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mitschlag



Posts: 236
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 20 2009,13:38   

Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 19 2009,18:28)
My reason for discussing horse evolution in the first place was because of the toes - that's it.
....
Classic strawman.

Quote
Ah, but the strawberries!

That's where I had them. They laughed at me and made jokes,
but I proved beyond the shadow of a doubt, and with geometric logic,
that a duplicate key to the wardroom icebox did exist!


--------------
"You can establish any “rule” you like if you start with the rule and then interpret the evidence accordingly." - George Gaylord Simpson (1902-1984)

  
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 20 2009,18:13   

Quote (Erasmus @ FCD,Feb. 19 2009,16:38)
bwaha

you're a fraud denial.  there is interesting science in that paper but you wanna blather about crap

I'm still waiting for you to answer this question:    
Quote
So these species [Tragopogon miscellus and T. mirus] not only have multiple recurrent origins, they also evolve concurrently afterward.  How much of this still sounds random to you?


--------------
"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 20 2009,18:16   

Quote (Louis @ Feb. 19 2009,16:19)
   
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,00:14)
Have you read Berg, Schindewolf, Goldschmidt, Grasse, Bateson or any of the others who have not embraced Darwinist principles?

You might be surprised at what I read/have read, but then since (as noted before) all you care about is dick waving and gainsaying your "enemies", I decline to play your infantile games with lists. Stop posturing and projecting.

I'm going to take that as a "No", Louis.

--------------
"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 20 2009,18:30   

Quote (Albatrossity2 @ Feb. 19 2009,17:04)
   
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 19 2009,18:06)
I'm just being consistent.

Maybe you can buy a dictionary someday as well. Being a hypocrite is not "being consistent".

Demanding detailed mechanisms, precursors and pathways from others. while allowing yourself to indulge in a mechanism-free, precursor-free and pathway-free exercise in goalpost tectonics is hypocrisy.

But you are, for certain, consistently hypocritical.

My argument is based on life being created by an omniscient God.  My argument is that we mortals will never figure out how he did it.  You all say life is of natural, undirected origins.  You all say we should be able to figure out how it happened.  I'm not the one claiming accidental evolution can build complex living systems - you are.  That's the only reason I'm asking you for mechanisms.

I've consistently said that we'll never figure out how God did it.  What part of that is hypocritical?

Do you still want to talk about flowers?

--------------
"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 20 2009,18:32   

Quote (mitschlag @ Feb. 20 2009,11:38)
 
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 19 2009,18:28)
My reason for discussing horse evolution in the first place was because of the toes - that's it.
....
Classic strawman.

   
Quote
Ah, but the strawberries!

That's where I had them. They laughed at me and made jokes,
but I proved beyond the shadow of a doubt, and with geometric logic,
that a duplicate key to the wardroom icebox did exist!

Snip and ignore.  That's the M.O. around here when backed into a corner isn't it?

Do you still want to talk about Schindewolf?

--------------
"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
Louis



Posts: 6436
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 20 2009,18:39   

Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 21 2009,00:16)
Quote (Louis @ Feb. 19 2009,16:19)
   
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,00:14)
Have you read Berg, Schindewolf, Goldschmidt, Grasse, Bateson or any of the others who have not embraced Darwinist principles?

You might be surprised at what I read/have read, but then since (as noted before) all you care about is dick waving and gainsaying your "enemies", I decline to play your infantile games with lists. Stop posturing and projecting.

I'm going to take that as a "No", Louis.

Take it for whatever you want it to be. Your ill-informed opinion matters not.

As noted before, you are demonstrably not here to challenge or be challenged, you are here to gainsay "the opposition" and play silly oneupmanship games best left in the playground.

It's more than a little pathetic, Denial.

Louis

--------------
Bye.

  
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 20 2009,19:05   

For Bill:



--------------
"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
Reciprocating Bill



Posts: 4265
Joined: Oct. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 20 2009,19:11   

Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,20:05)
For Bill:


Come again?

--------------
Myth: Something that never was true, and always will be.

"The truth will set you free. But not until it is finished with you."
- David Foster Wallace

"Here’s a clue. Snarky banalities are not a substitute for saying something intelligent. Write that down."
- Barry Arrington

  
Albatrossity2



Posts: 2780
Joined: Mar. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 20 2009,21:12   

Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,18:30)
What part of that is hypocritical?

The part where you are hypocritical. If you want to read that previous comment over again and see if you can figure it out, I'll wait.  Or I can highlight it again, like this:

Demanding detailed mechanisms, precursors and pathways from others. while allowing yourself to indulge in a mechanism-free, precursor-free and pathway-free exercise in goalpost tectonics is hypocrisy.

--------------
Flesh of the sky, child of the sky, the mind
Has been obligated from the beginning
To create an ordered universe
As the only possible proof of its own inheritance.
                        - Pattiann Rogers

   
Henry J



Posts: 5786
Joined: Mar. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 20 2009,23:04   

The problem (which should be obvious) with the prediction that we'll never figure it out, is that unanswered questions are expected regardless of which model is correct. Therefore the mere existence of unanswered questions can't distinguish between them.

