Kleinman said:
Another evolutionist who doesn’t realize his own theory measures fitness by the ability to reproduce.
No. The point is that you are focusing on a system which has very special characteristics. Fitness may be affected in many ways. Let's say we have selection pressure one -- wolf. And we have selection pressure two -- big gonads. Little mousie with big gonads who escapes wolf long enough to reproduce before being eaten is fit. Particularly if those big gonads get him into selection pressure three, big colony of sister mice wearing white robes, promising oral sex, and lighting Grail shaped beacons.
Triple therapy for HIV is a very special case. That therapy directly targets replication -- the direct means by which the virus reproduces. There is no way for the virus to escape easily when we specifically target its ability to reproduce
directly, not through the indirect means of impacting fitness through depleted resources, or whatever, that we see in nature. That is what Taffer was trying to tell you. That is why I entered this silly exchange in the first place. Triple therapy for HIV does not mimic what we tend to see in nature. It is not an issue of us not understanding what fitness means. It is an issue of us seeing that you are loading the dice in your favor and calling you on it.
None of the treatments for HIV lead to death of the virus, these treatments only limit reproduction of the virus.
And you will need to excuse me for using examples that are not directly applicable to this case in an effort to explain things within a larger context. The whole point of mentioning death scenarios is an attempt to re-orient the discussion toward a more realistic scenario. You cannot use three pressures that directly act on the molecular machinery for reproduction of an organism and pretend that this in some way replicates the natural history of three selection pressures as it relates to evolutionary change (except in very peculiar circumstances).
So why don’t you tell us what the selection pressure is that evolves a gene from the beginning. I keep asking this question of you evolutionists
I've already told you that I'm not playing that game. This discussion concerns your use of a particular example and what you think it shows. Why do you continue to try and switch the emphasis? This is a narrow discussion. You stated that triple therapy for HIV is directly analogous to what occurs in the ev program and by extension to what happens in real life when multiple pressures are put on an organism. I disagree with you. Please stay focused on the issue at hand.
What you don’t seem to realize is that multiple selection conditions even if not fatal confound the evolutionary process.
Confound the evolutionary process? What in the world could that even possibly mean?
In a simple sense, what happens if you get a beneficial mutation for one selection condition and a harmful mutation for another selection condition on the same creature. Is that creature selected for or selected against?
There is simply no way to answer that question based on the information you have provided. It depends on the actual selection pressures involved and chance.
The net result is that evolution is slowed. The virus doesn’t have to win.
What does that mean? Evolution is slowed? I don't see a stop sign sitting over
Evolution. There is no slowing of evolution. There is perhaps slowing of this virus. That, in and of itself,
is evolution. Your contention is nonsensical and utterly dependent on a teleological framework.
The virus will win. It already is winning. If we do not devise new strategies in the next few decades, then it will prove to be a bigger problem. Thankfully it is not as virulent now. But, there are already people in whom the virus escapes all three therapies, even when the triple therapy approach is changed and they are given a different cocktail. People still die of this disease. Most of them are so sick before the virus "gets through" that they do not spread the infection, though. So we do not currently have a crop of completely drug resistant organisms traipsing about.
It has everything to do with the theory of evolution.
Need I remind you again that we are discussing your emphasis on HIV and triple therapy. Nothing else. I am not playing that game. If we conclude this discussion, then perhaps we may move on to another topic. We need, however, to finish this topic first.
Evolution has slowed sufficiently for people who suffer from HIV to live years longer. More effective and additional selection pressures on the virus may cause the virus to go extinct.
Of course the virus could go extinct. It almost assuredly isn't, but that is beside the point. Please explain to me how the virus going extinct is not "evolution". There is no such thing as "slowing evolution". We can slow an organism down by attacking it. If it survives it may remain relatively dormant, dead, or virulent beyond anything we dreaded because it escapes our selection pressures. Slowing evolution? I have no idea what you are talking about.
What????? What other response does a host have beside an immune response to the presence of a virus? Maybe you are talking about the sudden urge a host has to have a cup of chicken soup when exposed to a virus?
You haven't bothered to notice that HIV is a parasite? Host death is a fairly significant selective pressure on parasites. Host alive means transmission opportunities. Host dead means parasite dead. Rapid host death means limited transmission while long refractory periods means more chances to replicate. Didn't you get the message of why I was speaking about the early years of this disease? We see the same thing with other infectious agents. Syphilis was an absolute scourge before it became less virulent.