dust1n
Zindīq
....if you can't calculate the chance of mutations.....then the suspect says to the judge you can't calculate the chance that somebody else has the same DNA as me...somebody else could have mutations exactly same as me...therefore you cannot exclude the possibility somebody else has the same DNA as me... therefore the evidence is inconclusive..and the suspect is let go
All evolutionists I ever talked to cannot reason. They are all political party ideologues repeating the standard party line.
How Anti-Evolutionists Abuse Mathematics:
http://educ.jmu.edu/~rosenhjd/sewell.pdf
The researchers, Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator Phil Green and his student Dick Hwang, published a description of their new analytical approach and an initial application August 3, 2004, in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Both are at the University of Washington in Seattle.
"Understanding naturally occurring mutations has been of great interest because mutations are major drivers of evolution," said Green. "However, it's surprising how little is still known about their causes."
Previous studies have revealed a number of biases in the rates of different types of mutational change. These arise in part from the innate biochemical characteristics of the four DNA nucleotide units – adenine, guanine, cytosine and thymine – that affect their vulnerability to modification and the accuracy with which they are replicated when cells divide. Particular nucleotide sequences, for example cytosine-guanine (CpG) dinucleotides, form "hotspots" – regions that are particularly vulnerable to alterations that convert one nucleotide to another, causing mutations.
To understand these biases, Hwang and Green sought to develop a flexible approach to analyze the process of "neutral DNA evolution," in regions thought to lack genes and other functionally important sequences. "If you want to get an unvarnished picture of the mutation process itself, uncorrupted by natural selection, you want to look at neutrally evolving DNA," said Green. "Mutations in DNA that is not functional should better represent the complete spectrum of naturally occurring mutations. Mutations are of course also occurring in the genes and those are of interest because they can create new phenotypes and cause variation among traits. Some of those mutations are advantageous and consequently quickly spread through the species, while others are deleterious and are weeded out. So genes and other features don't evolve at neutral rates."
Bad Luck of Random Mutations Plays Predominant Role in Cancer, Study Shows - 01/01/2015
More stuff
New mathematics research proves there's plenty of time for evolution