This is an unusually poor reply from you, quite possibly because you haven't any answers to proffer.
The most direct and effective response to quote mining is to show that the misrepresented scientist doesn't believe what the quote miner claimed. Koonin sees evolution as a fact, contrary to your claims and your doctored "quote."
And Lynch says that human genome could degenerate if it were not for natural selection. Again, the opposite of what you were trying to have him say.
If you'd actually read the articles instead of cribbing stuff off of creationist sites, you'd avoid embarassments like this.
To call PNAS and Biology Direct (both of which I looked up personally)
Doubtful. If you actually read the articles, you would have realized the facts I showed you. Unless you were consciously trying to deceive us.
You seem to be claiming personal acquaintance with Koonin and Lynch -
Just acquainted with their ideas. Which is why is was so easy for me to derail your quote mining game. Hint: learn some biology and use evidence, instead of telling us about what you think scientists think.
and as you're so fond of doing, and are so incapable of doing anything else - are accusing me of quotemining.
Gotcha again. Are you starting to realize why presenting doctored "quotes" won't work for you?
When you've done so, perhaps we can have a sensible discussion.
Sure. Drop the quote mining, and show us some evidence.
Koonin is commenting on the facts: there are no intermediate forms worthy of the name, despite all the flimflam you insist on inventing, making up, or dredging up.
To be fair to Koonin, his argument is that there are no intermediate forms today, not that there were never any such. For example, an organism with apomorphies of both mammals and reptiles.
Er, except for montremes like the platypus, which is transitional in character between reptiles (lays eggs, complex reptilian skeleton, has a cloaca, poorly homothermic) and mammals (mammalian jaw, fur, primitive milklike process for nursing, poorly homothermic).
Oops. Koonin seems to base his notions in arthropods, which don't have many living transitionals (the insects being a major exception).
Eldredge and Gould said pretty much the same thing
Let's take a look...
Since we proposed punctuated equilibria to explain trends, it is infuriating to be quoted again and again by creationists—whether through design or stupidity, I do not know—as admitting that the fossil record includes no transitional forms. Transitional forms are generally lacking at the species level, but they are abundant between larger groups.
Stephen Gould,
http://www.stephenjaygould.org/library/gould_fact-and-theory.html
Surprise.
Huxley, who you quoted, was well aware of that fact,
In fact, Darwin was unaware of any such intermediate forms, merely predicting that some of them would be found in spite of the spotty nature of the fossil record. Not too long after Huxley's statement predicting that dinosaurs would prove to be the ancestors of birds, Archaeopteryx, a transitional between birds and dinosaurs, was found. There are very few major groups (as Gould said) that do not have a transitional between them. As you know, I've pressed you to name even one case of two major groups said to be evolutionarily connected, that lack a transitional and you couldn't do it. There still are some, but my faith in your ignorance of the evidence has so far been vindicated.
and still, very stupidly in my opinion, carried on with Darwinism.
As you learned, Darwinism is completely compatible with such intermediate forms. Darwin even predicted them, before any were known.
Lynch and Kimura (you fail to mention Kimura - he was a most potent mathematician, unlike your degree in systems analysis or whatever)
It's not the only degree I have. I have a master's degree in systems, however, and if you knew anything about it, you would know that it's mostly mathematical.
are saying very clearly that natural selection, on which you pin your fast-fading hopes, can't do the job of forwarding evolution. Despite all Dawkins' hoo-hah.
As you should know, Kimura pointed out the necessity of natural selection. His theory was that neutral mutations could over time, also produce some evolutionary change. And as you just learned Lynch has pointed out that natural selection is necessary for human evolution, and if we interfere with natural selection in humans, that could be bad for us in the long run. Darwin said the same thing, in
The Descent of Man. Surprise.
The tide is ebbing, barbarian. You'll end up stranded in the middle of nowhere if you don't repent of this nonsense.
Nice try. Hopefully, you'll figure out that quote mining is a very unreliable way of learning about biology.