Annoying Creationists
Mr Scott, Dr Schneider and the peer reviewers at the Oxford University Press Journal, Nucleic Acids Research used the rate of information acquisition from ev to estimate the evolution of a human genome. This rate of information acquisition was based on a genome length of 256 bases and a mutation rate 100 times higher than seen in the HIV virus (not 10 times higher as Dr Schneider published in his article) with a population of 64 creatures. Just use a realistic mutation rate of 10^-6 in Dr Schneider’s case and his calculation returns 4 trillion years to evolve a human genome. Use a realistic genome length and his estimate becomes billions of times larger. Now Mr Scott, Paul whines that huge populations will make this estimate decline. It does perhaps 2 or 3 orders of magnitude. If you are lucky (and you evolutionists are not lucky) that gets the estimate down to maybe a few quadrillion years to accumulate the information to evolve a human genome.
Paul, I’m wondering how far you are going to back pedal on ev? Have you turn the seat around on your bicycle yet?
Paul, why don’t you take up joobz’s suggestion that less severe selection conditions cause evolution to go more quickly. I don’t know what joobz thinks of Dr Schneider’s selection since these conditions can not cause extinction. Or take up Ichneumonwasp’s suggestion to turn selection on and off and see whether that speeds up evolution in ev. I tried to tell Ichneumonwasp that turning selection off causes the loss of information in ev but I don’t think Ichneumonwasp was listening.
The distorted and unscientific view that evolutionists hold of how mutation and selection works impedes the understanding of how this phenomenon works. Evolutionists block the advancement of science.
Hey Paul, did Dr Schneider make an accident when he published this in his peer reviewed publication about ev?Mr Scott said:Question for Paul: Has Ev been peer reviewed and verified as an accurate simulation in regards to its prediction of the absolute rate of real world evolution?Paul said:I can guarantee you it makes no prediction about the rate of real world evolution, except possibly by accident.
EV Evolution of Biological Information said:Second, the probability of finding 16 sites averaging 4 bits each in random sequences is 2^(-4x16)
EV Evolution of Biological Information said:@5x10^-20 yet the sites evolved from random sequences in only ~10^3 generations, at an average rate of ~1 bit per 11 generations. Because the mutation rate of HIV is only 10 times slower, it could evolve a 4 bit site in 100 generations, about 9 months [
EV Evolution of Biological Information said:35], but it could be much faster because the enormous titer (10^10 new virions/day/person [17]) provides a larger pool for successful changes. Likewise, at this rate, roughly an entire human genome of ~4x10^9 bits (assuming an average of 1 bit/base, which is clearly an overestimate) could evolve in a billion years, even without the advantages of large environmentally diverse worldwide populations, sexual recombination and interspecies genetic transfer. However, since this rate is unlikely to be maintained for eukaryotes, these factors are undoubtedly important in accounting for human evolution.
Mr Scott, Dr Schneider and the peer reviewers at the Oxford University Press Journal, Nucleic Acids Research used the rate of information acquisition from ev to estimate the evolution of a human genome. This rate of information acquisition was based on a genome length of 256 bases and a mutation rate 100 times higher than seen in the HIV virus (not 10 times higher as Dr Schneider published in his article) with a population of 64 creatures. Just use a realistic mutation rate of 10^-6 in Dr Schneider’s case and his calculation returns 4 trillion years to evolve a human genome. Use a realistic genome length and his estimate becomes billions of times larger. Now Mr Scott, Paul whines that huge populations will make this estimate decline. It does perhaps 2 or 3 orders of magnitude. If you are lucky (and you evolutionists are not lucky) that gets the estimate down to maybe a few quadrillion years to accumulate the information to evolve a human genome.
Paul, I’m wondering how far you are going to back pedal on ev? Have you turn the seat around on your bicycle yet?
So 2 selection pressures are sufficient to slow down evolution profoundly?Kleinman said:You keep grabbing at this straw Paul but it won’t rescue your theory. It is easy to show with your computer model that 1 selection pressure converges much more rapidly than 2 selection pressures.Paul said:I'm not trying to rescue any theory. I'm simply pointing out that there is nothing magic about three or more pressures.
Paul, you are the expert at moving goalposts. Let’s summarize what you have said about ev, ev started out representing reality, then it became a model of a small part of the evolutionary landscape, then it became a stylized model of mutation and selection and now you can guarantee it makes no prediction about the rate of real world evolution, except possibly by accident. You are the one slipping and sliding all over the evolutionary landscape. My goalposts have never moved, those goalposts are that ev shows that the theory of evolution is mathematically impossible and the reason is that competing selection conditions slow the evolutionary process. Ev shows this, the real world shows this, Delphi’s link to Wikipedia and the description of the fitness landscape shows this.joobz said:EXCELLENT!!!! you've recognized my example for what it is. According to you, magnitude doesn't matter. yet, high concentrations will kill, yet mild forms of this kind of stress generate stress risistant strains. According to you, we could never generate a strain resistant to stresses like freezing, oxidative injury, ethanol levels becuase each of these represent "Multiple selection pressures".Paul said:Are you suggesting that Kleinman may have to move the goalpost yet again?
Paul, why don’t you take up joobz’s suggestion that less severe selection conditions cause evolution to go more quickly. I don’t know what joobz thinks of Dr Schneider’s selection since these conditions can not cause extinction. Or take up Ichneumonwasp’s suggestion to turn selection on and off and see whether that speeds up evolution in ev. I tried to tell Ichneumonwasp that turning selection off causes the loss of information in ev but I don’t think Ichneumonwasp was listening.
The distorted and unscientific view that evolutionists hold of how mutation and selection works impedes the understanding of how this phenomenon works. Evolutionists block the advancement of science.