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Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
#1
Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
This is what I've heard from someone who is a Creationist-that most mutations are harmful, and that's why he doesn't "buy" evolution. I have also read the argument that mutations don't result in different species-ie, a fly is still a fly, even with mutations.
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#2
RE: Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
Most mutations are benign and therefore have no benefit and get lost in the mix.. It's only those that provide the organism with some advantage when it comes to surviving long enough to procreate that survive and get passed on to the next generation.

Simply put, benign mutations make no difference, harmful mutations probably cause the organism to die and never reproduce and beneficial mutations help the organism to pass on its genes to the next generation.

Tell your friend to read a decent book about evolution and to stop listening to what his like minded friends tell him.
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#3
RE: Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
(May 3, 2011 at 12:58 pm)oggtheclever Wrote: Most mutations are benign and therefore have no benefit and get lost in the mix.. It's only those that provide the organism with some advantage when it comes to surviving long enough to procreate that survive and get passed on to the next generation.

Simply put, benign mutations make no difference, harmful mutations probably cause the organism to die and never reproduce and beneficial mutations help the organism to pass on its genes to the next generation.

Tell your friend to read a decent book about evolution and to stop listening to what his like minded friends tell him.

Yep. I started with The Complete Idiot's Guide to Evolution and Evolution for Dummies. One book goes into the science, the other covers the, ahem, evolution of the idea. I still have them both and refer to them constantly.

OP, most mutations do nothing, as noted above. Then you have the beneficial mutations, which get passed on if the host is lucky. Finally you have the harmful mutations, which take the host out of the gene pool. So your friend has it bass-ackwards.
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#4
RE: Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
(May 3, 2011 at 1:11 pm)Gawdzilla Wrote:
(May 3, 2011 at 12:58 pm)oggtheclever Wrote: Most mutations are benign and therefore have no benefit and get lost in the mix.. It's only those that provide the organism with some advantage when it comes to surviving long enough to procreate that survive and get passed on to the next generation.

Simply put, benign mutations make no difference, harmful mutations probably cause the organism to die and never reproduce and beneficial mutations help the organism to pass on its genes to the next generation.

Tell your friend to read a decent book about evolution and to stop listening to what his like minded friends tell him.

Yep. I started with The Complete Idiot's Guide to Evolution and Evolution for Dummies. One book goes into the science, the other covers the, ahem, evolution of the idea. I still have them both and refer to them constantly.

OP, most mutations do nothing, as noted above. Then you have the beneficial mutations, which get passed on if the host is lucky. Finally you have the harmful mutations, which take the host out of the gene pool. So your friend has it bass-ackwards.

OK, well I really like both of those series of books, so I will have to check them out. Thanks for the recommendations. I definitely disagree with the argument that evolution provides no basis for the value or meaning of life-we each create our own meaning, don't we? I think so. It seems to me that theists, especially Christians, want to believe that their god (of course!) invented morality, marrige, etc, etc.
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#5
RE: Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
(May 3, 2011 at 12:54 pm)dave4shmups Wrote: This is what I've heard from someone who is a Creationist-that most mutations are harmful, and that's why he doesn't "buy" evolution. I have also read the argument that mutations don't result in different species-ie, a fly is still a fly, even with mutations.

Mutation is an pseudo-random event. Success in life depends on the organism's many characteristics - things that mutations can randomly change - remaining in relatively narrow range that would confer viability onto the organism. Take for example the level of activity of some endocrine glands - make the pituitory gland too active, and you grow into a clumsy giant unlikely to escape a charging predator. Make it too inactive and you can't reproduce. The lesson is if they fall outside that range, the organism either becomes sufficiently uncompetitive that it dies without producing an offspring, or produce offspring of diminished vitality. Either way the change is harmful from the point of view of evolution. Since the possible range of characteristics is large while the range of viable characteristics is small, random mutation indeed much more likely to produce an mutation that falls outside the viability range, and is therefore harmful, then one that falls within, and is therefore only potentially beneficial. For your creationist friend, so far so good. But from this point on he miss the point utterly and is full of shit.

