PsychoSarah
Chaotic Neutral
Negatory, natural selection can result in similar genes, perhaps, but your argument is founded on the idea that entirely identical sequences could arise in analogous locations within separate lineages so frequently as to give the illusion that separate lineages are actually related. And we have seen many instances of very similar phenotypes arising from very different genes, so your conclusion that natural selection could reasonably be expected to result in consistently identical genes in separate lineages falls flat.i actually assume (for the sake of the argument) that you are right at every point in your claims. some of your points may be actually true. but the problem is that i need more data to confirm (data that i dont think we have) this so i just skip this and focus on the main point. and the main point is that if we consider the natural selection then the whole calculaion is meaningless.
If you can't even demonstrate that 100 identical base pairs can arise in separate lineages, you can't even begin to consider convergent genes to be a reliable explanation for such widespread genetic similarity among all mammals. So, either admit that there is no evidence supporting your position, or actually find an example of 100 identical base pairs arising in separate lineages. Not amino acids, not sprinkled throughout the genome, 100 identical base pairs in a row.
Some of my points MAY be true? That's not something you can leave wishy washy; either openly agree or disagree.
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