Besides which, the position that "nature can't do that" directly implies that God would be unable to arrange for nature to do that, which contradicts the assumption that God is omnipotent.

Henry

  
Erasmus, FCD



Posts: 6349
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 21 2009,01:03   

Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,18:13)
 
Quote (Erasmus @ FCD,Feb. 19 2009,16:38)
bwaha

you're a fraud denial.  there is interesting science in that paper but you wanna blather about crap

I'm still waiting for you to answer this question:        
Quote
So these species [Tragopogon miscellus and T. mirus] not only have multiple recurrent origins, they also evolve concurrently afterward.  How much of this still sounds random to you?

As I said, you wish to blather about crap.

There is a strong argument to be made that, despite their apparent morphological similarity, individuals from separate polyploidy events in separate populations are not members of the 'same' species.  they have unique evolutionary histories and independent evolutionary trajectories.  Since your species concept involves whatever Noah carried off the ark, it is not surprising you have failed to grasp this point.  I'll play this stupid game with you IFF you explicate and defend your species concept. You won't do it because you are not genuinely interested in these arguments as anything but cover for We Don't Know Yet = goddidit.

what a fucking moron.  

if you think the formation of allopolyploids has some determinate component, by all means do share instead of pissing on the rug.  You have yet to formulate anything even remotely resembling a testable claim here, so here is your shot.  

Quote
So these species [Tragopogon miscellus and T. mirus] not only have multiple recurrent origins, they also evolve concurrently afterward.  How much of this still sounds random to you?


The answer to the question is  
Quote
That Doesn't Seem To Be Anything But Random To Me But Perhaps Jesus Teh Designer is whispering something in your ear that he is not whispering into mine, so why don't you share instead of braying like a fucking donkey about shit you know nothing about and aren't interested in learning, just using as an apologetic crutch for spreading your particular brand of stupid blinkered wankery?


Denial do you know how people evaluate the claim that X is random with respect to Y?  Not by stupid false equivalences, for one.

--------------
You're obviously illiterate as hell. Peach, bro.-FtK

Finding something hard to believe based on the evidence, is science.-JoeG

the odds of getting some loathsome taint are low-- Gordon E Mullings Manjack Heights Montserrat

I work on molecular systems with pathway charts and such.-Giggles

  
Quack



Posts: 1961
Joined: May 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 21 2009,02:38   

Quote
I've consistently said that we'll never figure out how God did it.  What part of that is hypocritical?


OK, if that's what it is, the case is settled, so why are you still here?

To persuade science that your assumption is the one and only solution?

So therefore we should begin worshiping your God?

It is getting pretty boring, can't you at least let us (or at least me) know what; what exactly are you selling here? That you are not on a buying spree is obvious, but again: What is it that you want to sell to the world, or what is your gift to the world?

If it is just: Science cannot answer, never will - but I, Daniel knows: God did it (but I don't know how, I just know it in my heart because that's the way it's got to be! If it isn't, I have a huge problem!), we already know that. Is that all there is to it?

Be a Christian and offer your other ear, patience is a Christian virtue, isn't it? Walk another mile with me, won't you, like the Lord said you should?

--------------
Rocks have no biology.
              Robert Byers.

  
mitschlag



Posts: 236
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 21 2009,04:51   

Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,18:32)
 
Quote (mitschlag @ Feb. 20 2009,11:38)
     
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 19 2009,18:28)
My reason for discussing horse evolution in the first place was because of the toes - that's it.
....
Classic strawman.

       
Quote
Ah, but the strawberries!

That's where I had them. They laughed at me and made jokes,
but I proved beyond the shadow of a doubt, and with geometric logic,
that a duplicate key to the wardroom icebox did exist!

Snip and ignore.  That's the M.O. around here when backed into a corner isn't it?

Do you still want to talk about Schindewolf?

Possess thy soul in patience, Dear Boy.

I have dusted off my copy of Schindewolf and look forward to working with you on its exegesis when I have a spare moment.

(Sorry, but I couldn't resist the association of the quoted part of your comment with Queeg's rant. The Devil made me do it.)   :angry:

--------------
"You can establish any “rule” you like if you start with the rule and then interpret the evidence accordingly." - George Gaylord Simpson (1902-1984)

  
Erasmus, FCD



Posts: 6349
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 21 2009,07:43   

mitschlag in particular simpson's account of schindewolf suggests that there are some serious issues with the domain of observations used by schindewolf to support his contentions.  i think SJG goes over this in more detail in "Structure" but I keep forgetting to bring my copy home.  I'll be paying close attention.  This narrative is a great antidote to Popper and Kuhn.

--------------
You're obviously illiterate as hell. Peach, bro.-FtK

Finding something hard to believe based on the evidence, is science.-JoeG

the odds of getting some loathsome taint are low-- Gordon E Mullings Manjack Heights Montserrat

I work on molecular systems with pathway charts and such.-Giggles

  
mitschlag



Posts: 236
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,07:29   

Quote (Erasmus @ FCD,Feb. 21 2009,07:43)
mitschlag in particular simpson's account of schindewolf suggests that there are some serious issues with the domain of observations used by schindewolf to support his contentions.  i think SJG goes over this in more detail in "Structure" but I keep forgetting to bring my copy home.  I'll be paying close attention.  This narrative is a great antidote to Popper and Kuhn.

