This is what is so illogical about Dr Richard’s way of counting. Notice how you neglected to respond to my final quote from this post. I’ll repeat it here so we can see where your logic leads.
Dr Richard, if you want to use your logic, ev does not have three directional selection pressures is has 32 directional selection pressures not 3. You are confusing the results of a directional selection pressure with the meaning of a directional selection pressures.
I am saying that you can measure a selection pressure acting on the codon.
What is your definition of a selection pressure again kleinman?
You'll have a week to think of one.
It’s time for you to answer a couple of questions. The first is what are these 60-70 directional selection pressures?
Another failure in reading comprehension. But your faith is blinding you to the obvious.
I cannot say for certain, as the paper does not provide this information. But I would say they include (but are not limited to)
1. mutations within the HIV protease gene that improve the efficiency of the gene in an untreated patient
2. mutations within the HIV protease gene that improve the efficiency of the gene in an treated patient
3. mutations within the reverse transcriptase gene that improve the efficiency of the gene in an untreated patient
4. mutations within the reverse transcriptase gene that improve the efficiency of the gene in an treated patient
5. mutations within either gene that improve integration/replication in the host DNA
6. mutations that interact with other mutations in the genome to improve overall fitness
The second is, there is an error in the equation in your link, what is it? If you can’t find it, perhaps the resident James Randi Educational Forum PhD in amathematics can find it.[/SIZE][/FONT]
Which link?
If you had read this thread carefully, you would have seen that I had said there is an immune response to HIV (how many directed selection pressures to you want to call this?) that HIV patients can mount but you appear not to know that it is insufficient to stop the disease. A single antibody directed at the protease can lead to all these amino acid substitutions,
Your lack of knowledge of the immune system does not suprise me.
Are you seriously trying to contend that the whole immune response to HIV infection is due a single antibody? That is very funny.
As stated before, I would count the human immune response as about 3500 selection pressures if we use the kleinman "selection pressure acting at a gene level" method of counting.
I have never claimed that human immune system is effective in all cases at preventing HIV infection.
Although you are again sadly misguided in asserting that it cannot stop the disease: a few seconds of research will tell you that there are individuals who have sufficient immunity to HIV to have immunity:
this paper will highlight some more immune mechanisms other than antibodies for you to learn about and explain why some individuals have higher natural resistance than others:
just as a single drug leads to numerous amino acid substitutions, just as ev’s 3 selection conditions leads to 32 amino acid substitutions. According to your logic, ev has 32 directed selection pressures. Which counting system do you want to work with?[/SIZE][/FONT]
You are wrong whichever system you pick: selection pressure acting at the level of the organism, the gene or base pair. Pick one.
It doesn’t matter how you want to count selection pressures. If you want to count each amino acid substitution as a selection pressure then ev has 32 selection directional pressures and still gives an analogous model of combination therapy of HIV. It is better to describe directional selection pressures by the number of genes impacted, the degree of inhibition of each of the genes involved and the number of amino acid substitutions required to achieve resistance to that directional selection pressure.
You are inching towards the light of understanding. Don't stop. But remember to update your goralpost art (getting a little crowded now) and include the other mechanisms of evolutionary change other than amino acid substitutions.
What you continue to miss in this discussion Dr Richard is that the underlying mathematics does not change by changing the way you count selection pressures.
Which why you have always been wrong
The more the amino acid substitutions required, the more generations needed to accomplish these changes by mutation and selection.
These have already been achieved. That is what the database shows. Its entire existence is a refutation of your theory.
Ev demonstrates this with spurious binding in the non-binding site region. HIV with its short genome has a much smaller portion of it’s genome being acted on by stabilizing selection pressures than an E Coli size genome or a human size genome. This is why your theory of evolution is mathematically impossible. You don’t have the selection pressure(s) to evolve reptiles into birds and if you did, you don’t have sufficient generations and sufficient populations to accomplish the transformation my mutation and selection. You really ought to study ev, you would learn something about the mathematics of mutation and selection.
Any evidence for the above list of random assertions? Other than the last 3000+ posts of mindless macro pasting?
Since I have already answered a couple of questions for you, it’s time for you to answer I couple of questions for me.
The first is what are these 60-70 directional selection pressures? The second is, there is an error in the equation in your link, what is it? If you can’t find it, perhaps the resident James Randi Educational Forum PhD in amathematics can find it.
See above.
1. Again, please tell me the minimum number of "directional "selection pressures you think must operate to prevent macroevolution by slowing microevolution to such an extent that it cannot happen within the timeframe of life on earth in the real world based on your extensive mathematical modelling.
kleinman's answer = 5 (3 modelled in ev + "a couple" more) - but less in bacteria and organisms with a longer genome
2. If one base pair mutation is a microevolutionary event, how many base pair mutations to make a macroevolutionary event? 2? 10? 100?
4. What is your definition of a "selection pressure"
5. (for old time's sake) What is your definition of macroevolution again? (NB random lists of things you think it is are not acceptable)