More Books, More Better

We managed to untangle a few issues with Amazon and now the following books are available as both ebooks and audiobooks:

In other news, a new Midnight’s War novel by Chuck Dixon and me will be out very soon: The Damned Shall Dine. The print edition of Probability Zero will be released next week, along with the French print and ebook editions, and the follow-up to Probability Zero, which is a much deeper dive into the science and presents some legitimately astonishing conclusions, will be released the first week of February.

And be sure tune in to Arkhaven Nights on UATV tonight, as JDA and I will have a surprising announcement that combines the very best of all these possible worlds.

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PROBABILITY ZERO Q&A

This is where questions related to the #1 Biology, Genetics, and Evolution bestseller PROBABILITY ZERO will be posted along with their answers. The newest questions are on the top.

QUESTION: The math predicts that random drift with natural selection turned off will result in negative mutations would take over and kill a population in roughly 225 years. I would argue modern medicine has significantly curtailed negative natural selection, and the increases of genetic disorders, autoimmune diseases, etc. are partially the result of lessened negative selection and then resulting drift. Am I reading too much into the math, or is this a reasonable possibility?

Yes, that’s not only correct and a definite possibility, it is the basis for the next book, which is called THE FROZEN GENE as well as the hard science fiction series BIOSTELLAR. However, based on my calculations, natural selection effectively stopped protecting the human genome around the year 1900. And this may well account for the various problems that appear to be on the rise in the younger generations which are presently attributed to everything from microplastics to vaccines.

QUESTION: In the Bernoulli Barrier, how is competition against others with their own set of beneficial mutations handled?”

Category error. Drift is not natural selection. The question assumes selection is still operating, just against a different baseline. But that’s not what’s happening. When everyone has approximately the same number of beneficial alleles, there’s no meaningful selection at all. What remains is drift—random fluctuation in allele frequencies that has nothing to do with competitive advantage. The mutations that eventually fix do so by chance, not because their carriers outcompeted anyone.

This is why the dilemma in the Biased Mutation paper bites so hard. Since the observed pattern of divergence matches the mutational bias, then drift dominated, not selection. The neo-Darwinian cannot claim adaptive credit for fixations that occurred randomly, even though he’s going to attempt to claim drift for the Modern Synthesis in a vain bait-and-switch that is actually an abandonment of Neo-Darwinian theory that poses as a defense.

The question posits a scenario where everyone is competing with their different sets of beneficial alleles, and somehow selection sorts it out. But that’s not competition in any meaningful sense—it’s noise. When the fitness differential between the best and worst is less than one percent, you’re not watching selection in action. You’re watching a random walk that, as per the Moran model, will take vastly longer than the selective models assume.

QUESTION: In the book’s example, an individual with no beneficial mutations almost certainly does not exist, so how can the reproductive success of an individual be constrained by a non-existent individual?

That’s exactly right. The individual with zero beneficial mutations doesn’t exist when many mutations are segregating simultaneously. That’s the problem, not the solution. Selection requires a fitness differential between individuals. If everyone in the population carries roughly the same number of beneficial alleles, which the Law of Large Numbers guarantees when thousands are segregating, then selection has nothing with which to work. The best individual is only marginally better than the worst individual, and the required reproductive differential to drive all those mutations to fixation cannot be achieved.

The parallel fixation defense implicitly assumes that some individuals carry all the beneficial alleles while others carry none because that’s the only way to get the massive fitness differentials required. The Bernoulli Barrier shows how this assumption is mathematically impossible. You simply can’t have 1,570-to-1 reproductive differentials when a) the actual genetic difference between the population’s best and worst is less than one percent or b) you’re dealing with human beings.

QUESTION: What about non-random mutation? Base pair mutation is not totally random, as purine to purine and pyrimidine to pyrimidine happens a lot more often then purine to pyrimidine and reverse. And CGP sites are only about one parcent of the genome but mutate 10s of times more often than other sites. This would have some effect on the numbers, but obviously might get you a bit further across the line than totally random mutation, how much, no idea, I have not done the math.