Erasmus, whatever you care to provide from Structure will be welcome.

Your reference to Gould reminded me of his essay Life's Little Joke, which goes well beyond Simpson in demolishing the simplistic sequence portrayed by Schindewolf.  (Gould wrote in 1991 and had in hand much more data than either Schindewolf or Simpson commanded.)  The entire essay - too long to copy and post here - is provided in the link.  Daniel should read it and comprehend it.

--------------
"You can establish any “rule” you like if you start with the rule and then interpret the evidence accordingly." - George Gaylord Simpson (1902-1984)

  
mitschlag



Posts: 236
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,07:54   

Contra Schindewolf, Part 1 (Introduction)
   
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 19 2009,18:28)
         
Quote (mitschlag @ Feb. 18 2009,04:00)
                 
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 17 2009,19:26)
Read Schindewolf's Basic Questions in Paleontology for an eye opening experience.

It is a losing gambit for Daniel to play the Schindewolf card.

I have read Grundfragen, and I can testify that it was an eye-closing experience.

Schindewolf musters artificial selection of data and tortuous argumentation to support preconceived notions of front-loading (orthogenesis) in evolution.

Remember Daniel's thread arguing that the evolution of the horse was a problem for modern evolutionary theory, and how Daniel bailed out of the discussion when Schindewolf's errors and omissions were pointed out to him, as in George  Gaylord Simpson's  The Major Features of Evolution?

I don't remember it like you do.  Schindewolf's data was never impeached - only his interpretation - which is understandable given the makeup of this group.


As we'll see from the record, we quoted Simpson, who accused Schindewolf of cherry-picking the data.  Does that qualify as "impeachment"?

(As an aside, you might consider avoiding ad hominems like "the makeup of this group" in the future. They add nothing to your argument.)
         
Quote
I repeatedly reminded all of you that horse evolution was one of Schindewolf's examples of gradualism, in fact he called it one of the most well documented cases of gradual evolution in paleontology, (You must've missed that part when you "read" the book), yet you all kept arguing that because horse evolution was gradual - Schindewolf was wrong.


I'm not clear about your point here.  Can you point me to one or more statements by Schindewolf that connect "horse" and "gradualism"?  What's the connection between gradualism and Schindewolf being "wrong"?  Wrong about what?

         
Quote
My reason for discussing horse evolution in the first place was because of the toes - that's it.  But you all read the thread title and jumped to unfounded conclusions, and then congratulated yourselves for "dismantling" them.


What were those "unfounded conclusions"?

Toes to follow...

--------------
"You can establish any “rule” you like if you start with the rule and then interpret the evidence accordingly." - George Gaylord Simpson (1902-1984)

  
Reciprocating Bill



Posts: 4265
Joined: Oct. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,08:31   

Quote (mitschlag @ Feb. 22 2009,08:29)
     
Quote (Erasmus @ FCD,Feb. 21 2009,07:43)
mitschlag in particular simpson's account of schindewolf suggests that there are some serious issues with the domain of observations used by schindewolf to support his contentions.  i think SJG goes over this in more detail in "Structure" but I keep forgetting to bring my copy home.  I'll be paying close attention.  This narrative is a great antidote to Popper and Kuhn.

Erasmus, whatever you care to provide from Structure will be welcome.

Your reference to Gould reminded me of his essay Life's Little Joke, which goes well beyond Simpson in demolishing the simplistic sequence portrayed by Schindewolf.  (Gould wrote in 1991 and had in hand much more data than either Schindewolf or Simpson commanded.)  The entire essay - too long to copy and post here - is provided in the link.  Daniel should read it and comprehend it.

Here is Gould's Structure comment on Schindewolfe. It arises in a discussion uniformitarianism versus catastrophism:

"Despite the uniformitarian consensus from Darwin's time until the late 20th century, occasional scholars of high reputation continued to float catastrophic proposals for the unresolved puzzle of mass extinctions...

"To cite the two most notable examples from the generation before Alvarez, Schindewolfe (1963), in an article entitled "Neokatastrophisimus," proposed bursts of cosmic radiation as the paroxysmal mechanism of mass extinction - with direct nuclear death (for the exterminations) and vast increases in mutation rates among survivors (for subsequent replacements by highly altered forms). But, to show the frustration (and scientific nonoperationality) of such proposals, Schindwolfe actually stated  - thus providing a favorite case that I have used for decades to illustrate the difference between science and speculation - that he had postulated cosmic radiation explicitly because such a cause would leave no empirical sign (then known to geologists) in the record of strata and fossils. (For Schindewolfe had to admit that the empirical record revealed no direct evidence at all for a catastrophic mechanism of mass extinction, and he therefore had to seek a potential cause that would leave no testable sign of its operation! Can one possibly imagine an unhappier situation for science? - to face the prospect of a plausible explanation that does not, in principle, leave evidence for its validation.)"

