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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/4/2008 10:12:16 AM
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Jhud
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No, given the information that the virus had attacked chimps and gorillas, but not humans, the prediction was that the ERVs would not be found in the same loci, but rather (as one would suspect from independent infections) at different loci. Of course, if it had attacked humans, but independently of the other apes, one would also expect different loci. The ERVs that fall into a common descent type phylogeny are those located at identical loci across the hominid family, suggesting a single infection. What I find to be interesting is if you look at the large number of insertion sites, it seems inevitable that some are going to be identical. Ad so you have this operating assumption that if the insertion sites differ, they occurred after the presumed 'split', and if you look at the ones that are the same, they occurred before the presumed 'split', so that you have the rather circular argument that the insertion sites both prove, and are the product of, a presumed evolutionary common ancestry. And to top it all off, "Twenty-four locations were ambiguous within the limits of resolution of this study and could, in theory, correspond to 12 orthologous sites", meaning that whether they actually were the same insertion points is really a matter of some debate.
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/4/2008 11:35:27 AM
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essentialsaltes
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ORIGINAL: Jhud you have the rather circular argument that the insertion sites both prove, and are the product of, a presumed evolutionary common ancestry. ERVs are not the only reason that we've come to the conclusion that humans and the other apes share a common ancestry. Using molecular clocks, evolutionary science has even calculated a rough estimate of the time when they diverged. The results of this study are consistent with, and thus confirmatory of, these conclusions. There is no 'debate' over the issue of those last 24 loci, just a lack of information.
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"My object in all arguments is not to make any preconceived opinion of mine seem right, but merely to discover and establish the truth, whatever the truth may be." -- HP Lovecraft, letter to Robert E. Howard 7/27-28/34
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/4/2008 12:04:56 PM
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gluadys
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ORIGINAL: Jhud quote:
No, given the information that the virus had attacked chimps and gorillas, but not humans, the prediction was that the ERVs would not be found in the same loci, but rather (as one would suspect from independent infections) at different loci. Of course, if it had attacked humans, but independently of the other apes, one would also expect different loci. The ERVs that fall into a common descent type phylogeny are those located at identical loci across the hominid family, suggesting a single infection. What I find to be interesting is if you look at the large number of insertion sites, it seems inevitable that some are going to be identical. Ad so you have this operating assumption that if the insertion sites differ, they occurred after the presumed 'split', and if you look at the ones that are the same, they occurred before the presumed 'split', so that you have the rather circular argument that the insertion sites both prove, and are the product of, a presumed evolutionary common ancestry. And to top it all off, "Twenty-four locations were ambiguous within the limits of resolution of this study and could, in theory, correspond to 12 orthologous sites", meaning that whether they actually were the same insertion points is really a matter of some debate. For someone who keeps emphasizing complexity, you like to avoid it where its convenient. No, it is not as simple as that. For one thing, one must also include the factor of dating when the ERVs originated. And I am sure you know how to keep an "if X, then Y" prediction in proper sequence. Case 1: If a virus infects different species independently, the resulting ERVs will probably vary in locus (though one cannot absolutely rule out a coincidental match). Furthermore, any presumed phylogeny based on such ERVs will not correspond to phylogenies based on other data points. Case 2: If a virus infects the common ancestor of two or more species, the resulting ERV will be inherited by all descendants of the ancestor. It will, of necessity, occur in the same place in the genome and any phylogeny constructed from such orthologous shared ERVs will be consistent with phylogenies based on other data points. Finally, in both cases, the dating of the origin of these ERVs will be consistent with the timing of the speciations, as deduced from other evidence: independent infections occurring subsequent to speciation (or at least the divisions in the population), and orthologous ERVs originating before speciation.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/4/2008 12:05:31 PM
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Method
