I remember I tried something at this site once.
03 September 2009
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Hmmm... I remember I tried something at this site once. Evidently, I gave up - lack of interest from anyone other than myself. Ah well. I think my style was too baby for those "in the know" and too detailed for those, um... "not".
I did kinda work on most of these prior posts here- and I think I tightened it a tiny bit and made it one single thingy. Figured I may as will pop it here.
Especially since once of the core ideas talked about is in the news today.1. No one knows.
An email was sent to PZ Meyers, a vocal opponent of anti-evolutionists, in which the following was asked:
How would a lizard "know" that it needed to develop camouflage to survive?
I can't imagine how any plant or animal other than human would have the ability to "know" and as well as pass it along via DNA to future hundreds of thousands of generations?
I was confused by the question.
The quick answer to the above question is: No one knows. No animal, plant, microbe, or whatever, says "Hmm... it's time to evolve! OK here we go... grrrrrrrrrrrrrr," followed by a POP! as wings sprout from it's rear.
And, though the questioner assumes it to be so, even humans aren't in control of how our species will change and diverge over millions of years. We have influence, far more influence, than most species, no doubt. But control? No.
More importantly, the question assumes that you or I, or a plant or animal, can somehow feel evolution happening in us. It doesn't work that way. Each of us is just a single frame of film that makes up a very, very long movie.
Even a whole species, over time, doesn't "know" to evolve.
No more than millions of hydrogen atoms know how to condense into a star or we know how to grow from baby to adult.
All things follow some combination of rules: of Physics/Mathematics, of Chemistry, of Biology. In the case of natural selection (the basic mechanism of evolution), the rules, in their most direct form, aren't that complicated once they are spelled out.
So... again, the question above confuses me. It wouldn't confuse me in a world where the basic concepts of nature were unknown. But that is not this world. Here, there is understanding to be had. It is also a world, unfortunately, where many are not aware of what is known. There's a lot of people that share blame for this - scientist and non-scientist alike. But the fact is, it is a situation that exists - one which desperately needs to be addressed.
Before I forget - I really, really want to point this out - not knowing a thing is not a something of which anyone should feel bad. The day you think you know everything with absolute certainty is the day you have deceived yourself utterly. That is a dangerous day. Knowing what you don't know, and asking to find answers, is how everyone learns.
So, in my own little way, I want to try spelling out a simple summary of the concept of natural selection as it is currently understood.1. We're all random mutants:
The instructions for making all living things is in our DNA. Essentially every animal, plant, or whatever, is born with a tiny number of errors in its DNA instructions. Also, these errors are basically random. One animal will have a mutation in some his part of the DNA instructions, another will have a mutation in a different spot of the instructions. Most of these changes, or mutations, really don't do much to harm or help the being which receives them. But the changes are new set in the instructions and these will be passed on to their children who will also end up with yet new mutations. And so, over the generations the mutations accumulate in a population.2. Natural challenges are thrown at populations all the time:
Nature constantly throws challenges at populations: Way too hot or cold, lack of food, too many predators, a poison or toxin seeps into the environment, lake water levels shrink or overflow, a volcanic eruption drastically alters the environment of the planet, an asteroid strikes ... really just think of something bad, and it probably already happened more than once in the world. And these are just the really drastic ones. More subtle challenges - many at any given time - happen pretty much continuously.3. Any given challenge of nature makes some DNA mutations more beneficial than others:
When a new natural challenge happens, especially to a big population, some individuals may have changes in their DNA instructions allow them to thrive better under the new conditions. If so, then they and their descendants will carry those changes forward. Those that have less ability to thrive under those conditions will be lost, over time, and take their genes with them. 4. The longer the challenge lasts, the more the beneficial changes set in and develop, and the more the harmful changes become lost:
Sometimes a severe natural challenge arises but only briefly (imagine there being a horribly bitter winter one year which really takes a toll on all the animals in an area. But then for many years afterward, the winters return to normal). In these cases, while the genetic changes - say an increase in hairiness - may have helped some survive over others, the removal of the severe pressure removes the need for that specific changed DNA.
The longer a specific challenge lasts (for example, say it's not just one cold winter, but a new ice age has begun) the more this selective filtering will happen.
First, the ones having the original useful mutation will remain the most able to survive. Then, as new mutations occur, there are new random DNA tweaks. Again, while the new mutations are random (as they always are), it is the tweaks that continue to improve survival within this stressful environment that will endure in favor over the others - even over the tweaks that FIRST allowed them to survive.
The longer this pattern continues. the more apparent the physical changes - ones that have become continuously better at their special function - will be.5. No one knows this is happening to them:
All of this is due to constant pressure over generations - to be more warmer, more able to hop or fly from tree-to-tree, more able to see better, run better, etc, etc. Even we humans, with the ability to think in detail, don't really know the environmental challenges that will be thrown at us tomorrow, or in a thousand years, and which particular traits will help us get through them.
No one knows it's "time to change". Change happens every time a new person, animal, or plant is born.
And, just sometimes, a useful change is there at the right time. And so the change sets into the population. But, rest assured, no one is aware of it - feeling the change.
What they - we - are aware of is that we are living our lives the best we can.
And that's enough of a responsibility right there. without worrying about "how to evolve". 2. Arguments in Bad Faith
I don't sit well when people use a public stage to spout off misinformation - especially regarding issues about which I happen to have some knowledge.
As in politics, people using deceptive tactics in anti-science or anti-medicine crusades are usually doing it for a reason: to sway people to their pre-defined cause by, essentially, lying.
One of the most insidious forms of lying to convince people that the “other side” is wrong goes something like this:
The main reason I worry about this approach is it’s very easy to get people to believe distortions of truth when the people haven’t been given a basic understanding of the facts in the first place.
Not surprisingly, this has come up in the context of the biological evolution of species, something which is an absolute fact of nature, the precise mechanisms of which are still under reasonable scientific discussion. In fact, it’s astonishing to realize the shear number of different versions of the above deception with regards to evolution.
To illustrate, here’s a good example of the deception to which I refer – following the same pattern which I outlined above:
Now, anyone reading that argument – especially when simply breezing through a magazine article – could be easily forgiven for simply accepting that argument It makes some sense. Um…except for the fact that the first two lines are completely false.
And deep down, all I want to do is explain why they are false. Which means I have to explain what is true. But I want to do so with an eye to presenting an overview as opposed to a highly detailed description (for which there are many, many sources).
So I guess, I’ll just do that in my own way.
And I’ll start at the heart of a wrong assumption: that "mutations are BAD".3. You are a mutant.
You're a mutant.
It’s not an insult.
You are, and were, from the very beginning of your genetic existence, someone that was built with mutated DNA.
