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    If two alleles exist at a locus at equal frequencies, we ... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Drift is not a directional force

    If two alleles exist at a locus at equal frequencies, we cannot predict which allele will go to fixation, only that one will

    CausationModality & Possibility
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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    A claim that one of two alleles will fix is analogous to saying a force acts on ...Drift is not a directional forceDrift is not a separate process from selectionEliminating heterozygosity is not sufficient to show that drift is directional

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    A claim that one of two alleles will fix is analogous to saying a forc...77%Biological populations reproduce, and offspring number can vary, which...72%Genetic drift across multiple generations tends to produce fluctuating...72%The locus of one atom cannot simultaneously be the locus of another at...71%

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    Brandon (2006), however, argues that “eliminating heterozygosity” is not sufficient to show that drift is directional, given that (as Stephens would readily acknowledge) if there were two alleles at a locus, beginning at equal frequencies, we could not predict which of the two alleles would go to fixation, only that one of them would; Brandon likens this to saying that “a 20-Newton force is acting on object A”, (2006: 325), which, he seems to imply, is not a directional claim. Moreover, he argue

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