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ORIGINAL: Jhud What I find to be interesting is if you look at the large number of insertion sites, it seems inevitable that some are going to be identical. Ad so you have this operating assumption that if the insertion sites differ, they occurred after the presumed 'split', and if you look at the ones that are the same, they occurred before the presumed 'split', so that you have the rather circular argument that the insertion sites both prove, and are the product of, a presumed evolutionary common ancestry. And to top it all off, "Twenty-four locations were ambiguous within the limits of resolution of this study and could, in theory, correspond to 12 orthologous sites", meaning that whether they actually were the same insertion points is really a matter of some debate. The ambiguous results were from BAC clones which are large chunks of digested genomic DNA that was inserted into a sequencing plasmid which was then grown in E. coli. Without a known genomic database the best they can do is end sequence the BAC clones which will return about 500 bases from each side of the 2k to 10k chunk. This procedure can not resolve the position of the ERV down to base pair resolution. However, a few of these ambiguous ERV's are shared by chimps and macaques and there is a genomic database for these species. Therefore, they were able to sequence the entire BAC clone using internal primers. These results showed that of the ambiguous clones that were capable of being ocmpletely sequenced the ERV's were not shared at an orthologous location. Those 24 ambiguous clones are just that, ambiguous. PERV's do show a strong tendency to insert into similar insertion sites, but these sites are several thousand base pairs in size and the retrovirus inserts randomly within these regions. The same type of preference can be shown for other retroviruses such as MLV, HIV, and ASLV from this paper.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/4/2008 12:08:47 PM
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Jhud
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For someone who keeps emphasizing complexity, you like to avoid it where its convenient. No, it is not as simple as that. For one thing, one must also include the factor of dating when the ERVs originated. And I am sure you know how to keep an "if X, then Y" prediction in proper sequence. Case 1: If a virus infects different species independently, the resulting ERVs will probably vary in locus (though one cannot absolutely rule out a coincidental match). Furthermore, any presumed phylogeny based on such ERVs will not correspond to phylogenies based on other data points. Case 2: If a virus infects the common ancestor of two or more species, the resulting ERV will be inherited by all descendants of the ancestor. It will, of necessity, occur in the same place in the genome and any phylogeny constructed from such orthologous shared ERVs will be consistent with phylogenies based on other data points. Finally, in both cases, the dating of the origin of these ERVs will be consistent with the timing of the speciations, as deduced from other evidence: independent infections occurring subsequent to speciation (or at least the divisions in the population), and orthologous ERVs originating before speciation. So you are saying it's impossible for the insertion sites to have been the same across species the result of an incidental occurence?
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/4/2008 2:15:12 PM
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gluadys
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ORIGINAL: Jhud quote:
For someone who keeps emphasizing complexity, you like to avoid it where its convenient. No, it is not as simple as that. For one thing, one must also include the factor of dating when the ERVs originated. And I am sure you know how to keep an "if X, then Y" prediction in proper sequence. Case 1: If a virus infects different species independently, the resulting ERVs will probably vary in locus (though one cannot absolutely rule out a coincidental match). Furthermore, any presumed phylogeny based on such ERVs will not correspond to phylogenies based on other data points. Case 2: If a virus infects the common ancestor of two or more species, the resulting ERV will be inherited by all descendants of the ancestor. It will, of necessity, occur in the same place in the genome and any phylogeny constructed from such orthologous shared ERVs will be consistent with phylogenies based on other data points. Finally, in both cases, the dating of the origin of these ERVs will be consistent with the timing of the speciations, as deduced from other evidence: independent infections occurring subsequent to speciation (or at least the divisions in the population), and orthologous ERVs originating before speciation. So you are saying it's impossible for the insertion sites to have been the same across species the result of an incidental occurence? No, I am saying that it is impossible for an orthologous ERV inherited from a common ancestor to not have the same site across descendant species. The situation you describe is improbable, but improbable is not impossible.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/4/2008 2:42:58 PM
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Method
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ORIGINAL: Jhud So you are saying it's impossible for the insertion sites to have been the same across species the result of an incidental occurence? It is highly improbable that two independent insertions would occur at the same base of the genome in two separate individuals. The overwhelming majority will insert at different spots. This is the overwhelming signal that is observed.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/4/2008 4:52:09 PM
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Jhud
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It is highly improbable that two independent insertions would occur at the same base of the genome in two separate individuals. The overwhelming majority will insert at different spots. This is the overwhelming signal that is observed. But not impossible?
