The so what, is that the scientific method does not work like that. Are you honestly suggesting that scienctific theories be determined by jury or opinion poll?Morny wrote:
jlay: Remember, NONE of this was observed. So what? Every day all of us, including scientists, juries, doctors, and biologists, make useful (and often life-saving) inferences based on evidence from unobserved events.
I completely understand inference. The problem is exampled in the article and how inference is suggested as evidence itself. The phylogenetic tree is another example of this. The other matter is that the graphs were designed to argue for the fusion event and to support common ancestry. That is question begging, which is starting with a conclusion and then working the evidence to support your hypothesis. It is just like saying, it's obvious there was a fusion event!
I've tried to example the circular reasoning, and your last statement also includes another example. You are again assuming common ancestry as a fact and that gorillas split off prior to chimps. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/03/go ... 57391.html You are appealing to one question begging prosition as a fact to prop up another. The real problem is how this practice has become so common place that it seems to be considered reasonable logic.Nonsense. Where do Carl Zimmer or I use a circular argument? The chromosome graphics are accurate models from living gorillas, chimps, and humans. The bandings, telomeres, centromeres, codon differences, etc., are consistent with common ancestry with gorillas splitting off before chimps. In addition, Carl Zimmer's excellent overview cites research supporting the likelihood for each of the proposed chromosome transitions, e.g., how telomeres can stick end-to-end to fuse 2 chromosomes.