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What are the limits of Natural Selection? An interesting open discussion with Gordon Davisson

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An interesting discussion, still absolutely open, has taken place in the last few days between Gordon Davisson and me on the thread:

Some very good friends, like Dionisio, Mung and Origenes, seem to have appreciated the discussion, which indeed has touched important issues. Origenes has also suggested that it could be transformed into an OP.

Well, I tought that it was probably a good idea, and luckily it did not require much work. 🙂   So, here it is. Gordon Davisson’s posts are in italics. It’s a bit long, and I am sorry for that!

I thank in advance Gordon Davisson for the extremely good contribution he has already given, and for any other contribution he will give. He is certainly invited to continue the discussion here, if he likes (and I do hope he does!). Of course, anyone else who could be interested is warmly invited to join.  🙂

Gordon Davisson (post #5):

Why is this supposed to be a problem for “Darwinism”? A low rate of beneficial mutations just means that adaptive evolution will be slow. Which it is.

And not as slow as it might appear, since the limiting rate is the rate of beneficial mutations over the entire population, not per individual. Although many beneficial mutations are wiped out by genetic drift before they have a chance to spread through the population, so that decreases the effective rate a bit. If I’ve accounted for everything the overall rate of fixation of beneficial mutations per generation should be: (fraction of mutations that’re beneficial) * (fraction of beneficial mutations that aren’t wiped out by genetic drift) * (# of mutations per individual) * (population).

Florabama’s description is exactly wrong. Beneficial mutations don’t have to happen “in a row”, they can happen entirely independently of each other, and spread independently via selection. You may be thinking of the argument from irreducible complexity, but that’s an argument that evolution depends on mutations that are only beneficial in combination, which is a different matter. (And FYI evolutionists dispute how much of a problem this actually is. But again, that’s another matter.)

gpuccio (post #11):

Gordon Davisson:

You say:

And not as slow as it might appear, since the limiting rate is the rate of beneficial mutations over the entire population, not per individual.

Yes, but any “beneficial” mutation that appears in one individual will have to expand to great part of the population, if NS has to have any role in lowering the probabilistic barriers.

That means that:

1) The “beneficial” mutation must not only be “beneficial” in a general sense, but it must already, as it is, confer a reproductive advantage to the individual clone where it was generated. And the reproductive advantage must be strong enough to significantly engage NS (against the non-mutated form, IOWs all the rest of the population), and so escape genetic drift. That is something! Can you really think of a pathway to some complex new protein, let’s say dynein, a pathway which can “find” hundreds of specific, highly conserved aminoacids in a proteins thousands of aminoacid long, whose function is absolutely linked to a very complex and global structure, a pathway where each single new mutation which changes one aminoacid at a time confers a reproductive advantage to the individual, by gradually increasing, one step at a time, the function of a protein which still does not exist?

If you can, I really admire your imagination.

2) Each of those “beneficial mutations” (non existing, IMO, but let’s suppose they can exist) has anyway to escape drift and be selected and expanded by NS, so that it is present in most, or all the population. That’s how the following mutation can have some vague probability to be added. That must happen for each single step.

While that is simply impossible, because those “stepwise” mutations simply do not exist and never will exist, even if we imagine that they exist the process requires certainly a lot of time.

Moreover, as the process seems not to leave any trace of itself in the proteomes we can observe today, because those functionally intermediate forms simply do not exist, we must believe that each time the expansion of the new trait, with its “precious” single aminoacid mutation, must be complete, because it seems that it can erase all tracks of the process itself.

So, simple imagination is not enough here: you really need blind faith in the impossible. Credo quia absurdum, or something like that.

Then you say:

Although many beneficial mutations are wiped out by genetic drift before they have a chance to spread through the population, so that decreases the effective rate a bit.

Absolutely! And it’s not a bit, it’s a lot.

If you look at the classic paper about rugged landscape:

http://journals.plos.org/ploso…..ne.0000096

you will see that the authors conclude that a starting library of 10^70 mutations would be necessary to find the wild-type form of the protein they studied by RM + NS. Just think about the implications of that simple fact.

You say:

Beneficial mutations don’t have to happen “in a row”, they can happen entirely independently of each other, and spread independently via selection.

Yes, but only if each individual mutation confers a strong enough reproductive advantage. That must be true for each single specific aminoacid position of each single new functional protein that appears in natural history. Do you really believe that? Do you really believe that each complex functional stricture can be deconstructed into simple steps, each conferring reproductive advantage? Do you believe that we can pass from “word” source code to “excel” source code by single byte variations (yes, I am generous here, because a single aminoacid has at most about 4 bits of information, not 8), each of them giving a better software which can be sold better than the previous version?

Maybe not even “credo quia absurdum” will suffice here. There are limits to the absurd that can be believed, after all!

You say:

You may be thinking of the argument from irreducible complexity, but that’s an argument that evolution depends on mutations that are only beneficial in combination, which is a different matter.

No, the argument of IC, as stated by Behe, is about functions which require the cooperation of many individual complex proteins. That is very common in biology.

The argument of functional complexity, instead, is about the necessity of having, in each single protein, all the functional information which is minimally necessary to give the function of the protein itself. How many AAs would that be, for example, for dynein? Or for the classic ATP synthase?

Here, the single functional element is so complex that it requires hundreds of specific aminoacids to be of any utility. If that single functional element also requires to work with other complex single elements to give the desired function (which is also the rule in biology), then the FC of the system is multiplied. That is the argument of IC, as stated by Behe. The argument for FC in a single functional structure is similar, but it is directly derived form the concept of CSI as stated by Dembski (and others before and after him).

And finally you say:

And FYI evolutionists dispute how much of a problem this actually is. But again, that’s another matter.

It’s not another matter. It’s simply a wrong matter.

Both FC and IC are huge problems for any attempt to defend the neo-darwinian theory. I am not surprised at all that “evolutionists” dispute that, however. See Tertullian’s quote above!

Gordon Davisson (post #35):

Hi, gpuccio. Sorry about my late reply (as usual, I’m afraid). Before I comment specifically to what you said, I need to make a general comment that I still don’t see how the original point — that beneficial mutations are rare — refutes evolution. The arguments you’re making against evolution’s ability to create complex functional systems don’t seem to have a very close connection to the rate of beneficial mutations. Note that all of these would be considered beneficial mutations:

* Minor changes to an existing functional thing (protein, regulatory region, etc) that improve its function slightly.
* Minor changes to an existing functional thing that change its function slightly, in a way that makes it fit the organism’s current environment better.
* Changes that decrease function of something that’s overdoing its role (e.g. the mutation discussed here, which winds up giving people unusually strong bones).
* Mutations that create new functional systems.
* Mutations that are partway along a path to new functional systems, and are beneficial by themselves.

Your argument is (if I may oversimplify it a bit) essentially that the last two are vanishingly rare. But when we look at the overall rate of beneficial mutations, they’re mixed in with other sorts of beneficial mutations that’re completely irrelevant to what you’re talking about! Additionally, several types of mutations that’re critical in your argument are not immediately beneficial aren’t going to be counted in the beneficial mutation rate:

* Mutations that move closer to a new functional system (or higher-functioning version of an existing system), but aren’t actually there yet.
* Mutations that produce new functional systems that don’t immediately contribute to fitness.

Furthermore, one of the reasons for the rate of beneficial mutations may be low is that there may simply not be much room for improvement. For example, the experiment you cited about evolution on a rugged fitness landscape suggests that the wild-type version of the protein they studied may be optimal — it cannot be improved, whether by evolution or intelligent design or whatever. If that’s correct, the rate of beneficial mutations to this protein will be exactly zero, but that’s not because of any limitation of what mutations can do.

Now, on to your actual argument:

And not as slow as it might appear, since the limiting rate is the rate of beneficial mutations over the entire population, not per individual.

Yes, but any “beneficial” mutation that appears in one individual will have to expand to great part of the population, if NS has to have any role in lowering the probabilistic barriers.

That means that:

1) The “beneficial” mutation must not only be “beneficial” in a general sense, but it must already, as it is, confer a reproductive advantage to the individual clone where it was generated. And the reproductive advantage must be strong enough to significantly engage NS (against the non-mutated form, IOWs all the rest of the population), and so escape genetic drift. That is something!

I’d disagree slightly here. There isn’t any particular “strong enough” threshold; the probability that a beneficial mutation will “escape genetic drift” is roughly proportional to how beneficial it is. Mutations that’re only slightly beneficial thus become fixed at a lower (but still nonzero) rate.

Can you really think of a pathway to some complex new protein, let’s say dynein, a pathway which can “find” hundreds of specific, highly conserved aminoacids in a proteins thousands of aminoacid long, whose function is absolutely linked to a very complex and global structure, a pathway where each single new mutation which changes one aminoacid at a time confers a reproductive advantage to the individual, by gradually increasing, one step at a time, the function of a protein which still does not exist?

If you can, I really admire your imagination.

I’ll discuss some of these points more below, but just two quick things here: first, this is just an argument from incredulity, not an argument from actual knowledge or evidence. Second, the article you cited about a rugged fitness landscape showed that they were able to evolve a new functional protein starting from a random polypeptide (the limit they ran into wasn’t getting it to function, but in optimizing that function).

2) Each of those “beneficial mutations” (non existing, IMO, but let’s suppose they can exist) has anyway to escape drift and be selected and expanded by NS, so that it is present in most, or all the population. That’s how the following mutation can have some vague probability to be added. That must happen for each single step.

While that is simply impossible, because those “stepwise” mutations simply do not exist and never will exist, even if we imagine that they exist the process requires certainly a lot of time.

