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PuckSR



Posts: 314
Joined: Nov. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 06 2006,16:07   

Serious Question....and Im not trying to insult you in the least avocationist.

Avocationist and DaveScot seem to be fairly distant from ID.  They seem to accept most of the science of evolution.  They only take issue with the finer details of mutation and adaptation.  

I would like to know why they support ID as a scientific endeavor.  I fully understand their support for the philosophical side of ID....but why ID(besides the fact that it refutes Evolutionary Theory)?

  
Henry J



Posts: 5786
Joined: Mar. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 06 2006,17:01   

keiths,
Re "Don't these guys ever learn from each other's mistakes?"

Wouldn't they need to start by learning from their own mistakes, first? ;)

Henry

  
avocationist



Posts: 173
Joined: Feb. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 06 2006,20:48   

Guthrie,

Quote
Can you tell us what a purely material universe is?  

Can you tell us what a universe that is a mixture of material and non-material stuff is?


Fine questions. A purely material universe means the  universe as understood by the philosophy of materialism; in which matter is understood in its commonest sense as "just stuff" eternally existing and without any needed component of mind or consciousness or God.

As to material and non-material I have wondered this same question. Although the spiritual has been traditionally spoken of as nonmaterial, I am unable to understand how something can exist and not be in any way material and how it can interact with matter. But I do not know physics and I don't even understand the expression "massless particle." Anyway, I strongly consider that what has been called non-material simply means an ultrafine level of materiality and the innermost dimensions. So it could be a smooth continuum. On the other hand, the Existence-Principle (God) must be fundamentally existent and therefore invulnerable, which matter by definition is vulnerable.
***********
Flint,

What I'm saying is I don't believe random mutation can account for much and isn't able to provide enough good raw material for natural selection to work on.

I think it is a bit of a red herring to accuse those who believe in the supernatural of pleading ignorance of a type that would hinder science. Did belief in a divine author stop Newton from discovering laws of planetary motion?

Quote
My reading of scripture is exactly thus. Stuff happened. Nobody understood it. Nobody admitted igorance. Instead, they made up gods and magical forces.
Yeah, but I do not automatically disbelieve in all miracles. What I'm saying is that people are overawed and come to wrong conclusions about them. For example, I am very sure I have seen ESP in action. I do not call it a miracle or supernatural. I know there is a way it works, we just don't know how yet.
***************************
Russell,

Quote
Yes, I guess the more one doesn't know about a given phenomenon, the better a candidate for ID it appears. From my perspective, these all look like pretty random phenomena.
 Well then in that case I can't discuss it intelligently at this time. I'll keep it in mind.
******************
Puck,

What argument of Hume's did I present? I'm not very familiar with him.
You speak of distantly designed watches. Haven't you been to Telic Thoughts? Don't you know Mike Gene and others are intersted in front-loading? I know you guys have some unfriendly history with JAD, but he believes in frontloading also, only he doesn't allow for much freedom in what turns up. Denton's last book, Nature's destiny, is all about front-loading and also speaks to your other comment, about not requiring a particular end product. Now, I would tend to prefer that interpretation, but I think Denton does a good job of showing that freedom does operate within quite a few constraints. There are probably laws about what sorts of body plans can actually come forth, with gaps between them. And he also talks a lot about how most features we humans possess would be required for us to have the powers we do. Things like our approximate size, bipedal locomotion, free hands with opposable thumbs, forward looking vision - that's what I remember. Without those, we would not have had the strength to create big enough fires to bring on the iron age and smelt metals, for one example.

Quote
An IDist would claim that ...something caused the water to flow from the rock... He would then seek to prove that the water could not flow out of the rock suddenly without a catalyst.  He would ask the "who"

Sure, but don't you see that the important difference has already occurred, whether he can answer the who or not. The IDist knows it took an intent to make water come out of a rock because nature won't do that unaided. And the Darwinist is arguing that it must have come out unaided, because that's what it looks like to him and if he considers an intentional being did it that isn't science.
Again, I think it's a red herring to claim that because we might consider God did it we will stop investigating nature. Nothing will stop the engine of science now except global totalitarianism, fundamentalism or catastrophe.

