Annoying Creationists
You are the one who brought up my PhD thesis and you claimed you could find irregularities in it. So find the irregularities. Why do you continue to attribute Dr Schneider’s computer model to me? Can’t you even get that fact straight?
Kleinman said:You are as poor at doing your literature searches as you are in the mathematics of mutation and selection. You don’t know who my thesis advisor was and who wasn’t. You are simply a big mouth coward; everyone here is capable of reading and understanding this point.joobz said:You have 2 publications listed on web of science, which typically ignores conference proceedings/abstracts. Why do you get so angry with me, when it was you who raised this issue in the first place. If you are embarrassed by your track record, why do you mention it?
Kleinman said:joobz said:
You would save yourself much frustration and humiliation if you simply stuck to the topic at hand. I've asked 3 times now, what are your justifications for your model assumption?
You have never answered this question. Indeed, you failed to answer any question that clearly demonstrates your poorly conceived theory for what it is.
You are the one who brought up my PhD thesis and you claimed you could find irregularities in it. So find the irregularities. Why do you continue to attribute Dr Schneider’s computer model to me? Can’t you even get that fact straight?
That isn’t a profoundly longish genome is it? Paul, there is a way to determine what this factor is. You have to map out the fitness landscape. You do this by computing the mistakes in 4^G combinations of genomes. I’ll let you do the arithmetic on that one. What I think you will find is there are lots of hills and valleys on the landscape which prevent the population from finding a perfect creature local optimum.Kleinman said:That’s a fitting “backstory” for the theory of evolution since ev converges to a local optimum, it just doesn’t happen to be a “perfect creature” local optimum for longer genomes.Paul said:It's not simply "longer genomes," now is it? We can run one experiment with a longish genome that converges, and another with the same length genome that does not. Therefore, obviously, there is another factor at work.