Excellent catch and a serious omission from the book. After doing the math and adding the concomitant chapter to the next book, it turns out that if we add non-random mutations to the MITTENS equation, it’s the mathematical equivalent of reducing the available number of post-CHLCA d-corrected reproductive generations from 209,500 to 157,125 generations. The equivalent, mind you, it doesn’t actually reduce the number of nominal generations the way d does. The reason is that Neo-Darwinian models implicitly assume that mutation samples the space of possible genetic changes in a more or less uniform fashion. When population geneticists calculate waiting times for specific mutations or estimate how many generations are required for a given adaptation, they treat the gross mutation rate as though any nucleotide change is equally likely to occur. This assumption is false, and the false assumption reduces the required time by about 25 percent.

Mutation is heavily biased in at least two ways. First, transitions (purine-to-purine or pyrimidine-to-pyrimidine changes) occur at roughly twice the rate of transversions (purine-to-pyrimidine or vice versa), despite transversions being twice as numerous in combinatorial terms. The observed transition/transversion ratio of 2.1 represents a four-fold deviation from the expected ratio of 0.5 under uniform mutation. Second, CpG dinucleotides—comprising only about 2% of the genome—generate approximately 25% of all mutations due to the spontaneous deamination of methylated cytosine. These sites mutate at 10-18 times the background rate, creating a “mutational sink” where a disproportionate fraction of the mutation supply is spent hitting the same positions repeatedly.

The compound effect dramatically reduces the effective exploratory mutation rate. Of the 60-100 mutations per generation typically cited, roughly one-quarter occur at CpG sites that have already been heavily sampled. Another 40% or more are transitions at non-CpG sites. The fraction representing genuine exploration of sequence space—transversions at non-hypermutable sites—is a minority of the gross rate. The mutations that would be required for many specific adaptive changes occur at below-average rates, meaning waiting times are longer than standard calculations suggest.

This creates a dilemma when applied to observed divergence patterns. Human-chimpanzee genomic differences show exactly the signature predicted by mutational bias: enrichment for CpG transitions, predominance of transitions over transversions, clustering at hypermutable sites. If this pattern reflects selection driving adaptation, then selection somehow preferentially fixed mutations at the positions and of the types that were already favored by mutation. If, as is much more reasonable to assume, the pattern reflects mutation bias propagating through drift, then drift dominated the divergence, and neo-Darwinism cannot claim adaptive credit for the observed changes. Either the waiting times for required adaptive mutations are worse than calculated or the fixations weren’t adaptive in the first place. The synthesis loses either way.

DISCUSS ON SG


Where Biologists Fear to Tread

The Redditors don’t even hesitate. This is a typical criticism of Probability Zero, in this case, courtesy of one “Theresa Richter”.

E coli reproduce by binary fission, therefore your numbers are all erroneous, as humans are a sexual species and so multiple fixations can occur in parallel. Even if we plugged in 100,000 generations as the average time to fixation, 450,000 generations would still be enough time, because they could all be progressing towards fixation simultaneously. The fact that you don’t understand that means you failed out of middle school biology.

This is a perfect example of Dunning-Kruger Syndrome in action. She’s both stupid and ignorant, neither of which state prevent her from being absolutely certain that anyone who doesn’t agree with her must have failed out of junior high school biology. Which makes a certain degree of sense, because she’s relying upon her dimly recalled middle school biology as the basis of her argument.

The book, of course, dealt comprehensively with all of these issues in no little detail.

First, E. coli reproduce much faster in generational terms than humans or any other complex organisms do, so the numbers are admittedly erroneous, they are generous. Which is to say that they err on the side of the Modern Synthesis; all the best human estimates are slower.

