By "slowed down" I believe Elnono means that Lenski took great pains to eliminate outside factors which might cause mutation of genes.
Hence why a representative number for the span of a human generation is required...
By "slowed down" I believe Elnono means that Lenski took great pains to eliminate outside factors which might cause mutation of genes.
I have said repeatedly that I will get to it, and I will.
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Part of proving that is going through the assumptions and criticisms you have to see if they carry any weight.
If they don't, and appear to be based on either ignorance, distortions, misapplications of established science, then it is safe to conclude it has been proven to a much greater degree than you assert.
The "tangents" as you like to call them bear directly on your case, whether you like it or not.
On a related note, the conference calls that only dimly concern me are over, and I have a project to prepare for turning in, so my time here will be very limited in the next few days.
Last edited by RandomGuy; 07-28-2011 at 03:57 PM.
By slowed down I mean the experiment removed a lot of added complexity in order to make studying easier.
The experiment has no environmental changes, and E.Coli has much fewer base pairs than humans, and thus is much less room for mutations (and selection).
You also making the incorrect assumption that a meaningful mutation couldn't have happened before 30,000 generations have gone by. Mutations are random. It's selection the mechanism by which such random hand of cards are eventually arranged in a way to accommodate the organism into it's surrounding environment.
You started complaining about dubious extrapolation, but you're doing exactly the same thing.
It doesn't matter. It's not linear. That it took Lenski 30,000 generations under his controlled environment doesn't mean it takes 30,000 generations under every environment. It can take only 1 generation with the right set of mutations.
The terms macroevolution and microevolution are inventions of Creationists to create an artifical distinction where in reality there is none.
The process of evolution, as defined by science, works the same no matter what timescales you are looking at.
Even taking that into account, evolution including speciation can and has been observed both "in the field" and in the laboratory.
The Theory of Evolution is one of the most robust scientific theories in existance, and despite being easily falsifiable it never has been, nor has any alternative scientific hypothesis ever gained any ground.
Indeed, the Theory of Evolution (by Natural Selection) as it relates to the fact of evolution is a more robust and more complete scientific theory than the Theory of Gravity as it relates to the fact of gravity. And yet, nobody seems to have a problem with the Theory of Gravity, nor do they posit the existance of "Intelligent Falling".
That's all his experiment can say... because his experiment confirmed it... any other rate conjecture outside of what he found would be mere speculation... your 1 generational 'speciation' wish would defy some pretty tough probabilities...
Again, my statement was: "the ramifications of Lenski's experiment..."
I'm pretty busy too, but I'll contend your notion that his experiment somehow slowed down the E. coli's mutative rate simply because certain factors were controlled...
Lest you accuse me of accusing you of "dishonesty"... it's more along the lines of stating that "a glass is half empty" or stating that "a glass is half full"... are both valid statements, and both could very well be supported - but they are nevertheless diametric assessments of the same picture...
So let's see what we have:
Lenski grew marked E. coli bacteria in citrate containing (citric acid) agar solutions... but continually fed them DM25 solution... hmmm... his bacteria populations were always fed something ensuring that his cultures would continually reproduce... not a given in nature.
He knew that his batches were not equipped with the plasmid aided mechanisms to deliver the citrate to the interior of the E. coli bacteria... So after his blooms confirmed that this particular constraint was finally overcome, via natural mechanisms alone... it became pretty obvious that there was a notable change...
I should note that since his cultures were rebooted every 75 days, compe iveness for 'food' wasn't a big factor preventing the growth of his cultures [granted the Cit+ strains tend to reach population density limitations that weren't previously attained by Cit- strains]...
I'll quote this from wiki:
"As of February 2010[update], the E. coli populations have been under study for over 50,000 generations, and are thought to have undergone enough spontaneous mutations that every possible single point mutation in the E. coli genome should have occurred multiple times."
How is that considered a slow mutation rate, if the entire genome has had a chance to change every single one of it's base pairs given the ulative size of the population involved...???
and
"Of the 12 populations, 4 developed defects in their ability to repair DNA, greatly increasing the rate of additional mutations in those strains. Although the bacteria in each population are thought to have generated hundreds of millions of mutations over the first 20,000 generations, Lenski has estimated that only 10 to 20 beneficial mutations achieved fixation in each population, with less than 100 total point mutations (including neutral mutations) reaching fixation in each population."
Note: Lenski's use of the word 'beneficial mutation' here is not to be confused with how we've been using it throughout this thread... he's talking about those that achieved fixation... which is another discussion altogether...
Of those mutations however, he identified two particular genes that were altered over time and that eventually allowed his cultures to utilize the citrate in his solutions...
This was the significant change that allowed his team to claim "evolution had been observed..."
FYI.... Freezing the bacteria was done only to help catalogue each generation for future studies (brilliant imo), but it shouldn't have interfered with the E. coli's ability to reproduce in it's comfy year round temperature of 37 °F (a perfect incubation temperature that each batch has had the benefit of 'growing' under)... You made it sound like the freezing process somehow slowed down their metabolism and by proxy their mutation rate...
Last edited by Phenomanul; 07-28-2011 at 06:11 PM.
I have the actual printed article... that online version (which is a revised edition BTW) doesn't include the accompanying graph from where I obtained the "40 million base pair" figure...
