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You have that backwards, I have focused almost exclusively on the evidence while you have talked in short pedantic quips.
A statement supported exclusively upon the credibility of the poster which remains to be established.
That is an obvious distortion, I said that mutations are no explanation at all. Eating protein has absolutely nothing to do with it. At best eating meat could be an effect of an adaptive trait being expressed but can in no way be considered a cause of adaptive evolution. The amino acid sequence of the protein coding genes determines the protein product, not the other way around.
The absurdity of your statements are not only evident, they are obvious.
Since this was published the known divergence has grown by 5X:
When I look at the human brain, I see workmanship and intelligent design. How did Evolution design male and female brains? How could Evolution differeniate between lots of testosterone in one brain and estrogen in another?
I do not see how Evolution could design a human brain.Especially when you examine the difference between male and female brain chemicals.
It's been quite awhile since I've looked at this stuff, so I'd have to re-read up on it (which I don't have time for now) to give you an answer.
The only thing I can venture from memory is that the rate the increase in divergence has largely been the result of identification of large indels which account for 1/10 the rate of single substitutions in terms of actual mutation events.
Therefore, I would assume the rate (in terms of events) of mutations wouldn't need increase all that much.
You provide no evidence for why the gene in question could not have changed randomly.
Sure. But you didn't understand, regardless of his credibility. I trust you do now, and are not still under the misconception that he was saying that ingesting protein could effect genetic changes?
You don't even define the problem and I have ample source material.
No, it's not an obvious distortion - you still seem to think that I/we think that eating protein affects your genes. That isn't true. Eating just (apparently) can cause an increase in brain-size without any genetic change.
No - the absurdity of your strawman is obvious.
It means no less and no more than that purifying selection was pretty hard on it for 400 million years. So what?
Divergence goes from 1.33% to 6% and you don't think the mutation events increased?
Depends on what you are actually measuring. From what I remember of the chimp genome paper, the number of indels accounted for significantly more divergence in terms of nucleotides, but on a mutation event basis, they were one tenth as common as point mutations.
Which raises a point, what are those rates quoted actually measuring? I know, it's a mutation rate, but what are the units of expression? Without knowing more details, I can't really comment further (I suppose I could look up the paper when I have time).
So basically if you give a species enough time, they are bound to become superior.If I leave my car in the snow for years, I do not think it will look like a better car in the spring.
The fact that it only allowed 2 substitutions in 400 million years doesn't mean anything to you?
I don't know what he thinks for sure but I know for a fact that ingesting protein has nothing to do with this.
That was a quote from me and it remains true.
It cannot and does not have anything to do with brain size.
You keep talking in circles and have no interest in the detailed scientific research introduced into the discussion. The facts speak for themself and you have not bothered to address a single one.
Of course it means something, but it doesn't necessitate that it then had only 2 substitutions in the next 400 million years. As you no doubt know, mutations are random, and selection pressure can change.
It also seems likely that there could have been some positive feedback going on - once one mutation becomes fixed, we move toward an ecological niche wherein more brain mutations are more advantageous.
If extra protein gives us a bigger brain without affecting our genes, it has everything to do with this.
All your sources seem to contradict you.
Why not? The size of our muscles and the rest of our body depends on more than just our genes.
What facts have you raised? Mutation rates? You have not established that they must be fixed, so there's nothing to address.
Haven't you been shown the calculations demonstrating that it could have happened?2 substitutions in in 400 million years and the 2 million years ago random chance produced 18. One thing is obvious, this could not happen by random but I don't expect you to see it since you don't look.
This reads like gibberish. Are you saying that "positive feedback, fixation, and nucleotide substitutions" cause a frameshift mutation in every case?You are assuming positive feedback, fixation and nucleotide substitutions that produce a functional amino acid sequence without causing a frameshift. This happens no where in nature and yet you assume it unconditionally simply because the alternative is unappealing to you.
Where do you think the amino acids used to synthesize proteins come from? Can you even name the nine essential amino acids?Again you are making a fundamental mistake due to a lack of knowledge. Nucleotide sequences join together in triplet codons, these codons are the amino acid sequence. In the protein coding genes the way they fold together determines the three dimensional structure of the parts of the cell. Protein ingested through meat has nothing to do with the size and complexity of the brain. You haven't gotten anything right yet so the fact that you made another fundamental error does not surprise me in the slightest.
Evidence or retract. Immediately.Beneficial effects from mutations are very rare and tend to be temporary. They certainly are not producing adaptive traits on an evolutionary scale in vital organs.
"Basic biology" like essential amino acids?I have spoken in passing about one regulatory gene that would require 18 substitutions in a gene 118 nucleotides long. They must have been fixed because they are fixed. The only reason there is nothing to address is because you did not bother to learn basic biology before you jump on the bandwagon.
2 substitutions in in 400 million years and the 2 million years ago random chance produced 18. One thing is obvious, this could not happen by random but I don't expect you to see it since you don't look.