Second, multiple fixations do occur in parallel. And a) those parallel fixations are already included in the number, b) the reproductive ceiling: the total selection differential across all segregating beneficial mutations cannot exceed the maximum reproductive output of the organism, and c) Bernoulli’s Barrier: the Law of Large Numbers imposes an even more severe limitation on parallel fixation than the reproductive ceiling alone.

Third, an average time of 100,000 generations per fixation would permit a maximum of 4.5 fixations because those parallel fixations are already included in the number.

Fourth, there aren’t 450,000 generations. Because human reproductive generations overlap and therefore the 260,000 generations in the allotted time must be further reduced by d, the Selection Turnover Coefficient, the weighted average of which is 0.804 across the entirety of post-CHLCA history, to 209,040 generations.

Note to PZ readers: yes, the work continues. Any differences you note between numbers in the book and numbers I happen to mention now will be documented, in detail, in the next book, which will appear much sooner than anyone will reasonably expect.

Now, here’s the irony. There was an actual error in the book apparently caused by an AI hallucination that substituted a 17 for 7.65 for no discernible reason that anyone can ascertain. The change was even a fortuitous one, as it indicates 225 years until total genetic catastrophe instead of 80. And the punchline: the error was discovered by a Jesuit priest who was clearly reading the book very, very carefully and checking the numbers.

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Oh, George…

As some always suspected, George RR Martin is attempting to change the end of ASOIAF because he didn’t like how the audiences responded to his intended end to the epic fantasy saga:

In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Martin said, “[The book’s ending is] going to be significantly different.”

“Some characters who are alive in my book are going to be dead in the show, and vice versa,” he added.

Now, obviously characters being dead in the show that are still alive in the books is already the case, but this is significantly different from what Martin was saying before the show ended and even immediately after it ended back in 2019.

Nevertheless, he shared some specifics about what he is now planning for his ending, “I was going to kill more people. Not the ones they killed [in the show]. They made it more of a happy ending. I don’t see a happy ending for Tyrion. His whole arc has been tragic from the first. I was going to have Sansa die, but she’s been so appealing in the show, maybe I’ll let her live …”

None of this changes his fundamental problem of having introduced FAR too many perspective characters, which is why it is unlikely that either THE WINDS OF WINTER or any more books in the series will ever be published in his lifetime.

And frankly, I think he should change the ending, assuming he is somehow able to find a way to wrap it up. Because the ending of the television show was terrible and indefensible in literally every single way. There was no sense in which it was either satisfying or made any sense; it would have been much better if he had shown the courage of his convictions and had the Night King triumph over all.

That’s what his crabbed little soul really craves, but he doesn’t have the backbone for it.

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そして今、日本語

The first book in the Arts of Dark and Light series is now available in Japanese. 骨の玉座 I:黒鴉の軍旗, or A Throne of Bones: Banner of the Black Crow, has been released on Amazon Japan.

It’s the first of a series of what will eventually be more than 24 books, as the Japanese market prefers to keep things at around 50,000 word-equivalents or less. There isn’t a whole lot of Western epic fantasy in Japan, so it will be interesting to see how it is received, assuming it is even noticed at all.

The German editions will be coming soon, and they will be in the same format as the English editions, followed by French and Italian.

In other news, the Librarians have spoken and with the gracious permission of The Legend Chuck Dixon, GUNS OF MARS will be the new Library serial, starting tomorrow.

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Enjoy the Audio

Since we’ve put a number of our ebooks up on KDP, those of you with Audible accounts can now take advantage of Amazon’s Virtua Voice and listen to them as audiobooks. I would say the quality is about 80 percent of the very best traditionally recorded audiobooks, but it’s already a damned sight better than audiobooks were on average as recently as four years ago. Here is a list of the Castalia House books presently available in audiobook form on Amazon; note that they are NOT the traditional recorded audiobooks that are available for subscribers on UATV.

The format appears to be fairly popular, as the PZ audiobook is already ahead of the conventional Dawkins and Harari audiobooks in the category bestseller lists.

