Saviourmachine said:
This was what I was thinking: if the environment is changing, theres a bigger chance that a beneficial mutation will spread fast through the population. When there occurs a environment shift, the variation in the population comes more into play (and with variation mutation).
The probability of a mutation being fixed is the same whether the environment is changing or not. It's just that, if the environment is changing, a mutation giving a change in form will be the one selected since that change in form will fit the new environment. When the environment is stable, most mutations will move the population off the fitness peak and are therefore not advantageous.
So, the definition of Information is still not correct. Would you like to give me a definition you like? I mean with Information the amount of information bearers that can be decoded from a DNA string. That bearer can be a biological catalysator, a biological clock, a biological counter and so on, it doesnt matter for me.
I don't think there is
any definition of information that can be applied to the subject. All our intuitive notions of "information" fail here. The problem is that the DNA codes for an individual organism and that organism goes thru a developmental process that amplifies what is in the DNA in ways that don't allow a linear correlation from DNA to individual. And it is the "complexity" of the organism on which we base our ideas of "information", with the more "complex" individual representing more information.
I know that isn't a satisfactory answer, especially since anti-evolutionists claim that evolution can't provide the necessary "information", but it is going to have to do. Any attempt I have seen to define "information" in an evolutionary sense has failed.
Speed
Tooth fairy, nice example! If you want to define information in the terms I describe, I can talk about speed. (Ive only to convince you that there is some kind of information thats increasing with time).
Again, that doesn't work. If you look at the speed an enzyme catalyzes a reaction, is that "information"? When a reaction proceeds "slowly" but very specifically, is that more or less information than a non-specific enzyme that catalyzes a reaction that proceeds faster?
What do you think about the question on the end, lucaspa? Because you see so much counterexamples, I think this question should help you answer me conveniently.
When hte environment shifts and what was an essential enzyme is no longer essential, what we see is not a "loss of information" but rather an addition of information. What happens is that a mutation appears that shuts the gene off. This is a positive action, not a negative one. And because the individual with the mutation saves the energy that would go into making and maintaining the enzyme (or structure), that positive action is selected for.
My argument
Thats correct. With insertion and deletion in terms of information bearers that can be decoded from a DNA string.
You and Arikay are talking apples and oranges. Insertion and deletion
mutations simply scramble the gene and give you a different protein. What you are talking about is deletion of an enzyme or a feature, such as teeth in birds or leg bones in whales.
As I say, what we see at the detailed genomic level is not deletion, but addition of a step that says "keep this gene turned off".
Corruptions of old information is more likely
Yes, without any proof out of practice, I based that on stochastics. Information out of the environment can be pushed in an organism by natural selection in adding new or deleting/corrupting old information. When speaking about a random process that handles these additions of new information and corruptions of old information, I think the last option is easier for her. For you, field men, its maybe utter nonsence, but for me it sounds very reasonable.
Usually, when you screw with a sentence, you end up corrupting that sentence and losing meaning. This is what you are thinking of. However, that is in terms of the
individual sentence. Instead, look at
population of sentences, each having some form of variation. Then you select only those sentences that have meaning. It's tough on the individual sentence, but for the
population you end up increasing information.
You are continuing to confuse what happens in an individual with what happens to a population. Evolution is what happens to
populations.
Another question
Your speaking about deleting and adding a single base with new information as a result. Im speaking about corrupting old information.
Same thing. Most of the time, for the
individual, adding or deleting a single base will corrupt the old information. But those individuals die! Tough on the individual, but it does remove the corrupted information from the
population. When the insertion or deletion results in new information, natural selection guarantees that this new information will become part of the
population.
The big question
This is a nice example of added information. What Im stating is that its for me more assumable that a random proces would destroy the old genes that code for a tail then creating new genes. The big question is: why doesnt that happen?
It does. If you look at the population, the random process does, in some individuals, destroy the old genes for a tail. Spina bifida babies have genes for forming a brain destroyed. But what happens to those spina bifida babies, especially in the absence of modern medical care? They
die and don't have babies of their own. So, for the
population, that corruption doesn't count.
Let's try another example. You make 100 copies of the Windows XP CD. In one of them, the information is corrupted and the CD won't work. What do you do with it? You throw it away! And then make the next copies from one of the copies that was fine.