You assume here that divergence is based on mutations. It is not in a great majority of the cases. Divergence is rather exhibited by selection pressures.
Actually, you are still overlooking isolation and the restriction/absence of gene flow. As long as you have a single population, mutations alone simply increase variability in the species.
But split the population into two isolated groups, and the mutations that occur and are preserved in each group will be a different set of mutations. This introduces a measure of divergence.
Divergence will be re-inforced by differing selective pressures on the two groups.
It is from a geneticist standpoint. This is what Hardy-Weinberg is based on among others.
Ah, that is what you are getting at. I hadn't heard it called "stasis" before. Such stasis occurs when there is little or no selective pressure or when the selective pressure is in favour of the status quo. After all, when a species is well adapted to its niche, any change is more likely to be negative than positive.
And if you look at that, you find yourself looking a varietal differences: not new species.
Yes, if a butterfly population changes from 40% with blue wings to 60% with blue wings over 5 generations, we have evolution on a small scale within the species, but not likely speciation.
Speciation requires that 1) the population be divided into two or more relatively isolated groups, 2) many such changes occurring in many traits, and 3) the development of intrinsic isolating factors that discourage/prevent interbreeding even when there is opportunity to do so.
If these factors result in two (or more) populations which 1) are genetically different from each other and 2) do not interbreed successfully when given the opportunity to do so, would you not agree that speciation has occurred?
Here you assume that mutations (=chemical "mutilations") are reproduced. The majority will never be reproduced, because they can't be "read".
I am not sure what you are saying here. Are you saying that most mutations will be caught and corrected before the cell reproduces? That is true enough.
Furthermore, uncorrected mutations often produce cell death and/or problems with embryological development that lead to spontaneous abortion.
Obviously such mutations have no impact on the evolution of a species. Mutations that appear in a viable organism tend not to have a major effect, positive or negative, on the organism. That is why most mutations are rated "neutral" in respect to fitness.
But the genetic re-production apparatus, makes sure that the alleles are inherited (=copied and transferred). Even if they are not "phenotypically" expressed.
True. But since the phenotype is an expression of the underlying genotype, a change in the ratio in which the phenotypes occurs signals an accompanying change in the ratio of the alleles.
Check out this post in which I have looked at the mathematics of phenotype and genotype change.
http://foru.ms/showpost.php?p=14449626&postcount=5
It is part of a debate with a creationist I had some time ago. The whole thread is here:
http://www.christianforums.com/t1368403-natural-selection-and-genetics.html
Remember that change in ratio (or the frequency at which an allele appears in the gene pool) is the definition of evolution.
Very often I think we focus too much on mutations, and especially on whether they are beneficial or harmful. This draws attention to the host organism. But evolution is not what happens to individual organisms. It is about population level changes: about which genomes are reproduced most frequently and which tend to disappear. One really needs to think in terms of the statistics of the gene pool above all else.