“Lethal mutations” is a broad category. Certainly cancer will gitcha if nothing else does first. You die as a centenarian, of a lethal mutation. So what? What you die of doesn’t matter to evolution except insofar as it hinders reproduction.What has the initial claim got to do with evolution? It seems to be saying that if you have a child it will most likely die from lethal mutations.
What the fuck did you expect?No citations?
If 10% has allowed us to survive 200,000 years, it is OK.Ninety percent of your genome is junk — interview with Larry Moran.
Or we don't presently understand how the rest is functional or beneficial.Epigenetics...what is 'junk' now may become beneficial under different conditions?
Or, more plausibly, we have been studying DNA since 1860. It took us ninety years just to work out the structure of the molecule*; In the next seventy years, we have so far found out what 8.2% of it is doing, and still have very little clue what the other 91.8% is up to.8.2% of our DNA is functional.
But see Moran’s discussion I linked above. He argues that 90 percent is indeed junk, and we have no reason to think we will discover otherwise. This dovetails with his contention that most evolution is driven by drift and accident, with natural selection playing a far smaller role than realized.Or, more plausibly, we have been studying DNA since 1860. It took us ninety years just to work out the structure of the molecule*; In the next seventy years, we have so far found out what 8.2% of it is doing, and still have very little clue what the other 91.8% is up to.8.2% of our DNA is functional.
* This was famously deduced in 1953 by Watson and Crick, who used the well established chemical methodology of taking X-Ray crystallographic prints from a much smarter woman, Rosalind Franklin, and then not giving her any credit.
That’s nonsensical.most evolution is driven by drift and accident, with natural selection playing a far smaller role than realized.