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by jdmichal
4002 days ago
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You are talking about introducing a genetic bottleneck, which I already addressed. Having diversity is good because it helps prevent such bottlenecks from entirely eliminating a population. Also, you are no longer discussing the fallacy. The fallacy is believing that something that allows an individual to survive better than another individual will be selected for, when in fact individuals can only selected against by preventing reproduction, thereby restricting the expression of those traits in the future population. The mere existence of a Johnson in the first place indicates that Johnsons were not previously selected against. An event killing the Johnson would then be the selection against. The end result looks like Smiths were selected for, but the actuality is that not-Smiths were selected against. |
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Would THAT weird flap trait be selected against? After all, it "prevents reproduction, thereby restricting the expression of those traits in the future population."
And how is that scenario in any way different than the Smiths which merely reproduce 10 times as often, by virtue of the aforementioned century of fertility?