Quote
Now, here is the problem with ID.  
Evolutionary Theory claims things evolve over time.  It suggests the method and the means for evolution.  Scientists constantly strive to refine our understanding of the methods of evolution...i.e. natural selection

So basically, ID finds mutation and selection inadequate, and also does not find evidence for gradualism, in fact on the contrary sees evidence for relatively sudden appearances. It does not look mathematically probable that randomness can produce what Darwinists say it does.

Quote
All of ID theory is based around detecting the "Designer".
Well, it is really based around detecting signs of intelligence as opposed to random processes.
Quote
It doesnt further our understanding at all to claim that "something" caused something else.  It furthers our understanding when we try to figure out "how" "something" caused something else.
I disagree. If we cannot even come to a strong conclusion that we are dealing with a designed or undesigned phenomenon then our world is more confusing than I'd like to think it is. But while it helps to know that, it is of course only the beginning of inquiry.
Nothing like getting off on the right foot.
You state that ID doesn't bother to ask how. Strictly speaking, ID is a design inference and nothing more. ID is not a full-fledged theory of life. Perhaps it can be, or perhaps it will become a piece of one. ID is simply a different conclusion from the same data, and may help evolution theory go off in some new directions. Because it is a different conclusion based upon the same data, the complaints that it isn't science or doesn't do research are actually empty. All it needs is qualified people who can be involved with/understand current research and come to the design inference.

Quote
If evidence, not sheer probability pointed towards an entity controlling evolution...science would have problem theorizing one.
 I presume you meant to say science would have NO problem theorizing one? If that is the case, I can only say you might be naive. Many scientists precisely find this repugnant. Also, I'm confused - from your posts I am gathering that you accept theistic evolution. And you think there are no visible clues?

Quote
Let me explain...if we kept finding organisms that were not well-suited to their environment(if polar animals froze to death all of the time)...that would indicate natural selection had flaws.
Puck, no one disputes that natural selection is at work. Like the ability to feel pain, life could not exist as we know it without it.

Quote
If we kept finding that organisms were perfectly designed...such as a complete lack of vestigial organs....or more efficient design...we would suggest some interference.
I don't know that I could locate but Dembski and others have made some good arguments against the tendency to decide what a perfect designer would do. Some of these thoughts, in my opinion, come from the same childish tendency to ascribe to a God, even a God one doesn't believe in, magical powers. I have a much more organic conception of how God and nature fit together. I think of it as an ongoing project.

Your final question:
Quote
They seem to accept most of the science of evolution.  They only take issue with the finer details of mutation and adaptation.  

I would like to know why they support ID as a scientific endeavor.  I fully understand their support for the philosophical side of ID....but why ID(besides the fact that it refutes Evolutionary Theory)?


I don't know that I do accept most of the science of evolution. I don't think there's much evidence that small changes lead to new species. I thought Meyer's paper was good and brought out how much we don't know about body plans, epigenetic factors in embryonic development and how difficult it is to bring about large changes because many simultaneous steps would be needed in order to not destroy the organism. Parts all work together and would need to be modified together.

I've been interested in this topic for about 7 or 8 years, and yet I never heard the phrase 'intelligent design' until maybe a year ago.  Intelligent design just gives a name to the obvious. I don't think of it as a discrete scientific endeavor, really, but as a working assumption it could lead to better discoveries. Mainly, I find it a problem when people have the working assumption that design is ruled out. That's hubris.
And why would I separate philosophy from science? If I think something is philosophically true (God exists) I would expect to find clues to that in science, in nature, in reality. And if I can't, then the science is yet primitive or my philosophy is wrong.

  
Inoculated Mind



Posts: 16
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 06 2006,20:54   

Phishy, I think nothing will satisfy you, and that doesn't matter to me much. Feel free to think what you like.
And thanks for spoiling my spying fun. :(
***
Back to the conversation.
"You got it exactly....We shouldnt regard the unknown as supernatural.  We should continue to seek "natural" explanations of phenomenon.  We know that the world has to be natural."

I had a thought on this the other day. "Supernatural" seems to be the refuge of the untestable and unobservable. I think it follows that if something "supernatural" could interact with matter, then it could be studied, in principle.

For example, lets assume the whole intelligent design thing. But contrary to what they say, you can indeed infer about the nature of the designer from the design. (They really mean we don't talk about it except in churches or during fundraising.)

