There is such a thing as codon preference in certain organisms. But codon preferences are only notably different between things like bacteria and mammals or dicot and monocot plants. However, even when there is preference, all codons are still used and there are still many, many possible DNA codes to produce one or a set of proteins that are functionally identical.Alate .. do you know a good reason why God might have chosen between CTT and TTA?
Is this another one of those Stripe games where stripe pretends to know something he really doesn't? If not please spell it out.I do.
I suppose you'd have to believe that in order to keep your rejection of God's word intact. :think:Nothing solves the problem of the redundancy of the genetic code.
Is this another one of those Stripe games where stripe pretends to know something he really doesn't? If not please spell it out.
All the areas of evidence for evolution are small. Infinitesimally small.It's not that he HAD to necessarily, but we know that the same function can be done in multiple ways since so many genes in animals have the exact same function. Why would He use the particular pattern that looks so much like evolution. And again this is only one small area of evidence.
Don't worry, it isn't hard to realize what percentage 5.15 X 10^ 47 is of 4.15 X 10^180... it's much smaller than any filtering system could possibly support.And if you are unable to calculate that number for yourself, there is no point in having a discussion with you. I already put forth plenty of effort for you. If you're not willing to contribute some of your own effort I'm not going to bother.
OK. The possibilities are 4^15, the working possibilities are less than 4^10, but we'll give you up to 4^10 just to weigh things in your favor. The chances of getting a working sequence are.... well, they are so tiny it might as well be 1/google percent chance to get from a working sequence in one group to a working sequence in another group in the time we have available.Nope. Now you're asking me to redo the calculations for those strings and I'm not doing extra work for you. We need to continue with what we were using. A short artificial string will not give us what we need to answer your questions. You want to do those, do them yourself.
You don't say anything in your previous posts where the people with a vested interest in a certain pattern don't weigh the factors used to get that pattern.I've been over that particular issue with you already also. You need to go back and do some thread reading.
But can't you see that every time it doesn't work there is a cost? You don't have that much opportunity cost to spend. You don't have infinite generations.Because, as flipper already pointed out to you, the ones that don't work don't survive. In fact cyt C is so important they probably would not even survive the embryonic stage. Even if the vast majority of changes don't work, you never see them.
Yes. And that selection process is working on a much better chance than 5.15 X 10^ 47 of 4.15 X 10^180. How much better? 100 times better? A trillion times better? No way, try more like trillions of trillions of trillions of trillions.... and many more trillions of times better. Why do you even put these two up as comparisons? Make a comparison that's apples to apples, not galaxies to apples! (not to overly extend galaxies, but those are the biggest common things before going on to the universe)The vast majority of new cultivars of roses don't make it to market either, that doesn't mean you can't make new rose varieties because good ones are an extremely small percentage of the total possibilities. There is a selection process getting rid of the unfit.
this is the reason why any old arrangement of a gene sequence will not produce the same traits we see in humans and chimps.
All the areas of evidence for evolution are small. Infinitesimally small.
Don't worry, it isn't hard to realize what percentage 5.15 X 10^ 47 is of 4.15 X 10^180... it's much smaller than any filtering system could possibly support.
For those that want to realize just how small the chance is of getting a working sequence from the possibilities, every single integer above the "47" is 10 times greater. That means 5.15 X 10^ 47 is 10% of 5.15 X 10^ 48. And 5.15 X 10^ 47 is 1% of 5.15 X 10^ 49. And 5.15 X 10^ 47 is .1% of 5.15 X 10^ 50... starting to see the problem here? You are dealing with a system that goes up by 10's with each integer over 47?!?! when we have to go from 47 to 180!?!?!?!
And we only have so much time before we just can't have enough generations born to provide enough sequence changes to get just this one little sequence fixed in each group.
Uhh no. I know how it works since I had to deal with it. I also know that you can take many genes that do the exact same thing and find vast differences between them. Pretending this isn't so is borne of ignorance.I suppose you'd have to believe that in order to keep your rejection of God's word intact.
In other words, you don't know but you're going to pretend you do. YOU are laughable.Not at all. I went and asked a few questions and got a few answers. Codon preference wasn't one of them, but that is interesting. Seems to me there are a few ways the difference might be affective. Not to forget that even if there is no difference your challenge is still laughable.
Well, then. You should have no trouble telling us the other thing that synonymous codons might affect. :up:Uhh no. I know how it works since I had to deal with it.
And you'd be wrong - unless you believe that genes can only do one thing. And you know better than that so this little tirade is just another example of how dishonest you are.I also know that you can take many genes that do the exact same thing and find vast differences between them.