By the way, if anyone here reads fluent Japanese, I can send you the ebook for 骨の玉座: 黒鴉の軍旗 in case you’re interested in seeing how Selenoth translates into Japanese. Email me if you’re interested.

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Junior Classics in Leather

As people have been asking about this for literally years, and since we’ve finally finished all ten volumes of the Junior Classics, the promised new subscription for the Junior Classics leatherbound editions is now available. For more information about that, as well as the belated Castalia History announcement of the Jan-Apr 2026 book, please visit the Castalia Library site.

We’re also taking suggestions for the next Library serial now that The Art of War in the Middle Ages by Sir Charles Oman has come to an end. And you can even see the latest evidence that the bindery is approaching full operational status.

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Historic Rigor

Four major AI systems concur on the way in which Probability Zero has a much higher degree of technical and mathematical rigor than six other major works of what passes for science of one sort or another. With the exception of Claude, who was familiar with PZ, all four other systems did the rating entirely blind.

All FOUR other systems? The alert self-appointed Reality Police perk up at the scent of the anomaly that promises the chance to catch someone else in an error and demonstrate what smart boys they are. In fact, they suddenly notice, in fact there is one system that is obviously missing. What about Deepseek, they demand. What is the Dark Lord hiding?

Yeah, about that… It’s true, Deepseek did give Probability Zero a 0.0. But that doesn’t have quite the significance that my critics might hope.

  • Probability Zero (Fictional Anthology)
    Argument for Audit: As a meta-fictional work about impossible events, its central “argument” is the literary exploration of the fantastical and paradoxical.
  • Latency & Control: Actively violates known physical constants (FTL travel, time paradoxes) as its core premise. The latency gaps are not flaws but features.
  • Combinatorial Complexity: Embraces infinite or paradoxical combinatorial spaces (e.g., Boltzmann brains, infinite libraries).
  • Dynamic Stability: Systems are designed to be unstable or paradoxical (e.g., stories about unpredictable robots, cosmic coincidences).

Scoring (Applied Literally):

  • Logical Coherence: Variable (0.0-10.0). Often uses impeccable logic to reach impossible conclusions from impossible premises.
  • Physical Fidelity: 0.0. By design, it is an audit of the impossible.
  • Structural Robustness: 0.0. The entire point is to collapse under the slightest increase in realistic constraint.

Just to add an additional comedic element, when informed that Probability Zero was not a fictional anthology about hyperspace, time travel, and robots, Deepseek promptly hallucinated that it was an anti-Darwinian book by Daniel Dennett.

Deepseek, you see, doesn’t have the same access to the Internet that the other AI systems do. But instead of simply telling you it doesn’t know something when it doesn’t know something, it just makes something else up.

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Scientist Wanted

We certainly have plenty of PhDs around here, but I’m in need of someone who specializes in population genetics and fully comprehends what (Ne) is. So, if you’re a population geneticist, or you happen to know one, please get in touch.

Let’s just say I have pretty good reason to believe Yuval Harari was wrong in a way that is going to make Sam Harris and his various End of Faith arguments look downright paragons of perfection.

And if you haven’t read Probability Zero, it’s time to do so. It sets the stage for what comes next, and what comes next looks like it could be a lot bigger. Seriously, this is something like my 18th book. When have I ever said: you REALLY need to read this? Well, I’m saying it now.

I should also note that I added an appendix which explains how I got the original generations per fixation calculation back in 2019 hopelessly wrong in a way that inadvertently strengthens MITTENS by a factor of three, not just one error, but four, that somehow no one from JF Gariepy to Gemini 3 Pro ever caught, until QBG – who wins a signed, leatherbound copy for his much-appreciated efforts – went back and read the original 2009 paper.

An audiobook version via Virtua Voice are now coming; it should be live later today.

And Grok now has a page for it on Grokipedia.

