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Julia Jeffrey Julia Jeffrey
wrote...
Posts: 79
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11 years ago
Alright, I need a straightforward answer, as well as an explanation.
An hypothesis will be fine too if you could get one (even if you know the answer). However, please justify if you're stating the answer or if you're stating the hypothesis. Thanks in advance!
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wrote...
11 years ago
Hardy-Weinberg is the opposite of evolution, which means it does not provide evidence for evolution. instead, it gives reasonable situations, where evolution is NOT POSSIBLE

ANSWER
situations where evolution is not possible ( Hardy-Weinberg)
* Random mating ( animals mate without even caring about if the other animal is a same type of an animal or not, which leaves NO OFFSPRING)

* mutation is a large populations ( if a mutation happens in a large population, that mutated animal would't get attention to reproduce as the population is big)

* No mutations ( if there is no mutation, then there wouldn't be an evolution)

*Isolated from other populations ( if the animals are isolated they wouldn't be able to reproduce with different types of animals to make a new/ different offspring)

No natural selection ( if there is no natural selection, then no trait would be selected)

HYPOTHESIS
Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium proves that evolution is not always possible. There could be situations where mechanism of evolutionary changes possible, either by the involvement of humans, or by the animals by it-selves.Therefore, HWE proves that evolution is not always possible.
Answer accepted by topic starter
BugmenotBugmenot
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11 years ago
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wrote...
11 years ago
Let's start from the evolution side.

These are the things which drive evolution:
1. mutation
2. natural selection
3. the fact that a population cannot be infinitely large
4. the fact that not all members of a population breed equally well, or have the same number of offspring
5. mating between individuals is not completely random
6. populations can face disturbances that range from changes in environment, to individuals migrating in and out.

The Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium states, simply, that in the absence of the "disturbances" listed above, the frequency of each genetic allele in the environment ought to remain exactly the same from one generation to the next.  The mathematical/probabilistic statement is based on the fact that Hardy and Weinberg used the formal laws of probability to demonstrate that in the absence of the factors listed, frequencies -will not- change.  In other words, evolution will not occur, in any way.  

The observable facts, however, are that (a) one or more of these factors *always* occurs, and (b) as a result, we can see changes in the frequency of alleles.  That, too, was demonstrated mathematically by Hardy and Weinberg.

The simplest formal definition of evolution is simply "the change in the frequency of alleles in a population over time."  That is, in fact, what evolution really boils down to.

There's more detail at http://anthro.palomar.edu/synthetic/synth_2.htm .
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