ecologist88
Member
Has anyone read the Biotic Message by Walter Remine? He claims that Haldane's Dilemma is unanswered. Anyone know about this?
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Has anyone read the Biotic Message by Walter Remine? He claims that Haldane's Dilemma is unanswered. Anyone know about this?
From CB121: Haldane's DilemmaResponse:
Haldane's "cost of natural selection" stemmed from an invalid simplifying assumption in his calculations. He divided by a fitness constant in a way that invalidated his assumption of constant population size, and his cost of selection is an artifact of the changed population size. He also assumed that two mutations would take twice as long to reach fixation as one, but because of sexual recombination, the two can be selected simultaneously and both reach fixation sooner. With corrected calculations, the cost disappears (Wallace 1991; Williams n.d.).
Haldane's paper was published in 1957, and Haldane himself said, "I am quite aware that my conclusions will probably need drastic revision" (Haldane 1957, 523). It is irresponsible not to consider the revision that has occurred in the forty years since his paper was published.
ReMine (1993), who promotes the claim, makes several invalid assumptions. His model is contradicted by the following:
The vast majority of differences would probably be due to genetic drift, not selection.
Many genes would have been linked with genes that are selected and thus would have hitchhiked with them to fixation.
Many mutations, such as those due to unequal crossing over, affect more than one codon.
Human and ape genes both would be diverging from the common ancestor, doubling the difference.
ReMine's computer simulation supposedly showing the negative influence of Haldane's dilemma assumed a population size of only six (Musgrave 1999).
There isn't a dilemma. Haldane missed certain aspects of how evolution works, for instance that there's two parties partaking in sexual reproduction, not one. That's why sex won out in evolution, because it's more powerful and faster to produce genetic variation.The Wikipedia article on Haldane's Dilemma is a lasting shame on evolutionists. That article documents the evolutionists' continued attempt to obscure Haldane's Dilemma, rather than solve it. Evolutionists still have no agreed solution to Haldane's Dilemma. They merely obscure it away, and brush it aside prematurely. It is a scandal.
It doesn't even have to be solved by computer simulation since Haldane missed parts of how evolution works.See for yourself. Compare the Wikipedia article with the CreationWiki.org article (written by ReMine).
Haldane's Dilemma has NOT been solved by computer simulation. There exists no computer simulation anywhere: (1) that "solves Haldane's Dilemma", and (2) which evolutionary geneticists themselves embrace as a realistic model of evolution in nature.
Or it's unrealistic to take a 60 year old research paper that contained errors as a fact or disproof of evolution.It is not honest to attack Haldane's assumptions as "unrealistic" when they are wildly unrealistic IN FAVOR of evolution.
Moreover, the evolutionists' computer simulations so far make wildly unrealistic assumptions IN FAVOR of evolution. There exists no computer simulation that solves Haldane's Dilemma.
Haldane's Dilemma has not been solved. For a good introduction go to CreationWiki.org, and see the topic "Haldane's Dilemma". ReMine wrote it.
One doesn't need to know biological terms or complex mathematics to see biological evolution in action right there in our own species, making this "dilemma" hardly a problem at all.
There isn't a dilemma. Haldane missed certain aspects of how evolution works, for instance that there's two parties partaking in sexual reproduction, not one.
It doesn't even have to be solved by computer simulation since Haldane missed parts of how evolution works.
Or it's unrealistic to take a 60 year old research paper that contained errors as a fact or disproof of evolution.
Haldane even ends with "To conclude, I am quite aware that my conclusions will probably need drastic revision. But I am convinced that quantitative arguments of the kind here put forward should play a part in all future discussions of evolution."
Yes, but incorrectly.That's an error. Haldane's analysis included sexual reproduction.
Since we share over 20 ERVs and hundreds of unique transposons with chimpanzees, we have to be related, so solely based on that, we have to conclude that there's something missing from the "dilemma" that is forcing the it to become a dilemma when it really isn't. (like parallel instead of serial mutation rate, which increases in speed in larger populations as Nunney discovered.)Seeing "biological evolution in action" is not the issue. Haldane's Dilemma is the issue, and evolutionists have not solved it.
Since we share over 20 ERVs and hundreds of unique transposons with chimpanzees, we have to be related, so solely based on that, we have to conclude that there's something missing from the "dilemma" that is forcing it to become a dilemma when it really isn't. (like parallel instead of serial mutation rate, which increases in speed in larger populations as Nunney discovered.)
I don't think you read the other articles that I linked to.His argument is essentially, 'Evolution is a fact, therefore there is no dilemma. Rather, there must be something missing from our understanding [of evolutionary genetics]'.
In other words, there remains an unresolved contradiction within the field of evolutionary genetics. Haldane's Dilemma remains unsolved, just as ReMine claims.
Yes, [Haldane's analysis included sexual reproduction,] but incorrectly.
He [Haldane] also assumed that two mutations would take twice as long to reach fixation as one, ...
... but because of sexual recombination, the two can be selected simultaneously and both reach fixation sooner.
With corrected calculations, the cost disappears
Riverwolf's post is an example of how evolutionists create confusion and allow it to thrive, so as to brush aside Haldane's Dilemma prematurely. They have not actually solved Haldane's Dilemma.
"Seeing biological evolution in action" is not the issue. Haldane's Dilemma puts a limit on the RATE of evolution -- and a limit of 1,667 beneficial substitutions in ten million years. Evolutionary geneticists have not solved it.