Mr Scott, I’ve already proved mathematically that ev can’t evolve binding sites on a realistic length genome because of the multiple selection conditions. If you can’t evolve simple binding sites, what makes you think you can evolve the huge number of genetic differences between cats and dog from a common ancestor? Do you want to tell us what the selection conditions that do this? Paul can then put it in ev and end this discussion.
Paul, you can answer this question about binding sites better than I can. Is this Ev-able?
My own way to answer is, if any binding site can evolve in a finite amount of time, then we only have to do the math to see if cats and dogs could have had a common ancestor. We pretty much can know how far back the split may have occured because we can count the genetic differences -- perhaps even mitochondrial DNA would suffice -- between present day animals. Remember that the genetic difference between the standard cat and dog will be twice the difference between their common ancestor and each. Note also that many individuals would be evolving binding sites in parallel, not just in series. A cat that eats well because a microevolutionary step lets its ears hear prey better could mate with one who's paws were the beneficiaries of their own, independent microevolutionary step that let it stalk prey more silently. The changes don't have to be sequential, as, I understand, is an Ev limitation. In populations of thousands of dogs and thousands of cats over thousands of generations mixing their genes by sexual reproduction thousands of times, it's easy to see how macroevolution would occur after such a huge accumulation of microevolutionary steps. Why can't multitudes of microevolutions add up to macroevolution?
In fact, by tracing the fossil records, such diversions of one species into many over time have been verified countless times.
The evidence provided by a partial model of evolution can lend support for the theory, but can never be relied on to prove such a theory "impossible." Only a complete model/simulation can do that, and there presently is no such computer model capable of proving evolution to be impossible.
Why, Dr. Kleinman, do you insist that an incomplete model of evolution can be used to prove that evolution is impossible?
By the way, do you consider a picture of a dog and cat with similar markings as your evidence that they evolved from a common ancestor?
Faith in the bible comes from the gut, not from evidence. Sometimes, a picture illustrating the similarities between species, such that you can actually see how accumulations of microevolutionary steps can have a macroevolutionary result, can make an impression at a gut level and therefore influence how one interprets the mathematics of evolution. It's clear your gut faith in the bible has impeded your ability to objectively acknowledge mathematical truths.
That is a cute picture though.
It
is cute. My first choice would have been a picture of the cartoon character "catdog," but that was too cute. My second choice was one of the photos I found of cats humping dogs. That would have been too un-cute for a bible thumper. The photo I settled on seemed to express the heart of cat/dog divergence, but you can't let that into
your heart. There's an ignorant holy book blocking its path.
Don't forget my important questions:
Why, Dr. Kleinman, do you insist that an incomplete model of evolution can be used to prove that evolution is impossible?
Why can't multitudes of microevolutions add up to macroevolution?