This is simply wrong. Take the evolution of atovaquone resistance in P. falciparum (the malaria parasite). Unless I’m completely misreading the diagram Larry Moran gives in http://sandwalk.blogspot.com/2…..ution.html, one of the resistant variants (labelled “K1”) required 7 mutations in a fairly specific sequence, and at most 4 of them were beneficial. In order for this variant to evolve (which it did), it had to pass at least 3 steps unassisted by selection (which you claim here is impossible) and all 4 beneficial mutations had to overcome genetic drift.

At least in this case, beneficial intermediates are neither as rare nor as necessary as you claim.

Moreover, as the process seems not to leave any trace of itself in the proteomes we can observe today, because those functionally intermediate forms simply do not exist, we must believe that each time the expansion of the new trait, with its “precious” single aminoacid mutation, must be complete, because it seems that it can erase all tracks of the process itself.

So, simple imagination is not enough here: you really need blind faith in the impossible. Credo quia absurdum, or something like that.

Except we sometimes do find such traces. In the case of atovaquone resistance, many of the intermediates were found in the wild. For another example, in https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/double-debunking-glenn-williamson-on-human-chimp-dna-similarity-and-genes-unique-to-human-beings/, VJTorley found that supposedly-novel genes in the human genome actually have very near matches in the chimp genome.

Then you say:

Although many beneficial mutations are wiped out by genetic drift before they have a chance to spread through the population, so that decreases the effective rate a bit.

Absolutely! And it’s not a bit, it’s a lot.

If you look at the classic paper about rugged landscape:

http://journals.plos.org/ploso…..ne.0000096

you will see that the authors conclude that a starting library of 10^70 mutations would be necessary to find the wild-type form of the protein they studied by RM + NS. Just think about the implications of that simple fact.

That’s not exactly what they say. Here’s the relevant paragraph of the paper (with my emphasis added):

The question remains regarding how large a population is required to reach the fitness of the wild-type phage. The relative fitness of the wild-type phage, or rather the native D2 domain, is almost equivalent to the global peak of the fitness landscape. By extrapolation, we estimated that adaptive walking requires a library size of 10^70 with 35 substitutions to reach comparable fitness. Such a huge search is impractical and implies that evolution of the wild-type phage must have involved not only random substitutions but also other mechanisms, such as homologous recombination. Recombination among neutral or surviving entities may suppress negative mutations and thus escape from mutation-selection-drift balance. Although the importance of recombination or DNA shuffling has been suggested [30], we did not include such mechanisms for the sake of simplicity. However, the obtained landscape structure is unaffected by the involvement of recombination mutation although it may affect the speed of search in the sequence space.

In other words, they used a simplified model of evolution that didn’t include all actual mechanisms, and they think it likely that’s why their model says the wild type couldn’t have evolved with a reasonable population size. So it must’ve been intelligent design… or maybe just homologous recombination. Or some other evolutionary mechanism they didn’t include.

Or their model of the fitness landscape might not be completely accurate. I’m far from an expert on the subject, but from my read of the paper:

* They measured how much infectivity (function) they got vs. population size (larger populations evolved higher infectivity before stagnating), fit their results to a theoretical model of the fitness landscape, and used that to extrapolate to the peak possible infectivity … which matched closely to that of the wild type. But their experimental results only measured relative infectivities between 0.0 and 0.52 (using a normalized logarithmic scale), and the extrapolation from 0.52 to 1.0 is purely theoretical. How well does reality match the theoretical model in the region they didn’t measure?

* But it’s worse than that, because their measurements were made on one functional “mountain”, and the wild type appears to reside on a different mountain. Do both mountains have the same ruggedness and peak infectivity? They’re not only extrapolating from the base of a mountain to its peak, but from the base of one mountain to the peak of another. The fact that the infectivity of the wild type matches closely with their theoretical extrapolation of the peak is suggestive, but hardly solid evidence.

So between the limitations of their simulation of actual evolutionary processes and the limitations of the region of the landscape over which they gathered data, I don’t see how you can draw any particularly solid conclusions from that study.

Well, except that there are some conclusions available from the region of the landscape that they did make measurements on: between random sequences and partial function. They say:

The landscape structure has a number of implications for initial functional evolution of proteins and for molecular evolutionary engineering. First, the smooth surface of the mountainous structure from the foot to at least a relative fitness of 0.4 means that it is possible for most random or primordial sequences to evolve with relative ease up to the middle region of the fitness landscape by adaptive walking with only single substitutions. In fact, in addition to infectivity, we have succeeded in evolving esterase activity from ten arbitrarily chosen initial random sequences [17]. Thus, the primordial functional evolution of proteins may have proceeded from a population with only a small degree of sequence diversity.

This seems to directly refute your claim that stepwise-beneficial mutations cannot produce functional proteins. They showed that it can. And they also showed that (as with the atovaquone resistance example) evolution doesn’t require stepwise-beneficial paths either. They found that stepwise-beneficial paths existed up to a relative fitness of 0.4, but they experimentally achieved relative fitnesses up to 0.52! So even with the small populations and limited evolutionary mechanisms they used, they showed it was possible to evolve significantly past the limits of stepwise-beneficial paths.

I don’t have to imagine this. They saw it happen.

gpuccio (posts 36 -39, 41, 46, 48):

 

Gordon Davisson:

First of all, thank you for your detailed and interesting comments to what I wrote. You raise many important issues that deserve in depth discussion.

I will try to make my points in order, and I will split them in a few different posts:

1) The relevance of the rate of “beneficial” mutations.

You say:

Before I comment specifically to what you said, I need to make a general comment that I still don’t see how the original point — that beneficial mutations are rare — refutes evolution. The arguments you’re making against evolution’s ability to create complex functional systems don’t seem to have a very close connection to the rate of beneficial mutations.

I don’t agree. As you certainly know, the whole point of ID is to evaluate the probabilistic barriers that make it impossible for the proposed mechanism of RV + NS to generate new complex functional information. The proposed mechanism relies critically on NS to overcome those barriers, therefore it is critical to understand quantitatively how often RV occurs that can be naturally selected, expanded and fixed.

Without NS, it is absolutely obvious that RV cannot generate anything of importance. Therefore, it is essential to understand and demonstrate how much NS can have a role in modifying that obvious fact, and the rate of naturally selectable mutations (not of “beneficial mutations, because a beneficial mutation which cannot be selected because it does not confer a sufficient reproductive advantage is of no use for the model) is of fundamental importance in the discussion.

2) Types of “beneficial” mutations (part 1).

You list 5 types of beneficial mutations. Let’s consider the first 3 types:

Note that all of these would be considered beneficial mutations:
* Minor changes to an existing functional thing (protein, regulatory region, etc) that improve its function slightly.
* Minor changes to an existing functional thing that change its function slightly, in a way that makes it fit the organism’s current environment better.
* Changes that decrease function of something that’s overdoing its role (e.g. the mutation discussed here, which winds up giving people unusually strong bones).

Well, I would say that these three groups have two things in common:

a) They are mutations which change the functional efficiency (or inefficiency) of a specific function that already exists (IOWs, no new function is generated).

b) The change is a minor change (IOWs, it does not imply any new complex functional information).

OK, I am happy to agree that, however common “beneficial” mutations may be, they almost always, if not always, are of this type. that’s what we call “microevolution”. It exists, and nobody has ever denied that. Simple antibiotic resistance has always been a very good example of that.

Of course, while ID does not deny microevolution, ID theory definitely shows its limits. They are:

a) As no new function is generated, this kind of variation can only tweak existing functions.

b) While the changes are minor, they can accumulate, especially under very strong selective pressure, like in the case of antibiotic resistance (including malaria resistance). But gradual accumulation of this kind of tweaking takes long times even under extremely strong pressure, requires a continuous tweaking pathway that is not always existing, and is limited, however, by how much the existing function can be optimized by simple stepwise mutations.

I will say more about those points when I answer about malaria resistance and the rugged landscape experiment. I would already state here, however, that both those scenarios, that you quote in your discussion, are of this kind, IOWs they fall under one of these three definitions of “beneficial” mutations.

3) Types of “beneficial” mutations (part 2).

The last two types are, according to what you say:

* Mutations that create new functional systems.
* Mutations that are partway along a path to new functional systems, and are beneficial by themselves.

These are exactly those kinds of “beneficial” mutations that do not exist.

Let’s say for the moment that we have no example at all of them.

For the first type,are you suggesting that there are simple mutations that “create new functional systems”? Well, let’s add an important word:

“create new complex functional systems”?

That word is important, because, as you certainly know, the whole point of ID is not about function, but about complex function. Nobody has ever denied that simple function can arise by random variation.

So, for this type, I insist: what examples do you have?

You may say that even if you have no examples, it’s my burden to show that it is impossible.

But that is wrong. You have to show not only that it is possible, but that it really happens and has real relevance to the problem we are discussing. We are making empirical science here, not philosophy. Only ideas supported by facts count. So, please, give the facts.

I would say that there is absolutely no reason to believe that a “simple” variation can generate “new complex functional systems”. There is no example of that in any complex system. Can the change of a letter generate a new novel? Can the change of a byte generate a new complex software, with new complex functions? Can a mutation of 1 – 2 aminoacids generate a new complex biological system?

The answer is no, but if you believe differently, you are welcome: just give facts.

In the last type of beneficial mutations, you hypothesize, if I understand you well, that a mutation can be part of the pathway to a new complex functional system, which still does not exist, but can be selected because it is otherwise beneficial.

So, let’s apply that to the generation of a new functional protein, like ATP synthase. Let’s say the beta chain of it, which, as we all know, has hundreds of specific aminoacid positions, conserved from bacteria to humans (334 identities between E. coli and humans).

Now, what you are saying is that we can in principle deconstruct those 334 AA values into a sequence of 334 single mutations, or if you prefer 167 two AAs mutations, each of which is selected not because the new protein is there and works, but because the intermediate state has some other selectable function?

Well, I say that such an assumption is not reasonable at all. I see no logical reason why that should be possible. If you think differently, please give facts.

