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Author | Topic: Mutations | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
quicksink Inactive Member |
Is a sufficient number of mutations accumulated over time to create the mind-blowing diveristiy and complexity of today?
Could random and rare mutations create the following: a second stomach in a cow echolocation limbs from fins fully functional lungs brains from single-celled organisms vertebrates venus fly traps wings feathers (the perfect design of feathers would have to come immediately- crude feathers would cause the death of the animal and the loss of the mutation) nervous systems (these would also have to come about in one massive and miraculous mutation- half a nervous system is not good) senses for detecting the magnetic field of the planet (again, half a sense is no good- we're not talking about quantum leaps and enormous mutations that somehow work perfectly and create fully functional senses, limbs, organs, etc.) flowers that attract pollenators and attach "pollen packs" to the pollenator (again, some systems, like that of the orchid, are extremely complex- half a pollenation system would cause the extinction of the specie) mosquitos and chemicals that numb surrounding skin (mosquitos that were unable to numb the pain caused by their bite would become quickly extinct- what mutation could bring around a random mechanism that would just happen to produce a chemical that would just happen to numb an organisms skin. fingernails etc. Please don't tell me that these questions needn't an answer because evolution occurred, no matter how you turn it. Occam's razor states that a theory that cannot produce sufficient answers for all questions is most likely incorrect. If evolution can only carry half its weight, then less likely and less possible theories must be condsidered, in the case that they are the only solutions.
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nator Member (Idle past 2200 days) Posts: 12961 From: Ann Arbor Joined: |
quote: That is not what Occam's Razor states. From Talkorigins: "Occam's razor, or the law of parsimony, requires us to choose among several possible hypotheses that which has the least assumptions and arbitrary constants." There is a further discussion here:
http://www.skepdic.com/occam.html
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derwood Member (Idle past 1907 days) Posts: 1457 Joined: |
I can echolocate.
Not as well as some bats and some aquatic mammals, to be sure, but I can do it nonetheless. In fact, we do it all the time. Say you are outside and someone calls your name. What do you do? And how do you do it? By the way, those 'quaestions' look awfully familiar. Do you know Karl Crawford?
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Peter Member (Idle past 1510 days) Posts: 2161 From: Cambridgeshire, UK. Joined: |
quote: Just to pick on one .... why would crude feathers cause the deathof the individual ? Feathers probably originated before flight, and developedover time into the feathers that enable flight in modern birds. There are suggestions that some dinosaurs had rudimentaryfeathers (do a search like +feathers +scales in yahoo), and then there are legends of Quetzocoatl the feathered serpent, which may have a basis in fact long ago.
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Quetzal Member (Idle past 5903 days) Posts: 3228 Joined: |
Just one quibble 'cause I'm actually an evil pedant in disguise. Most archeologists studying Mesoamerican cultures think that the form for Quetzalcoatl was inspired by my pseudonym-sake: the Central American Quetzal (Pharomacchrus mocinno). It is known that many of the really fancy Aztec headdresses were composed primarily of quetzal feathers (why not? the birds have a 2 meter tail!). They (the birds) were considered royalty (or at least reserved for royalty) by the Maya, among others. When it flies, it undulates very like a snake with wings - just like the representative drawings of Quetzalcoatl.
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ksc Guest |
Just to form these incredible body parts or systems the mutations ...through RANDOM chance.... highlite on the RANDOM , must occur over and over again in the same DNA strand responsible for the body part or system.
So what are the odds of a RANDOM mutation effecting a particular DNA strand in the first place? Then to do it again and and again..by chance? Not to mention that most (almost all) mutations are harmful with a few that are neutral.
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nator Member (Idle past 2200 days) Posts: 12961 From: Ann Arbor Joined: |
quote: First, what you completely miss is that evolution is not completely random. Natural selection, by definition, is not random. Those organisms which have heritable characteristics which enable it to succeed in reproducing itself within particular environmental conditions will therefore spread it's genetic material more rapidly through a population that those which reproduce less-successfuly. The environmental selection is non-random. Mutations are, however. BTW, you are wrong anbout most mutations being detrimental. Most mutations are neutral as regards to fitness. Please provide full references to the professional literature that says otherwise. If most mutations are detrimental, then why haven't all or most species spiraled into extinction?? ------------------"We will still have perfect freedom to hold contrary views of our own, but to simply close our minds to the knowledge painstakingly accumulated by hundreds of thousands of scientists over long centuries is to deliberately decide to be ignorant and narrow- minded." -Steve Allen, from "Dumbth"
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ksc Guest |
Schraf:First, what you completely miss is that evolution is not completely random. Natural selection, by definition, is notrandom.