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/4/2008 5:36:41 PM
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Method
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ORIGINAL: Jhud quote:
It is highly improbable that two independent insertions would occur at the same base of the genome in two separate individuals. The overwhelming majority will insert at different spots. This is the overwhelming signal that is observed. But not impossible? No, not impossible. We are talking about the same type of odds as the Powerball lottery. Primates carry around 200,000 total ERV's. Out of 200,000 insertions you would expect the same number of independent but orthologous ERV's as you would expect identical lotto numbers from 200,000 Powerball lottery tickets. The odds may be a little less than that, but still quite steep. There is a much higher probability that an ERV would be lost in a lineage than independent orthologous ERV's. I am aware of a couple HERV-K insertions that seem to have been lost in the human lineage but present in the chimp and gorilla lineage (if memory serves).
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/7/2008 2:47:41 PM
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Jhud
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No, not impossible. We are talking about the same type of odds as the Powerball lottery. Primates carry around 200,000 total ERV's. Out of 200,000 insertions you would expect the same number of independent but orthologous ERV's as you would expect identical lotto numbers from 200,000 Powerball lottery tickets. The odds may be a little less than that, but still quite steep. There is a much higher probability that an ERV would be lost in a lineage than independent orthologous ERV's. I am aware of a couple HERV-K insertions that seem to have been lost in the human lineage but present in the chimp and gorilla lineage (if memory serves). So, you argument is 'the odds against similar insertions points are high, so common decent is a more reasonable explanation'?
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/7/2008 5:29:07 PM
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gluadys
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ORIGINAL: Jhud quote:
No, not impossible. We are talking about the same type of odds as the Powerball lottery. Primates carry around 200,000 total ERV's. Out of 200,000 insertions you would expect the same number of independent but orthologous ERV's as you would expect identical lotto numbers from 200,000 Powerball lottery tickets. The odds may be a little less than that, but still quite steep. There is a much higher probability that an ERV would be lost in a lineage than independent orthologous ERV's. I am aware of a couple HERV-K insertions that seem to have been lost in the human lineage but present in the chimp and gorilla lineage (if memory serves). So, you argument is 'the odds against similar insertions points are high, so common decent is a more reasonable explanation'? Basically, yes. The probability that a shared ERV comes about by common descent is so much more probable, that both probability and parsimony require opting for that as the most likely explanation. This is even more so when dealing with a set of shared ERVs that fall into the same phylogenic pattern as other derived similarities. The chances that even one shared ERV would have arisen through independent insertions is extremely remote. That several would do so and in this pattern takes the probabilities so close to zero that it is not worth considering without extremely powerful reasons. As Method says, if one group within the clade does not share the ERV, it is far more probable that it lost the ERV than that the other members acquired it independently.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/7/2008 7:54:22 PM
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Method
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ORIGINAL: Jhud So, you argument is 'the odds against similar insertions points are high, so common decent is a more reasonable explanation'? Sure, since common descent is observed to produce this very pattern. You and your siblings (or cousins) are a perfect example.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/7/2008 11:59:56 PM
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Jhud
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Sure, since common descent is observed to produce this very pattern. You and your siblings (or cousins) are a perfect example. So a 'common descent of the gaps' argument then it is.
