Who said I was trying to falsify evolution? You jump to yet another conclusion without a clue.
Then what is your point?
No, you are grasping at straws.
If it were straw-grasping you'd be able to tell us all why positive feedback is implausible.
Like I have told you repeatedly, most mutations are selectively neutral. That vast majority of the one strong enough to trigger selection are deleterious. Only in very remote circumstances do mutations have a selective advantage and the rarest of mutations are the one that are fixed.
Yes, you've told us that repeatedly, but you've not provided evidence ever.
Yes they do but I don't expect you to know what a reading frame is anyhow.
Code:
Before:
123123123123123123
ACGTACTTACAAGCGTAC
After:
123123123123123123
ACGTACT[B]G[/B]ACAAGCGTAC
The reading frame remains the same. Because it's a
substitution. Deletions and insertions cause frameshifts, mark. But then, you of course know this, since you're lecturing me about my knowledge of biology!
<staff edit>
What you should be looking for is a molecular mechanism, not a rhetorical device.
So - you don't have a molecular mechanism? Then you "don't know." There, was that so hard? No. Now let those of us interested in changing that to "I do know" get on with it.
A triplet codon determines the amino acid.
But, as I said, a triplet codon is not
identical with the amino acid it codes for.
Keep it up, your making this easy.
Says mark, who doesn't know what causes a frameshift.
It also depends on an amino acid sequence that will produce a useful protein.
Of course, that was implicit in my answer - amino acid sequence determines the location of functional groups.
That is not what would have had to happen, you would need highly conserved genes involved in neural functions to undergo a major overhaul.
You say that without evidence. As it happens, there were changes in genetics, but it turns out that they were allowed by a change in diet.
Your chasing the wind here but be my guest.
Did you do the search? Because someone's already done the
research, and it's there for you to find. A change in diet accounts for the change in mutation rate, because it allowed those mutations to be beneficial.
Your assuming that they occurred, had a beneficial affect on the brain and then were fixed.
Of course they occurred - we can see them right there in the genome. What mechanism do you propose got them there?
Type 'mutations affecting the human brain' in Pub Med and educate yourself.
Why would I want to search for something that is clearly going to turn up results related to genetic diseases affecting the brain?
Then you should know that diet does not change the genetic code affecting the human brain.
I'm sick and tired of telling you, so here it is for the last time: I never suggested that. <staff edit>
I notice you didn't bother to quote cite or link anything remotely related. By the way, of course I read it. <staff edit>
That should do it, you made no real points and beat this diet thing to death. Get some new material. Hey! I have an idea, why don't you try reading the scientific literature before you start pontificating about it.
You want me to read some literature? How about
these chaps?