The point is while mutation is random, the result of mutation is not. It doesn't matter if mutation that makes one stronger and faster is a thousand times less likely than one that make you blind or give you misshapen legs. In nature, the possessor of the the stronger or faster gene is more likely to survive, while the blind and genetically cripppled is sure to die. Bad mutations systematically die off. indifferent mutations systematically makes no difference, while good mutations systematically prosper at the expense of others. So all the mutations that makes one stronger or faster accummulate in the gene poor generation over generation, while those that blind you or make you a cripple is deleted from the gene pool almost as soon as it arise.

This is evolution. Evolution only requires mutation. It is not mutation. Evolution is the systematic sorting of the outcomes of mutation, discarding the bad, encouraging the good. Bible besotted creationists miss the point, one suspect willfully, lest they must grow up beyond 1000 BC.

What followed is another instance of creationists confidently missing the key point. When creationists say no mutation has been observed to change a fly to a non-fly, that is the sort of moronic truism akin to saying no single person has been observed to make a better spouse. A species is by definition a group of organisms capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring. A single mutation does not a group make. Creationists talk about species with supreme confidence in a way that betray the fact that they are utterly devoid of the most rudimentary grasp of what a species actually is.

When one look at a group of organisms [/i]capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring across multiple generations, one does indeed observe how of mutations through multiple generations can lead to the gradual formation of sub-populations of organism that are genetically more and more different from each other. Examples are literally everywhere, but the notable ones popularized by text books or every day examples range from Darwin's finches to the different breeds of dogs that strut around in a make-belief world of pet virtue. It is only a matter of time before sufficient genetic difference accummulate between subpopulations such that they are no longer capable of interbreeding between each other. When this happens two species have arisen out of what was formerly a single species. Gradual accummulation of beneficial mutations through generations in parts of a formerly genetically unified population until that part can no longer interbreed with the rest of the former population, and must now interbreed only amongst itself, this is how evolution create new species out of old. That creationists with their world view pivoting about infantile fantasy of of divine annointment of a single individual should fail to see the worthlessness of such notions in the real biological world is all together not unexpected, but it still betrays utter ignorance and intellectual dishonesty and lethargy.
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#6
RE: Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
Rule #1 is never listen to any creationist shithead about evolution. They believe in fairy tales.... they are morons.
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#7
RE: Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
(May 3, 2011 at 1:49 pm)Minimalist Wrote: Rule #1 is never listen to any creationist shithead about evolution. They believe in fairy tales.... they are morons.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KnJX68ELbAY

There should be a video there.
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#8
RE: Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
Try this one:




Or,



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#9
RE: Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
Depends on the mutation.
Quote:"An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity. "
Martin Luther King, Jr.
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#10
RE: Is it true that most mutations produce negative effects??...
I'm not sure that it is true, but even if it were, it wouldn't matter.

If an organism has a disadvantageous mutation, it's less likely to reproduce, and the mutation is unlikely to propagate to later generations.

So even if the ratio of disavantageous to avdvangeous mutations were a million to one, it wouldn't matter, because the disadvantageous mutations tend to disappear from the population as their carriers are less likely to reproduce.

The point to take away is that, whilst mutations are (something approaching) random, their survival in the population is not.

Quote:a fly is still a fly, even with mutations.

Of course, but is the mutated offspring of the mutated offspring of the mutated offspring...etc... of a fly still a fly?
That is, if you could preserve (alive) a modern-day fly somehow, then in 10 million years try to have it reproduce with one of it's descendents, would it be able to?
Probably not, although that of course depends on the selective pressures applied to the fly population between now and 10,000,000AD, and the mutations that happen to occur between now and that time.

Speciation doesn't happen between adjacent generations. It happens over 10's or 100's of thousands or millions of generations.
Galileo was a man of science oppressed by the irrational and superstitious. Today, he is used by the irrational and superstitious who claim they are being oppressed by science - Mark Crislip
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