I will say it again; the simple idea that new complex functions can be deconstructed into simple steps, each of them selectable for some not specified reason, is pure imagination. If you have facts, please give them, otherwise that idea has not relevance in a scientific discussion.

4) Other types of mutation?

You add two further variations in your list of mutations. Here they are:

* Mutations that move closer to a new functional system (or higher-functioning version of an existing system), but aren’t actually there yet.
* Mutations that produce new functional systems that don’t immediately contribute to fitness.

I am not sure that I understand what you mean. If I understand correctly, you are saying that there are mutations which in the end will be useful, bur for the moment are not useful.

But, then, they cannot be selected as such. Do you realize what that means?

It means that they can certainly occur, but they have exactly the same probability to occur as any other mutation. Moreover, as they are no selected, they remain confined to the original individual or clone, unless they are fixed by genetic drift.

But again, they have exactly the same probability as any other mutation to be fixed by genetic drift.

That brings us to a very strong conclusion that is often overlooked by darwinists, especially the neutralists:

Any mutation that does not have the power to be naturally selected is completely irrelevant in regard to the probabilistic barriers because its probability is exactly the same as any other mutation to occur or to be fixed by drift.

IOWs, only mutations that can be naturally selected change the game in regard to the computation of the probabilistic barriers. Nothing else. All variation which cannot be naturally selected is irrelevant, because it is just a new random state, and is already considered when we compute the probabilities for a random search to get the target.

5) Optimal proteins?

You say:

Furthermore, one of the reasons for the rate of beneficial mutations may be low is that there may simply not be much room for improvement. For example, the experiment you cited about evolution on a rugged fitness landscape suggests that the wild-type version of the protein they studied may be optimal — it cannot be improved, whether by evolution or intelligent design or whatever. If that’s correct, the rate of beneficial mutations to this protein will be exactly zero, but that’s not because of any limitation of what mutations can do.

OK, I can partially agree. The proteins as we see them now are certainly optimal in most cases. But they were apparently optimal just from the beginning.

For example, our beloved ATP synthase beta chain already had most of its functional information in LUCA, according to what we can infer from homologies. And, as I have shown in my OPs about the evolution of information in vertebrates, millions of bits of new functional information have appeared at the start of the vertebrate branch, rather suddenly, and then remained the same for 400+ million years of natural history. So, I am not sure that the optimal state of protein sequences is any help for neo-darwinism.

Moreover, I should remind you that protein coding genes are only a very small part of genomes. Non coding DNA, which according to darwinists is mostly useless, can certainly provide ample space for beneficial mutations to occur.

But I will come back to that point in the further discussion.

I would like to specify that my argument here is not to determine how common exactly are beneficial mutations in absolute, but rather to show that rare beneficial mutations are certainly a problem for neo-darwinism, a very big problem indeed, especially considering that (almost) all the examples we know of are examples of micro-evolution, and do not generate any new complex functional information.

5) The threshold for selectability.

You say:

I’d disagree slightly here. There isn’t any particular “strong enough” threshold; the probability that a beneficial mutation will “escape genetic drift” is roughly proportional to how beneficial it is. Mutations that’re only slightly beneficial thus become fixed at a lower (but still nonzero) rate.

I don’t think we disagree here. Let’s say that very low reproductive advantages will not be empirically relevant, because they will not significantly raise the probability of fixation above the generic one from genetic drift.

On the other hand, even if there is a higher probability of fixation, the lower it is, the lower will be the effect on probabilistic barriers. Therefore, only a significant reproductive advantage will really lower the probabilistic barriers in a relevant way.

6) The argument from incredulity.

You say:

I’ll discuss some of these points more below, but just two quick things here: first, this is just an argument from incredulity, not an argument from actual knowledge or evidence. Second, the article you cited about a rugged fitness landscape showed that they were able to evolve a new functional protein starting from a random polypeptide (the limit they ran into wasn’t getting it to function, but in optimizing that function).

I really don’t understand this misuse of the “argument from incredulity” issue (are, of course, not the only one to use it improperly).

The scenario is very simple: in science, I definitely am incredulous of any explanation which is not reasonable, has no explanatory power, and especially is not supported by any fact.

This is what science is. I am not a skeptic (I definitely hate that word), but I am not a credulous person who believes in things only because others believe in them.

You can state any possible theory in science. Some of them will be logically inconsistent, and we can reject from the start. But others will be logically possible, but unsupported by observed facts and by sound reasoning. We have the right and the duty to ignore those theories as devoid of any true scientific interest.

This is healthy incredulity. The opposite of blind faith.

I will discuss the rugged landscape issue in detail, later.

7) Malaria resistance.

In the end, the only facts you provide in favour of the neo-darwinist scenario are those about malaria resistance and the rugged landscape experiment. I will deal with the first here, and with the second in next post.

You say:

This is simply wrong. Take the evolution of atovaquone resistance in P. falciparum (the malaria parasite). Unless I’m completely misreading the diagram Larry Moran gives in http://sandwalk.blogspot.com/2…..ution.html, one of the resistant variants (labelled “K1”) required 7 mutations in a fairly specific sequence, and at most 4 of them were beneficial. In order for this variant to evolve (which it did), it had to pass at least 3 steps unassisted by selection (which you claim here is impossible) and all 4 beneficial mutations had to overcome genetic drift.

At least in this case, beneficial intermediates are neither as rare nor as necessary as you claim.

Now, let’s clarify. In brief, my point is that malaria resistance, like simple antibiotic resistance in general, is one of the few known cases of microevolution.

As I have already argued in my post #36, microevolutionary events are characterized by the following:

a) No new function is generated, but only a tweaking of some existing function.

b) The changes are minor. Even if more than one mutation accumulates, the total functional information added is always small.

I will discuss those two points for malaria resistance in the next point, but I want to clarify immediately that you are equivocating what I wrote when you say:

This is simply wrong.

Indeed, you quote my point 2) from post #11:

“2) Each of those “beneficial mutations” (non existing, IMO, but let’s suppose they can exist) has anyway to escape drift and be selected and expanded by NS, so that it is present in most, or all the population. That’s how the following mutation can have some vague probability to be added. That must happen for each single step.”

But you don’t quote the premise, in point 1:

“1) The “beneficial” mutation must not only be “beneficial” in a general sense, but it must already, as it is, confer a reproductive advantage to the individual clone where it was generated. And the reproductive advantage must be strong enough to significantly engage NS (against the non-mutated form, IOWs all the rest of the population), and so escape genetic drift. That is something! Can you really think of a pathway to some complex new protein, let’s say dynein, a pathway which can “find” hundreds of specific, highly conserved aminoacids in a proteins thousands of aminoacid long, whose function is absolutely linked to a very complex and global structure, a pathway where each single new mutation which changes one aminoacid at a time confers a reproductive advantage to the individual, by gradually increasing, one step at a time, the function of a protein which still does not exist?

I have emphasized the relevant part, that you seem to have ignored. Point 2 is referring to that scenario.

It is rather clear that I am speaking of the generation of bew complex functional information, and I even make an example, dynein.

So, I am not saying that no beneficial mutation can be selected, or that when that happens, like in microevolution, we cannot find the intermediate states.

What I am saying is that such a model cannot be applied to the generation of new complex final information, like dynein, because it is impossible to decosntruct a new complex functional unit into simple steps, each of them naturally selectable, while the new protein still does not even exist.

So, what I say is not wrong at all, and mt challenge to imagine such a pathway for dynein, of for ATP synthase beta chain, or for any of the complex functional proteins that appear in the course of natural history, or to find intermediates of that pathway, remains valid.

But let’s go to malaria.

I have read the Moran page, and I am not sure of your interpretation that 7 mutations (4 + 3) are necessary to give the resistance. Indeed, Moran says:

“It takes at least four sequential steps with one mutation becoming established in the population before another one occurs.”

But the point here is not if 4 or 7 mutations are needed. The point is that this is a clear example of microevolution, although probably one of the most complex that have been observed.

Indeed:

a) There is no generation of a new complex function. Indeed, there is no generation of a new function at all, unless you consider becoming resistant to an antibiotic because a gene loses the function to uptake the antibiotic a new “function”. Of course, we can define function as we like, but the simple fact is that here there is an useful loss of function, what Behe calls “burning the bridges to prevent the enemy from coming in”.

b) Whatever out definition of function, the change here is small. It is small if it amounts to 4 AAs (16 bits at most), it is small if it amounts to 7 aminoacids (28 bits at most).

OK, I understand that Behe puts the edge to two AAs in his book. Axe speaks of 4, from another point of view.

Whatever. The edge is certainly thereabout.

When I have proposed a threshold of functional complexity to infer design for biological objects, I have proposed 120 bits. That’s about 35 AAs.

Again, we must remember that all known microevolutionary events have in common a very favourable context which makes optimization easier:

a) They happen in rapidly reproducing populations.

b) They happen under extreme environmental pressure (the antibiotic)

c) The function is already present and it can be gradually optimized (or, like in the case of resistance, lost).

d) Only a few bits of informational change are enough to optimize or lose the function.

None of that applies to the generation of new complex functional information, where the function does not exist, the changes are informationally huge, and environmental pressure is reasonably much less than reproducing under the effect of a powerful antibiotic.

8) VJ’s point:

You say:

VJTorley found that supposedly-novel genes in the human genome actually have very near matches in the chimp genome.

It’s funny that you quote a point that I consider a very strong argument for ID.

First of all, VJ’s arguments are in confutation of some statements by Cornelius Hunter, with whom I often disagree.

Second, I am not sure that ZNF843 is a good example, because I blasted the human protein and found some protein homologs in primates, with high homology.

Third, there are however a few known human proteins which have no protein counterpart in other primates, as VJ correctly states. These seem to have very good counterparts in non coding DNA of primates.

