Quote Originally Posted by Serpent_Nirvana View Post
Also, the terms dominant and recessive DO refer to phenotypes. NOT genotypes. That's a common misconception. Therefore, it is perfectly possible for one given phenotypic manifestation of a gene to be dominant while another is recessive. And if you don't believe me, it is even on Wikipedia, the Source of All Knowledge of Everything (okay not really but it IS on Wikipedia):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominan...is_dominant.3F
this is right off the link you posted

"It is critical to understand that dominance is a genotypic relationship between alleles, as manifested in the phenotype. It is unrelated to the nature of the phenotype itself"