Here’s a bit of what I mean - just a little bit.
You were given half of your DNA – the instructions of life – by your father and half by your mother.
We all might think that if your Dad compared the DNA that he gave you to the DNA with which he started life, that they would be a perfect match.
And it probably is. Nearly perfect.
Nearly.
But not quite.
At the least, what he would actually find is that his original DNA, the sequence of letters he was born with, and the DNA he gave you had a couple of hundred tiny differences, scattered randomly throughout. A similar fact is true for your mother’s contribution as well.
This is a consistently demonstrable fact, a consequence of the slight imperfection of the machinery that copies our DNA.
The DNA they each gave you contains numerous mutations – changes in DNA .
They both gave you mutated DNA.
So - without question – you are a mutant.
My stating this raises two questions: (1) How did that happen? (2) Why do I not have six toes, or something equally “mutanty”?
Your instructions were copied less-than-perfectly
To think about this, let me just describe some background with a way too simple and utterly inaccurate analogy:
Your DNA is a book of instructions, written in a simple alphabet (as it is made of only 4 letters, unlike our 26 letter alphabet).
Now, this instruction book is sometimes described as a "blueprint" of your body. However, that’s a bit inaccurate.
All your book really contains is the diagrams to make a wide variety of tools and materials that are, generically, called “proteins”.
And it’s these proteins, each one described in your DNA instruction book, that work together in a highly intricate dance of interactions and combinations to build you.
So, again:
OK... given that background, what is a mutation?
The most basic description of a mutation is: any change somewhere in the DNA instructions.
There are many types of changes that can happen, some massive and some almost imperceptible, but I’ll focus on the simpler ones.
Imagine someone has your book of DNA instructions and is given the task of making a copy of the whole thing by hand. (And in fact, this copying happens all the time in most of the cells in your body.)
OK, so, the guy who’s doing the copying is pretty darn good. He rarely makes mistakes and he’s also very diligent at double checking his work so as to correct the occasional error he does make.
So the copy is really, really pretty darn faithful to the original.
But… it’s a big book. Once in a very, very long while, the copying guy misspells a word (In the analogy, say, “cat” is copied as “car” or “kat”) and also happens to not notice the error, so it doesn’t get corrected.
Once he’s moved on to later pages of the book, there is no going back. The error is now a permanent part of the copied book.
That’s a mutation.
Other times, he might accidentally delete or add one or many letters. (In the analogy, “color” becomes “collor” or “colour”)
These are also mutations.
There are even more elaborate ways that changes in DNA instructions happen, but these basic ones illustrate the point, I think.
And here’s where the difference between your parents’ DNA and your DNA comes up:
See, for the most part, both your father and mother were built up using the instruction books they were born with.
And as the years went by, eventually, your mother-to-be started making egg cells and your father-to-be made sperm cells – the two things that, together, make a child.
Each round of “making cells” is, in fact, a round of copying the DNA instruction book and putting it into a new cell. And each round of copying has that chance of a mistake being made, somewhere, nearly randomly.
That chance, again, is low. But over the years, the copying happens often enough that it happens often enough.
And for an average 30 year old man, enough rounds of copying have happened that a hundred or so random errors – mutations - have crept into the instructions contained within any given sperm cell. Similar events are true for any given egg from the mother.
And then one sperm and one egg meet and, of course, that’s the start of a baby. A baby with a couple of hundred mutations!
You. Me. Everyone.
You are a mutant.
And yet most of us are not particularly unusual compared with anyone else, to the best of our knowledge.
How can this be?4. Quiet Accumulations
To recap from the prior post:
If we all start with a couple of hundred mutations in our DNA, why don’t we all have three arms and twenty eyes - or at least look like Hugh Jackman?
I suppose it's worth making a semantic distinction here with words like mutant and mutation.
The spelling changes in your DNA instructions are the “mutations”. The protein which is encoded by the altered DNA is a “mutant” protein. The organism (animal, plant, microbe) that was created with those mutant proteins is often also called a “mutant”.
Calling one with a change in their DNA a “mutant” would be correct, whether or not one could actually see any bodily evidence of the changes which the mutation has caused.
However, in the common usage – the non-scientific language - people think of a "mutant" as some person with a demonstrable change from the norms of humanity - a six-toed foot, for example. So, by that measure - a very extreme measure - very few of us would think of ourselves as mutants.
But this clouds the simple fact that each of us truly do contain mutations. We are not simply re-assortments of our parents’ genetic information. Each of us has a scattering of new changes within us – we were conceived and born with these changes.
And yet, here we are, most of us, looking more or less like our family and even our friends.
Why, if we all have genetic “abnormalities” do we not all look or work much differently than anyone else?Most mutations neither harm nor help:
So, here’s the deal: most genetic mutations have no major effect on how you function as a human or how you look, at least compared to the normal variations seen throughout humanity.
In these cases - again the most common - the net result is that there is no discernible difference between how you function with that mutation and how you would function without it. It is a fact of statistics and the way DNA and proteins work that most mutations will not actually cause any real problem or benefit at all.Same difference:
In many cases, this “no harm, no foul” result is because the particular mutation in the DNA instruction causes absolutely no change in how the proteins – the actual machinery and materials of you - are built. This is called a “silent” mutation.
There’s a detailed reason that this is possible - but for now, just think of how you, a reader of English, would interpret the words “color” and “colour”. Depending on where you live (the US or UK), one is probably the preferred spelling, but you know that they both mean the exact same thing – it’s just a minor spelling variation about which most English speakers are forgiving.
Essentially the same thing happens with many words in DNA instructions. There are quite a number of DNA words that can be spelled with minor variation and yet mean precisely the same thing.
So mutations in DNA that simply result in accepted spelling variations will not change the protein that it encodes in any way at all.Close enough for government work:
Other times, the change is not a simple spelling variation but actually does alter how the protein is built. However, even with a change in the structure, many are minimal enough to actually keep the protein functioning in approximately the same way as the original. This is termed a “neutral” mutation.
Imagine you had instructions to make a chain to lock a bike to a bike rack. The instructions call for 50 metal oval links and a very intricate lock mechanism on one end.
And the instructions are not in the shorthand we might be used to, like this:
The instructions are more linear, step-by-step, no matter how repetitive it seems, like this:
Followed by the (likely) hundreds of individual steps to make a lock from scratch, attached to the chain of links, and then it's done.
Now, imagine the instructions got slightly garbled so it suddenly said to do this:
Well, a metal square link isn't quite the same as a metal oval link, but it still serves the purpose of being a solid link, and the chain is about the same length – so, in the end, we still have a usable bike lock system.
