I doubt the children bounce the way you described.
I didn't provide any details.
Sure if you only know about mutations that are harmful you might mistakenly think all mutations are harmful, or think mutation means a gentic change that produces a disease. It would be an oxymoron in that case. But not if you use mutation in the sense it is used in science,
I'll provide HOW IT IS USED in the references below.
Evidently you were unable find anything to support your claim so I'll have to do it for you:
http://www.genetics.org/content/176/3/1759.full.pdf
The above link supports your claim. I really had to dig to find it. It also illustrates the effect of "world view" on science.
Only by assuming that "vast populations will die off" as normal, can one categorize mutants as good.
a change in the genetic code, these mutations can be harmful, neutral or beneficial. You can also have mutation that have beneficial effects along with harmful side effects. Then its being selected for will depend on which is the more powerful. Antibiotic resistance in bacteria is powerfully selected for where there are plenty of antibiotics in the environment, but where there aren't any antibiotics, the ordinary bacteria were able to reproduce more quickly. The beneficial effect came with a cost. At least that was the situation when antibiotic resistance was first discovered. But bacteria have mutated again and the new mutation compensates for the side effect, so that now antibiotic resistant bacteria can out compete the old variety even when there are no antibiotics around. So yes organisms can undergo beneficial mutations and no it is not an oxymoron. The drug companies failed to produce a drug based on the mutation, that is a very different thing from the mutation being harmful.
No, what I said was "that they all
are harmful and that not one is an improvement."
The only examples in opposition to my claim is when observers "move the goal posts" and use a degrading and less than optimal environment to the equation. Lets say by adding sulfur dioxide fumes to the environment of the population. Then as the population dies off, evolutionists point to the 2 people standing with a mutant gene that doesn't allow for sulfur dioxide to be absorbed quite as quickly. By ignoring the information that they were already compromised in some other way, and moving the goal posts of the failing environment, they can call such a mutation "beneficial".
It's a very common theme in Science Fiction movies. The TV show HOUSE also hits on this effect almost every week. But it's much more realistic because the patients usually die or loose an organ or two before the solutions are found. I'll restate:
They all
are harmful and that
not one is an improvement.
Why would nature
repair DNA changes if it was a
good thing?
Mutation, DNA Repair, and DNA Integrity | Learn Science at Scitable
DNA Repair - Elsevier
DRIG - What is DNA repair?
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New colon cancer gene discovered", J. Marx, Science 260: 751-752, 1993.
Mismatch repair, genetic stability, and cancer", P. Modrich, Science 266: 1959-1960, 1994.
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