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/8/2008 8:05:18 PM
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Method
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ORIGINAL: Jhud So a 'common descent of the gaps' argument then it is. Not so. The results of genetic studies are consistent with what one would expect from common ancestry. It is the same concept that is used for DNA paternity tests. The only difference is that STR's (short tandem repeats) are used for paternity tests instead of ERV's, but the same methodology applies. Actually, DNA paternity tests make for a good example. Each one of us has thousands of STR's in our genomes. For a known set of STR's we may have 4 repeats for one while 8 repeats in another. The distribution of STR alleles is more or less uniform in the human population. Therefore, the number of repeats in each STR makes for an individual identifier like a social security number. If one picks enough STR's it is highly improbable (greater than 1 in 3 billion) that a child and prospective father would share these identifiers without being child and father. Are you saying that paternity tests are bad and innacurate simply because no one was there to observe the father's sperm fertilizing the mother's egg?
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/8/2008 11:20:27 PM
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Jhud
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Not so. The results of genetic studies are consistent with what one would expect from common ancestry. It is the same concept that is used for DNA paternity tests. The only difference is that STR's (short tandem repeats) are used for paternity tests instead of ERV's, but the same methodology applies. Actually, DNA paternity tests make for a good example. Each one of us has thousands of STR's in our genomes. For a known set of STR's we may have 4 repeats for one while 8 repeats in another. The distribution of STR alleles is more or less uniform in the human population. Therefore, the number of repeats in each STR makes for an individual identifier like a social security number. If one picks enough STR's it is highly improbable (greater than 1 in 3 billion) that a child and prospective father would share these identifiers without being child and father. Are you saying that paternity tests are bad and innacurate simply because no one was there to observe the father's sperm fertilizing the mother's egg? You already made the argument; because the possibility of ERVs inserting in similar locations is considered to remote to have occured by some other unknown method, evolutionists assume common descent. It's the classic 'CD of the gaps' argument.
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/8/2008 11:33:07 PM
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gluadys
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ORIGINAL: Jhud You already made the argument; because the possibility of ERVs inserting in similar locations is considered to remote to have occured by some other unknown method, evolutionists assume common descent. It's the classic 'CD of the gaps' argument. You are referring to an unknown method that for an unknown reason imitates common descent. Why reach for that when we know that common descent would produce the pattern observed without bringing unknowns into the picture? I am sure you've heard of Occam's razor.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/8/2008 11:42:17 PM
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Jhud
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You are referring to an unknown method that for an unknown reason imitates common descent. Why reach for that when we know that common descent would produce the pattern observed without bringing unknowns into the picture? I am sure you've heard of Occam's razor. Common descent is not a method.
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/9/2008 12:42:55 AM
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gluadys
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ORIGINAL: Jhud quote:
You are referring to an unknown method that for an unknown reason imitates common descent. Why reach for that when we know that common descent would produce the pattern observed without bringing unknowns into the picture? I am sure you've heard of Occam's razor. Common descent is not a method. Irrelevant. We know what sort of genetic pattern will be the result of common descent and why that is the pattern associated with common descent. We also observe that pattern in actual species genomes. Any unknown method, to be considered at all, would have to produce the same observed pattern. Since it is a pattern with a known cause, why introduce an unknown imitator?