In order to conclude that the designer was supreme, perfect, or a "master designer" as Dembski would put it, we would need to have artifacts that would be characteristic of the skills of a perfect designer. Granted, a perfect designer could purposely make bad designs, as a master chess player could make bad moves on purpose, but there would be no reason to conlclude that they are masters of their crafts.
But life as it exists is full of examples of really bad design. So many people have trumpted this that I'm sure you can all name 20 examples off the top of your heads. Anyway, these 'designs' would be characteristic of incompetent, wicked, or designers whose budgets ran out too soon.
I contend that if you can call the designer "intelligent" or "One smart cookie" as Behe once said, then you can conclude that it was questionably intelligent, downright inane, or powerful but evil. Or maybe one of each?

I would charge that the fact that IDists say that intelligent design cannot identify the designer is because they know full well that if they did consider the 'designs' in question as evidence of the level of intelligence of this designer, that they will realize that it no longer points towards the god of their religion, which is supposed to be perfect.

As a final note, Behe said in court that the only thing that could be concluded about the designer was that it intended to create the structures in question. As the cross-examining lawyer pointed out, how can you know that without knowing the identity of the designer? The fact is, it could have been a bumbling idiot of a designer, and meant to create a microscopic drill bit... and with a little miscalculation, they created a flagellum. And then an accident in the alien laboratory in the upper atmosphere allows the butt-propellor-equipped cell to escape and wreak havoc. Oops, says the "designer."

Returning to reality...

  
Renier



Posts: 276
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 06 2006,21:22   

To avocationist :

Quote
And why would I separate philosophy from science? If I think something is philosophically true (God exists) I would expect to find clues to that in science, in nature, in reality. And if I can't, then the science is yet primitive or my philosophy is wrong.


First, You cannot state "God exists". It is an assumption, with no evidence to back it up.

Secondly, you say that in reality, you should find clues about the existence of God. In reality my friend, there is none. Not one gram of evidence. Not even a atom, not even a neutrino bit of evidence or any trace of God in nature. You think mainstream science is stupid and just some wacked out conspiricy? Don't be naive. Face your fears.

"And if I can't, then the science is yet primitive or my philosophy is wrong." Science does not deal with the question of God's existance. However, if you really insist on using this measurement, then your philosophy must be floored, since, as I have stated, nothing, NOTHING in science has the need to invoke a god for explanation. There are gaps in science (so what?), and there are lots of people working on filling those gaps, and they are very successful, year after year they close the gaps.

Read this, and stop being ignorant or stiff-necked. If you are sincere in your search, then this might help you. If not, nothing will, not even if your God boomed a thunder voice from the heavens and said "you are wrong". You would then just rebuke the devil. Worship your God in whatever way you see fit, but don't trade him in for an old book or be dishonest about what science is and all the things they have found. Not even your God thinks dishonesty is a good thing.

Quote
> Among the many problems with evolution are the questions it is unable to
> answer.

I would be careful with this line of reasoning. It is essentially a "you don't know everything so you don't know anything" position. For example, one could assert

"Among the many problems with the theory of Gravity are the questions it is unable to answer."

If you were to assert that, because the current theory of Gravity is incomplete or inaccurate in some places that Gravity does not exist, then you would be a fool.

</Tongue-in-cheek humor here> And since there are questions that the Theory of Gravity cannot answer, I invite you to show your equal disdain for it by walking off the top of a tall building. After all, by your reasoning, gravity must not exist, right? </End TIC>

But seriously, you have a much worse problem than with the Theory of Evolution. For by your own reasoning which I reproduce exactly for your benefit, your own faith is in jeopardy. For "Among the many problems with Christianity are the questions it is unable to answer."

And a whole list of questions could -- and certainly would -- emerge! The list would be endless, including the exact nature of the kenosis, the conflicts between free will and predestination, etc. There have been wars build on conflicts of theology concerning questions the Bible has no complete answers for.

In fact, the problem of unanswered questions is much more of a difficulty with Christianity than it is with Science. After all, Christianity is a "Revealed Religion". Since the source of that Revelation is supposedly God Himself, then leaving us with essential and important questions unanswered is a potential argument against the reality of your Faith and mine. Certainly, by your reasoning, Christianity should possess all of the answers, right?