These "neutral" mutations happen quite often. And, in such cases, it’s almost as harmless a change as the previous type of silent mutation.
(Note: A very different outcome might have happened had we mucked about with the very intricate makeup of the lock mechanism, or if a metal link had been replaced with a link made of silly putty.)Sooner or later... the day comes when you can't hide from what you've done anymore. A day of reckoning.
As mentioned previously, at conception, every human child is a recipient of a couple of hundred of these type of mutations. Now, considering your DNA instruction set is made up of a few billion letters, this is an almost imperceptible amount of change.
And because silent and neutral mutations, introduced one by one in the DNA instruction book, are often not even noticed, this allows genetic mutations creep into a population over time.
But over time, over many generations, it begins to add up. Think about this:
And it goes on.
And this has always been happening since before we were born and will continue to happen long after we’re gone.
And those are just the simple spelling errors. There's far more dramatic mutations out there as well.
Because of all this, the changes accumulate.
And, again, many of these end up being no benefit and no harm.
But at some point, for one of many reasons, a mutation - be it a brand new one or a combination of older ones - will make a difference.
For one of your descendants, who knows how many generations away, this accumulation of mutations could ultimately lead to something very harmful.
Or, almost as likely, they could result in something that will save their life and the lives of *their* descendants.
Or it just might make their eyes bluer.
You really won’t know until the day that it kicks in.
But that day (or many days, or century, or millennium) ends up being very important.5. We are the things that worked.
To recap:“Oh my GOD! It's a MUTANT!!!”
There are, indeed, mutations that result in very serious effects. The most obvious examples of this are birth defects that decrease the likelihood of surviving for long after birth or at least to adulthood. Of this type, most are so severe that such a one would likely never even make it through pre-birth development and would not even be born.
These are the ones - aside from the ability to shoot ice from our hands or to look like Hugh Jackman - that people commonly think of as “mutations”.
But the rest... are a little more subtle.
Sometimes, a mutation makes a difference right when it emerges - if it affects something immediately important in how something physically develops or it's ability to continue living.
Other times, even though it changes something physically (whether you can see it or not), a mutation may not impact anything enough to effect an organism's development or life *if* it doesn't really impact the needs it has in that particular environment.Relative benefit, relative harm
So, as for the smaller fraction of mutations that do have a noticeable effect:
As an example, we can consider changes that affect an organism's ability to obtain or efficiently utilize food.
Some possible beneficial results of a mutation that increase the ability to obtain energy from food:
Some possible detrimental results of a mutation that decrease the ability to obtain energy from food:
(As a side-comment: notice that being "the strongest" is just one of many things that may - or may not - help an individual to survive. Some people, even today, insist on interpreting a famous term "Survival of the fittest" to mean some form of "Survival of the strongest". This is absolutely wrong.)
Now it’s important to note here - with this food acquisition example - that in times of plenty, there might be so much food available that everyone has enough to eat and there’s no particular harm or benefit to the above changes in ability, assuming they are not too severe.
In this case, where the pressure caused by food availability is very low, it's possible to have a population of animals with both the original food-using ability and the altered one to be intermingled without any noticeable advantage of one over the other. If the environment is not one in which this mutation is noticed, there is little pressure on the animals with the relatively decreased ability.
It’s when food becomes more scarce that any benefit or harm, food-wise, will become noticeable to the population.Just able to make it through
Under this pressure of nature (ie, sudden limited food sources) the harm or benefit of any abilities will ultimately be noticed in one way:
Which ones are able to survive this pressure, and which ones are not.
Compared to those better equipped to cope with the pressure, more of those individuals that are less able to survive the pressure will succumb before they have children. And so the genetics that caused them to be less able to cope will diminish in the population over time.
Taken to the extreme, if the pressure (ie, lack of food) continues long enough, over enough generations, the genes which resulted in a lesser ability to cope could ultimately be gone from the population.
But note: all the survivors had was simply a better ability to deal with a particular circumstance over time. It could have been lack of food, it could have been too cold or too hot, or increased radiation, or a new disease, or anything else you can think of.
Usually it's many of these at once.
Nothing about an individual's survival, or more importantly, the genetics behind it, says anything about it's superiority or advanced nature.
That which allowed survival was simply the best thing available at the time.Not more advanced, just the fortunate recipients of survival
To drive the point home, there have been uncountable numbers of species that - after all their "advancement" - suddenly ended up without even a "best". Given a particular challenge - some lasting numerous generations, others happening abruptly - most species on Earth, after millions of years getting through all sorts of things, one day found themselves with nothing that ultimately could save them.
So, in the end, the use of the term "good genetics" (a term I've heard tossed about) is something I find particularly annoying. That term is so vague that it is essentially meaningless. But the way people use it is to mean something like, "to be more advanced".
This is simply false.
On a purely biological level (as opposed to philosophical), the fact that we, each of us, is here on Earth means nothing more than that we (via all our ancestors) made it through the hoops and hurdles of time.
More likely than not, in many cases, we just made it.
We are all a mish-mash of thousands of things that were good enough for government work. Some functioned well, some even exceedingly well, and some just got us by. Some things got tweaked to work better, others still truck along almost the same as they were when they first appeared.
Nothing about us is, in any way, perfect. And biologically speaking, we are not in any way a goal of this process.
Put simply, we – each and every plant, animal and microbe on Earth - are all amazingly fascinating, walking, talking collages of things that worked.
Posted by Clear as Mud at Thursday, September 03, 2009
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No one knows
07 June 2008
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How does a tree know how to "evolve" it's seed to fly on the wind?The super-quick answer, by the way, is: No one knows or thinks about needing to "evolve". No more than hydrogen "knows" how to condense into stars or we "know" how to grow from baby to adult.
How would a lizard "know" that it needed to develop camouflage to
survive?I can't imagine who any plant or animal other than human would have
the ability to "know" and as well as pass it along via DNA to future
hundreds of thousands of generations?
All things follow some combination of rules: of Physics/Mathematics, of Chemistry, of Biology.
In the case of natural selection, the rules, in their most direct form, aren't that complicated once they are spelled out.
Also, the question is a fair one. But only in a world where few understand the basics of biology. There's a lot of people that share blame for this - scientist and non-scientist alike. But the fact is, it is a situation that now exists which needs to be addressed.
And - I really, really want to point this out - not knowing a thing is NOT something to feel bad about, especially when you're willing to ask questions. Yes, there's occasionally some stuck up snot who'll lord his or her pool of knowledge over you like it was a badge of honor. But that's because they are jerks.
Knowing what you don't know, and asking to find answers, is how everyone learns.
So, as I tried to do in a comment on that post... I want to try a simple summary of the concept of natural selection: Feel free to tell me if I have screwed something up here, by the way.
