Well, there is the first fundamental flaw. Evolution does not require cross-fertilization.
If you're going to quote me, please finish my sentences...
I SAID breeding and mutations. The cross-fertilisation was in brackets for a reason - namely that breeding permits cross-fertilisation. Anyhow, I thoroughly disagree with your statement as it stands.
Evolution
does require cross fertilisation - not because it needs it to exist, but it needs it to be
effective. Mutations are incredibily dangerous factors if there isn't enough junk in the code to make sure that the probability of a mutation being dangerous is very small. This is why any GA/GP program with a high mutation application invariably develops a large amount of junk. This proportion of junk can be directly related as a function to the porportion of mutation application versus 'cross-over' (aka breeding) application.
Obviously, true breeding in nature is more complicated than that because the breeding operation itself "knows" about the status quo in the DNA and actually tries to reproduce that. It seeks to avoid mutations rather than to produce them. Mutations are accidental - not part of the design. This makes sense of course... if the design was for mutations to be avoided.
No, this is not the hypothesis of evolution. You are talking about the independent inheritance of genes as discovered by Mendel.
Right. Since evolution isn't about producing new combinations of 'things' ie: one more rib, one more limb, a few more eyes... what IS it about?
There is a genetic basis to evolution--of course--but you do not seem to be clear on what it is.
Do you care to enlighten me then?
What does "distribution of alleles" mean to you?
The natural variation in the features common to a characteristic (eg: eye colour, skin colour, etc). Changing these do not produce new 'sub-species' but information CAN be removed from the population unless reintroduced by accidental mutation.
Okay... so I used a bad example of colour being a feature in my frog example.
Yes, the definition of evolution has changed in the last 1000 years. Most evolutionary theories up to the 19th century were "great chain of being" theories which were more about the evolution of the soul than of species.
Then you get Lamark's theory of evolution via the inheritance of acquired characteristics.
Neither of these is applicable to today's definition.
Then in 1859 Darwin publishes his thesis of evolution of species via natural selection. This is still a bedrock of evolution. In the 1930's the neo-Darwinian definition which incorporates the insights of genetics into natural selection was created and that is the one still in use today.
Fine.... that wasn't quite what I was meaning... but okay. Thanks.
I understood that the theory of evolution was still in a process of equilibrium...
Neither of these pieces of information is necessary to the theory of evolution. They will be essential to any theory of abiogenesis when one is formed.
Yup I'm sure that rocks do leap up and start dancing somewhere...
Evolution does not happen by chance. You are confusing one aspect of the mechanism of evolution (mutations) with evolution itself.
*Bursts out laughing*
Thank you!!! You've made my day. What exactly is the 'non-chance' bit of evolution since this contradicts every part of the theory of evolution I've read so far?
If I'm confusing the mechanics with evolution, and evolution needs the mechanics to exist I'm guessing pure chaos is actually purely deterministic and therefore not chaotic at all...
What does co-evolution mean to you?
Two things 'adapting' together because their fitness function indirectly influences each other rather than direct competition because of conflicting fitness functions...
I agree. Adaptation is not evolution. But evolution enables adaptation. IOW there is no adaptation without evolution.
You've got it the wrong way round. Evolution does not enable adaptation. Adaptation
might enable evolution but I shall just end with various quotes and then leave this thread completely... and I do mean it this time lol.
Some quotes. I had to quote this one since I found it.... For all the theistic evolutionists
Oh but of course the story of Adam and Eve was only ever symbolic, wasnt it? Symbolic?! Jesus had himself tortured and executed for a symbolic sin by a non-existent individual. Nobody not brought up in the faith could reach any verdict other than barking mad!
- Richard Dawkins,
The root of all evil? (broadcast on Channel 4, 16 January 2006)
The interpretation of evolution is in a state of upheaval: the rapid advancement of Molecular Biology has led into question many of the tenets of Darwinism and neo-Darwinism which, although valuable approaches at the time they were formulated, never fulfilled the criteria demanded by real scientific theories
In the authors opinion, no real theory of evolution can be formulated at present.
Evolution Without Selection: FORM AND FUNCTION BY AUTOEVOLUTION by
A. LIMA-DE-FARIA
http://creationontheweb.com/content/view/1160/105/
"Evolution has been observed. It's just that it hasn't been observed while it's happening. ... It is rather like a detective coming on a murder after the scene
the detective hasn't actually seen the murder take place, of course. But what you do see is a massive clue ... Huge quantities of circumstantial evidence. It might as well be spelled out in words of English."
- Richard Dawkins
The first sentences are correct...
As for the detective coming on the murder scene, it is ironic that the detective in this case views the circumstantial evidence and
refuses to consider any alternatives other than ideas the detective already has. This detective would look at a well laid out crime scene destined to point to a particular antagonist and would refuse to consider that the crime scene had been set up. A rather pathetic detective wouldn't you think??
Anyway, I'm off now... have fun guys.