Certainly as Mr Scott has suggested there may be a “sweet spot” where evolution can be accelerated. You have suggested that this curve may be parabolic. However, this rate of evolution will never be as rapid as when a single selection pressure is applied. You have two ways of establishing the rates of evolution. You can collect data in real situations such as the treatment of HIV or you can look at mathematical models to establish this behavior. You are trying to take a single data point on the fitness landscape for HIV to support your argument.
So, now you agree that multiple selection pressures do not stop evolution? OK< then the argument is at an end.
I am not constructing an argument for anything here, Dr. Kleinman. I am arguing against your position that you have stated repeatedly -- that three selection pressures so profoundly slow evolution that the process essentially stops. That the rate of evolution is not as rapid as when one selection pressure is applied is completely beside the point, Dr. Kleinman, since no one has argued that multiple selection pressures will necessarily be faster than one selection pressure in stimulating evolutionary change. We are arguing against your stated position that three pressures will stop evolution.
You now seem to agree with us that evolution continues along, three pressures or no. Your real world example (HIV triple therapy) -- your example, Dr. Kleinman, not mine -- of how three selection pressures demonstrates that evolution is stopped by those three selection pressures is bunk, Dr. Kleinman. So, your insistence that ev serves as a reliable model for the evolutionary process with HIV triple therapy in the real world and demonstrates the actual mathematics of evolutionary change is bunk, Dr. Kleinman.
I believe the general behavior of ev with 1, 2 and 3 selection conditions and the use of multiple antimicrobials to treat difficult infections and the failure and consequences of using monotherapy to treat MRSA, Gonorrhea, pseudomonas and other multiply resistant microbes will have far more weight in this debate.
So, in other words, Dr. Kleinman, when evidence argues against you, you will ignore the evidence?
A computer model that was devised to show the emergence of new information and not mimic all evolutionary conditions is better evidence of how the evolutionary process works than a real world example?
There is only one reason I have harped on HIV, Dr. Kleinman -- because of
your insistence that HIV triple therapy serves as the real world example that validates your idea of how ev functions. There are many examples of three and more selection pressures working on organisms in the real world. May we now begin to examine all the other examples of multiple selection pressures not stopping the evolutionary process? There are so many, it is difficult to know where to begin.
Each of the parameters in ev has unique effects on the generations for convergence. Increasing populations decreases the generations of convergence at a decreasing rate as you increase population, increasing mutation rate decreases the generations for convergence to a point where the generations for convergence starts to increase. The major factor which increases the generations for convergence is the genome length which increases at an increasing rate as you lengthen the genome. There has been a lot of data posted on this thread and the Evolutionisdead forum which shows this.
Dr. Kleinman, why do you insist on answering a question not even asked? Paul answered my question briefly and to the point, all the while demonstrating that you do not know how to correlate the results of ev runs with the real world, since you harp on "abnormally high mutation rates". In small populations in the real world variance among organisms cannot be high. That is how current HIV triple therapies slow the evolutionary process, as opposed to earlier triple therapy regimens that permitted high enough population counts, which translates in the real world to increased variability. If one cannot input high populations in ev, the only way to mimic "real world" variability in orgnisms is through increasing the mutation rate. That there are rates that interfere is beside the point, as we all know. Kill organisms or eliminate their ability to replicate, and they do not leave behin progeny.