new drkitten said:
I'll let you know as soon as you either "request" anything, or as soon as you ask a genuine question.
My question remains:
quote:
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Originally posted by Dr Adequate
And, interestingly, there is almost invariably great genetic distance between two species which they will identify as the same "kind" than there is between humans and chimpanzees.
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hammegk: Is that so. Can you cite a source? Or should we just take your word for it ....
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hammegk:
Still looking for numbers that a layman might understand that demonstrates that 'greater genetic difference' over Felidae than exists chimp to human.
My last question to you
hammegk
Not in a way that I could make sense of.
For example
http://www.agu.org/revgeophys/buckli01/node3.html
does provide a definition. Moving from that to a computation of the variation among Felidae and comparing it to the variation homo sap to Pan spp is not anything I understand how to accomplish. Are you aware of a source for a compution that has been done?
Has been answered that "no computaion has been done" (understandable to any but the cognoscenti), and you've made no comment at all on my linked definitions of genetic difference.
Statements such as the following are neither request nor questions; they are reflexively nihilistic insults to the practitioners of science.
quote: hammegk
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I suspected there is no data to share on the genetic variation question across recognized Felidae.
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And you were wrong; I provided citations that provide actual numbers describing the degree of genetic variation within Felidae.
At this point, you have two choices. You can either read the papers and try to ferret out the numbers, or you can whine about your unwillingness (not inability) to understand the writings. But I have neither interest nor responsibility for interpreting the data for you.
You obviously have no "responsibility". You may choose to continue to assert that data you understand shows more than say, 40 million differences across Felidae dna, but you are unwilling to demonstrate your knowledge for doofs like me.
I do not, which is why I posted "scientific proof" in the form of peer-reviewed articles from high-end journals (in science, not only the coin of the realm, but large denomination coins at that).
I do, in fact, claim, that such articles are "scientific proof."
Too bad you are unwilling to share your working definition of genetic difference, let alone try to explain it.
If you have genuine questions about their interpretation, let me know.
I've already stated that I have no understanding of your citations.
If you have genuine methodological criticisms to offer, I will be very interested indeed.
I have none, nor is my interest in methodology. I continue to request layman level results that defends the claim that the genetic variation across Felidae exceeds that variation chimp to man.
And prior to addressing that question, some understanding on the meaning of genetic difference would seem appropriate.