1. We're all random mutants:
(Which I touched on in part 1 and part 2)
Essentially every animal, plant, or whatever, is born with a number of mutations. Many, if not most, of which don't do much one way or the other. Additionally, which particular mutations each one has is basically random. One will have a mutation in this part of the DNA instructions, another will have a mutation in a different spot of the instructions, and so on.
2. Natural challenges are thrown at populations all the time:
(Which I touched on here in general and here with a specific case)
Nature constantly throws challenges at populations: Way too hot, too cold, lack of food, too many predators on the ground, a poison or toxin seeps into the environment, lake water levels shrink, water levels rise and invade areas that were once land, a massive eruption drastically alters the environment of the planet, an asteroid strikes ... really just think of something bad, and it probably already happened more than once in the world. And these are just the really drastic ones. More subtle challenges - many at any given time - happen pretty much continuously.
3. Any given challenge of nature makes some DNA mutations more beneficial than others:
If individuals have DNA changes that allow them the ability to thrive better under the conditions created by natural challenges, then they and their descendants will carry those changes forward. Those that have less ability to thrive under those conditions will be lost and take their genes with them.
4. The longer the challenge lasts, the more the beneficial changes set-in and develop:
Sometimes a severe natural challenge arises but only briefly (imagine there being a horribly bitter winter one year which really takes a toll on all the animals in an area. But then for many years afterward, the winters return to normal). In these cases, while the genetic changes - say an increase in hairiness - may have helped some survive over others, the removal of the severe pressure removes the need for that specific changed DNA.
The longer a specific challenge lasts (for example, it's not just cold for a winter, but a new ice age begins) the more this selective filtering will happen. First, the ones having the original beneficial mutation will remain the most able to survive. Then, as new mutations occur, there are new random DNA tweaks.
Again, while the new mutations are random (as they always are), it is the tweaks that continue to improve survival within this prolonged stressful environment that will endure in favor over the others - even over the tweaks that FIRST allowed them to survive. The longer this pattern continues. the more apparent the physical changes - ones that have become continuously better at their special function - will be.
5. No one knows this is happening to them:
All of this is due to constant pressure - to be more warmer, more able to hop or fly from tree-to-tree, more able to see better, run better, etc, etc. And it's all happening under all all our noses. Even we humans, with the ability to think in detail, don't know the environmental challenges that will be thrown at us tomorrow and which particular traits will help us get through them.
No one knows it's "time to change". Change happens. And sometimes a useful change happens at the right time. And so the change sets into the population. But, rest assured, no one is aware of it. What they - we - are aware of is that we are living our lives the best we can.
And that's enough of a responsibility right there. without worrying about "how to evolve". Frankly, I'm happy I don't have to worry about that.
I've got enough on my plate as it is.
Posted by Clear as Mud at Saturday, June 07, 2008
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The tiny difference between life and death
02 June 2008
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Remember the basic simplistic description I've been using so far:
- DNA is the instructions, written in a simple alphabet, that says how to build proteins.
- Proteins are the things that actually go about building you.
But it's only wafer-thin.
How small a change in DNA is still enough to matter?
I mean, I made a big deal about individual DNA spelling errors accumulating in a population. And then I mentioned that many of them, when created, show no noticeable effect, bad or good. But at the same time I said that, with enough time and accumulation of spelling errors, sometimes there is an effect, for bad or for good.
But does that mean that a whole bunch of tiny changes have to accumulate over time, in just the right way, until the combination results in a "good" or "bad" quality?
No, it isn't necessary at all to be so intricate.
It's quite possible that a mutation is simply there, a tiny unnoticed change, in just a small number of individuals- a change that doesn't matter much. Until... an environment comes along that makes it matter.
We Want Information.
In fact, this leads into another of my new-found pet peeves regarding claims of evolution denialists.
In addition to the bald-faced lie that "all mutations are bad and/or lethal" (see part 1 and then part 2), another bizarre anti-evolution claim is that mutations do not "increase the information" of the DNA instruction book because mutations are just "random noise".
The use of the word "information" is the trick used by denialists in this case. It's a term the meaning of which denialists can keep changing in mid-argument so that they are always, magically, right. It's also something which no biologist would use in the way that the denialists do.
I tend to not worry about what they say, though. What they mean is very clear. They're claiming that mutations of any kind add nothing new to the world and, thus, can't fuel evolution.
Yes, it's kinda the opposite of when they say "all mutations are bad".
As with the "all mutations are bad" claim, this one is so wrong on it's face - so demonstrably false - that I have to conclude, once again, that those claiming it is true are, quite simply, lying.
I'll just own the word for myself, with an example.
To use their "information" term as *I* see fit, since they do the same, I will say this:
Every single mutation ever made in DNA is a bit of new information. It is a change from the previous. Whether this information is useful, harmful, or neutral, will be seen in the fullness of time. But it is something new, nonetheless, which may end up having profound effects in ways sometimes unforeseeable.
And I can think of a couple of really good examples of the smallest of changes leading to a profound effect.
Now, there's lots of general examples of mutations conferring benefits: things that make you better at getting food, using food, using new sources of food, evading predators, catching pray, surviving hot or cold climates better, and on and on.
But I think the best initial examples are ones that are almost smack-in-the-face obvious.
Ones that literally show the difference between life and death that an
incredibly small, and usually un-noticed change can make.
I'm thinking of relatively minor tweaks of the DNA instructions, which probably go unnoticed by their owners under the daily grind of life. But in the face of certain challenges thrown at them by nature, these minor differences allow the few and the lucky to survive a direct assault on their very life.
In this post, I will turn to one particular example, from the world of bacteria, the representative descendants of some of the oldest forms of life on Earth.
(In a subsequent post, I'll hit closer to home with a somewhat similar example from our own human DNA.)
Bacteria: An Instant Mob
Bacteria are, simply, single celled creatures. That is, whereas humans are made up of trillions of individual units called "cells" - all stitched together into skin, bone, nerves, lungs, the heart, etc - every bacterium is simply a single, sometimes free floating cell.
How they make more of themselves is also different from our own method. Whereas humans use sex to make more humans, a process usually involving the massive expenditure of energy, time and (for us) money, bacteria get it over with using a simpler approach.
They just grow, and when they get close to twice their starting size, each bacterium makes a copy of its DNA instruction book. It then chops itself in half, with each new half receiving a full copy of everything.
Where there was one free-floating bacterial cell, now there is two. And then it happens again: two becomes four, four becomes eight, and so on until there is a lack of food or space, which might not happen until there's already billions of bacteria.