Yet we do not. And one of the largest questions challenging the reality of your Faith is how you can remain so decidedly smug in your ignorance and call it knowledge. That is a direct violation of the principles of faith found in the Holy Scriptures, yet you ignore those principles daily in your crusade against Evolution.

Unanswered questions are not a problem with Science. We explain things the best we can with the evidence at hand. When more knowledge or better explanations come into view, they tend to supplement and change our explanations.

Why, a cursory reading of any popular science journal has new discoveries in almost every issue, with a note on how the discovery addresses a particular question or explanation in science. And very often, the assertion is made that if the evidence is confirmed, it will require a change in a certain part of the current theory.

And Science is happy, even eager, to accommodate! After all, the goal of science is to progress from less knowledge to more knowledge, from less understanding to more understanding. We already know that we don't know everything -- unlike certain people who (on religious grounds) think they have all knowledge and wisdom and power and might.

> Here they are, in order of importance:
>
> 1. How can life come from non-life?

You have for the umpteenth time confused abiogenesis with evolution. Let me try to put it as plainly as I possibly can.

"Life from non-life" is not a part of the Theory of Evolution. Abiogenesis is a separate field, still in its infancy, and will have unanswered questions for many, many years. It is principally a chemical exploration of conditions in the distant past -- and given developments in planetary cosmology recently, I suspect there will have to be some changes in some of their models of the early earth.

"Life from life, with modifications" describes the Theory of Evolution. After all, you are different from your parents, and your parents were different from their parents, ad infinitum. The changes from one generation to the next were subtle. Yet they were there. The ToE describes the changes in the characteristics of populations from one generation to the next.

You are on notice. You have been told the difference between evolution and abiogenesis many times. Now pay attention. We will expect you to know the difference from now on and to use the terminology correctly.

Still, to answer your question a bit more completely, life as we know it follows the laws of chemistry even as non-life follows the laws of chemistry. These laws are rather complex, and while the interactions of elements and molecules are somewhat random, the chemical results are not at all random.

That random interactions can produce terribly complex results can be found in some toxic waste dumps. In certain dumps, chemicals have combined into significantly more complex forms than the chemicals that were originally dumped there. What formed was a product of chemistry. It depended upon the chemicals present (both kind and quantity) and the heat energy available. But the laws of chemistry guaranteed the result.

Now think. You believe that God created man from a clay mold that He breathed life into. How did that breath create our physical systems from undifferentiated clay? That is an unanswered question of Christianity, by the way. But there is life from non-life.

For that matter, from where did God come? Your answer, of course, is that He always existed. And yet, if life must come from somewhere, then so must have He come from somewhere! Your own reasoning, sir -- your own reasoning.

And might not God, from Whom are all things, have been able to write the laws of chemistry in such a way as to guarantee that "life" would emerge? Is not God omnipotent? If He is, then He would have that ability to create such laws.

There is no difficulty between faith in God and the Theory of Evolution, or between faith in God and abiogenesis for that matter.

> 2. How could the Cambrian Explosion happen?

This is a question? The fact is that what we call the "Cambrian Explosion" did happen!

There is a certain geologic strata we call "Precambrian" in which no life remnants are found (or only the least complex). In the Cambrian strata -- which covers about a 50 million period.

And in fact, this is not a single strata or time period itself with undifferentiated mixed-up forms. There are seven different subdivisions of the period! I commend to you this site for study, should you decide to do some:

http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/cambrian/camb.html

But the fact is that some of the characteristics of life are reproduction, adaptation, and a struggle to survive. And in the early earth, not every environmental niche had been inhabited. There was plenty to be exploited. And life gravitated to those niches where it could survive, and succeeding generations became better adapted to those niches. After all, the better the organism fits with its environment, the more likely it is to survive and reproduce!

So there were environmental pressures toward fairly rapid evolutionary changes.

And yes, we don't know all the answers. But that doesn't matter. We know many things, and as time and investigation progresses we shall know more.

Does this frighten you? Man, learning on his own without the aid of a holy book? Finding answers to questions in the world around him? Why should it? If God created man with a brain, then is it a sin to use it? I should think not!

> 3. How does evolution disprove ID?