So, if we accept these proteins as real and functional (unfortunately not much is known about them, as far as I know), then what seems to happen is that:

a) The sequence appears in some way in primates as a non coding sequence. That means that no NS for the sequence as representing a protein can take place.

b) In some way, the sequence acquires a transcription start in humans, and becomes an ORF. So the protein appears for the first time in humans and, if we accept the initial assumption, it is functional.

Well, if that kind of process will be confirmed, it will be a very strong evidence of design. the sequence is prepared in primates, where is seems to have no function at all, and is activated in humans, when needed.

The origin of functional proteins from non coding DNA, which is gaining recognition in the recent years, is definitive evidence of design. NS cannot operate on non coding sequences, least of all make them good protein coding genes. So, the darwinian mechanism is out, in this case.

9) The rugged landscape experiment

OK, this is probably the most interesting part.

For the convenience of anyone who may be reading this, I give the link to the paper:

http://journals.plos.org/ploso…..=printable

First of all, I think we can assume, for the following discussion, that the wild-type version of the protein they studied is probably optimal, as you suggested yourself. In any case, it is certainly the most functional version of the protein that we know of.

Now, let’s try to understand what this protein is, and how the experiment was realized.

The protein is:

G3P_BPFD (P03661).

Length: 424 AAs.

Funtion (from Uniprot):

“Plays essential roles both in the penetration of the viral genome into the bacterial host via pilus retraction and in the extrusion process. During the initial step of infection, G3P mediates adsorption of the phage to its primary receptor, the tip of host F-pilus. Subsequent interaction with the host entry receptor tolA induces penetration of the viral DNA into the host cytoplasm. In the extrusion process, G3P mediates the release of the membrane-anchored virion from the cell via its C-terminal domain”

I quote from the paper:

Infection of Escherichia coli by the coliphage fd is mediated by the minor coat protein g3p [21,22], which consists of three distinct domains connected via flexible glycine-rich linker sequences [22]. One of the three domains, D2, located between the N-terminal D1 and C-terminal D3 domains, functions in the absorption of g3p to the tip of the host F-pilus at the initial stage of the infection process [21,22]. We produced a defective phage, ‘‘fdRP,’’ by replacing the D2 domain of the fd-tet phage with a soluble random polypeptide, ‘‘RP3-42,’’ consisting of 139 amino acids [23].

So, just to be clear:

1) The whole protein is implied in infectivity

2) Only the central domain has been replaced by random sequences

So, what happens?

From the paper:

The initial defective phage fd-RP showed little infectivity, indicating that the random polypeptide RP3-42 contributes little to infectivity.

Now, infectivity (fitness) was measured by an exponential scale, in particular as:

W = ln(CFU) (CFU = colony forming units/ml)

As we can see in Fig. 2, the fitness of the mutated phage (fd-RP) is 5, that is:

CFU = about 148 (e^5)

Now, always from Fig 2 we can see that the fitness of the wildtype protein is about 22.5, that is:

CFU = about 4.8 billions

So, the random replacement of the D2 domain certainly reduces infectivity a lot, and it is perfectly correct to say that the fd-RP phage “showed little infectivity”.

Indeed, infectivity has been reduced of about 32.6 million times!

But still, it is there: the phage is still infective.

What has happened is that by replacing part of the g3p protein with random sequences, we have “damaged” the protein, but not to the point of erasing completely its function. The protein is still there, and in some way it can still work, even with the have damage/deformation induced by our replacement.

IOWs, the experiment is about retrieving an existing function which has been artificially reduced, but not erased. No new function is generated, but an existing reduced function is tweaked to retrieve as much as possible of its original functionality.

This is an important point, because the experiment is indeed one of the best contexts to measure the power of RM + NS in the most favorable conditions:

a) The function is already there.

b) Only part of the protein has been altered

c) Phages are obviously a very good substrate for NS

d) The environmental pressure is huge and directly linked to reproductive success (a phage which loses infectivity cannot simply reproduce).

IOWs, we are in a context where NS shoul really operate at its most.

Now, what happens?

OK, some infectivity is retrieved by RM. How much?

At the maximum of success, and using the most numerous library of mutations, the retrieved infectivity is about 14.7 (see again Fig. 2). Then the adaptive walk stops.

Now, that is a good result, and the authors are certainly proud of it, but please don’t be fooled by the logarithmic scale.

An infectivity of 14.7 corresponds to:

about 2.4 million CFU

So, we have an increase of:

about 17000 times as stated by the authors.

But, as stated by the authors, the fitmess should still increase of about 2000 times (fitness 7.6) to reach the functionality of the wild type. that means passing from:

2.4 million CFU

to

4.8 billion CFU

So, even if some good infectivity has been retrieved, we are still 2000 times lower than the value in the wild type!

And that’s the best they could achieve.

Now, why that limit?

The authors explain that the main reason for that is the rugged landscape of protein function. That means that RM and NS achieve some good tweaking of the function, but starting from different local optima in the landscape, and those local optima can go only that far.

The local optimum corresponding to the wildtype has never been found. See the paper:

The sequence selected finally at the 20th generation has ~W = 0.52 but showed no homology to the wild-type D2 domain, which was located around the fitness of the global peak. The two sequences would show significant homology around 52% if they were located on the same mountain. Therefore, they seem to have climbed up different mountains

The authors conclude that:

The question remains regarding how large a population is required to reach the fitness of the wild-type phage. The relative fitness of the wild-type phage, or rather the native D2 domain, is almost equivalent to the global peak of the fitness landscape. By extrapolation, we estimated that adaptive walking requires a library size of 10^70 with 35 substitutions to reach comparable fitness. Such a huge search is impractical and implies that evolution of the wildtype phage must have involved not only random substitutions but also other mechanisms, such as homologous recombination.

Now, having tried to describe in some detail the experiment itself, I will address your comments.

10) Your comments about the rugged landscape paper

You say:

That’s not exactly what they say. Here’s the relevant paragraph of the paper (with my emphasis added):

But it is exactly what they say!

Let’s see what I wrote:

“you will see that the authors conclude that a starting library of 10^70 mutations would be necessary to find the wild-type form of the protein they studied by RM + NS.

(emphasis added)

Now let’s see what they said:

By extrapolation, we estimated that adaptive walking requires a library size of 10^70 with 35 substitutions to reach comparable fitness. Such a huge search is impractical and implies that evolution of the wild-type phage must have involved not only random substitutions but also other mechanisms, such as homologous recombination.

(I have kept your emphasis).

So, the point is that, according to the authors, a library of 10^70 sequences would be necessary to find the wildtype by random substitutions only (plus, I suppose, NS).

That’s exactly what I said. Therefore, your comment, that “That’s not exactly what they say” is simply wrong.

Let’s clarify better: 10^70 is a probabilistic resource that is beyond the reach not only of our brilliant researchers, but of nature itself!

It seems that your point is that they also add that, given that “such a huge search is impractical” (what a politically correct adjective here! ), that should:

“imply that evolution of the wild-type phage must have involved not only random substitutions but also other mechanisms, such as homologous recombination.”

which is the part you emphasized.

As if I had purposefully left out such a clarifying statement!

Well, of course I have purposefully left out such a clarifying statement, but not because I was quote-mining, but simply because it is really pitiful and irrelevant. Let’s say that I wanted to be courteous to the authors, who have written a very good paper, with honest conclusions, and only in the end had to pay some minimal tribute to the official ideology.

You see, when you write a paper, and draw the conclusions, you are taking responsibilities: you have to be honest, and to state only what can be reasonably derived from the facts you have given.

And indeed the authors do that! They correctly draw the strong conclusion that, according to their data, RM + NS only cannot find the wildtype in their experiment (IOWs, the real, optimal function), unless we can provide a starting library of 10^70 sequences, which, as said, is beyond the reach of nature itself, at least on our planet. IOWs, let’s say that it would be “impractical”.

OK, that’s the correct conclusion according to their data. They should have stopped here.

But no, they cannot simply do that! So they add that such a result:

implies that evolution of the wild-type phage must have involved not only random substitutions but also other mechanisms, such as homologous recombination.

Well, what is that statement? Just an act of blind faith in neo-darwinism, which must be true even when facts falsify it.

Is it a conclusion derived in any way from the data they presented?

Absolutely not! There is nothing in their data that suggests such a conclusion. They did not test recombination, or other mechanisms, and therefore they can say absolutely nothing about what it can or cannot do. Moreover, they don’t even offer any real support from the literature for that statement. They just quote one single paper, saying that “the importance of recombination or DNA shuffling has been suggested”. And yet they go well beyond a suggestion, they say that their “conclusion” is implied. IOWs logically necessary.

What a pity! What a betrayal of scientific attitude.

If they really needed to pay homage to the dogma, they could have just said something like “it could be possible, perhaps, that recombination helps”. But “imply”? Wow!

But I must say that you too take some serious responsibility in debating that point. Indeed, you say:

In other words, they used a simplified model of evolution that didn’t include all actual mechanisms, and they think it likely that’s why their model says the wild type couldn’t have evolved with a reasonable population size. So it must’ve been intelligent design… or maybe just homologous recombination. Or some other evolutionary mechanism they didn’t include.

Well, they didn’t use “a simplified model of evolution”. They tested the official model: RM + NS. And it failed!

Since it failed, they must offer some escape. Of course, some imaginary escape, completely unsupported by any facts.

But the failure of RM + NS, that is supported by facts, definitely!

I would add that I cannot see how one can think that recombination can work any miracle here: after all, the authors themselves have said that the local optimum of the wildtype has not been found. The problem here is how to find it. Why should recombination of existing sequences, which share no homology with the wildtype, help at all in finding the wildtype? Mysteries of blind faith.

And have the authors, or anyone else, made new experiments that show how recombination can solve the limit they found? Not that I know. If you are aware of that, let me know.

