R
rossum
Guest
The genome of what? A bacterium has a smaller genome than a starfish. What organism has this genome and where is the reference which provides the figure of 10,000?The genome.
Basic knowledge which you appear to lack. I mentioned chromosomes, genes and exons. Chromosomes are always DNA. Genes and exons can be either DNA before transcription or RNA after transcription. RNA may be messenger-RNA, transfer-RNA or ribosomal-RNA, with some of the mRNA being non-coding. You have failed to explain what you meant by your apparently nonsensical word-salad, “Duplications occur at the eukaryotic level therefore all genes must be accounted for.” Are you sure you are not using a Markov text generator to put your posts together?Are you aware it’s called RNA? (gasp) I mean really this is basic knowledge.
Given your almost complete lack of knowledge in this area your opinion is of no worth. You have opinion, science has the evidence. Science wins.Which in my opinion negates certain aspects of causality that are critical in science.
Your ignorance obviously extends to cover the ability to search the internet. Type “average mutations in humans” into Google. I got over four million hits, among them Nachmann and Crowell (2000) “Estimate of the Mutation Rate per Nucleotide in Humans” where you can read:Our estimate of the neutral mutation rate is 175 mutations per genome per generation (range 91–238). This is science where we have detailed data to back up our numbers. We have the data, get used to it.And as far as I can tell you pulled that number out of your hoo-ha.
To show that your argument that natural selection has no mutations to work on is worthless. Natural selection has billions of mutations to work on. It also serves to point out your lack of knowledge in this area - the figure I used, 150, is a common estimate. Why do you chose to argue in an area where your knowledge is sorely lacking? You would do better discussing a topic that you know something about.What exactly is the point of this anyway?
It shows that your toy model of evolution that omits natural selection is faulty and that the probabilities you are getting from it are worthless.I don’t see how it helps your argument.
Evidently something else you do not understand.Second law of thermodynamics: entropy.
rossum