Bacteria are rarely seen as a single cell all on it's lonesome. Since it can create its own company - one can become two in as little as hour or, even sometimes, less - it's always a population in the making.
Each one is a snowflake, er, sort of...
If we start with the simplest situation, where a bacterial population is initially just one lone cell, a population will arise simply by cells growing and dividing over and over again.
Since we started with a single cell, this population is essentially a bunch of clones of the original.
Almost.
But, remember, as with all living things, mutations -the DNA spelling errors -always happen at some rate. And as the population of cells grows in number, reaching well into the millions or billions within hours or days, mutations occur in one cell or another pretty much all the time.
So even starting from the purity of a single cell, it doesn't take very long for there to be large numbers (in the range of millions) of tiny genetic differences from bacterial cell to bacterial cell.
Now, as pointed out in part 2, the usual rules apply:
- Most mutations create no significant change in the life of any particular bacteria, either resulting in acceptable DNA spelling variations or in proteins that, though slightly different, still work the same.
- Some mutations are bad, either causing the unfortunate cell to grow slowly (pretty much a kiss of death in a population that grows and divides so fast) or by really screwing up a protein that is needed for life. In either case, these mutations rarely survive in a bacterial population.
- And then there are the few mutations that do something useful for the lucky bug.
Germ Warfare
And here is where I'll pull out an extreme life-or-death example.
While there are numerous other types of benefit that are more common, they are also more subtle in effect until seen over time. My example is blatantly apparent within almost no time at all.
So, as a wee bit of extra background... a lot of people seem to think that antibiotics, chemicals that kill different bacteria, were basically created by humans. But that's not true at all.
There has been endless mortal combat between bacteria and many of the organisms on which they sometimes prey. Many antibiotic compounds arose in such beings to fight off bacterial invasion.
In fact, bacteria even fight other bacteria - if for no other reason then for simple competition over limited resources (a concept with we humans are all too familiar). Many bacterial species have developed their own antibiotics which, while harmless to their own type, will kill bacteria of other types.
One of these antibiotics which has likely been part of inter-germ warfare for a very long time, is called streptomycin. Of course, this compound has also been used by us in modern medicine.
Streptomycin stops bacterial growth. It does this by entering into a bacterial cell and shutting down all protein production.
Specifically, the drug binds directly to a critical bit of the machinery that creates all proteins in the bacterial cell, gumming up the whole works.
The result of this is the bacteria are prevented from any further growth and replication. Bacteria are killed because of streptomycin... they are essentially in freeze-frame until, over time, normal degradation begins to tear away at the cells.
Some pretty extreme Natural Pressure
So, imagine a population of bacteria is minding its own business. Then, whether due to encountering the bacterial species that produce streptomycin or due to injection of the drug by a doctor, the population is suddenly pummeled with buckets of streptomycin molecules.
At this point, the environment of these bacterial cells has changed and nature (or medicine) has offered a severe challenge to the life of the population.
Waves of the drug permeate the bacteria, binding to their protein creation machinery, ultimately leading to the equivalent of organ shutdown.
The bacteria in this population are going to die.
A hidden gift
But… as I mentioned, there’s millions of cells in this population with at least one mutation somewhere in its DNA instructions. And, again, these mutations simply arose because of an occasional accident in the copying of the DNA instruction book.
Well, one of the mutations that arose was a really simple one:
A misspelling in the DNA that tells the cell how to build a part of the protein creation machinery.
It’s just a single letter misspelling so that where the DNA had once been written with the letter “A”, it now had the letter “C”.
The result of this is the type of mutation to which I referred in part 2 as a “neutral” mutation.
Remembering the analogy from that post, where cells normally had protein-making machines with an oval chain-link at a particular position, cells with this particular mutation have machines with a square-link. (Again, this is an analogy)
Now, fortunately for these cells, this change ends up having no particular effect, bad or good, on the function of the protein-making machines. So cells with this mutation survived perfectly well, no harm, no foul - though they ultimately made up a minority of the population.
But here’s the kicker:
That tiny change, that one spelling error, that totally harmless and permitted tweak of the protein making machine actually contains a hidden gift - one that had never been noticed by the bacteria until this time.
This mutated machinery is impervious to streptomycin.
Cells containing this mutation are resistant to streptomycin attack.
So while all the other cells, with the usual machinery, are slowly being destroyed, these mutants endure. They survive. And they will continue to survive – and grow and reproduce – even in this constant cloud of antibiotic attack.
And... not only that. Their survival allowed the survival of all the other mutations any of them might be carrying. Meanwhile, the rest that died took all their mutations - good, bad, or currently indifferent - with them to the grave.
The future genetic makeup of this population has now been drastically altered - in one fell swoop.
I got your information right here
This, as one of zillions of examples, puts the lie to the bizarre claim that mutations are just noise which confer no new "information".
This one tiny change in DNA spelling conferred vast amounts of information as far as the bacteria are concerned.
They didn't realize the new message they had in their midst until they encountered the right environment. But when they did, they found that some of them indeed carried new "information".
This information - the one tiny change - conferred life, where there was, for all others, death.
And, on a broader level, it created a portal for all the genetic differences of the survivors to endure into the future.
To me, the ramifications for this population because of this one change are profound. The impact of this one genetic event, driven by a natural experience, will be detectable far into the future.
So, to claim that this is not "information" - using whatever shifting terms the denialists want - is simply willful ignorance of reality.
---
The next time around (or when I get to it) I'll discuss a somewhat similar genetic tweak - with similar-ish effects - that exists in humanity. Something only recently realized with rather surprising historical roots.
Yes, it's the one people keep bringing up before I can even write about it.
Posted by Clear as Mud at Monday, June 02, 2008
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We are the things that worked
06 May 2008
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Please read that first, so you can get the context of where I'm coming from.
---
To recap:
- Everyone was born with mutations.
- Most of these mutations have little or no effect on your ability to live and flourish.
But, on occasion, a mutation makes a difference.
“Oh my GOD! It's a MUTANT!!!” ... well, no, it's probably something pretty un-amazing...
Deformations are the most obvious mutations to us.
Although, even then, many things that are technically “deformations” are nothing more than the minor variations that we all have when compared to others.
But some, of course, are serious – ones we usually call birth defects generally cause problems which decrease the likelihood of surviving to adulthood. Of this type, most are so severe that such a one would likely never even make it through pre-birth development and would not even be born.
These are the ones - aside from the ability to shoot ice from our hands or to look like Hugh Jackman - that people commonly think of as “mutations”.
But the rest... are a little more subtle.
Sometimes, a mutation makes a difference right when it emerges - if it affects something immediately important in how something physically develops or it's ability to continue living.