Then you say:

Or their model of the fitness landscape might not be completely accurate.

Interesting strategy. So, if the conclusions of the authors, conclusions driven from facts and reasonable inferences, are not those that you would expect, you simply doubt that their model is accurate. Would you have had the same doubts, had they found that RM + NS could find easily the wildtype? Just wondering…

And again:

So between the limitations of their simulation of actual evolutionary processes and the limitations of the region of the landscape over which they gathered data, I don’t see how you can draw any particularly solid conclusions from that study.

Well, like you, I am not an expert of that kind of models. I accept the conclusions of the authors, because it seems that their methodology and reasonings are accurate. You doubt them. But should I remind you that they are mainstream authors, not certainly IDists, and that their conclusions must have surprised themselves first of all. I don’t know, but when serious researchers publish results that are not probably what they expected, and that are not what others expect, they must be serious people (except, of course, for the final note about recombination, but anyone can make mistakes after all! ).

Then your final point:

This seems to directly refute your claim that stepwise-beneficial mutations cannot produce functional proteins. They showed that it can.

No, for a lot of reasons:

a) We are in a scenario of tweaking an existing, damaged function to retrieve part of it. We are producing no new functional protein, just “repairing” as much as possible some important damage.

b) That’s why the finding of lower levels of function is rather easy: it is not complex at all, it is in the reach of the probabilistic resources of the system.

I will try to explain it better. Let’s say that you have a car, and that its body has been seriously damaged in a car accident. That’s our protein with its D2 domain replaced by a random sequence of AAs.

Now, you have not the money to buy the new parts that would bring back the old body in all its spendor (the wildtype).

So, you choose the only solution you can afford: you take a hammer, and start giving gross blows to the body, to reduce the most serious deformations, at least a little.

the blows you give need not be very precise or specific: if there is some part which is definitely too out of the line, a couple of gross blows will make it less prominent. And so on.

Of course, the final result is very far from the original: let’s say 2000 times less beautiful and functional.

However, it is better than what you started with.

IOWs, you are trying a low information fixing: a repair which is gross, but somewhat efficient.

And, of course, there are many possible gross forms that you can achieve by your hammer, and that have more or less the same degree of “improvement”.

On the contrary, there is only one form that satisfies the original request: the perfect parts of the original body.

So, a gross repair has low informational content. A perfect repair has very high informational content.

That’s what the rugged landscape paper tells us: the conclusion, derived form facts, is perfectly in line with ID theory. Simple function can be easily reached by some probabilistic resources, by RV + NS, provided that the scenario is one of tweaking an existing function, and not of generating a new complex one.

It’s the same scenario of malaria resistance, or of other microevolutionary events.

But the paper tells us something much more important: complex function, that with a high informational content, cannot be realistically achieved with those mechanisms, nor even in the most favorable NS scenario, with an existing function, and the opportunity to tweak it with high mutation rates and highly reproducing populations, and direct relevance of the function to reproduction.

Complex function cannot be found, not even in those conditions. The wildtype remains elusive, and, if the author’s model is correct, which I do believe, will remain elusive in any non design context.

And, if RV and NS cannot even do that, how can they hope to just start finding some new, complex, specific function, like the sequence of ATP synthase beta chain, or dynein, or whatever you like, starting not from an existing, damaged but working function, but just from scratch?

OK, this is it. I think I have answered your comments. It was some work, I must say, but you certainly deserved it!

Addendum:

By the way, in that paper we are dealing with a 139 AAs sequence (the D2 domain).

ATP synthase beta chain is 529 AAs long, and has 334 identities between E. coli and humans, for a total homology of 663 bits.

Cytoplasmic dynein 1 heavy chain 1 is 4646 AAs long, and has 2813 identities between fungi and humans, for a total homology of 5769 bits.

These are not the 16 – 28 bits of malaria resistance. Not at all.

