Sonnike,
quote:
SLPx, would any answer actually satisfy you and possibly convince you?
SLPx is under no obligation to answer this. You have made an assertion, the burden of evidence resides with you. If Dr Page will allow me to repeat his question:
quote:
"Evidence that the information for the speciation of the salmon in question was present from the beginning.
WHAT, exactly, this information is. You must know, for otherwise you would not have claimed that it was already there.
Explain why "no new information" can arise naturalistically.
To answer this, start by providing a biologically relevant definiton of "information."
Support the above responses with verifiable scientific sources."
If you can't provide evidence of this, Sonnike, no one is obliged to accept your argument any more than you would accept pink fairies push the earth around the sun.
http://biocrs.biomed.brown.edu/Darwin/DI/AcidTest.html
Futuyma refers to an experiment where a lactose cleaving enzyme was knocked out. The bacteria were then cultured on a lactose bearing substrate. Predictably, most died, but every now and again a culture flourished, & it wasn't just a new lactose cleaving enzyme that evolved, either..........
"Thus an entire system of lactose utilization had evolved, consisting of changes in enzyme structure enabling hydrolysis of the substrate; alteration of a regulatory gene so that the enzyme can be synthesized in response to the substrate; and the evolution of an enzyme reaction that induces the permease needed for the entry of the substrate. One could not wish for a batter demonstration of the neoDarwinian principle that mutation and natural selection in concert are the source of complex adaptations." [ DJ Futuyma , Evolution, 1986, Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, MA. pp. 477-478.]
Strange that new function can evolve when it DEFINATELY never existed in the parent population. Surely, according to you, the only way this could happen if there were pre-existing genetic information in the genome. This was eliminated, so it can't be true. If there were "intelligent" mutations, one would expect many/all cultures to survive, this wasn't the case. Conclusion: RM & NS resulted in the population wide existence of an enzyme that cleaves lactose, an enzyme expression control system, & a control for the associated permease. It wasn't there when the experiment started. This contradicts your claim that the information for new function must pre-exist in genomes, or am I misunderstanding?
Mark
------------------
Occam's razor is not for shaving with.