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06-15-2002, 12:10 PM | #21 | ||||||||||||||||||||
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scigirl,
No, it is you who once again misunderstand me. (Hanging my head down, and shaking it slowly and sadly, and suddenly noticing that I need to get a new shoelace in one of my trusty "Wolverine" workboots.) I was not thinking that you thought that that one specific gene (or whatever) was the only difference between humans and chimps - I was trying to highlight the fact that it ISN'T the only difference (the "fusion point"). I was trying to get you to be the one to "'fess up", as it is more dramatic that way. Quote:
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In Christ, Douglas [ June 15, 2002: Message edited by: Douglas J. Bender ]</p> |
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06-15-2002, 04:43 PM | #22 | ||||||||
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From this argument, one could argue that DJB had not come from two human parents, but instead, that he had miraculously popped into existence into thin air, having been miraculously created. Quote:
To expound in detail, this was a result of comparing our genome with other genomes, such as those of chimps, mice, dogs, and fish. Some parts are strongly conserved (close sequence matching), while some parts are not. Protein-coding parts are generally conserved, which is a result of being selected for specific functions, but the big surprise is the finding of a large number of conserved noncoding parts. These most likely have other functions, such as gene regulation and coding for functional bits of RNA; exactly what functions many of these parts have is unknown. But much of our genome has poor sequence conservation, meaning that it evolves with little or no selective constraint. This suggests that those parts either have no function or have some function that imposes very little sequence constraint, like being "stuffing" or mutagen sinks or whatever. Quote:
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06-15-2002, 04:56 PM | #23 | |
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Mr. Bender:
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Rick; moderator of the FD&D forum. |
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06-16-2002, 12:15 AM | #24 | ||||||||||||||
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Ok here we go again,
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from <a href="http://www.gate.net/~rwms/EvoEvidence.html" target="_blank">the evolution evidence page</a> again: Quote:
About function of the telomeres: Quote:
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This is from another chromosome (chromosome number 4), but here's some preliminary work addressing your question whether extra telomeres are functional. <a href="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=117319 35&dopt=Abstract" target="_blank">A cascade of complex subtelomeric duplications during the evolution of the hominoid and Old World monkey genomes.</a> Quote:
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Obviously, just because there is a naturalistic explanation for planet orbits, or for thunder, that doesn't mean there is no supernatural deities. Why do you object to evolutionary biologists looking for natural explanations, but not other scientists? Or do you object when a scientist looks for a natural cause of cancer, rather than a satanic one? I'm very confused as to why evolutionary biologists get 'special' treatment, out of the long list of scientists who attempt to study and explain the natural world in order to improve it. You asked why your explanation doesn't explain the locations? Well, when you do genetic engineering (say, you insert a gene in a mouse), usually you just throw it in there, and it integrates into any old spot in the DNA. And usually, it works just fine. Actually, you can stick it in a bacterial plasmid, insert that plasmid in the eukaryotic cell, and the gene usually works without ever being integrated into any of the euk chromosomes! It seems that the locations of genes do not seem to matter much - this is an assumtion based on the fact that multi-subunit proteins are encoded by genes that are scattered around the DNA (in what looks to us a haphazard fashion). So, if genes don't need to be in a particular order (as evidenced by genetic engineering AND just common sense observations about proteins), than why are so many genes from so many different organisms lined up in a pattern that is consistent with evolution? Quote:
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What I am trying to impress upon you is this: 1) Genes do not appear to need a particular location in order to function. This is true with gp91 that I study in my lab--one of the 5 genes in NADPH oxidase (you can introduce it as a plasmid and it still works). 2) Genes do not have a particular order if you analyze them according to what they do in a given organism (again, the NADPH oxidase genes--there's 5--are all on different chromosomes). 3) These same exact genes are in that same weird haphazard order in related organisms. For example, gp91 is on the X in humans, and lo and behold, it's also on the X in all the animals that evolution says are our relatives. If #1 is true, than why do we see #3, if not for evolution? If each animal were separately created, this to me seems like a pretty amazing coincidence that gp91 is always on the X, even though we can show it doesn't need to be on the X. Why? Quote:
Should we abandon all of our working theories and models about the universe because we might be wrong? Or should we keep using the ones that work fairly or really well to explain the evidence, until data surfaces that shows our models are wrong? I vote for the former. So out with it, prove that the extra centromere and telomeres in chromosome 2 are necessary, and show me where they came from. Here's some more evidence for you: <a href="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=118630 72&dopt=Abstract" target="_blank">Direct evidence for the Homo-Pan clade.</a> Quote:
The thing is Douglas, there is no way to prove to you that evolution happened, if your answer is to say, "well all that evidence just means that God wanted it that way." Why is it that all this data just happens to align with our evolutionary trees that we made just from fossil records and other types of data? Is that just an amazing coincidence too? The ordering of the genes (even though they don't need to be in that order), the ordering of the "junk," the extra centromeres and telomeres, the transposition data in the Y, etc, etc. This data is piling up higher and higher, and nearly every time, the data supports our trees that we made before genetic experiments. Coincidence, God wanted it that way, or evolution? I wonder, if evolutionary theory is such a good predictor of where genes are going to be in an organism, even if it didn't really happen, why does it matter to you? You might as well accept the predictions/conclusions of evolution anyway, since so far, here's the score as I see it: * Specific predictions about genes made by evolutionary theory that just happened to come true: thousands * Specific predictions about genes made by the 1st chapter of Genesis that just happened to come true: zero So why not just accept evolution, and say, "God set it into motion" or whatever, since you are forced to accept the conclusions anyway (instead of saying 'humans have very similar chromosome patterns as a chimp that in fact look like evolution but are not at all from evolution')?? scigirl |
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06-16-2002, 07:51 AM | #25 | ||||
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lpetrich,
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In Christ, Douglas |
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06-16-2002, 09:35 AM | #26 | |
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scigirl |
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06-16-2002, 09:51 AM | #27 | |||
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06-16-2002, 10:06 AM | #28 | |
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1. A robot with a one-piece arm. This part had a hook on it that attached it to the main frame, and also had a characteristic blemish on it--say, a big red stain. Now, let's say that the old creations get left in the junkyard, and can be used in future shows. Next week we find this robot: 2. This robot is much different from last week's robot. The arm is composed of two pieces this time. The piece that attaches to the main frame (the "upper arm) has a different hook from the first robot arm. But then we notice that there's a piece that was welded by the team to the upper arm (i.e. the "forearm) that, strangely enough, looks just like the main arm from the first robot. In fact, the hook is still there, but is not hooking to anything. Also, this forearm has the same red stain, and is the same size. Would you conclude the following? A. The junkyard wars team constructed the second robot arm from scratch, they stuck a hook on the forearm even though it wasn't hooking to anything, and also put a red stain on it. B. The team found the first robot in the junkyard, took the arm, and stuck it on their new robot? That, I believe is a better analogy. Robot A's arm represents one of the chimp chromosomes (how about 2q), robot B's arm represents human chromosome 2. A piece of chromosome 2 looks just like 2q - same size, same blemishes, same non-functioning hook (at least it looks non-functional). The centromere does actually function as a hook--the microtubules attach to it to pull chromosomes apart during meiosis and mitosis. Chromosomes only need one. We have not observed any known function for the extra centromere in the human chromosome, but yet, there it is, looking just like the centromere from 2q, blemishes and all. scigirl |
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06-17-2002, 11:10 AM | #29 | |
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06-22-2002, 06:39 AM | #30 |
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Douglas,
Well? Anything to add about the human/chimp chromosome fusion event? scigirl |
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