So exactly what are you callling me out on?
That I can't use a quoted value?
That you feel it is absolutely central to the exercise I introduced?
Like I said, feel free to use a value of 15 million base pair differences if you so desire... it doesn't make the results of my exercise any less telling...
but before you do consider this:
I know you would hate the thought of having to read that article directly from a (gasp!) apologetics website... but I would caution that before you dismiss it consider that most of the quoted researchers in the excerpt above are in fact neoDarwinian Evolutionists... not Creationists...
LOL @ my use of the '40 million base pairs' figure being interpreted by you as being a "specific" "fact"...
Had I said, say "40,123,456" <--- Now that is a specific number...
Anyways, I didn't jump to conclusions, you all did... I clearly stated 2 genes were identified as having mutated for Lenski's E. coli experiment to yield the Cit+ strain... Honestly, you want me to spell out the contextual specificity for every one of my statements...??? I know you know that I know that you know the association between base pairs, DNA segments and entire genes... we've discussed the matter countless of times... And even if I did include such specificity everywhere you all would further complain about the length of my responses [it's a no-win proposition for me to do so]... (see LnGrrR's satirical response to your other question)...
Last edited by Phenomanul; 07-28-2011 at 06:19 PM.
Well, I too will be out of the forum for several days... I'm sure I'll come back to some more the same...
I know we will never see eye-to-eye on this matter... ah.. C'est la vie!!
Come on over RAIN!!!!
-Peace
The funny thing is, I found out in my research that the 40 million base pairs figure is used to respond to the common assertion that humans and chimps share 98% or so of our DNA.
"Look we share most of our DNA, that means we are very close relatives"
The creationist rejoinder:
"Oh yeah, we differ by 40 million base pairs, so there, that's a HUGE difference"
Leaving out that 40M is 1.4% of 3.4Bn base pairs.
The point stands.
Given that the VAST majority of human DNA is junk, there is a good chance that most of that is in the junk parts.
The research done since 2001 has narrowed down the differences even more.
Most of the differences have to do with little more than *when* genes get expressed or turned on/off.
A bit longer for thumb development, a bit less for this a bit more for that.
Fascinating stuff, and precisely what one would expect from a common ancestor.
The vast amount of junk is actually one of the things that really reinforces the similarities. Few other animals seem to have as much junk in their DNA trunk as we do. That so much random noise is shared strongly implicates common ancestry.
That junk was intelligently designed!
Have a look here:
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread47371/pg12
specifically the posts by amantine back in 2004.
Least you can do is a little research in this stuff. It's a google search away.
Neat trick quoting "evolutionists". You can quote them all day long and draw all the bad conclusions you want.
More quotes does not equal better arguments, any more than longer DNA strands mean more complex organisms, one of your other rather frequent misstatements.
I could quote Einstein all day long while I am attempting to prove unicorns exist, but that doens't mean that the quotes mean what I say they do, or Einstein ever admitted believing in unicorns.
But I digress. Your attempt to deflect from your previous statements awaits.
Evolution's predictive powers in action.
Either God made our DNA to look like it used to be common with chimps on purpose to with us,
or
Evolution is true.![]()
Going back to the OP (shocking I know)
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How convenient for you.
The answer to your question is no, I do not feel it is central to the calculation. It was merely a follow up fact you threw in, that needed to be verified before I would accept it as a given.
Well, you could know everything about the organic chemistry of that sandwich, but you would never think those ingredients randomly organized themselves to form a sandwich, would you? I think you unwittingly made a good point.
At the end of the day, science can never truly answer the "why?" questions. What we "know" about the world is only models mapped to empirical phenomena.
So, going all the way back to this, I will take PM's word that the physical copy of the article he has in his office, different than the online version, supplied him with the figure. So we have fact 3 supported, in some round about way.
PM has also in some round about way stated that bacteria will mutate at a rate much faster than humans for a few reasons, on a per generation basis in any given single lineage. This will make his calculation a bit "generous". I will accede this, as I can buy his given reasons.
Now we get to the difference between "beneficial mutation" and "mutation".
The calculation here concerns "beneficial".
"Beneficial" had a very specific meaning in Lenski's experiment. It meant one thing, and one thing only. Did it increase the ability of the bacteria to reproduce on a medium with citric acid, and digest it.
If that were the ONLY "beneficial" trait that affected genes, that might mean something.
How many other "beneficial" genes were introduced that were not considered part of the experiment?
The environment determines what is "beneficial" and what isn't, for both humans and bacteria.
Evolutionary theory states that selective pressures are the other shaper of change.
Lenski very actively selected for only one trait.
Did past human environments only select for ONE trait and the genes that affected that trait?
Did the bacteria exibit other changes that would, in a more complex environment have also changed genes?
PM himself acknowledged that mutations happen all the time at VERY high rates for bacteria. Gotta get going. That is enough for today.
You are way out of your depth here.
Do I have to be an accountant, like you, to join the argument? LMFAO. Seems the ability to add and subtract makes one an expert in numerous fields. I believe in evolution. I haven't even been arguing against it, but you are probably smart enough to pick up on that.
God of the Gaps
We don't know why, therefore god did it!!
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You completely misunderstood.
Life apparently can evolve. Why?
Donnie, shut the up! You're out of your element!
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