Other times, even though it changes something physically (whether you can see it or not), a mutation may not impact anything enough to effect an organism's development or life *if* it doesn't really impact the needs it has in that particular environment.
Relative benefit, relative harm
So, as for mutations that do have a noticeable effect.
Some cause harm, possibly minimal, possibly huge.
Some cause a benefit, possibly minimal, possibly huge.
AS an example, we can consider changes that affect an organism's ability to obtain or efficiently utilize food.
Some possible beneficial results of a mutation that increase the ability to obtain energy from food:
- Can outrun others to get food,
- Can forage better or root around for untapped food sources,
- Can eat items not commonly eaten or too harmful for most to eat,
- Can use strength as a tool to either kill animals easier or fight off competitors
- Can biologically extract more energy from less food (net result, you need less food to survive)
Some possible detrimental results of a mutation that decrease the ability to obtain energy from food:
- Slower, when speed is important for getting to the food
- Less ability to forage for food sources (anteater with a stumpy snout?)
- Less ability to tolerate food types, especially when those are the only foodstuffs available.
- Less physical strength when ability to take down an animal is critical or when competition for food is carried out by strength.
- Able to extract less energy from the same amount of food (net result, you need more food to survive).
(As a side-comment: notice that being "the strongest" is just one of many things that may - or may not - help an individual to survive. Some people, even today, insist on interpreting a famous term "Survival of the fittest" to mean some form of "Survival of the strongest". This is absolutely wrong.)
Now it’s important to note here - with this food acquisition example - that in times of plenty, there might be so much food available that everyone has enough to eat and there’s no particular harm or benefit to the above changes in ability, assuming they are not too severe.
In this case, where the pressure caused by food availability is very low, it's possible to have a population of animals with both the original food-using ability and the altered one to be intermingled without any noticeable advantage of one over the other. If the environment is not one in which this mutation is noticed, there is little pressure on the animals with the relatively decreased ability.
It’s when food becomes more scarce that any benefit or harm, food-wise, will become noticeable to the population.
Just able to make it through
Under this pressure of nature (ie, sudden limited food sources) the harm or benefit of any abilities will ultimately be noticed in one way:
Which ones are able to survive this pressure, and which ones are not.
Compared to those better equipped to cope with the pressure, more of those individuals that are less able to survive the pressure will succumb before they have children. And so the genetics that caused them to be less able to cope will diminish in the population over time.
Taken to the extreme, if the pressure (ie, lack of food) continues long enough, over enough generations, the genes which resulted in a lesser ability to cope could ultimately be gone from the population.
But note: all the survivors had was simply a better ability to deal with a particular circumstance over time. It could have been lack of food, it could have been too cold or too hot, or increased radiation, or a new disease, or anything else you can think of.
Usually it's many of these at once.
Nothing about an individual's survival, or more importantly, the genetics behind it, says anything about it's superiority or advanced nature.
That which allowed survival was simply the best thing available at the time.
Not more advanced, just the fortunate recipients of survival
To drive the point home, there have been uncountable numbers of species that - after all their "advancement" - suddenly ended up without even a "best". Given a particular challenge - some lasting numerous generations, others happening abruptly - most species on Earth, after millions of years getting through all sorts of things, one day found themselves with nothing that ultimately could save them.
So, in the end, the use of the term "good genetics" (a term I've heard tossed about) is something I find particularly annoying. That term is so vague that it is essentially meaningless. But the way people use it is to mean something like, "to be more advanced".
This is simply false.
On a purely biological level (as opposed to philosophical), the fact that we, each of us, is here on Earth means nothing more than that we (via all our ancestors) made it through the hoops and hurdles of time.
More likely than not, in many cases, we just made it.
We are all a mish-mash of thousands of things that were good enough for government work. Some functioned well, some even exceedingly well, and some just got us by. Some things got tweaked to work better, others still truck along almost the same as they were when they first appeared.
Nothing about us is, in any way, perfect. And biologically speaking, we are not in any way a goal of this process.
Biologically speaking, we are each, simply, an amazingly fascinating, walking, talking collage of things that worked.
---
In the next post, I think I'll discuss a more extreme type of challenge to populations. Something more life-or-death extreme.
Posted by Clear as Mud at Tuesday, May 06, 2008
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Quiet Accumulations
05 May 2008
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Please read that first, so you can get the context of where I'm coming from.
---
Quiet Accumulations
To recap from the first post: You, and everyone you know is a mutant.
And remember the basic description:
- DNA is the instructions, written in a simple alphabet, that says how to build proteins.
- Proteins are the things that actually go about building you.
Most mutations neither harm nor help:
If we all start with a couple of hundred mutations in our DNA, why don’t we all have three arms and twenty eyes - or at least look like Hugh Jackman?
I suppose it's worth making a semantic distinction here. In saying "mutation" and "mutant", I am referring to spelling changes in your DNA instructions (the mutation) and the protein or organism which is encoded by the altered DNA (the mutant). And that is typically exactly what is meant by those words.
However, most of us think of a "mutant" as the end result - some person with a demonstrable change from the norms of humanity - a six-toed foot, for example. Using that more common usage, then probably not everyone is a physical mutant. Although, changes from the norm are often not in things visible to the eye, so you never know.
So, here’s the deal: most genetic mutations have no major effect on how you function as a human or how you look, at least compared to the normal variations seen throughout humanity.
In these cases - again the most common - the net result is that there is no discernible difference between how you function with that mutation and how you would function without it. It is a fact of statistics and the way DNA and proteins work that most mutations will not actually cause any real problem or benefit at all.
It's the same difference:
In many cases, this “no harm, no foul” result is because the particular mutation in the DNA instruction causes absolutely no change in how the proteins – the actual machinery and materials of you - are built. This is called a “silent” mutation.
There’s a detailed reason that this is possible - but for now, just think of how you, a reader of English, would interpret the words “color” and “colour”. Depending on where you live (the US or UK), one is probably the preferred spelling, but you know that they both mean the exact same thing – it’s just a minor spelling variation about which most English speakers are forgiving.
Essentially the same thing happens with many words in DNA instructions. There are quite a number of DNA words that can be spelled with minor variation and yet mean precisely the same thing.
So mutations in DNA that simply result in accepted spelling variations will not change the protein that it encodes in any way at all.
Close enough for government work:
Other times, the change is not a simple spelling variation but actually does alter how the protein is built. However, even with a change in the structure, many changes are minimal enough to actually keep the protein functioning in approximately the same way as the original. This is termed a “neutral” mutation.
Imagine you had instructions to make a chain to lock a bike to a bike rack. The instructions call for 50 metal oval links and a very intricate lock mechanism on one end.