Evolution does not disprove ID. ID is a weasel-word theology for those who contend that we have reached the limits of our knowledge and must confine all the rest of our unanswered questions to the Unknown "God did it" explanation.

In point of fact, Michael Behe has admitted to belief in evolution, including the common ancestry of man and ape! His beef is that God is left out of science (since science cannot investigate the supernatural), and so he wants to redefine science.

His problem, I suspect, is largely like your own. He perceives troubles in the world with "evolutionary philosophy", not realizing that there are many other troubles in the world that have nothing to do with this imaginary construct. His objections to the ToE are not scientific, but theological.

The Dover case amply proved that ID is nothing but a theological attempt to put religion back into the public schools. The goals of the Discovery Institute and others like them are to reform society and government into a more theocratic arrangement, intolerant of non-Christians or Christians who do not agree with them, and imposing their concept of "morality" upon the population.

However, shouldn't the question be, "How does ID disprove Evolution"? It doesn't, of course. And despite objections, evolution still happens.

If God's hand is behind evolution (and I have no problem thinking that it might be so), there is no evidence of it. After all, if God can cause the course of events to happen so that man exercising his "free will" can still do exactly the thing God wants to be done, then God can similarly hide here.

In any case, Science by definition cannot investigate the supernatural. There may be things science can never explain, and it accepts that limitation. But the Kansas school board notwithstanding, Science investigates natural phenomena, natural causes, natural effects. The supernatural is not in view.

> 4. How can a cynodont evolve into a therapsid? A synapsid?

Actually, if you were to do your research, you would find that cynodonts are therapsids. A derived branch of them, to be sure, but still from that line. The therapsids are part of the synapsid group.

So you have it backwards. Not that we are surprised. After all, this question was probably culled from some creationist web site, and maybe you thought maybe the terms would be as confusing to others as they are to you?

The following are a list of websites where you can get more information on this technical question.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synapsid
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therapsid
http://tolweb.org/tree?group=Synapsida
http://tolweb.org/tree?group=Therapsida&contgroup=Synapsida
http://www.isgs.uiuc.edu/faq/fossils/pdq252.html
http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hangar/2437/therapsd.htm

But your real question here is "How can macroevolution happen, where species with certain traits are ancestral to species with different traits?"

The answer, simply, is "descent with modification." The genetic code is flexible. It can change. It has changed! And given time (there has been plenty of it), the changes have accumulated.

> 5. How can evolution disprove the existence of G_d? Of Jesus Christ?

It can't. It doesn't even try. Evolution simply answers questions about how things work. It says nothing about God, neither affirming nor denying Him.

And that is as it should be. For petty man to think he can "prove" the existence of God or "disprove" His existence is ridiculous. He is beyond all such proofs. The only thing that can be disproved is our own limited "God-in-the-box" theology in which we assume our descriptions of God are necessary and sufficient.

> 6. How can Social Darwinism be justified on moral grounds in light of Nazism > and racism?

As you should know (and doubtless do know, but what do you care?), "Social Darwinism" is not an accepted sociological theory any more. It was popular up until the Second World War, but it really had nothing to do with racism or Nazism.

Racism has been around a long time. I have read sermons by prominent pre-Darwin theologians who justified racism and slavery on the basis of the Bible. I have read sermons on social order by pre-Darwin theologians who justified social inequality on the basis of the Bible.

It seems that Social Darwinism and certain Christian doctrines had a lot in common at certain times!

But see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Darwinism for more information.

The fact is that man will reach for what is handy to justify what they are doing. You do the same thing. I am quite convinced that you are aware of the truth in certain areas, but you ignore it because it doesn't fit your theology. And you wind up blaming God for your bad behavior.

"Evolutionists", by the way, do not endorse "Social Darwinism". And just because "Nature" behaves a certain way does not mean that we want it that way. So Scientists work with natural phenomena to frustrate nature! We do that with vaccines, medical treatments, improvements in technology and infrastructure. Life for us does not need to be cruel and brutish. We can rise above our circumstances -- and we attempt to do so.

However, I find it interesting that Fundamentalism is in many ways a repackaging of "Social Darwinism". After all, Fundamentalism is not concerned with addressing inequalities, but with preserving inequalities! It is not concerned with the rights of the masses, but with preserving power with the wealthy or the "right". It believes that the Strong should rule over the Weak.