OK, that’all for the moment. Again, I apologize for the length of it all!  🙂

Comments
GPuccio, Would you agree when I say that both 'negative selection' and 'positive selection' results in loss of biological information? Both negative and positive selection results in the removal of certain organisms from the population. Now, if I am correct, the question arises: how does information loss help evolution? Those removed organisms contained unique information that is lost forever. It may even be the case that a removed organism was one or two point mutations away from some astounding evolutionary novelty, but due to actions of 'positive selection' the world will never witness it. What a horrible thought! :) Which brings me to a more general claim: natural selection (positive or negative) leads to loss of information and is therefore detrimental to evolution. Do you agree?Origenes
October 7, 2017
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Dionisio at #48: The whole enchilada, yes. And a rich enchilada it seems to be! At any level. "But the more we understand about it, the more it looks like designed systems." There is no doubt about it. And if you consider that, to me, it already looked like designed systems, say 10 years ago, and irrefutably so, you can imagine how great is my conviction now! Irrefutable would be a pale euphemism.gpuccio
October 7, 2017
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Dionisio: "Could that qualify as beneficial mutation? " I would rather say: environment driven adaptation (probably epigenetic). :)gpuccio
October 7, 2017
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gpuccio @40: Shouldn't any model of evolution include the core formulation of the fundamental evo-devo problem? Dev(d) = Dev(a) + Delta(a,d) Where Dev(a) is the entire developmental process of an ancestor, Dev(d) is the entire developmental process of a descendant, Delta(a,d) is the union of all the spatiotemporal changes in Dev(a) required to get Dev(d). Please, note that "entire" means the whole enchilada. tutto, tutto, tutto. However, a major outstanding issue is that we don't understand the Dev(x) of any biological system 'x' yet. Work in progress... stay tuned. But the more we understand about it, the more it looks like designed systems.Dionisio
October 7, 2017
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gpuccio @46: "See how spending time with neo-darwinists can teach us a lot!" Could that qualify as beneficial mutation? :)Dionisio
October 7, 2017
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Mung: "But to be really good, like I am, you have to be good at procrastinating your procrastination!" I am an exceptional case, I must say: I always procrastinate, except when I don't procrastinate. (See how spending time with neo-darwinists can teach us a lot! :) )gpuccio
October 7, 2017
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--“official model” of evolution is a lot like trying to define one for genetics or chemistry or geology.-- One can take issue with whether evolution should be compared to genetics, chemistry or geology, but leaving that aside those fields have "official models" i.e. standards. What would be the standard for evolution?tribune7
October 7, 2017
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Gordon:
I’m really good at procrastinating!
But to be really good, like I am, you have to be good at procrastinating your procrastination!Mung
October 7, 2017
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The explanation @40 could be a separate OP by itself. Like the bigos*, which tastes better the longer it lasts, this discussion is getting better with every hour. Kudos to both GP and GD. Keep it going! PS. I'm chewing slowly what is being said here. I want to digest it well. :) (*) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BigosDionisio
October 7, 2017
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Gordon:
my original plan of discussing whether whether RM + NS is the official model of evolutionary theory
First you have to find this alleged evolutionary theory. Then you have to read it to see what it actually says. Good luck with thatET
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Dionisio: "A good laugh is a mighty good thing" :)gpuccio
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Gordon Davisson: OK, the first point: 1) Is there an "official model" od evolution?
Trying to define an “official model” of evolution is a lot like trying to define one for genetics or chemistry or geology. All of these study complex, diverse, and messy categories of phenomena; they’re fields that are constantly in flux, with new things being learned and sometimes things we thought we knew being reassessed. Trying to nail down exactly what the state of knowledge of any of these fields at any given time would be an exercise in nailing jello to a tree. What you can say, at any given time, is that there’s general agreement about some core knowledge about the phenomena, surrounded (metaphorically) by a cloud of reasonably-well-supported hypotheses, which are surrounded in turn by many many open and/or controversial questions. But the question of how settled various questions are is itself subjective, so you can’t even objectively define how solid various parts of our understanding are. This isn’t anything special about evolution; it’s just how things are in any dynamic field of science.
Well, I find all that perfectly reasonable. I agree.
Now, despite the difficulty of defining exactly what the official model/settled core/whatever of evolution is, I can confidently say that RM + NS is not it. At the very least, it needs to include genetic drift as a core process. But RM + NS + GD would still be a drastic oversimplification.
OK, but here I must start to clarify what I think, which is slightly different, although not dramatically different. First of all, I must apologize for havinf used the rather inappropriate term "RM", instead of the more accurate form "RV" (random variation), which I usually use. Probably, I did that because we were discussing the rugged landscape paper, which indeed can be more easily ointerpreted in terms of nucleotide mutations. However, I am well aware that there are many kinds of random variation events. Now, I have tried to explain, in my post #23 in answer to Corey Delvine, why I consider all forms of random variation events essentially equivalent (with some exceptions, that I have mentioned there) in terms of attempts at testing different states in the search space by a random walk. You may perhaps try to read that post, even if I happily admit it's in some way part of the melee, because I believe there are some interesting points in it. :) So, form now on, it's RV + NS. But, essentially, you are no, like Corey, objecting to the simplification in the types of variation. You are rather objecting, if Iunderstand well, to the simplification in other mechanisms that contribute to evolutionary history. First of all genetic drift. In that, you are probably right. For example, there is no doubt at all that neutral mutations and genetic drift are an important part of what happens in evolutionary history. So, did I mean when I said: "Well, they [the authors of the paper] didn’t use “a simplified model of evolution”. They tested the official model: RM + NS. And it failed!" I maintain that statement, but I realize that I meant something different by the term "official model" than what you mean with the same words. Let's see. I agree with you that having some detailed model of what happened in evolutionary history is an ongoing task, and that there are a lot of different approaches to that, and different models, including, I would say, different design models which, although ognored by the official academy, are part of the scientific thought just the same. But in my statement I was not referring to a general model of evolutionary history, but rather to some explanatory model of the generation of new comples functional information, which, as you may have understood now, is my real reference. IOWs, we are not discussion "evolution" here, but rather the generation of new complex functional information. At least, that's my view of things. So, the simple point is that I am convinced that, when we consider carefully what has been suggested in the last 70 years, and all the knowledge that has been accumulated in biology, the simple fact remains, IMO, that there are still only two types of "explanatory models" which have some potentiality to explain complex functional information in biological objects. And they are: a) The standard neo-darwinist model (RV + NS) b) Design models What do I mean by "standard neo darwinist model"? Very simply, the modern synthesis, in all its formulations, past and present. Because, in all its "official" formulations, the fact remains that the generation of new complex functional information is always explained as a result of RV + NS, and nothing else. Let's consider, for example, the most important "addition" to standard evolutionary thought: neutralism, and the concept of genetic drift, as you very correctly mention. I have nothing against neutralism and genetic drift. I am sure that neutralists are very right, and that genetic drift happens all the time. But the simple fact is that those aspects are irrelevant in regard to the generation of new, complex functional information. They have no relevant influence on the probabilistic problem which is the core of ID thought. IOWs, they can considered essentially as variations of RV. GD, for example, can fix any new variation. But any new variation has the same probability of being fixed. Nothing changes. Indeed, even convinced neutralists, like Larry Moran, when brutally asked something about how relevant functional complexity is generated, have to admit (rather reluctantly, IMO), that the explanation for that trivial aspect can only be RV + NS! :) So, my view is that GD is an important part of what happens in natural history, but it is no part at all of any explicatory model for the generation of new complex functional information, simply because ot has no possible role in explaining it. Now, I am aware that there are other "models", in what I often call "neo-neo-darwinism", or "post-neo-darwinism", that have the ambition to "explain" complex functional information without recurring to RV + NS as the onnly relevant mechanism. I have witnessed many of them, through the years, especially recently. Just as examples, let's quote Andreas Wagner's "Arrival of the fittest: “Natural selection can preserve innovations, but it cannot create them. Nature’s many innovations—some uncannily perfect—call for natural principles that accelerate life’s ability to innovate, its innovability.” and so on... and James A. Shapiro's "Third way to evolution": "James A. Shapiro proposes an important new paradigm for understanding biological evolution, the core organizing principle of biology. Shapiro introduces crucial new molecular evidence that tests the conventional scientific view of evolution based on the neo-Darwinian synthesis, shows why this view is inadequate to today’s evidence, and presents a compelling alternative view of the evolutionary process that reflects the shift in life sciences towards a more information- and systems-based approach in Evolution: A View from the 21st Century." and so on... Well, my "not so humble" opinion about those models is simple: they explain nothing. Maybe I am wrong. But I don't think so. Time will say. In the meantime, the only real "antagonist" to design models, IM not so humble O, remains one and only one: RV + NS. Why? Because RV + NS does explain something: for example, the known cases of microevolution. And because RV + NS is supported by some facts: for example, the known cases of microevolution. OK, a little boring maybe, but at least it is true. What RV + NS cannot explain at all is the generation of new, complex functional information. Which is the only thing I am interested in. Thats' why I have dedicated my discussion with you, and this OP with the following comments, essentially to that point. Then you say:
Really, it’d need to consist of a catalog of all of the various evolutionary mechanisms we’ve discovered over the decades. Most of them can at-least-sort-of be categorised as types of mutation (e.g. unequal crossing over, transposon and retroviral insertion), selection (biased gene conversion, meiotic drive), or genetic drift (the founder effect, hitchhiking), but not always, and not always into just one category. The hypermutable state model, for example, involves an unusual type of mutation tightly coupled to an unusual type of selection, so it sort of fits into both of those categories. On the other hand, endosymbiosis and homologous recombination don’t really fit into any of the categories. Any model of evolution that doesn’t include all of the above mechanisms (and others I didn’t list / don’t even know about) is, pretty much by definition, incomplete. It’s really really hard to justify a claim that evolution cannot account for X, if you’re basing that on an incomplete model of evolution.
OK, I have probably already answered that. You are right if you speak of "evolution" as "anything that happend in evolutionary hostory". But, if we are speaking of potential explanation, our choice in our debate is drastically restricted to what has been suggested and has explanatory power. IOWs, I am comparing the design model to any posiible explanation that exists in present scientific thought, not to any possible imagined future explanation of which we have no idea at all. And I stick to my idea that the only the RV + NS algorithm adds something to the mere idea of random events, and therefore deserves to be analyzed in the debate about design models. But, of course, if you or any other discussant can show me why other ideas really have some explanatory in regard to the generation of new complex functional information in biology, I ma ready to listen. And to answer. Just give me something that can be understood and answered! For example, you mention the "hypermutable state model". I checked that briefly, and I found this paper: "Regulating general mutation rates: examination of the hypermutable state model for Cairnsian adaptive mutation." Abstract In the lac adaptive mutation system of Cairns, selected mutant colonies but not unselected mutant types appear to arise from a nongrowing population of Escherichia coli. The general mutagenesis suffered by the selected mutants has been interpreted as support for the idea that E. coli possesses an evolved (and therefore beneficial) mechanism that increases the mutation rate in response to stress (the hypermutable state model, HSM). This mechanism is proposed to allow faster genetic adaptation to stressful conditions and to explain why mutations appear directed to useful sites. Analysis of the HSM reveals that it requires implausibly intense mutagenesis (10(5) times the unselected rate) and even then cannot account for the behavior of the Cairns system. The assumptions of the HSM predict that selected revertants will carry an average of eight deleterious null mutations and thus seem unlikely to be successful in long-term evolution. The experimentally observed 35-fold increase in the level of general mutagenesis cannot account for even one Lac(+) revertant from a mutagenized subpopulation of 10(5) cells (the number proposed to enter the hypermutable state). We conclude that temporary general mutagenesis during stress is unlikely to provide a long-term selective advantage in this or any similar genetic system. If I understand well, whether this model is good or bad, it is based on the general idea that some biological beings (especially bacteria, I believe) have adaptive mechanisms that can help the search for some new functional information (always, however, of the microevolutionary type). But I agree with that! I am convinced, for example, that the whole plasmidic system in bacteria is strongly adaptive. And we have a special example of that kind of adaptation in humans, which works on somatic immune cells and not on germ cells: the antibody maturation process, which I have discussed in detail here: https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/antibody-affinity-maturation-as-an-engineering-process-and-other-things/ The problem is that adaptive systems require a lot of complex functional information: they are indeed examples of objects with a huge amount of specific complex functional information. The advantage they can get in a random search is traceable to their functional information, which makes the random serach less random. We are, here, exactly in the context of the principle of conservation of information, many times discussed by Dembski and Marks. It's like designing a computer which makes some specific random searches easier and more profitable. Wonderful but that's the result of good design. You get what you inputted first, in a different form. OK, so I am here, ready to discuss any model which does not rely exclusively on RV + NS and which, according to what you believe, has some potential explanatory power in regard to the generation of new complex functional information in biology. In next post, I will discuss the rugged landscape paper. Again! :)gpuccio