You are assuming positive feedback
fixation
and nucleotide substitutions that produce a functional amino acid sequence without causing a frameshift.
This happens no where in nature and yet you assume it unconditionally simply because the alternative is unappealing to you.
Again you are making a fundamental mistake due to a lack of knowledge. Nucleotide sequences join together in triplet codons, these codons are the amino acid sequence.
In the protein coding genes the way they fold together determines the three dimensional structure of the parts of the cell.
Protein ingested through meat has nothing to do with the size and complexity of the brain.
You haven't gotten anything right yet so the fact that you made another fundamental error does not surprise me in the slightest.
As if you actually read them.
Diet can be a factor in certain traits but what happens is genes are expressed differently, sometimes turned on and off by prions but not altered on an amino acid sequence level.
When you are talking about random mutations you are talking about an error in the DNA replication process that most often does nothing at all. In those rare instances that they have a strong enough effect to be acted upon by selection it's deleterious the vast majority of the time.
Beneficial effects from mutations are very rare and tend to be temporary.
I have spoken in passing about one regulatory gene that would require 18 substitutions in a gene 118 nucleotides long. They must have been fixed because they are fixed. The only reason there is nothing to address is because you did not bother to learn basic biology before you jump on the bandwagon.
No, it's not as simple. A big indel may be one mutation but many nucleotides. Mutation rates ought to measure the rate at which events occur, because identifying a rare large insertion as a hundred much more frequent single base insertions makes no sense whatsoever. Of course, it's kinda hard to be sure if that large indel is one event or not... but there's still not much point in breaking it up into many smaller ones.Nucleotides, that is what they are measuring. Here is the deal, when the nucleotide divergence increases from 1.33% to 6% how does the mutation rate change? It's as simple as that.
The most frustrating part of it is that you have convinced yourself that you have a firm grasp on what you're talking about. People who think they are experts when in fact they display glaring errors that would embarass a first year undergrad on their first day generally refuse to be told any different.
Stop thinking you actually know what you're talking about in this context. You don't. And it is frustrating to see legitimate scientific terminology used in order to further butcher science.
No, that's not obvious at all. Nor does a non-random cause falsify evolution in any way.
No, I am positing positive feedback as a possible cause.
As you know, fixation happens rapidly to advantageous mutations. If that fixation allows further advantageous mutations, or opens up an ecological niche with strong selective pressure for a big brain, then we have positive feedback.
Substitutions do not produce frameshifts.
Which do I assume? None of them. I posit the first as a possible explanation. It is a fairly plausible explanation, in fact. I accept the second because of observed facts, as with the third.
I don't know what the alternative you're suggesting actually is. The only true alternatives are "I don't know" or "it happened randomly." I don't mind either of those, but it's nonetheless useful to think about explanations.
Actually, it appears you have the lack of knowledge. The codons are not the amino acid sequence; the codons (having been transcribed and translated) code for the amino acid sequence. I know all of this and, apparently, you don't.
Whose lack of knowledge?
The protein folding (determined by the location of functional groups available for hydrogen bonding, disulphide bridges and so on) determines the shape of the protein.
How do you know? Have you done the study, or looked for them? No. This is the null hypothesis, sure, but you don't have evidence to discount it.
You have ignored everything I've said on this topic so far, it seems. I KNOW HOW PROTEIN SYNTHESIS WORKS. But you don't seem to understand that diet can affect the body without affecting the genome! According to your line of thought, the only way our muscles will shrink is if our genome changes! Not so - if we don't eat, our body removes protein from the muscles to metabolise.
A quick google for "protein diet brain" will reveal a few studies on the topic. It turns out that we can't evolve a bigger brain if we don't have adequate food supplies because having a big brain requires a lot of energy and a lot of protein.
So it is not that ingesting protein changes our genome as you are still falsely accusing me of saying but that having more food allows these 18 new mutations to be beneficial because they don't just waste energy we don't have.
Please - get over yourself. I know what I'm talking about; I'm not exactly uneducated in biology - certainly I know the ins and outs of transcription and translation. In fact, the enzyme reverse transcriptase does exactly what you claim is impossible - affects the genome. Of course it's not relevant, but it doesn't surprise me in the least that you don't know about it.
So please stop misrepresenting my(our) arguments and start addressing them: Improved diet causes increased brain size. Not by directly affecting the genome.
Hah! You clearly didn't read the one from which you stole that image comparing human and chimpanzee brains, which discussed the evolution of the former from something resembling the latter!
Haven't you been shown the calculations demonstrating that it could have happened?
This reads like gibberish. Are you saying that "positive feedback, fixation, and nucleotide substitutions" cause a frameshift mutation in every case?
Where do you think the amino acids used to synthesize proteins come from? Can you even name the nine essential amino acids?
Evidence or retract. Immediately.
"Basic biology" like essential amino acids?