Reference was to:

Schindewolfe, O. H. 1963 Neokatastrophismus? Zeits. Deutsch. Geol. Res. 114:430-435

Of course, Gould continues with a discussion of Alvarez: "By contrast, the genesis of the [sic] Alvarez's hypothesis for the K-T mass extinction could not have been more different, or more exemplary for science. For the K-T bolide proposal began with an unanticipated empirical discovery - generated, ironically, during a test for an opposite hypothesis, and therefore surely not gathered under the aegis of any iconoclastic theoretical thoughts."

Gould goes on to discuss the initial, nearly universal rejection of Alvarez's hypothesized MECHANISM, followed by a description of the triumph of an EMPIRICALLY TESTABLE hypothesis over subsequent years. He identifies "several reasons to honor the conventional criteria used by scientists to judge the strength and importance of hypotheses - criteria based upon empirical affirmation, fruitful extension, and widening intellectual scope, rather than on such nonoperational notions as progress towards absolute truth." He goes on to note:

1. Alvarez proposed a theory that generated testable predictions: that, for example, the irridium layer would be detected globally. This was confirmed, capped by the discovery of the "smoking gun" of the Chicxulub structure off the Yucatan peninsula.

2. It sparked "a veritable orgy of exciting, and at lease intellectually fruitful, discussion and collaboration" across diverse disciplines,

3. "Most importantly, and diagnostically for scientific practice, the impact hypothesis proved its mettle (at least for me) in the explicit suggestions and prods that it provided for particular (and ultimately highly fruitful and exciting) paleontological research that would never even have been conceptualized without its nudge and encouragement.

From The Structure of Evolutionary Theory pages 1306-1307 and 1308-1309.

--------------
Myth: Something that never was true, and always will be.

"The truth will set you free. But not until it is finished with you."
- David Foster Wallace

"Here’s a clue. Snarky banalities are not a substitute for saying something intelligent. Write that down."
- Barry Arrington

  
mitschlag



Posts: 236
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,08:32   

Contra Schindewolf, Part 2 (On horse toes - dialog with George)

I believe that this is where toes were introduced into the discussion:
   
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Sep. 28 2007,03:31)
       
Quote (Alan Fox @ Sep. 27 2007,11:25)
If you recall, this thread was originally intended for you to show how the evolution of the horse is a problem for the current theory of evolution. I have not seen a great deal of evidence from you, yet.

You're right.  

In order to keep this thread on topic, I will try to keep my posts focused on the work of Schindewolf and Berg and (at least in the case of Schindewolf) also on the evolution of the horse.

Berg doesn't say a lot about horses other than this from section IV, "Convergence":
                         
Quote
"At the very time when in North America the Equidae were being evolved, forms of the order Litopterna were being elaborated in South America in the plains of the Argentine.  The latter are extinct ungulates, in many respects recalling horses: they had also lost the lateral digits of their limbs, and for progression made use of the median digit; their extremities and neck were likewise lengthened, and in the former, the ball-and-socket joints, by which movements in all directions could be accomplished, were being gradually supplanted by pulley joints, which restricted their limbs to being moved only backwards and forwards; their teeth lengthened and grew more complex (although no cement was present).  This group was extinct in South America before the arrival of horses. The Litopterna, or pseudo-horses, thus copied the horses in many ways.
The same course (as to limbs and teeth) as in horses was followed in the evolution of camels in the New World, and of deer, antelopes, sheep and oxen in the Old"
Nomogenesis, pg. 212.

As for Schindewolf's position, why don't I just start by using the same quote I provided for you over at Brainstorms:                  
Quote
To this extent,the one toed horse must be regarded as the ideal running animal of the plains. It's early Tertiary ancestors had four digits on the front feet and three on the hind feet, and low crowned cheek teeth. Since in the later Tertiary, an expansion of plains at the expense of forests has been observed, this change in environmental conditions and the consequent change in the mode of life has been represented as the cause of linear, progressive selection leading up to the modern horse.
However, in the formulation of this view, not enough consideration has been given to the fact that the evolutionary trend of reduction in the number of toes had already been introduced long before the plains were occupied in the early Tertiary by the precursors of the horse; these inhabited dense scrub, meaning that they lived in an environment where the reduction of the primitive five-toed protoungulate foot was not an advantage at all. In the descendants, then, the rest of the lateral toes degenerated and the teeth grew longer step by step... regardless of the mode of life, which... fluctuated repeatedly, with habitats switching around among forests, savannas, shrubby plains, tundra, and so on.
If selection alone were decisive in this specialization trend, we would have to ascribe to it a completely incomprehensible purposefulness...
Basic Questions in Paleontology pp. 358-359, (emphasis his)

Both of these men intently studied real examples from nature and the fossil record and came to the same conclusions:
1. That evolution of types happened suddenly - not gradually.
2. That subsequent evolution proceeded as if constrained by laws.
3. That natural selection had nothing to do with the formation of any organ.


