Mutation and selection can accomplish small events such as drug resistance with microbes. There are real examples of these phenomena. However, to extrapolate these types of phenomena to the evolution of birds from reptiles or humans and chimps from a primate ancestor by mutation and selection has no mathematical foundation. You simply do not have sufficient number of generations and populations to accomplish all the genetic changes required. In the real world, the books have to balance. In addition to the fact that multiple selection pressures slow down evolution, there are no selection pressures that can evolve a gene from the beginning. You are the one ignoring the real world and you do this by extrapolating mutation and selection far beyond what it is mathematically capable of doing.
Load of bunk. Mutation and selection can accomplish small events, big events, grand events, deathly events, whatever. It all depends on what genes and gene networks are involved. You are again showing your incredibly one-dimensional view of the genome. Single base changes in regulatory genes or in regions for promoter or transcription factors can have a huge impact on morphology. It is absolute and complete misrepresentation to say anything else.
I am not extrapolating mutation and selection beyond what it is mathematically incapable of doing. You seem to have no grasp whatsoever of the actual genome of actual living beings. We have seen huge changes in organisms over time that you seem to think are impossible mathematically. Yet you do not fault the mathematical model? Why? Because you have a preset notion that evolution cannot occur. Schneider based his model on a subset of information from living creatures. He did not model the genomic behavior of all living beings. I'm sure we can contact him about this issue?
Hey, Paul, would you mind asking Schneider if he designed his model to cover all living beings?
You're beginning to screech, Dr. Kleinman. Your argument from a model against reality. That's a truly stupid thing to do.
Where is this mathematics of mutation and selection you are talking about?
Your biases are showing Dr. Kleinman. I said there were plenty of mathematical models of the current theory of evolution, not merely of mutation and selection. You, who are the mathematical genius of the century, are aware of all this work, are you not, Dr. Kleinman? I can barely read a paper on evolutionary theory without being inundated with mathematical modelling of this, that, and the other.
I have the mathematics of a peer reviewed and published computer model of mutation and natural selection. Now where is this mathematical cornucopia that forms the foundation of your theory?
You haven't read any of the literature, have you? OK, I'll start posting links in the morning as I pull up individual articles. How many do you want? There are mathematical models galore. You know this. Why are you acting dumb about it?
Crossing over does not increase information in a genome; it is simply a rearrangement of existing genes in the gene pool. You not created any new genes.
Pseudogenes, not previously expressed in an organism, now expressed in the presence of a promoter, repeat, rinse. Move transcription factor to new gene so that it is expressed in new milieu and suddenly the protein balance is changed. We're talking morphological changes here, Dr. Kleinman. You know, the stuff that natural selection actually works on.
What you continue to have difficulty with is the mathematics of mutation and selection. The massive number of differences between reptile and bird genomes can not be accomplished by mutation and selection. Not only is there no selection pressure that would do this, there is no way to account for all the required changes needed by mutation and selection.
Well gosh and golly jeepers, name me one person who actually thinks that all the changes between reptile and bird occurred by simplistic models of mutation and selection. I'd actually like to meet this mythical creature rarer than a phoenix-unicorn hybrid. Your mathematics are useless in this situation, Dr. Kleinman. Just how far do you intend to carry this straw man?
One unique gene difference between birds and reptiles is enough to prove the impossibility of evolution. What is the selection pressure that would evolve this unique gene?
What? I have no idea what you are on about now.
This seems to be the sum total of the evolutionist argument, you don’t know how it happened but you know it did. Well, I know it didn’t happen by mutation and selection, ev shows how slow this process is and that the theory of evolution by mutation and selection is mathematically impossible.
Well, isn't that nice. We agree on something. I know it didn't happen according to the simple outline you propose too. Evolution is much more complex than simple mutation and selection. There is no argument here.
What still hasn’t sunk in with you is that recombination without error can not increase information in the gene pool and that recombination with natural selection can cause the loss of information in the gene pool due to loss of alleles.
Oh, really? Yet up above you said that I should be arguing for recombination with selection for the development of the human brain. I guess the human brain is just a degenerate version of something that has lost information from that wonder of the world, the human-chimp common ancestor. I'll get the press on the line and let them know.
