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    Drift and selection can produce the same outcomes even th... — Carmelics
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    Supports→The persistence of biologists' debates over the relative importance of drift and selection is explicable without making those debates seem trivial

    Drift and selection can produce the same outcomes even though they are distinct processes

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    If two distinct processes can produce identical outcomes, scientists can reasona...The persistence of biologists' debates over the relative importance of drift and...

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    Drift and selection should be characterized as processes rather than o...88%Drift is not a separate process from selection83%Distinguishing process from outcome dissolves the apparent overlap bet...82%Natural selection is analogous to artificial selection.81%

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    As will be discussed further below, much of the twentieth century was marked by debates among biologists about the relative importance of drift and selection in evolution. Were those debates at least in part the result of conceptual unclarity? Millstein (2002) argues that we need not accept this inadvertent consequence of Beatty’s argument, and that selection can, in fact, be distinguished from drift. In order to do this, three extensions should be made to Beatty’s account. First, similar to Hod

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