Your comment would make Dunning & Kruger proud. I wasn't going to say any more, but it deserves a closer look...But I think I have debated things so there is obviously a difference in opinion. For example the post you used Post #20. You made a point about how I had misunderstood the paper or the whole EES and posted a snippet to support this. But ironically it was you who misunderstood it. You thought the supporters of SET had already incorporated the EES forces to show how there was no issue.
But you misunderstood the paper. It was only pointing out the position of how the SET thinks they have incorporated the EES forces and not that they really had. I was just pointing out to you this misunderstanding. I had to repeat this as you still didn't get what the paper was actually about. If anything there is probably a misunderstanding on both sides.
1. My point in #20 was that "you seem to misunderstand the difference between the EES and the SET" not that you had misunderstood the paper or the whole EES - but it's clear that you have misunderstood the paper (see 2 & 3 below).
2. I did not think "the supporters of SET had already incorporated the EES forces to show how there was no issue". The argument for EES explicitly acknowledges that the SET incorporates the same 'forces', but argues it does so "in a way that undermines their significance".
Please try to avoid telling people what they do or do not think - if you want to know, ask.
3. The paper you linked to (in #13) and that my quote (in #20) was pulled from is in two parts; one is a call for the adoption of EES by Kevin Laland and colleagues, the other is an argument that an EES is not necessary by Gregory A. Wray, Hopi E. Hoekstra and colleagues. I quoted from the latter.
It was not "only pointing out the position of how the SET thinks they have incorporated the EES forces". That you would say that suggests you have misunderstood the debate itself.
Lol! No, I was referring to my August 2014 post that I quoted from in #107.I'm not sure what you are saying. Are you saying you said the same thing about yourself years ago?
"Steve, have you considered whether long rambling stream-of-consciousness screeds strewn with semantic quibbles are really the best way to get your point across?
Why not organize your thoughts and put a decent argument together?
Why not organize your thoughts and put a decent argument together?
Posting a lot of commentary doesn't show you understand the papers, it just shows you posted a lot of commentary.I think this is a bit of an unfair conclusion. I have posted large sections of papers and given commentary. In fact, my own personal commentary probably outnumbers the quotes from papers. So I think this shows I understand the papers pretty well.
We've explained what the debate between SET & EES is about and how that is different from what you have posted.I cannot see how you have really explained how I have misunderstood things.
They did give a reasonable summary of the debate, but your condensation of it was meaningless.Yes, I agree it is more complex than perhaps trying to cover everything with a general summation. But I was only going off the papers where they were summarizing what the differences were in the intros and conclusion sections. I felt they gave a good overall outline. I guess the authors did as well otherwise why would they write that.
To make any interesting comment about the SET & EES debate, you really need to understand the issues involved and how fit into the wider picture of evolutionary biology. It's not enough to know the names of the contested ideas and their superficial descriptions in opinion articles, you need to understand them and their place in evolution. Your comments here have shown that you seem to struggle with natural selection, let alone developmental plasticity and bias, niche construction, inclusive heredity, extra-genetic inheritance, etc.
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