George challenged Daniel on Schindewolf's claim that reduction in toes preceded the appearance of plains on the planet.  Daniel responded:
   
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Sep. 30 2007,16:56)
     
Quote (George @ Sep. 28 2007,07:44)
         
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Sep. 28 2007,03:31)
           
Quote
However, in the formulation of this view, not enough consideration has been given to the fact that the evolutionary trend of reduction in the number of toes had already been introduced long before the plains were occupied in the early Tertiary by the precursors of the horse; these inhabited dense scrub, meaning that they lived in an environment where the reduction of the primitive five-toed protoungulate foot was not an advantage at all. In the descendants, then, the rest of the lateral toes degenerated and the teeth grew longer step by step... regardless of the mode of life, which... fluctuated repeatedly, with habitats switching around among forests, savannas, shrubby plains, tundra, and so on.
If selection alone were decisive in this specialization trend, we would have to ascribe to it a completely incomprehensible purposefulness...
Basic Questions in Paleontology pp. 358-359, (emphasis his)

So basically Schindewolf is saying that horses developed single-toed hooves regardless of the selection pressures applied?  How does he know what those pressures were?  How does he know the scrub was dense?  Paleoecologists today can identify what species were present in the landscape at a point in time, but have much more difficulty in determining vegetation structure.  This has led to disagreements over what the European landscape of most of the Holocene was.  Yes there were lots of oak trees present, but was it closed forest?  Was it patches of scrub interspersed with grassy plains?  Was it widely spaced parkland-like trees?

In other words, what was the quality of his data and how far is he spreading it with rhetoric?

He doesn't go into any details (in this book at least - he may have in others or in one of his papers) about how he knew the environmental conditions were such as he described, so I can't tell you how he determined that.

I'm assuming that the man described in 1965 by Stephen Jay Gould's advisor, Dr. Norman Newell as "the greatest living paleontologist", used the scientific method and the accepted evidence of his day to determine these factors.

You might be in a position to show that he made a false claim, but you must base that on evidence from that time period.


And then:

 
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Oct. 01 2007,19:37)
   
Quote (George @ Oct. 01 2007,07:22)
You misunderstand me.  I'm not saying he was lying.  I'm questioning how he knew what Tertiary environmental conditions were like and how good were the data he based his conclusions on.  As I said before, it is difficult enough for today's paleoecologists to reconstruct past vegetation.  It would have been much more difficult and imprecise for the ecologists of a century ago.  Palynology, one of the more powerful tools, was only in its infancy.

To summarise:  he may have based his theories on the understanding of the day, but if that understanding is wrong, his ideas crumble.

Schindewolf's book was published (originally - in German) in 1950.  While technically that was in the last century, (so was 1999), it wasn't "a century ago".  

This is what he said:
       
Quote
Since in the later Tertiary, an expansion of plains at the expense of forests has been observed, this change in environmental conditions and the consequent change in the mode of life has been represented as the cause of linear, progressive selection leading up to the modern horse.
(emphasis mine)

I assume "has been observed" means that it was well accepted.  Perhaps newer data has proved him wrong, I don't know.


And yet again:

 
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Oct. 03 2007,02:22)
   
Quote (George @ Oct. 02 2007,07:57)
         
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Oct. 01 2007,19:37)
Schindewolf's book was published (originally - in German) in 1950.  While technically that was in the last century, (so was 1999), it wasn't "a century ago".
 

My mistake.  I thought you said he worked and wrote in the 1920s.

Perhaps you were thinking of Leo Berg?  He wrote Nomogenesis in 1922.          
Quote

I wasn't questioning this statement:

           
Quote
Since in the later Tertiary, an expansion of plains at the expense of forests has been observed, this change in environmental conditions and the consequent change in the mode of life has been represented as the cause of linear, progressive selection leading up to the modern horse.


I was questioning this one:

             
Quote
However, in the formulation of this view, not enough consideration has been given to the fact that the evolutionary trend of reduction in the number of toes had already been introduced long before the plains were occupied in the early Tertiary by the precursors of the horse; these inhabited dense scrub, meaning that they lived in an environment where the reduction of the primitive five-toed protoungulate foot was not an advantage at all.
(emphasis mine)

My question is how did he know the environment at the time was entirely comprised of dense scrub?  If I were to guess, this statement is based on finds of macrofossils or pollen of scrub species coupled with other proxy data that gave clues about climate.  This may have been the prevailing view at the time.  Don't know.  Doesn't matter.  But I suspect hand-waving.

So, after admitting that you "don't know" what evidence Schindewolf based his argument on, you say that it "doesn't matter", because you "suspect hand-waving".  Is this how science is done?
         
Quote
My point is that knowledge of what species were present at the time doesn't give an accurate picture of what the vegetation structure was at the time, especially over large areas.  I presume the ancestors of horses were widely distributed and not confined to a small isolated valley or two.

As you can see as you walk around in "the wild", vegetation structure varies considerably depending on climate, soil and other things, including the activities of grazing animals.  It is extremely unlikely that the landscape where the ancestors of horses evolved was completely dominated by "dense scrub".  It is extremely likely that there were some more open areas where having fewer toes increased fitness.