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/9/2008 10:59:44 AM
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Jhud
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rrelevant. We know what sort of genetic pattern will be the result of common descent and why that is the pattern associated with common descent. We also observe that pattern in actual species genomes. Any unknown method, to be considered at all, would have to produce the same observed pattern. Since it is a pattern with a known cause, why introduce an unknown imitator? The genetic pattern is not the 'result of common descent' - common descent is a result. A genetic pattern might be evidence for common descent, but it's not the result of common descent - common descent would be the result of generation of organisms enduring slight genetic changes over a period of millions of generations leading to the all the sorts of organisms that ever existed and currently exist. The mechanisms that allow for this are what are in question - if they don't work, then common descent as evolutionist understand it could not have occurred, whatever the activity of ERVs.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/9/2008 12:45:14 PM
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gluadys
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ORIGINAL: Jhud quote:
rrelevant. We know what sort of genetic pattern will be the result of common descent and why that is the pattern associated with common descent. We also observe that pattern in actual species genomes. Any unknown method, to be considered at all, would have to produce the same observed pattern. Since it is a pattern with a known cause, why introduce an unknown imitator? The genetic pattern is not the 'result of common descent' - common descent is a result. A genetic pattern might be evidence for common descent, but it's not the result of common descent - common descent would be the result of generation of organisms enduring slight genetic changes over a period of millions of generations leading to the all the sorts of organisms that ever existed and currently exist. The mechanisms that allow for this are what are in question - if they don't work, then common descent as evolutionist understand it could not have occurred, whatever the activity of ERVs. Wow, I've never seen anything so backward in my life. Usually you are pretty coherent, but this is ridiculous. My siblings and I share a common genetic pattern because we have common ancestors. Those common ancestors are not the result of our genetic patterns. The fact that we share certain unique derived characters is indeed a result of our common descent from these ancestors. Therefore, because we know that common descent necessarily results in the shared inheritance of traits, the observation of such a pattern where ancestry is unknown is a legitimate reason to infer common ancestry as the source of the pattern. Common descent from a common ancestor is a known producer of shared inheritable traits in the unique pattern of a nested hierarchy. And the mechanisms that allow for this are very well known. Imperfect replication of DNA. Reproduction, both sexual and asexual. Natural selection and speciation.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/9/2008 12:52:28 PM
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Jhud
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Wow, I've never seen anything so backward in my life. Usually you are pretty coherent, but this is ridiculous. My siblings and I share a common genetic pattern because we have common ancestors. Those common ancestors are not the result of our genetic patterns. The fact that we share certain unique derived characters is indeed a result of our common descent from these ancestors. Therefore, because we know that common descent necessarily results in the shared inheritance of traits, the observation of such a pattern where ancestry is unknown is a legitimate reason to infer common ancestry as the source of the pattern. Common descent from a common ancestor is a known producer of shared inheritable traits in the unique pattern of a nested hierarchy. And the mechanisms that allow for this are very well known. Imperfect replication of DNA. Reproduction, both sexual and asexual. Natural selection and speciation. Common descdent is neither the cause nor mechanism of you or your ancestors, it is the description of your relationship, which was my simple point.
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/9/2008 1:16:48 PM
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gluadys
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ORIGINAL: Jhud Common descdent is neither the cause nor mechanism of you or your ancestors, it is the description of your relationship, which was my simple point. That relationship is defined by inheritance via reproduction. Reproduction is a mechanism of inheritance. Inheritance of similar genetic material in a particular pattern from a common ancestor is what common descent is about. It seems to me you are just playing with semantics here.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/9/2008 1:31:19 PM
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Jhud
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That relationship is defined by inheritance via reproduction. Reproduction is a mechanism of inheritance. Inheritance of similar genetic material in a particular pattern from a common ancestor is what common descent is about. It seems to me you are just playing with semantics here. No, I am simply trying to clarify that common descent is neither a method nor mechanism.
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/9/2008 3:44:15 PM
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gluadys
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ORIGINAL: Jhud quote:
That relationship is defined by inheritance via reproduction. Reproduction is a mechanism of inheritance. Inheritance of similar genetic material in a particular pattern from a common ancestor is what common descent is about. It seems to me you are just playing with semantics here. No, I am simply trying to clarify that common descent is neither a method nor mechanism. Well common descent is nothing without reproduction and reproduction is certainly a mechanism for transferring genetic information from parent to offspring. So I don't know what the purpose of your clarification is. It is still splitting hairs as far as I can see.
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RE: genetic evidence against evolution - 6/9/2008 5:12:43 PM
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Jhud
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Well common descent is nothing without reproduction and reproduction is certainly a mechanism for transferring genetic information from parent to offspring. So I don't know what the purpose of your clarification is. It is still splitting hairs as far as I can see. Science needs to be precise.
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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