ksc:Whether natural selection is or isn’t is debateable. What you have forgotten is that the mutations that you claim are naturally selected are RANDOM Schraf:Those organisms which have heritable characteristics which enable it to succeed in reproducing itself within particular environmental conditions will therefore spread it's genetic material more rapidly through a population that those. ksc:Genetic differances will spread, but not differances produced by your mutations. For starters the changes would be so small that the environmental conditions would not even recognize them. In fact the time needed between a noticable morphological differance produced by mutations would be extremely long. So long that the environmental conditions would have probablty moved on long ago. Schraf:which reproduce less-successfuly. The environmental selection is non-random. Mutations are, however. BTW, you are wrong anbout most mutations being detrimental. Most mutations are neutral as regards to fitness. Please provide full references to the professional literature that says otherwise. ksc:I think you can find it in just about any book on evolution that talks honestly about the subject. Schraf:If most mutations are detrimental, then why haven't all or most species spiraled into extinction?? ksc:Because evolution doesn’t happen
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Fedmahn Kassad Inactive Member |
quote: Ah, the typically enlightening post by Karl. Evolution doesn't happen? Correct me if I am wrong, but you do believe that a horse and a zebra share a common ancestor, do you not? How about a chihuahua and a wolf? A leopard and a lynx? If not, then they were all on the Ark together. If you agree that they do share a common ancestor, then you believe in evolution. Which is it? FK
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Percy Member Posts: 22508 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 5.4 |
ksc replying to Schraf: It's only debatable if you want to change the context. The current discussion is considering the evolutionary pressure on organisms in a constant envirnoment.
Shraf is well aware of this, as would be almost any evolutionist. Are you under some misimpression that this is a point in your favor?
Organisms are not generally lucky enough to have a mutation occur simultaneous with environmental change. Most mutations just sit idle and recessive in the genome until an environmental change occurs for which they confer some advantage. Schaf writes ksc replies: I think not. Did you perhaps misunderstand what Schraf said? You appear to be taking issue with a fact that almost everyone on both sides of the debate concedes to be true. --Percy
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nator Member (Idle past 2200 days) Posts: 12961 From: Ann Arbor Joined: |
quote: Right. What is your point here?
quote: So, do you recognize that small changes do occur? Please explain, then, how small changes, such as a slightly longer prehensile tail which enables an individual to reach more fruit, or a slightly different shaped beak which enables an individual to crack seed hulls more quickly, would not be recognized by the environment? If you are able to get even a little bit more food in you, wouldn't that mean that your offspring would be better fed by the mother because the mother could produce more milk, in the case of mammals, and therefore more of your offspring would survive?
quote: Morphological change isn't the only kind of change. What about the resistance/immunity that some Caucasions have to HIV due to a mutation? It seems that people who's ancestors survived the Black Plague in Europe passed on a mutation of a certain protein to their descendents which affords partial protection from or full immunity to HIV-1 to those which have the mutation, depending upon if it is a partial or full mutation. Read more here:
http://www.sciam.com/0997issue/0997obrien.html quote: Uh, are you actually implying that the environment changes extremely rapidly in all ways, everywhere, at all times? That is demonstrably not true.
quote: Great, then you will have no problem providing full references to the literature here to back up your assertions. BTW, any good book on the ToE is going to be heavily referenced to the professional literature. I don't care much about what people say in popular press books unless they reference peer-reviewed professional literature. Popular press books are not peer-reviewed and are not really good sources of reliable scientific information unless they arewell-referenced.
[QUOTE]Schraf:If most mutations are detrimental, then why haven't all or most species spiraled into extinction?? ksc:Because evolution doesn’t happen [/b][/QUOTE] Uh, you just said that most mutations are detrimental. This means that you acknowledge that mutations occur, right? Therefore, to follow your logic, if most mutations are detrimental, then we would have all species rapidly becoming extinct. Try again. ------------------"We will still have perfect freedom to hold contrary views of our own, but to simply close our minds to the knowledge painstakingly accumulated by hundreds of thousands of scientists over long centuries is to deliberately decide to be ignorant and narrow- minded." -Steve Allen, from "Dumbth"
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derwood Member (Idle past 1907 days) Posts: 1457 Joined: |
quote: Not to mention the 950+ species of bat in more than a dozen genera in more than one family...
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Quetzal Member (Idle past 5903 days) Posts: 3228 Joined: |
Or the 9,800 species of birds.
Welcome back SLP. We missed you.
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Percy Member Posts: 22508 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 5.4 |
Is this the original SLP? If so, your original SLP account still exists. If you need the password there's a "Forgot your password?" link on the page where you type your messages, assuming you remember the email address you used to open the SLP account.
--Percy
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derwood Member (Idle past 1907 days) Posts: 1457 Joined: |
quote: Ah - silly me. I should have read this before posting my question. Some questions for karl - questions which have been asked several times before (not just by me), but which have gone unanswered. What is a "DNA strand" as you are using it? Why MUST these mutations occur "over and over again in the same DNA strand responsible for the body part or system"? Your last paragraph belies your shallow understanding of development and genetics. Maybe you should be asking questions insteqad of making these multi-year-old proclamations over and over again. Percy - I have tried to use my old password/ID and I kept getting error messages, so I re-registered. I explained this in another thread a few weeks ago.
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