Schindewolf was overstating the case that the environment required to select for single-toedness was not present in the early Tertiary.  Because of this, he has no grounds for claiming that development of the trait preceeded selection pressure.

So based on your experience 'walking around in the wild', you've now decided that Schindewolf, one of the premier paleontologists in all of Europe, overstated his case? (a case which, I'm sure, was based on slightly more research than that!)

It's amazing to me how you can delude yourself into thinking you have actually refuted his arguments while presenting no evidence to the contrary from the Tertiary period at all!


At which point, George seems to have thrown in the towel.

More to come...

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"You can establish any “rule” you like if you start with the rule and then interpret the evidence accordingly." - George Gaylord Simpson (1902-1984)

  
mitschlag



Posts: 236
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,08:41   

Quote (Reciprocating Bill @ Feb. 22 2009,08:31)
(For Schindewolfe had to admit that the empirical record revealed no direct evidence at all for a catastrophic mechanism of mass extinction, and he therefore had to seek a potential cause that would leave no testable sign of its operation! Can one possibly imagine an unhappier situation for science? - to face the prospect of a plausible explanation that does not, in principle, leave evidence for its validation.)"

Indeed.

But if that fails, cherry-picking the data is worth trying.

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"You can establish any “rule” you like if you start with the rule and then interpret the evidence accordingly." - George Gaylord Simpson (1902-1984)

  
Reciprocating Bill



Posts: 4265
Joined: Oct. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,09:05   

Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,19:30)
My argument is based on life being created by an omniscient God.  My argument is that we mortals will never figure out how he did it.  You all say life is of natural, undirected origins.  You all say we should be able to figure out how it happened.  I'm not the one claiming accidental evolution can build complex living systems - you are.  That's the only reason I'm asking you for mechanisms.

I've consistently said that we'll never figure out how God did it.  What part of that is hypocritical?

Sorry Daniel, this don't fly.

You've postulated that God assembled cells like people assembling automobiles, and stuffed them with frontloaded information that has been unfolding ever since. And you've said we'll never figure out "how he did it." Indeed.

We are asking for your description of WHAT he did. You say he stuffed those cells with machinery like information-bearing DNA and the Krebs cycle, as well as the ability to appropriately deploy new adaptations and preprogrammed body plans. You claim that events such as speciation and the emergence of major biological features reflect the operation of the mechanisms he stuffed in to those cells.

THAT is what we are requesting from you. Describe the mechanisms that God stuffed into those primordial cells that account for these large scale phenomena spanning deep time. Describe how those mechanisms interact with changing environments to assure that adaptive features arise. Unless you are now claiming that God actively intervened at every such event (then why front load?), you still need to supply a description of that mechanism.

Your proposed mechanism should offer an explanation for the timing of saltational events, including divergence of single populations into separate species, the distribution of features among the daughter species, their progressive differentiation, the fact of their adaptation to changing environmental circumstances, and so forth.

Begging off into mysterian ignorance won't do.

[edits for clarity]

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Myth: Something that never was true, and always will be.

"The truth will set you free. But not until it is finished with you."
- David Foster Wallace

"Here’s a clue. Snarky banalities are not a substitute for saying something intelligent. Write that down."
- Barry Arrington

  
Erasmus, FCD



Posts: 6349
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,09:17   

wow mitch those little exchanges really made me remember how much of a dishonest petty little lying sophist Denial is.  

oh, so just because you have been outside before you know more than the premier paleontologist in Uzbekistan...

christ give me a break what a pile of shit

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You're obviously illiterate as hell. Peach, bro.-FtK

Finding something hard to believe based on the evidence, is science.-JoeG

the odds of getting some loathsome taint are low-- Gordon E Mullings Manjack Heights Montserrat

I work on molecular systems with pathway charts and such.-Giggles

  
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,12:04   

Quote (Henry J @ Feb. 20 2009,21:04)
The problem (which should be obvious) with the prediction that we'll never figure it out, is that unanswered questions are expected regardless of which model is correct. Therefore the mere existence of unanswered questions can't distinguish between them.

So after 150+ years of study, science has explained the evolution of exactly zero biological systems.  That's a lot of unanswered questions!
 
Quote
Besides which, the position that "nature can't do that" directly implies that God would be unable to arrange for nature to do that, which contradicts the assumption that God is omnipotent.

Henry

Notice that I usually attach the term "undirected" to the term "natural".  I have no problem believing that God gave us both random and non-random evolutionary mechanisms, but I don't believe the random mechanisms caused any of the macroevolutionary events.

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"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
Schroedinger's Dog



Posts: 1692
Joined: Jan. 2009

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,12:19   

Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 22 2009,19:04)
Quote (Henry J @ Feb. 20 2009,21:04)
The problem (which should be obvious) with the prediction that we'll never figure it out, is that unanswered questions are expected regardless of which model is correct. Therefore the mere existence of unanswered questions can't distinguish between them.

So after 150+ years of study, science has explained the evolution of exactly zero biological systems.  That's a lot of unanswered questions!
   
Quote
Besides which, the position that "nature can't do that" directly implies that God would be unable to arrange for nature to do that, which contradicts the assumption that God is omnipotent.