And the instructions are not in the shorthand we might be used to, like this:
Link 50 metal ovals together, add lock on the end.The instructions are more linear, step-by-step, no matter how repetitive it seems, like this:
Start - add metal oval - add metal oval - add metal oval - add metal oval - (this is repeated 46 more times)Followed by the (likely) hundreds of individual steps to make a lock from scratch, attached to the chain of links, and then it's done.
Now, imagine the instructions got slightly garbled so it suddenly said to do this:
Start - add metal oval - add metal oval - add metal SQUARE - add metal oval - (this is repeated 46 more times)
Well, a metal square link isn't quite the same as a metal oval link, but it still serves the purpose of being a solid link, and the chain is about the same length – so, in the end, we still have a perfectly usable bike lock system.
These "neutral" mutations happen quite often. And, in these cases, it’s almost as harmless a change as the previous type of silent mutation.
( Note: A very different outcome might have happened had we mucked about with the very intricate makeup of the lock mechanism, or if a metal link had been replaced with a link made of silly putty.)
Sooner or later... the day comes when you can't hide from what you've done anymore. A day of reckoning.
As mentioned previously, at conception, every human child is a recipient of a couple of hundred of these type of mutations. Now, considering your DNA instruction set is made up of a few billion letters, this is an almost imperceptible amount of change.
And because silent and neutral mutations, introduced one by one in the DNA instruction book, are often not even noticed, this allows genetic mutations creep into a population over time.
But over time, over many generations, it begins to add up. Think about this:
You inherited a few hundred mutations from your parents.
You give all of those plus a couple hundred more to each child you might have.
They give yours and your parents’ mutations to their children.
And those children (your grandkids), in turn, give the mutations from your parents, you, your child, and themselves to your great grandchildren.
And it goes on.
And this has always been happening since before we were born and will continue to happen long after we’re gone.
And those are just the simple spelling errors. There's far more dramatic mutations out there as well.
Because of all this, the changes accumulate.
And, again, many of these end up being no benefit and no harm.
But at some point, for one of many reasons, a mutation - be it a brand new one or a combination of older ones - will make a difference.
For one of your descendants, who knows how many generations away, this accumulation of mutations could ultimately lead to something very harmful.
Or, almost as likely, they could result in something that will save their life and the lives of *their* descendants.
Or it just might make their eyes bluer.
You really won’t know until the day that it kicks in.
But that day (or many days, or century, or millennium) ends up being very important.
---
Working topics for subsequent posts (Just so I have it down in print. And so people can say, "hey you never wrote that one!"):
- We are the things that worked
- The tiny difference between life and death
- The confusion of language: "The theory"
- The confusion of language: "The fittest"
- There's always something new
- You think living is easy? (The Second Law of overlooking the obvious)
- ...?
Posted by Clear as Mud at Monday, May 05, 2008
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You are a mutant
03 May 2008
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Please read that first, so you can get the context of where I'm coming from.
1. You are a mutant.
Yup. You're a mutant.
This is in response to the following claim that is often made:
All mutations are bad. They cause horrific birth defects. There is no way a mutant can survive, nor can anything good come of mutations.It's usually a claim made to "prove" evolution is false.
Of course, this one is so factually wrong that it's kind of a joke.
In fact, it's so astonishingly wrong, that it can really only be called a lie.
Why?
Because, you are a mutant.
I know I already said that, but I'm just reinforcing the point.
You are a mutant and you can not deny it. Well, not if your honest.
And by the way, I don’t mean that half of your DNA came from mom and the other half from dad and so, therefore, you are different from them. That’s true, too. But I don’t mean that.
Keep reading...
I mean that you are, from the very beginning of your genetic existence, the result of mutations.
Here’s a bit of what I mean - just a little bit. For starters, if your Dad compared the DNA – the instructions of life - that were in any of his sperm cells (please be adults here) and compared it with the DNA that he was first given at conception he would find, as you might expect, that they are a nearly perfect match.
Nearly.
But not quite.
What he would find is compared with the DNA he had at the beginning of his life, the DNA in any sperm cell contain a couple of hundred simple mutations. This is a consistently demonstrable fact, a consequence of the slight imperfection of the machinery that copies our DNA.
So, his sperm contain numerous mutations.
And his sperm, with those mutations, along with your mother's egg, also with some mutations, made you.
So - without question – you are a mutant.
And to be clear, me too.
And pretty much every other living thing on Earth.
How so?
Your instructions were copied less-than-perfectly
To think about this, let me just describe some background with a way too simple and utterly inaccurate analogy:
Your DNA is a book of instructions, written in a simple alphabet (as it is made of only 4 letters, unlike our 26 letter alphabet).
Now, this instruction book is sometimes described as a "blueprint" of your body. However, that’s a bit inaccurate.
All your book really contains is the diagrams to make a wide variety of tools and materials that are, generically, called “proteins”.
And it’s these proteins, each one described in your DNA instruction book, that work together in an amazing dance of combinations and permutations to build you and every other organism on Earth.
So, again:
- DNA is the instructions, written in a simple alphabet, that says how to build proteins.
- Proteins are the things that actually go about building you.
OK... given that background, what is a mutation?
The most basic description of a mutation is: any change somewhere in the DNA instructions.
There are many types of changes that can happen, some massive and some almost imperceptible, but I’ll focus on the simpler ones.
Imagine someone has your book of DNA instructions and is given the task of making a copy of the whole thing by hand. (And in fact, this copying happens all the time in most of the cells in your body.)
OK, so, the guy who’s doing the copying is pretty darn good. He rarely makes mistakes and he’s also very diligent at double checking his work so as to correct the occasional error he does make.
So the copy is really, really pretty darn faithful to the original.
But… it’s a big book. Once in a very, very long while, the copying guy misspells a word (In the analogy, say, “cat” is copied as “car” or “kat”) and also happens to not notice the error, so it doesn’t get corrected.
Once he’s moved on to later pages of the book, there is no going back. The error is now a permanent part of the copied book.
That’s a mutation.
Other times, he might accidentally delete or add one or many letters. (In the analogy, “color” becomes “collor” or “colour”)
These are also mutations.
There are even more elaborate ways that changes in DNA instructions happen, but these basic ones illustrate the point, I think.
And these things happen often enough that by the time a dad’s sperm and a mom’s egg are created, and then they meet to ultimately lead to a new life, there’s already a hundred or so mutations locked in to the baby-to-be.
Every baby starts off with around 100 simple mutations.
Every baby is a mutant.
You are a mutant.
And yet most of us are not particularly unusual compared with anyone else, to the best of our knowledge.
Why?
(I originally ended with "Why?" to mean I would go into more detail in the next post. Alternatively, though, you can feel free to offer up thoughts on that very question.)
