What I am still not clear on is why you think that the chance on a large insertion would be infinitessimal, and why it would represent a 'hopeful monster' type of evolution. Why couldn't it be a copy of another part of the genome, or the result of unequal crossing over, or a number of other mechanisms through which large insertions have been hypothesized or observed to occur? I think this is the largest disconnect. You state that mechanisms that we know of could never have caused such large insertions, but I really have no idea why that would be.jnhofzinser said:I'd like to bridge the current disconnect (which is likely my fault), if possible.
Consider, please, two cases on "equivalent" divergence:
Case A: the divergence between chimpanzee and human genomes was "maximum entropy" (i.e., spread across point mutations only)
Case B: the divergence between chimpanzee and human genomes was "minimum entropy" (i.e., essentially one big substitution [=insertion/deletion])
Now it is clear that the reality as has been observed is somewhere in between these two cases.
But let's (hypothetically, now) imagine Case B. The evidence (in Case B, not in real life) is that a single mutation has caused the evolution represented by the divergence between chimpanzees and humans. How do we respond? Do we say, "sure: an insertion is a mutation, no problem" or do we say "wow! the likelihood of that mutation is infinitessimal [as it represents a 'hopeful monster' type of evolution]".
Ok, now back to reality. I am assuming (yes, assuming: this is NOT a conclusion from the paper, and I have never made such a claim) that, represented in the divergence between chimpanzee and humans there are insertions that are representative of Case B. You folks are saying "sure: an insertion is a mutation, no problem." I am saying "wow! the likelihood of that mutation is infinitessimal [as it represents a 'hopeful monster' type of evolution]"
I recognize that the disconnect might very well be due to the fact that my underlying assumption (that is, that there are Case-B insertions) may be in error. However, we do not yet have the evidence to determine this one way or the other.
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