Henry

Notice that I usually attach the term "undirected" to the term "natural".  I have no problem believing that God gave us both random and non-random evolutionary mechanisms, but I don't believe the random mechanisms caused any of the macroevolutionary events.

You are flying high on bullshit now.



Quote
So after 150+ years of study, science has explained the evolution of exactly zero biological systems.  That's a lot of unanswered questions!


I think it has been done. Sadly, I am not familiar enough with the most recent studies. But if you need pathways that will stand the course of scrutiny, and be validated by evidence, you can always take a look at the evolutionary pathway of whales or horses. The thing is, although these pathways are not yet 100% complete, THEY WORK! They have confirmed predictions based on evolutionary theory, and more discoveries will probably validate it some more. If something doesn't, I think a lot of us here will have simultanious ejaculations due to the sheer prospect of a new view on these mechanisms.

Science isn't closed, far from it. But to be able to advance science, you have to offer science, not magic.



Quote
Notice that I usually attach the term "undirected" to the term "natural".  I have no problem believing that God gave us both random and non-random evolutionary mechanisms, but I don't believe the random mechanisms caused any of the macroevolutionary events.


This sentence, in and of itself, is totaly unconsistent. How can you ever prove that God had anything to do with "random/non-random" mechanisms? If you can, fine, sounds like science, then just state your case. If you can't, forget it, this is not science...

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"Hail is made out of water? Are you really that stupid?" Joe G

"I have a better suggestion, Kris. How about a game of hide and go fuck yourself instead." Louis

"The reason people use a crucifix against vampires is that vampires are allergic to bullshit" Richard Pryor

   
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,12:29   

Quote (Erasmus @ FCD,Feb. 20 2009,23:03)
       
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,18:13)
           
Quote (Erasmus @ FCD,Feb. 19 2009,16:38)
bwaha

you're a fraud denial.  there is interesting science in that paper but you wanna blather about crap

I'm still waiting for you to answer this question:                  
Quote
So these species [Tragopogon miscellus and T. mirus] not only have multiple recurrent origins, they also evolve concurrently afterward.  How much of this still sounds random to you?

As I said, you wish to blather about crap.

There is a strong argument to be made that, despite their apparent morphological similarity, individuals from separate polyploidy events in separate populations are not members of the 'same' species.  they have unique evolutionary histories and independent evolutionary trajectories.  Since your species concept involves whatever Noah carried off the ark, it is not surprising you have failed to grasp this point.  I'll play this stupid game with you IFF you explicate and defend your species concept. You won't do it because you are not genuinely interested in these arguments as anything but cover for We Don't Know Yet = goddidit.

what a fucking moron.  

if you think the formation of allopolyploids has some determinate component, by all means do share instead of pissing on the rug.  You have yet to formulate anything even remotely resembling a testable claim here, so here is your shot.  

         
Quote
So these species [Tragopogon miscellus and T. mirus] not only have multiple recurrent origins, they also evolve concurrently afterward.  How much of this still sounds random to you?


The answer to the question is          
Quote
That Doesn't Seem To Be Anything But Random To Me But Perhaps Jesus Teh Designer is whispering something in your ear that he is not whispering into mine, so why don't you share instead of braying like a fucking donkey about shit you know nothing about and aren't interested in learning, just using as an apologetic crutch for spreading your particular brand of stupid blinkered wankery?


Denial do you know how people evaluate the claim that X is random with respect to Y?  Not by stupid false equivalences, for one.

The evidence speaks for itself Erasmus:

The species Tragopogon miscellus (as defined by the scientists who have studied it the most extensively) formed 20 times in the past 80 years.  The species Tragopogon mirus (as defined by the scientists who have studied it the most extensively) formed 12 times in the past 80 years.  

One of the papers recounting this is entitled "Polyploidy: recurrent formation and genome evolution".  The section describing the above is entitled "Extent of multiple origins".  Source  

These two species (as defined by the scientists who have studied them the most extensively) are undergoing rapid concerted evolution.

The title of the paper documenting this fact is "RAPID CONCERTED EVOLUTION OF NUCLEAR RIBOSOMAL DNA IN TWO ALLOPOLYPLOIDS OF RECENT AND RECURRENT ORIGIN"  Source

I'm not making this stuff up Erasmus!  If you have a problem with their definition of "species", take it up with Soltis and Soltis or Kovarik et al - not me.

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"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,12:32   

Quote (Reciprocating Bill @ Feb. 20 2009,17:11)
 
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,20:05)
For Bill:


Come again?

It's a mechanism for saltational evolution.

--------------
"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,12:36   

Quote (Albatrossity2 @ Feb. 20 2009,19:12)
 
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,18:30)
What part of that is hypocritical?

The part where you are hypocritical. If you want to read that previous comment over again and see if you can figure it out, I'll wait.  Or I can highlight it again, like this:

Demanding detailed mechanisms, precursors and pathways from others. while allowing yourself to indulge in a mechanism-free, precursor-free and pathway-free exercise in goalpost tectonics is hypocrisy.