Really now, do you think this occurs with reproduction? You are now extrapolating the production of immunoglobins to reproduction. And do you want to explain how coping promoters all over the place speeds up the evolutionary process?
Didn't even mention immunoglobulins or hypervariable regions, but we could go there next. How do I explain it? I already have. You obviously didn't understand. Do you know what a promoter region is? Do you know what a transcription factor site is?
If a promoter is placed near a pseudo gene, then that pseudogene can lose its paltry pseudo status and join the rest of the club in the smoking car, the place where all the big boy genes hang out.
Copy a gene and you have two copies of the same gene. A new gene requires mutation. So now you have a copy of a gene that is slightly altered and low and behold, it performs an entirely new function like growing feathers on a lizard. It requires mutations to make a new gene and ev shows this is a profoundly slow process even if you have a selection process that could make the new gene and you don’t. You are in complete denial of the mathematics of mutation and selection and how it works. Study ev and learn how the mathematics of mutation and selection works instead of making your wild unscientific extrapolations.
I'm in complete denial of your lunacy for thinking you have "the mathematics of mutation and selection". Copy a gene and its expression can increase. It can also be associated with different transcription factors so that it is expressed at different times. You know, the whole proteomics bit. Making completely different morphologies -- having genes expressed in different places, different times.
And yes, single gene mutations in newly copied genes works too. But, again, there is no analogy to ev, since ev models numerous changes in the same place and all those changes have to fit a pre-determined state. The new mutation in a gene copy only has to advance survival. Ev does not model that behavior.
A gene is to evolve. The first base in the sequence for the gene is laid down on the genome. One base codes for nothing so there is nothing for natural selection to act upon. A second base added by random chance is laid down in the sequence. Still nothing to code for, natural selection can not act on this sequence. A third base in the sequence is laid down. You now have enough bases to form a codon for a single amino acid. A single amino acid has no functional use so there is still nothing for natural selection to act upon. So bases must be added randomly until you have a long enough sequence of bases to produce a functional polypeptide and then natural selection can act. Adding bases randomly yield probabilities so infinitesimally small that evolution is mathematically impossible.
What an interesting just so story.
And if we begin with peptides that serve as templates for RNA? There is already a relationship between amino acid and RNA in that scenario. The other way around makes no sense -- starting with RNA and/or DNA and expecting it to code for an amino acid. That is a silly story.
Simple enough, tell us how recombination without error can create new genes and I’ll tell you how recombination and natural selection can cause the loss of alleles. Of course you can’t tell us how recombination without error can create new genes but I can tell you how recombination and natural selection can cause the loss of alleles.
Are you an ostrich with its head in the sand. I've already given you several scenarios for this and you pretend that I haven't. Try something new. Your screeching is growing old.
If you had read the paper beyond the abstract you would realize that you are limiting the scope of ev because it suits your belief system, not because that was the intention of Dr Schneider. If you had read these threads you would have seen from the very beginning that I acknowledged that you can gain information by mutation and selection. The only shame in this is that you think you can understand the mathematics of mutation and selection without doing your homework. Read Dr Schneider’s works completely and read these threads completely, otherwise you reveal that you are superficial in your analysis, of course, that is the only type of analysis the theory of evolution can stand up to.
Um, no. I have read the paper completely, just today again. I see in it just how wrong you are, as reflected in some responses above. You, of course, will either not understand them or will pretend not to understand them, or will neglect the issue and continue to put your head in the sand. Whatever you want bro.
So, how about this. You publish this excellent work of yours. Put up now or shut up. You have the answer, so you think. It's time for peer review. I can't wait for the chuckles.
ETA
But, frankly, no one here needs me to repeat the same arguments that you have ignored since the beginning of this thread. This whole fiasco reads -- ev shows that evolution couldn't happen; no, you're wrong and here's the evidence to show where you are wrong; but ev shows that evolution couldn't happen; no, you're wrong and here's more evidence to show where you are wrong; rinse, repeat.
My only contribution was to argue against your use of HIV. I've served that purpose. You are now returning to arguments that began on page 2 of the thread and needn't be rehashed.