I would argue there isn't a strong vested interest in obtaining a "certain pattern". People recognized the pattern long before there was evolution.
People recognized categories, but not a pattern of animals evolving into other animals before there was evolution.
When the tree of life disappears, so does evolution. So anyone wanting to keep their job will support the tree of life. And supporting the tree of life is easy when you are the one weighing the factors that produce the tree.
Funny that, Here's a mutation that does keep humans alive and healthy for much longer than normal.
I wish I had it . . .
We've talked enough that you can stop playing stupid.
When I say "count on" that means a mechanism that one could rely on
most of the time (I knew there was a reason to keep that macro).
So the question remains, do you want your theory to rely on magic mutations to survive? Since selection can't do it, it's magic or ___.
As I said, the non-working ones won't show up. And you are forgetting about gene duplication.
Right, the non-working ones won't show up, but they cost you time, material, and energy. And then when a working one shows up, it doesn't give you a selective advantage. Yikes.
And if you want to bring the numbers back, the tiny time, material, and energy cost will happen so often that evolution will never get off the ground.
As Barb already pointed out, you seem to have forgotten about sexual reproduction. If your lucky mutant gets to reproduce . . .guess what? You have at least 15,000 lucky mutant offspring the very next generation. and then each one of them can go on and do the same and so on and so on . . . So that even if your offspring is more like 10 per generation, the multiplication of sexual reproduction can spread your mutation all over the place in short order, since most organisms have relatively short generation times. And of course the partners might have other mutations that have a synergistic effect on the other mutations and you have all sorts of combinations that may have a selective advantage.
In short you have a real failure to understand how biology works. You think organisms are like fragile pieces of human technology that can break when bumped the wrong way, but they aren't their resilience is what allows them to change.
Yeah, and all the other organisms in the same population are out-producing you without the mutation by magnitudes more. How to overcome that problem? Selection won't do it, so it's either magic or ___.
I'm the only one between the two of us that wants to stay in reality. Your pejorative does not apply since I've shown how the biology you claim I fail at is the very biology that causes evolution to fail.