If you keep snipping my reasoning for such then - yeah - it looks hypocritical.  If you actually look at my explanation, it then becomes crystal clear that it is consistent reasoning rather than hypocrisy.  I don't expect you to go that far.

Still want to talk about flowers?

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"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
Schroedinger's Dog



Posts: 1692
Joined: Jan. 2009

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,12:51   

Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 22 2009,19:36)
Quote (Albatrossity2 @ Feb. 20 2009,19:12)
   
Quote (Daniel Smith @ Feb. 20 2009,18:30)
What part of that is hypocritical?

The part where you are hypocritical. If you want to read that previous comment over again and see if you can figure it out, I'll wait.  Or I can highlight it again, like this:

Demanding detailed mechanisms, precursors and pathways from others. while allowing yourself to indulge in a mechanism-free, precursor-free and pathway-free exercise in goalpost tectonics is hypocrisy.

If you keep snipping my reasoning for such then - yeah - it looks hypocritical.  If you actually look at my explanation, it then becomes crystal clear that it is consistent reasoning rather than hypocrisy.  I don't expect you to go that far.

Still want to talk about flowers?

Please, don't try to compete with biologists, you don't have the knowledge or the stamina. try to learn something instead, and let the people who have studied these things enlighten you.

I mean, I'm an atheist, but if there really is a life after death, I'd rather spend it in the flames of hell with the likes of Darwin, Caesar and all those who died before your christ came around than with a single one of you "rightful" christians.

Do the math, think for youself, and stop using strawmen.

And about the 10 commandments, I don't know who the hell is this guy "Thou", but his life sounds like shit!*

*General anti-religious offence intended. Blame me, I'm just human!

--------------
"Hail is made out of water? Are you really that stupid?" Joe G

"I have a better suggestion, Kris. How about a game of hide and go fuck yourself instead." Louis

"The reason people use a crucifix against vampires is that vampires are allergic to bullshit" Richard Pryor

   
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,12:55   

Quote (mitschlag @ Feb. 22 2009,05:29)
   
Quote (Erasmus @ FCD,Feb. 21 2009,07:43)
mitschlag in particular simpson's account of schindewolf suggests that there are some serious issues with the domain of observations used by schindewolf to support his contentions.  i think SJG goes over this in more detail in "Structure" but I keep forgetting to bring my copy home.  I'll be paying close attention.  This narrative is a great antidote to Popper and Kuhn.

Erasmus, whatever you care to provide from Structure will be welcome.

Your reference to Gould reminded me of his essay Life's Little Joke, which goes well beyond Simpson in demolishing the simplistic sequence portrayed by Schindewolf.  (Gould wrote in 1991 and had in hand much more data than either Schindewolf or Simpson commanded.)  The entire essay - too long to copy and post here - is provided in the link.  Daniel should read it and comprehend it.

Schindewolf is not mentioned at all.  Gould seems to be "demolishing" every simplistic phylogenic tree here - including Simpson's.

One thing you repeatedly fail to mention is that Schindewolf's area of expertise and study was not horses - it was cephalopods and stony corals - for which he documented extensive patterns of evolution.  Horses were a periphery issue for him - one for which he probably accepted the commonly delineated pathway for his day.  

Thus I can understand why you'd want to focus on horses, since - as you've just documented - all Schindewolf's contemporaries missed the mark to a degree, but no discussion of Schindewolf is worth having if it's not about the area he excelled in - cephalopods and stony corals.

--------------
"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
Schroedinger's Dog



Posts: 1692
Joined: Jan. 2009

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,13:02   

Excuse me, honnest request. I am not familiar with Schindewolf's writings. But, does he get into Stromatolites?

--------------
"Hail is made out of water? Are you really that stupid?" Joe G

"I have a better suggestion, Kris. How about a game of hide and go fuck yourself instead." Louis

"The reason people use a crucifix against vampires is that vampires are allergic to bullshit" Richard Pryor

   
Daniel Smith



Posts: 970
Joined: Sep. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 22 2009,13:06   

Quote (mitschlag @ Feb. 22 2009,06:41)
 
Quote (Reciprocating Bill @ Feb. 22 2009,08:31)
(For Schindewolfe had to admit that the empirical record revealed no direct evidence at all for a catastrophic mechanism of mass extinction, and he therefore had to seek a potential cause that would leave no testable sign of its operation! Can one possibly imagine an unhappier situation for science? - to face the prospect of a plausible explanation that does not, in principle, leave evidence for its validation.)"

Indeed.

But if that fails, cherry-picking the data is worth trying.

Schindewolf is often faulted (probably rightly so) for his "cosmic radiation" theory of extinction.  I must point out that this was late in his career, as he was advancing in age, and in no way represents Schindewolf in his prime.

Also (again), the horse toes were an example I cited to Alan Fox on Brainstorms.  He chose that example (unfortunately) as the title for the thread when he invited me here.  If you really want to discuss Schindewolf, let's talk about the bulk of the book devoted to cephalopods and stony corals rather than these periphery issues.

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"If we all worked on the assumption that what is accepted as true is really true, there would be little hope of advance."  Orville Wright

"The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientific question."  Richard Dawkins

  
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