Pretending it is so, when you know better, is borne of intolerance and deceit. I'm not that well versed when it comes to biology, though ignorant is a little unjustified. But you're a proven liar.Pretending this isn't so is borne of ignorance.
In other words, you don't know but you're going to pretend you do. YOU are laughable.
No, I don't and as I said codon preference still doesn't save you since there are still thousands of possibilities for each gene. This is your big chance to show how much I don't know by explaining whatever it is you're talking about. I think you're blowing smoke again. If you can't tell us what they are I'm going to assume you don't actually know anything.No, actually. I went and asked a few questions and got a couple of interesting responses. One of them was yours about codon preference. But there are others that were more interesting. I guarantee you know them.
Because if God actually made the universe 6000 years ago, He did it in a way that makes it look EXACTLY like he actually did it 4.6 billion years ago through slow processes (And I'm not just talking about DNA). Why would He do that?And no matter how long you argue, your challenge remains lame. Your challenge is for creationists to come up with a reason why God would use the same sequences to create similar creatures when He could have used different sequences. This challenge is easily answered with, "Why not?"
OK then. :idunno:No, I don't
Because if God actually made the universe 6000 years ago, He did it in a way that makes it look EXACTLY like he actually did it 4.6 billion years ago through slow processes (And I'm not just talking about DNA). Why would He do that?
So you don't know. Chalk that up to another Stripe falsehood.OK then. :idunno:
It took me all of five minutes to find a couple of answers. Perhaps you might learn something as well.
I Googled the two codons stripe listed. The first hit was Stripe's question on physicsforum. The physicists' response was that they can influence protein folding differently. I'd like to hear Stripe explain how it happens.
I Googled the two codons stripe listed. The first hit was Stripe's question on physicsforum. The physicists' response was that they can influence protein folding differently. I'd like to hear Stripe explain how it happens.
Yes, albeit not directly from you. And my larger, original point still stands so . . .Great! Looks like you learnt something. :up:
And my larger, original point still stands so . . .
In YOUR opinion which doesn't actually count for much.All the areas of evidence for evolution are small. Infinitesimally small.
But that's the thing. On the one hand your sort love to say how theories are being overturned all the time. Then in the next breath you act like no one would dare overturn Evolution. Which is it? I say no matter what any "vested interest" if there were solid evidence against evolution, it would be dead already. Someone would have become famous out of upsetting the apple cart. As anyone else that has ever overturned a major scientific idea has done, Einstein, Copernicus, Watson and Crick, etc.What makes it so small is that you can't put much confidence in a process where the people who have a vested interest in a certain pattern are the same ones that weigh the factors that determine the pattern.
Except it isn't. If the numbers are what you are implying they are, everything would die an instant a mutation happened. We know that doesn't happen. We know that we can have major changes in form.Don't worry, it isn't hard to realize what percentage 5.15 X 10^ 47 is of 4.15 X 10^180... it's much smaller than any filtering system could possibly support.
No it doesn't and you know better.And this is just one sequence. Even if you are lucky enough to get a sequence that works, it has to be in an organism that has a selective advantage before that new sequence will spread to the population.
You can cover the genome of any organism with a population of a few thousand and a few generations given known mutation rates. This means every mutation WILL happen every few generations.And we only have so much time before we just can't have enough generations born to provide enough sequence changes to get just this one little sequence fixed in each group.
That's the thing if it doesn't work, there isn't necessarily a generation. Think about this. If you have say fish. A fish like a salmon can produce 35,000 eggs in a spawning run. That's a heck of a lot of dice rolls at once. And for much of the history of life on earth (and for most of the living organisms on earth) we are dealing with those kinds of numbers. Your thinking on this matter is incredibly limited.But can't you see that every time it doesn't work there is a cost? You don't have that much opportunity cost to spend. You don't have infinite generations.
Because to do it is to imply evolution unnecessarily. Evolution would remain a useful scientific explanation if every possible analysis showed it to be true, even if in actuality God had just made the entire world with just the illusion it is.Your "larger, original" point was to question why God would create creatures using similar DNA sequences when different DNA sequences produce the same amino acids. That challenge is easily defeated by answering, "Why not?"
Eroded by a tiny amount. Ask on those forums the question I gave you. They'll tell you what I told you. There are still many thousands of possible ways to encode the same gene with the same function. We know this because many organism already contain the same genes with far more different DNA sequences that do the identical function. If you can take a human cytochrome C and put it into a yeast and it does the same thing, obviously there's no reason for it to be identical to a chimp's cytochrome C.But, as further investigation shows, there is more that a DNA sequence does than just code for amino acids. There are things that are affected even though the change will produce the same protein. Every time such a feature is discovered your silly challenge is further eroded.