mistermack wrote:Hi, I don't know if I can be all that much help. Having an interest doesn't make me an expert.
Firstly, I would comment that it's not the best choice for a debate. Very few people will understand the finer points of glucose handling, me included, so you would have to debate it with and in front of some very clued up people. I prefer the sickle cell anaemia example, or even things like the vestigial tails and appendix etc. Another favourite of mine is the fact that our sexual lubricants smell exactly like the lubricant that covers many fish, after a few hours in the air.
Ok my apologies, as usual my assumptions got the better of me. I assumed that from what you said on the other thread you were an expert.
This is my simple insulin analogy
‘You live in a house, where the electricity supply is intermittent.
One lamp is left plugged in. When it lights you know the juice is on.
You send someone round to plug-in the fridge, the freezer, the central heating etc.
These plugs pop out after a while. But you keep sending the plugger-in round the house.
When the lamp goes out, you stop sending the plugger-in round the house’

Cock-a-mammy or what?
A single hox gene change could swap receptors from insulin to glucose. Whilst there are undoubtedly a ‘chain’ of genes involved somewhere along the line is a gene which says ‘this receptor is for insulin’. Change that gene to glucose receptor and you get glucose receptors, yes I’m oversimplifying, but it’s definitely not a complete system rebuild.
I believe in the words of the prophet dawkins ‘DNA is a recipe not a blueprint’
I may be wrong, but I think that is the case.
Given that, I would have expected, an alternative evolutionary pathway to have been traced. This leaves the ‘bug me’ question ‘What goes on in the control of glucose that makes insulin/glucagon feedback a seeming necessity?’
Most of natsel works through energy budgeting. Could the islet cells be doing complex maths (making them more expensive) to produce a proportionate response to glucose in the bloodstream?
Are the GLUTs on islet cells significantly more expensive than insulin GLUTs?
Your point about this not being suitable place for debate astounds me. Doesn’t stop people arguing about electrons being photons. Call me crazy but you seemed quite happy to engage in a far more difficult debate on electron structure.

<== colubridae
mistermack wrote:On the extinction of the Neanderthals, I haven't heard of any work on meiotic drive being involved, I wouldn't mind some references to have a look at.
I’m pretty sure you won’t find any references, It’s me spitballing.
It started on RDF. I engaged a theist twerp on the epicurean dilemma. He evaded the issue and I added the Neanderthals. Along the lines of "Why did skydaddy make the Neanderthals extinct? Evidence suggests they were gentler, more intelligent creatures yet they got the chop without being given a chance to develop”
After more baloney from him, I put the idea of segregation distorters as an extinction mechanism for them. He pointed me to creationist website bullshitting about god’s meiotic drive. Naturally for me I went ballistic and hounded him to my own extinction. Go with that for the irony.
If segregation distorters got them, there would be a single clear evidential signature. Whether it would show up in the fossil/archaeological evidence I don’t know. I’m not privy to Neanderthal dig results.
If you like, we can continue the same ethics discussion as I started on RDF, but without the god twaddle.
mistermack wrote:My own FEELING is that Neanderthals were very sedentary people, intimately involved in their territory, and specialising in exploiting local features, like places where herds of migrating game got concentrated. I've read this opinion on several occasions, contrasting them to modern humans, who seemed to have the capacity to 'up sticks' and adapt to circumstances.
This would make Neanderthals very vulnerable to climate change, and their demise seems to coincide with the last ice age.
It's not just the ice that was a killer, it was the drastic climate change that travelled in front of the ice.
So when modern humans started spreading out from the middle east, the Neanderthals were probably down to just a few pockets anyway, and probably just couldn't cope with the competition.
Yeah sorry I was hoping for more than a wiki condensate. My apologies for the incorrect assumption.
As they say ‘I makes an ass out of u & me’

I have a well balanced personality. I've got chips on both shoulders