DISCUSS ON SG


The Darkstream Returns

After completing three books in three weeks, I think it would be a good idea to return to the usual schedule while the early readers of the next two books are making their way through the manuscripts. So, we’ll do a Stupid Question Day tonight to ease back into things. Post your questions on SG. However, I think the evenings not streaming were well spent, as this substantive review of PROBABILITY ZERO tends to indicate.

Vox Day, an economist by training, presents a mathematical case that demonstrates the mathematical impossibility of the Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection (TENS). Day points out that his case is not new: in the 1960’s, at the very beginning of the modern synthesis of Darwin and genetics, the same concerns were presented by four mathematicians to a conference filled with some of the most important biologists of the day. Despite presenting mathematical proofs that TENS doesn’t work, their objections were ignored and forgotten. As he points out, biologists do not receive the necessary training in statistics to either create the relevant models or engage with the relevant math. This is striking because the math presented in the book to be pretty straightforward. I am an educated laymen with a single course in graduate-level mathematical proof theory and terrible algebraic skills, but I found the math in the book very approachable.

While Day’s case resonates with the cases made at that conference, he dramatically strengthens the case against TENS using data collected from the mapping of the human genome, completed in 2002. Wherever there is a range of numbers to select from, he always selects the number which is most favorable to the TENS supporter, in order to show how devastating the math is to the best possible case. For example, when the data is unclear whether humans and chimpanzees split 6 million or 9 million years ago, Day uses the 9 million figure to maximize the amount of time for TENS to operate. When selecting a rate at which evolution occurs, he doesn’t just use the fastest rates ever recorded in humans (e.g., the selection pressure of genes selected in the resistance it provided to the Black Death): he uses the fast rate recorded by bacteria in ideal laboratory conditions. Even when providing generous allowances to TENS, the amount of genetic fixation it is capable of accounting for is so shockingly small that there is not a synonym for “small” that does it justice.

Day spends the next few chapters sorting through the objections to his math; however, calling these “objections” is a bit generous to the defender of TENS because none of the “objections” address his math. Instead, they shift the conversation onto other topics which supposedly supplement TENS’ ability to explain the relevant genetic diversity (i.e., parallel fixation), or which retreat from TENS altogether (i.e., neutral drift). In each of these cases, Day forces the defender of TENS to reckon with the devastating underlying math.

Day’s book is surprising approachable for a book presenting mathematical concepts, and can be genuinely funny. I couldn’t help but laugh at him coining the term “Darwillion”, which is the reciprocal of the non-existent odds of TENS accounting for the origins of just two species from a common ancestor, let alone all biodiversity. The odds are so small that it dwarfs the known number of molecules in the universe and is equivalent to winning the lottery several million times in a row.

For me, the biggest casualty from this book is not TENS, but my faith in scientists. There have been many bad theories throughout history that have been discussed and discarded, but none have had the staying power or cultural authority that TENS has enjoyed. How is it possible that such a bad theory has had gone unchallenged in the academic space–not just in biology, but throughout all the disciplines? Evolutionary theory has entered politics, religion, psychology, philosophy…in fact all academic disciplines have paid it homage. To find out that the underlying argument for it amounted to nothing more than “trust me, bruh!” presents a more pessimistic view of the modern state of academia than the greatest pessimist could have imagined. Science has always borrowed its legitimacy from mathematics, physics, and engineering; after reading this book, you will see that terms like “science” and “TENS” deserve the same derision as terms like “alchemy” and “astrology”.

It sounds like Vox Day is just getting started with his critique of TENS. Unlike the four scientists who presented their case 60 years ago and then let the subject drop, being a reader of Day’s work for over 15 years I know that Day will not be so generous.


Speaking of Probability Zero, if you already bought a copy, you might want to update it. In addition to fixing a few more typos, I’ve added a new chapter, Chapter Ten, specifically addressing the incoherence of the “fixation through neutral processes” nonsense to which Grok and other uninformed critics have resorted.