October 7, 2017
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gpuccio, When I read @32 the emphasized quote of your interlocutor referring to those who don't understand evolution and your response about not being surprised by what your interlocutor had said, I couldn't stop laughing even after reading your request to not laugh so loud. Well, when I read your request I laughed even louder. Sorry for that. Your interlocutor left me without choice. Laughing was the only alternative. Alright, I'll try and behave better next time. I've been told more than once that I don't have good manners in public forums. :) Actually, a Canadian professor said publicly here that I don't ask honest questions, whatever that meant. :) But I want this serious discussion between GD and you to continue smoothly, because I expect to learn from it. I'll walk out of the room next time your interlocutors write something that makes me laugh. :)Dionisio
October 7, 2017
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Dionisio: "Maybe my off topic comment @28 added up to the alleged mêlée? Sorry if that’s the case." No, I think he was probably referring more to the kind interactions between Corey Delvine, ET and me. "No more unsolicited commenting here, unless I forget my promise." Please, forget, please, forget! By the way, I must apologize for my unsolicited summoning you in my answer to Corey at #32 (the emphasized part toward the end, about understanding evolution). I know, I should not have abused of your identity in that blatant way, but it was too good a temptation, and I could not resist! :)gpuccio
October 7, 2017
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gpuccio, I'm glad to follow closely your interesting discussion with GD, but will try to stay on the sideline, so that I don't get accused of turning this thread into a mêlée. :) Maybe my off topic comment @28 added up to the alleged mêlée? Sorry if that's the case. Now just wanted to share this link before running to the exit door: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jeb.13047/full That's all. No more unsolicited commenting here, unless I forget my promise. :)Dionisio
October 7, 2017
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Gordon Davisson: Welcome back!
I see the discussion is turning into a melee (sigh).
Well, that seems unavoidable... :)
I’m going to basically ignore everything since gpuccio @ 13,
That's very wise!
and follow my original plan of discussing whether whether RM + NS is the official model of evolutionary theory (and then segue back to talking about the “rugged fitness landscape” paper).
Perfect. OK, now I am busy, and cannot answer in detail. I'll do it later. But I want to state immediately that I find your post #35 very reasonable, and that I can agree with many of the things you say there. Of course, with different emphasis and perspective, in many cases. So, it's a pleasure to discuss again, and with a good interlocutor, after the unavoidable plunge into the melee (which sometimes is some experience, too! ;) )gpuccio
October 7, 2017
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I see the discussion is turning into a melee (sigh). I'm going to basically ignore everything since gpuccio @ 13, and follow my original plan of discussing whether whether RM + NS is the official model of evolutionary theory (and then segue back to talking about the "rugged fitness landscape" paper). The particular comment you made that's set me off is:
Well, they [the authors of the paper] didn’t use “a simplified model of evolution”. They tested the official model: RM + NS. And it failed!
...which I have to strongly disagree with. First, because there's no such thing as an official model of evolution, and second because if there were it wouldn't be just RM + NS. Trying to define an "official model" of evolution is a lot like trying to define one for genetics or chemistry or geology. All of these study complex, diverse, and messy categories of phenomena; they're fields that are constantly in flux, with new things being learned and sometimes things we thought we knew being reassessed. Trying to nail down exactly what the state of knowledge of any of these fields at any given time would be an exercise in nailing jello to a tree. What you can say, at any given time, is that there's general agreement about some core knowledge about the phenomena, surrounded (metaphorically) by a cloud of reasonably-well-supported hypotheses, which are surrounded in turn by many many open and/or controversial questions. But the question of how settled various questions are is itself subjective, so you can't even objectively define how solid various parts of our understanding are. This isn't anything special about evolution; it's just how things are in any dynamic field of science. Now, despite the difficulty of defining exactly what the official model/settled core/whatever of evolution is, I can confidently say that RM + NS is not it. At the very least, it needs to include genetic drift as a core process. But RM + NS + GD would still be a drastic oversimplification. Really, it'd need to consist of a catalog of all of the various evolutionary mechanisms we've discovered over the decades. Most of them can at-least-sort-of be categorised as types of mutation (e.g. unequal crossing over, transposon and retroviral insertion), selection (biased gene conversion, meiotic drive), or genetic drift (the founder effect, hitchhiking), but not always, and not always into just one category. The hypermutable state model, for example, involves an unusual type of mutation tightly coupled to an unusual type of selection, so it sort of fits into both of those categories. On the other hand, endosymbiosis and homologous recombination don't really fit into any of the categories. Any model of evolution that doesn't include all of the above mechanisms (and others I didn't list / don't even know about) is, pretty much by definition, incomplete. It's really really hard to justify a claim that evolution cannot account for X, if you're basing that on an incomplete model of evolution. The "rugged landscape" experiment clearly did use an incomplete model of evolution: just one type of mutation (single-base substitutions), selection for infectivity (with a fixed fitness landscape), and drift. I think you can make a good case that many other mechanisms can be discarded as irrelevant (e.g. anything that applies only to diploid organisms), but not all of them. The authors think the omission of "other mechanisms, such as homologous recombination" might be significant. You've portrayed this as a dishonest attempt on their part to avoid admitting that they've falsified evolution, but I can't see any basis at all for your characterization. Even if they hadn't stated it in the paper, it'd still be true. Every analysis (of real phenomena) has limitations, and in reasoning from them it's important to understand those limitations and how they affect the conclusions you're drawing. It's also a bad idea to take any single experiment or analysis as the final word on anything. Published papers sometimes turn out to be seriously wrong, often contain minor mistakes, and even when things go "perfectly", there are still things like measurement and statistical errors to contend with. Has their experimental result been replicated? Have they or anyone else done any testing to see how well the theoretical model they use corresponds to reality? How much uncertainty is there in the fitting from their data to the parameters of the theoretical model, and how does that uncertainty propagate through the model to the conclusion? Actually, let me expand on that last point a bit. If this were a physics paper(*), I'd have expected to have seen some discussion of the goodness-of-fit measure they used to fit the theoretical model to their data, and rather than just a single best-fit set of parameters, an "allowed region" of combinations of model parameters that gave acceptable fits. Then, I'd expect them to track how that range of parameters propagates through the model into its outputs. Basically, I expect to see error bars (or more complicated error range descriptions) everywhere. But the only place I see them is on the measured fitness results. (* I'm not a physicist, but my father was, I studied it quite a bit in college before deciding to pursue computer science instead, and I still find physics interesting so I still follow the subject a fair bit. Net result: I'm fairly familiar with how physics is done and how physicists think. Therefore, it tends to be my reference for how science is done and how to think about other scientific subjects.) Lack of error bars (or some other indication of estimated uncertainty) doesn't mean there's no uncertainty; quite the opposite, it means you don't have any real idea how much uncertainty there is! BTW, you can get some idea how closely the model fits their data from Figure 3, which shows the measured fitness levels and fitted curve. Some points are very close to the curve, others pretty far away. Can you tell how well it matches with reality in the region they didn't measure? I'm pretty sure the answer has to be "no".Gordon Davisson
October 6, 2017
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Corey:
First, bringing two molecules near each other and in the right orientation to catalyze a reaction is not specific to ATP synthase.
Force of pressure
And second, if you think there is no chemistry involved in generating ATP….well
I never said nor implied such a thing. Look when a polypeptide is formed it is formed via a catalyst that speeds up a chemical reaction. ATP synthase uses force of pressure to squeeze another atom onto an existing molecule. It is a physical rather than chemical force that creates ATPET
October 6, 2017
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Corey Delvine: Just read this from you:
how a protein originally evolved and how proteins have evolved from other proteins are two very different questions
Maybe. So, you certainly have two very different answers! Don't be shy, give them to us.gpuccio
October 6, 2017
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Corey Delvine: What's the problem with you? Are you really trying to understand what I say? It doesn't seem so. You say:
So let me get this straight. You claim that “negative selection works against evolution.” Then agree that positive selection is the driving force behind evolution. Then you go onto agree that “negative and positive selection are two parts of a whole.” So which is it?
I thought I had been clear enough. But let's try again. a) I claim that “negative selection works against evolution.” Wikipedia seems to agree. Biologists seem to agree. You don't agree. OK, you are entitled to your own opinion. Perhaps you could even try to give some reasonable argument if why negative selection act in favor of evolution, or is netral, or whatever you believe. You know, it's called discussion. Until then, I will stick with my reason, with Wikipedia, and with biologists. b) I certainly agree that positive selection is the only driving force behind darwinian evolution. because it is true. Of course, I don't agree that such a driving force can drive anything more than those limited cases of microevolution that I have debated in great detail in my OP, or similar cases. As should be evident to whever has read even a small part of what I have written in this thread, I certainly don't believe that such a driving force can generate new complex functional information. Indeed, I am absolutely certain of the opposite. And I try to explain why in everything I say here. c) I certainly agree that “negative and positive selection are two parts of a whole.” But I have also cleraly specified that they are anyway responsible for two very different processes, and that, while they are coth eliminative processes, the whole difference is given by what is eliminated. I thought that was clear. Where is your problem? Is my English so bad? So, why ever do you ask:
So which is it?
It's very simple. It's a + b + c. There is no contradiction at all. That said, you think whatever you lik.
“The two processes are completely different in their result and their roles” If we look only at amino acid sequence, sure.
Ehm, what should we look at? I must really be dumb. I thought that biological information was written, at least for the part we understand better, in protein coding genes, and that the only role of protein coding gene was to determine the aminoacid sequence of proteins, from which derive the secondary and tertiary structure and therefore the function. But now, in your wisdom, you have clarified to me that I must not look only to the aminoacid sequence. I must also look at... what exactly? I must have missed something in your discourse... and I will see the light.
But don’t miss the forest for the trees. Looking at the bigger picture, both processes are part of the foundation of natural selection and both shift a population toward greater fitness in a given environment.
Ah, that's the trick... I must look at the forest. Very poetical! But, I thought that the forest was made of trees. You know, if you have no trees, but for example only blades of grass, what you get is a meadow, not a forest. However you look.
Anyways, you’ve only mentioned a small number of the potential amounts of variations. You are missing many of the interesting ones, and just sweeping them all under the rug like that does not look good on your part.
Let's see what I missed...
Are you aware that deletion of a single HOX gene has been shown to shift the rib cage up and down the spine of model organisms? How about the fact that a chromosomal inversion in fruit flies drives growth of legs where antennae would normally be? While I am mentioning these more for shock value rather than actual biological function, these massive changes at the organismal level are driven by small or even no change in DNA sequence. Are you sure that you understand the breadth of what “random variation” entails?