---
Working topics for subsequent posts (Just so I have it down in print. And so people can say, "hey you never wrote that one!"):
- Quiet accumulations
- We are the things that worked
- The tiny difference between life and death
- The confusion of language: "The theory"
- The confusion of language: "The fittest"
- There's always something new
- You think living is easy? (The Second Law of overlooking the obvious)
- ...?
Posted by Clear as Mud at Saturday, May 03, 2008
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Labels: biology, evolution, genetics
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Introduction of sorts
02 May 2008
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My frequency posting here will likely start out low.
Whether it stays low or not is a separate issue...
Anyways... the introduction.
---
I used to love it, then I didn't:
It's only been recently that I've regained enough of an interest in the sciences to really comment on them.
It's amusing to me and at least one of my old grad school friends that, after almost three years away from the sciences, this should happen.
See, while in the midst of in-the-weeds benchwork, there were periods where I was so bummed about some technical problem or other, that I often avoided all science reading outside of my little world. It just made me sad for reasons I won't go into right now.
So I would learn all about things very specific to my work but which would mean almost nothing to anyone walking in off the street.
And then, for many and varied reasons, I left the sciences, resulting in me having a PhD mainly for decorative purposes.
What woke me up a bit - people with megaphones and no truth:
So, for a while, when science-type or medical-type issues came up, I generally held my tongue or, more often, just walked on by.
But I'm learning one thing about myself. I don't sit well when there are issues that I happen to understand a bit and yet others, who by their words know very little if anything, use a public stage to spout off misinformation or out-and-out lies.
Now, as in politics, people using these tactics in anti-science or anti-medicine crusades are usually doing it for a reason. This group is sometimes countered by an opposing group which attempts to promote discussion to demonstrate why the first group might be slightly off-base in their claims. But they, themselves, are not likely to change their tune no matter how much reasonable discourse is offered. Their minds are made up and all things that exist in the world do so in order to prove that person's worldview is absolutely correct.
Little can be done in those cases. That's usually not so bad, because the number of such people is relatively small. Unless, of course, they have a megaphone.
That's when the real danger begins. It's the third, and by far the largest, group of folks - the ones who don't know the details of the argument - who are in danger of being turned toward believing the ones with the loudest voice. This becomes especially likely if those attempting to propagandize are armed with single bits of selective information or carefully chosen quote snippets, sometimes from "authorities", sometimes from the person or group they are attempting to demonize.
And, look, I'm aware we all do things like that, differing mainly in degree of duplicity and target of our attack. Some people will almost over-cautiously couch their rhetoric to remain truthful, fair, and allow for a benefit-of-the-doubt - practically negating the argument. Some will fire away but then retract the more glaring errors of their words. Others will feel no concern for such niceties and will let the bile fly far and wide, without regard to accuracy or hypocrisy.
I suppose it's the last group that concerns me the most. Certainly when it comes to the topic of science and medicine.
The Big "E":
Not surprisingly, this has come up in the context of biological evolution of species, being an absolute fact of nature, the mechanisms of which are still under reasonable scientific debate.
I remember what got me started noticing this - sort of lifting the fog from my brain in regards to attacks on reality.
As I was poking around the web one day, I stumbled on a post or something which proudly claimed they had the proof - PROOF! - that evolution was false.
Wow. OK, this could revolutionize science. How exciting. What was it?
It's called the Second Law of Thermodynamics.Um... really?
I remember reading this and just... scratching my head.
See, it'd been a while since I cracked open a physics book but, among other things, these concepts of thermodynamics have been around for a while. You'd think if it somehow managed to concretely disprove evolution, someone might have brought it up - and more importantly, proved it.
And, upon reading the explanation, I began to see that the person explaining this "undeniable proof" didn't understand much about biological life or, I suspected, physics. Others have gone in-depth to destroy this particular argument, but I'm happy to discuss the basic argument and the simple reason it doesn't make any sense as a post at some point soon.
Anyway, ok, thermodynamics is kinda over the head of me and most other folks, so I could just let it pass.
However, as I kept poking around, I saw more and more things that truly disturbed me.
Selective quoting, fact-mining (picking just the one bit that makes it sound like you're right), or complete lies.
- Evolution claims we came from mud! (it doesn't)
- Evolution claims whites (or whomever) are "superior"! (it very much doesn't)
- Charles Darwin claimed in his own book that natural selection couldn't work! (Really?!?)
- An astronomer said evolution is false! (He also said the Universe is not expanding. Wrong on both counts. Right about the formation of atoms in stars, though!)
- There is no fossil evidence that evolution occurred! (except for the thousands of fossils)
- Evolution doesn't explain gravity (True. It also doesn't explain why Nixon was such a creep, Ben Stein, so that's two points from Evolution, I figure.).
- There are NO CROCK-A-DUCKS!!! (WTF? Oh my God!)

... and on and on and on---- and ON AND ON AND ON.
Oh, and it's amazing how many directions they come from, pulling random bits from every corner of the intellectual realms - places no one else would even have dreamed of (ie, thermodynamics). And yet, each one simply ends up proving the point that the basics of evolution have held up for a century and a half for a reason.
The one that was one too many:
But there was one that just finally and completely pissed me off when I read it.
It pissed me off royally because anyone who knew ANYTHING about the science he is criticizing would know this is false.
The claim is this:
Natural selection, if it were real, would depend on mutations occurring in animals, plants, etc.Wow.
Any change in DNA is bad.
Mutations are bad.
They make mutant babies.
Most die at birth. The rest rarely mate.
So mutations can't drive evolution.
Therefore, evolution is false.
Look, people, if you don't know even the most basic facts of a topic, you shouldn't be criticizing it.
This applies to politics, personal life, electrical work, and for the love of all things, people, the ultimate fact-based thing: science!
Of course, when has that ever stopped anyone from mouthing off before. Yeah, I've done it, too.
But anyway, it was this basic lie - that mutations are all bad and/or lethal - that sort of did it for me. It is such a breathtakingly wrong statement, so demonstrably false, that no one with even basic biology training could actually come up with it.
And if they didn't have that training or, better yet, didn't bother to look it up from an authoritative source - because everyone needs a refresher - then why on Earth would they say such a wrong thing and not expect to be called on it?
All that made me decide to start from this point - the question of mutations - and work sideways.
I figure I could do my teeny-tiny little part and at least address some of these deceptions, one-by-one, in my own fashion and for whatever small bit of good it might serve.
So I started with the simple fact that each and every one of us is, in fact, a mutant.
... and then we'll see where it goes from there.
Posted by Clear as Mud at Friday, May 02, 2008
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