This article may help to explain why beneficial mutations have little to do with explaining macroevolution.
http://www.trueorigin.org/bacteria01.asp
http://www.trueorigin.org/bacteria01.asp
ThePhy said:Bob b, do you not agree with Jobeth in her original absolute statement that there are no beneficial mutations?
In other words, you are willing to state that in fact there are beneficial mutations?
I simply cannot find the words to express how ironic this is. You mentioned this in another thread. I literally laughed out loud when I read this.BTW do you think that people failed to notice that you are were afraid to comment on the article I posted? (the old "when in trouble change the subject" tactic)
You agree with which part of what she said? Her first sentence was an absolute declaration, with no provisions. Her second is a specific case. Do you support her first sentence or not?This is the way Jobeth put it: "All mutations are bad for the organism that has them. You may have been told otherwise, but people with sickle-cell anemia are very sick people."
I tend to agree with what she said.
Before posting my response to your OP, I did a bit of checking on the web to confirm something that I felt I already knew. There are a substantial number of Christian creationists who take Jobeth’s initial absolutist stance – denying that mutations are ever truly beneficial. If that was your stance, then the article you linked to would be superfluous – discussing something you don’t even believe exists. I now take it that your recommending that article to us implicitly admits that beneficial mutations are a fact. That’s a good start.BTW do you think that people failed to notice that you are were afraid to comment on the article I posted? (the old "when in trouble change the subject" tactic)
ThePhy said:You agree with which part of what she said? Her first sentence was an absolute declaration, with no provisions. Her second is a specific case. Do you support her first sentence or not? Before posting my response to your OP, I did a bit of checking on the web to confirm something that I felt I already knew. There are a substantial number of Christian creationists who take Jobeth’s initial absolutist stance – denying that mutations are ever truly beneficial. If that was your stance, then the article you linked to would be superfluous – discussing something you don’t even believe exists. I now take it that your recommending that article to us implicitly admits that beneficial mutations are a fact. That’s a good start.
Are you this wishy-washy in your theological teachings? How can you “tend to agree that ALL mutations are bad …” and then in the next sentence say without qualification that “some mutations may benefit the organism”?I said I tended to agree that all mutations are bad for the organism.
I have also said that some mutations may benefit the organism.
Yeah, that is for sure. Please massacre logic for us again and reconcile them. Remember, you need to not violate what you tend to agree on, but you also need to without hesitation support the some mutations are the good kind.Your problem seems to be that you think these two statements are in conflict.
You know that the scientists’ answer to abiogenesis is “We don’t know”. That admission seems to give you some kind of pathological satisfaction, so that just like a perverted sex addict you go for it every time you see the smallest opening. Well I’m sorry, but you will have to show that you have the integrity to discuss just evolution as a subject by itself, or you can find someone else to satisfy your perversions on.What this means in practice is that mutations are not a mechanism that can transform a hypothetical primitive protocell into a human being regardless of how much time is available. Going "downhill" (deterioration) can never get one higher up.
ThePhy said:From bob b:
Are you this wishy-washy in your theological teachings? How can you “tend to agree that ALL mutations are bad …” and then in the next sentence say without qualification that “some mutations may benefit the organism”?
Yeah, that is for sure. Please massacre logic for us again and reconcile them. Remember, you need to not violate what you tend to agree on, but you also need to without hesitation support the some mutations are the good kind.
You know that the scientists’ answer to abiogenesis is “We don’t know”. That admission seems to give you some kind of pathological satisfaction, so that just like a perverted sex addict you go for it every time you see the smallest opening. Well I’m sorry, but you will have to show that you have the integrity to discuss just evolution as a subject by itself, or you can find someone else to satisfy your perversions on.
Naw, just wonder why there isn’t a single Creationist on this board with both a reasonable knowledge of the science espoused by Creationists and the integrity to discuss it honestly. I know you enjoy pushing your Creationist fecal material at us incessantly, but believe it or not, some Christians actually give more than lip service to “Thou shalt not lie.”Oh, had enough, eh?
ThePhy said:From bob b: Naw, just wonder why there isn’t a single Creationist on this board with both a reasonable knowledge of the science espoused by Creationists and the integrity to discuss it honestly. I know you enjoy pushing your Creationist fecal material at us incessantly, but believe it or not, some Christians actually give more than lip service to “Thou shalt not lie.”
We converse with you, because you are by far the most active defender of the creationist side. That in no way implies you are knowledgeable, honest, or much of an example of Christian ideals. Quite the opposite.
I really have to wonder what percentage there is in many of these exchanges. I routinely have conversations with Christians, sometimes on non-science ideas that we differ significantly on, but at the end I never come away with the pervasive feeling that I have been trying to handle deceit like I do after trying to converse honestly with you.
I don’t agree with much of what you say. But if I ever feel that I routinely have to resort to the methods you like to employ daily, then I will know that I have lost, and it will be time for me to walk away and let someone who still honors truth to take over.
I am aware this is not a technical post, but I saw exactly zero responsiveness to the points I made in my last post from you.
And your feelings towards me?
From bob b:
Quote:
I said I tended to agree that all mutations are bad for the organism.
I have also said that some mutations may benefit the organism.
Are you this wishy-washy in your theological teachings? How can you “tend to agree that ALL mutations are bad …” and then in the next sentence say without qualification that “some mutations may benefit the organism”?
Because a mutation will at some point be bad for an organism does not mean that it cannot also provide a benefit for the said organism. A given mutation can eventually cause death to an organism (and therefore be bad), but at the same time, it may provide resistance to a disease (malaria in the case of sickle cell anemia) and therefore prolong the life of a given organism, a life that, without the mutation, had the potential of being much shorter.
More importantly, I think, it protects those that are heterozygous for the SCA gene.Sickel cell anemia is a crippling painful disease. It will kill an affected individual by their 40th year. Milaria is a fatal infectious disease that kills at all ages. individuals that have SCA can live to their 30's in relatively good health in areas where milaria is endemic. They are immune to the rapid killing infection but have a genetic disorder that will kill them in middle age. SCA is a benificial mutation if one lives in milaria country.
As Mr Jack noted, sickle cell confers a heterozygote advantage to the population. Many untreated sickle cell patients will actually die early in the course of the disease.Sealeaf said:Sickel cell anemia is a crippling painful disease. It will kill an affected individual by their 40th year. Milaria is a fatal infectious disease that kills at all ages. individuals that have SCA can live to their 30's in relatively good health in areas where milaria is endemic. They are immune to the rapid killing infection but have a genetic disorder that will kill them in middle age. SCA is a benificial mutation if one lives in milaria country.
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I then mentioned the same case that Jobeth did: sickle cell anemia, which benefits the person who has it in the sense of the alternative, death, but is bad for the organism in the sense that it is a deterioration in its genome.
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There isn't such a thing as 'deterioration of the genome' in evolution.
Bob isn't an evolutionist. This is one of the major problems when discussing things with you guys -- you can't think outside the box long enough to get what we're saying.