Ah, this is almost an argument. My compliments! OK, did you miss the part where I wrote, in anser to you: "Even one bit difference can crash a whole system." and "Both minimally positive effects, and huge negative aspects, I would add." I agree with you with the "huge negative aspects". And you are giving good examples of them. "deletion of a single HOX gene has been shown to shift the rib cage up and down the spine of model organisms" Wonderful! Really a huge functional gain. "a chromosomal inversion in fruit flies drives growth of legs where antennae would normally be" which is, I suppose, a welcome novelty. OK, show me how a simple change in the genetic code can generate a new complex proteins, a completely new functional sequence, or change limbs into functional wings. That would be interesting. Hox genes are final effectors in determining the location of parts. Of course, if you derange them, you derange the final result. Should I be astounded? Why? Try to take out a single transistor in some key position of some very complex circuit, and see what you can do. Should we be amazed at the wonderful power of electronic damage?
You throw around huge numbers like 10^390, but it only affects people who don’t understand how evolution works.
(emphasis mine) Why am I not surprised to hear that? :) (Dionisio, please, don't laugh out so loud! :) )
We did not walk our way to ATP synthase one amino acid at a time.
I am sure of that. But I supposed that was the standard neo-darwinian idea. OK, maybe two aminoacids at a time. Maybe three.. no, three is too difficult.
No biologist would ever claim that’s how it happened.
I don't know. I have never heard any biologists, let's say any interlocutor at all in the neo-darwinist field, claim anything about how it happened. And I have asked that question about ATP synthase beta chain for years, here. You know? You could be the first. OK, please, try!gpuccio
October 6, 2017
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“Squeeze, mind you and not chemically catalyzed.” First, bringing two molecules near each other and in the right orientation to catalyze a reaction is not specific to ATP synthase. And second, if you think there is no chemistry involved in generating ATP....well ...don't let the door hit you on the way out.Corey Delvine
October 6, 2017
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Corey, I don't understand your issue. Do you not understand how ATP is made? Here is a clue- How Cells Make ATP: ATP Synthase:
The first state is called the "open" state. In the "open" state ADP and Pi can bind to the active site. In the second state, called the "loose" state, ADP and Pi are locked in place and cannot be released. In the third state (the "tight" state") ATP is formed as ADP and Pi are squeezed together.
...
This mechanism of ATP synthesis is called the binding change mechanism.
You're welcome for the lesson.
If you get anything out of this, ET, please let it be the fact that how a protein originally evolved and how proteins have evolved from other proteins are two very different questions.
No one said nor implied otherwise. You have a strawman issue also.ET
October 6, 2017
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"Squeeze, mind you and not chemically catalyzed." Wow. Why on Earth did I think it was a good idea to talk to you in the first place. If you get anything out of this, ET, please let it be the fact that how a protein originally evolved and how proteins have evolved from other proteins are two very different questions. Something you guys like to forget.Corey Delvine
October 6, 2017
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The answer to the following question is given in the OP, but let's clarify it again: When the term 'evolution' is used in this discussion, does it refer to microevolution, like the famous Galapagos finch case or to macroevolution, like the often comparison between chimps and humans, or both, or either one, or none of those, or something else? For example, the below links refer to the Galapagos finch case: https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/epigenetics-may-explain-how-darwins-finches-respond-to-environment/ https://uncommondescent.com/evolution/researchers-darwins-finches-not-typical-example-of-evolution-at-all/Dionisio
October 6, 2017
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Corey:
We did not walk our way to ATP synthase one amino acid at a time.
True. There is no doubt that ATP synthase was Intelligently Designed. Just look at its structure-> 2 different subunits held just the right distance apart by an external docking mechanism? And nature just happened to figure out that the way to get ATP is by squeezing captured P's onto captured ADP's? Squeeze, mind you and not chemically catalyzed.
Are you aware that deletion of a single HOX gene has been shown to shift the rib cage up and down the spine of model organisms?
So you want us to believe that developmental control genes just happened to come along, work and because of that were kept? Are you are that the presence of developmental controllers and regulation are evidence for ID? Or do you have any evidence or way to test the claim that non-telic processes did it?ET
October 6, 2017
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So let me get this straight. You claim that "negative selection works against evolution." Then agree that positive selection is the driving force behind evolution. Then you go onto agree that "negative and positive selection are two parts of a whole." So which is it? "The two processes are completely different in their result and their roles" If we look only at amino acid sequence, sure. But don't miss the forest for the trees. Looking at the bigger picture, both processes are part of the foundation of natural selection and both shift a population toward greater fitness in a given environment. Anyways, you've only mentioned a small number of the potential amounts of variations. You are missing many of the interesting ones, and just sweeping them all under the rug like that does not look good on your part. Are you aware that deletion of a single HOX gene has been shown to shift the rib cage up and down the spine of model organisms? How about the fact that a chromosomal inversion in fruit flies drives growth of legs where antennae would normally be? While I am mentioning these more for shock value rather than actual biological function, these massive changes at the organismal level are driven by small or even no change in DNA sequence. Are you sure that you understand the breadth of what "random variation" entails? You throw around huge numbers like 10^390, but it only affects people who don't understand how evolution works. We did not walk our way to ATP synthase one amino acid at a time. No biologist would ever claim that's how it happened.Corey Delvine
October 6, 2017
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Corey:
ET says “you don’t get complex adaptations by merely eliminating the less fit” and you think he/she is referring to the fact that random variation is required as well.
Natural selection includes random variation. Random variation is the first step of natural selection- Mayr "What Evolution Is"
I read what ET said and it seems to me that he/she is trying to refute evolution by redefining it as only “eliminating the less fit” and then saying “that’s not enough.”
What? I am not trying to refute evolution. I was just making a point about natural selection, the alleged designer mimic which is clearly nothing of the sort.
Random variation is NOT just point mutations, which you probably already know.
Actually that is part of the debate as ID says not all mutations are random. The only mutations you can justifiably say are random are point mutations. See Spetner, "Not By Chance" 1997.
he/she
I am in a state of flux.ET
October 6, 2017
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Corey:
Isn’t evolution more complex than that?
Natural selection is an eliminative process that eliminates the less fit over time. See Mayr "What Evolution Is".
Isn’t evolution dependent on constant small changes which are then selected for based on their effects in the organism or between the organism and it’s environment?
Nature doesn't select for anything. Whatever is good enough gets to survive and have a chance at reproducing.ET
October 6, 2017
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Corey Delvine: You say, supposedly quoting me: “Natural selection is a force against evolution” This is definitely quote mining. What I said is: Of course, if a functional gene is supposed to change into something different, either in its original form or in a duplicate functional form, negative selection will act against that change. So, it is in general a force against neo-darwiniam evolution. Emphasis added for your convenience. The idea is simple enough: negative, or purifying, selection just eliminates changes, rso it preserves what already exists. It is rather obvious that it is a force acting against change, therefore against evolution. At best, it is a force which preserves what has been already created (whatever the mechanism that created it). When your imaginary professore says: “natural selection is the main driving force behind evolution” he is obviously referring to positive selection, not to purifying selection. So, I seem to be in agreement, for what it is possible, with your imaginary professor, but not with your more or less purposeful misunderstanding of what I said. You say: "You break natural selection into two forms, but these two forms are actually one in the same. Immediate removal (negative selection) of deleterious changes, while allowing neutral (or nearly neutral) and potentially beneficial changes to remain is what, over time, enriches the gene pool for beneficial changes (positive selection). You seem to have (subconsciously?) realized this because immediately after you copy/pasted from your previous post, you go on to say that “positive selection is eliminative too.” Yes it is, because negative and positive selection are two parts of a whole." But I agree with that! Of course they are two parts of the whole. But each part has different roles, and does different things. So, there is nothing subconscious in my argument. I am well aware that both processes are eliminative, and based on the concept of reproductive advantage, but you seem to forget that what is eliminated is different in the two cases: a) In negative selection, it is any new mutation which is deleterious enough which is eliminated b) In positive selection, it is the old population with the old form of the allele which is eliminated So, while both processes are based on eliminating, the two processes are completely different in their result and their roles. Frankly, your attempt at denying the differences between negative selection and positive selection, which are obvious in all the evolutionary science, is rather pitiful. For example, you may know that when we compute a Ka/Ks ratio, negative and positive selection can be easily distinguished: From Wikipedia (page: Ka/Ks ratio):
The Ka/Ks ratio is used to infer the direction and magnitude of natural selection acting on protein coding genes. A ratio greater than 1 implies positive or Darwinian selection (driving change); less than 1 implies purifying or stabilizing selection (acting against change); and a ratio of exactly 1 indicates neutral (i.e. no) selection.
Emphasis mine. Anyone can interpret what ET said as he likes. My point is not to interpret others (who can certainly speak for themselves) but to clarify things. Even if I start from what someone says, the things I say are my responsibility, and none else's. You say: "Now, I’m not sure exactly who “neo-darwinists” are, but “natural selection, by the process of expansion of simpler beneficial mutations, can help in the process, and lower the probabilistic barriers that stand against RV as an engine of complex novelty” is a good explanation of the process of evolution, in my opinion." I am happy that you agree with my description of the process. I call "neo-darwinists" all those who accept the neo-darwinian paradigm, IOWs the "Modern Synthesis", and all its following forms, based on RV + NS as an explanation for biological complexity. "I think that you disagree with it because you severely underestimate the types and complexities of “random variation”." That's absolutely not true. I don't underestimate random variation at all. I have a very clear idea of what it is, and of what it can do. "Random variation is NOT just point mutations, which you probably already know." Yes. As you imagined, I already know that. You may have noticed that I use the form: RV + NS for the neo-darwinian algorithm, and not RM + NS. That includes all forms of random variation, certainly not only SNVs. You say: "But do you know the variety of changes that are actually encompassed by “random variation”?" Yes, I do. "It is quite astounding." Why? You just apply any form of RV to a computer code, and you will get similar "astounding" results. I am not astounded at all! "And even relatively simple changes can have huge effects on organisms at both the cellular and the organismal levels." Of course. Even one bit difference can crash a whole system. "(Both potentially positive and negative effects I might add.)" Both minimally positive effects, and huge negative aspects, I would add. Please, read my OP. Look, I will try to make a serious argument about that, if you want to listen. Random variation can be of many different kinds: single nucleotide variants, both synonimous and non synonimous, or in non coding DNA, indels, translocations, duplications, exon shuffling, whatever you like. But, when we reason about probabilities in a random walk (which is the only appropriate way to deal quantitatively with RV in biology), then each single event of RV, whatever it is, gives a result which has always the same meaning: a new state. With each event of RV we are reaching a new state. One state among all the possible states. The probability of each possible state to be reached is similar, because the event is by definition random. Of course, there are exceptions, mainly the fact that SNVs, being by definition small variations, usually can reach only sequences in the immediate landscape, and not others. But there is an important exception even to that: frameshift mutations. As you certainly well know. So, what is all this excitement about the "variety of changes that are actually encompassed by “random variation”" about? One change = one new state. What is astounding in that? If you have to reach the 300+ conserved aminoacids in ATP synthase beta chain which are necessary for its function, how is the "variety of changes" going to help you? In no way. A specific sequence of 300 aminoacids is one state among about 10^390. Every time you have a RV event, you are "testing" one of those 10^390 states, whatever the nature of the variation. This is the simple truth.gpuccio
October 6, 2017
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gpuccio @19: "Of course, neo-darwinists believe that NS, by the process of expansion of simpler beneficial mutations, can help in the process, and lower the probabilistic barriers that stand against RV as an engine of complex novelty." Well, why not? There are known examples of fast macroevolution: a pumpkin converted into an elegant carriage. Mice turned into beautiful horses. That story has been around quite long. Who needs more proof? :)Dionisio
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