how does science know the difference between a HGT gene and an "evolved" gene?
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Do you mean "mutated", rather than "evolved"? Genes don't evolve. Populations evolve.
this doesn't really answer the question.Do you mean "mutated", rather than "evolved"? Genes don't evolve. Populations evolve.
yes, that's essentially the question i am asking.What do you understand the difference between a mutated gene and one that's been subject to horizontal transfer to be?
So you don't believe that there is any difference between a gene which has mutated and a gene which has been subject to horizontal transfer? Okay. Why do you believe that "science" says that there is?yes, that's essentially the question i am asking.
please don't bother responding to any more of my posts.So you don't believe that there is any difference between a gene which has mutated and a gene which has been subject to horizontal transfer? Okay.
please don't bother responding to any more of my posts.
Do you mean "mutated", rather than "evolved"? Genes don't evolve. Populations evolve.
So you don't believe that there is any difference between a gene which has mutated and a gene which has been subject to horizontal transfer? Okay. Why do you believe that "science" says that there is?
I think you cleaves hairs now or making a remark at the wrong issue. While a genes in an individual normally cannot evolve (or rarely evolves - if they do you might have cancer) they have still been exposed to evolutionary processes before they ended up in an indidual, so it is correct to say "evolved gene". But then again it is implicit understood that every single gene that exists has evolved so there is nothing new added by saying an "evolved gene".
This is a very important distinction
And I explained why it is so. Issue closed. You are shooting yourself in the foot.
It is also important to understand that not all scientist are biologist with a specialization in genetics and therefore might not have a single clue to what HGT even is.
Which make me wonder why you are so keen on that everyone understand what 'evolve' means to the last letter[...]
[...] and dot but avoided to correct all the "very important distinctions"?
If there is to be a discussion about scientific issues, then everybody involved in the discussion should a) use the correct terminology, and b) understand what that terminology means.
That is your oppion as net police yet.
But would you agree that answering the questions someone has instead of setting them up for straw man is just as appropriate as well?