I beg you to open your eyes. Read. Study. Understand. All of your questions above have been answered many times over. You still ask the same ones! You seem to think that nothing can ever answer your questions, so you refuse to recognize where they have been!

In that way, you are as thoroughly blind to the truth as you imagine your adversaries to be.

Yet there need be no conflict between Faith and Science. And the more I learn about both, the less real conflict I find. I am glad to be a Christian. I am grateful I am no longer a Fundamentalist.

Regards,

Raymond E. Griffith

  
stevestory



Posts: 13407
Joined: Oct. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 07 2006,03:41   

You guys should start a new thread for this discussion with Avocadoist. I'd like to keep this one about Uncommon Pissant.

For instance, here's a priceless new gem--they're suggesting antibiotic resistance might not be evolution:

Quote
February 7, 2006
Does Darwinian Evolution Explain Antibiotic Resistance?


http://www.uncommondescent.com/index.php/archives/787

Everybody make sure you see it before they realize it's stupid and delete it!

   
argystokes



Posts: 766
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 07 2006,04:46   

####, too slow already!  Maybe they realized that intelligently-designed antibiotic resistance wasn't consonant with their theology, erm, science.

--------------
"Why waste time learning, when ignorance is instantaneous?" -Calvin

  
Alan Fox



Posts: 1556
Joined: Aug. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 07 2006,04:48   

Site down for maintenance. I wonder what changes there'll be when it's back on line?

  
stevestory



Posts: 13407
Joined: Oct. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 07 2006,07:04   

right now at Uncommon Pissant, I get
Quote
Index of /

     Name                    Last modified       Size  Description

[DIR] Parent Directory        07-Feb-2006 12:45      -  
[DIR] _private/               04-Jun-2005 19:57      -  
[DIR] archives/               22-Dec-2005 16:53      -  
[DIR] books/                  04-Jun-2005 19:57      -  
[DIR] cgi-bin/                04-Jun-2005 19:57      -  
[DIR] darwinalia/             26-Sep-2005 23:36      -  
[DIR] documentation/          26-Dec-2005 10:50      -  
[DIR] images/                 31-Jan-2006 19:27      -  
[   ] local_42539.xml         07-Feb-2006 10:32     1k  
[   ] random_shirt.php        09-Dec-2005 15:20     1k  
[TXT] robots.txt              20-Apr-2005 07:04     6k  
[   ] tla_ads.php             26-Jan-2006 16:48     2k  
[DIR] videos/                 09-Dec-2005 10:04      -  
[DIR] wp-admin/               07-Feb-2006 13:05      -  
[DIR] wp-content/             04-Jun-2005 19:57      -  
[DIR] wp-images/              01-Aug-2005 15:41      -  
[DIR] wp-includes/            07-Feb-2006 13:07      -  


the only comedy to be had, right now, is the robots.txt file where they disallow all caching, for obvious reasons.

   
Inoculated Mind



Posts: 16
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 07 2006,09:28   

Interesting that they do not allow the caching... typical. What I'm wondering is, if they are so very afraid of people realizing how stupid they are, why do they bother with a public forum at all? Why can't they throughly vet (sp?) people, and then let them into a pass-word-protected forum that no one else can read?
-OR-
If they want to have the appearance of an open forum, they could just untick a little box that says that "anyone can comment." Thus, they have to manually add people.

My guess is, they are trying their hardest to obsessivly edit, cover up, and exclude things on their blog so that the casual observer sees an illusion of an open forum. If the visitor don't delve into it, check other people's comments on other blogs (trackback deleting gets in the way of that) then they come away with a false impression of a legitimate free exchange of ideas.

Please vote for the socialist leader of your choice:
1. DembScot
Now please turn in your ballot, thank you for participating in our democracy.*

  
stevestory



Posts: 13407
Joined: Oct. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 07 2006,10:01   

You have GOT to check out this thread.

http://www.uncommondescent.com/index.php/archives/787

DaveScot found a paper about how bacteria, when stressed out by a harsh environment, will turn off their mutation-repair mechanisms and do other things which promote mutations, in order to rapidly evolve. Somehow he thinks that this is evidence against "random mutation plus natural selection" as an agent of evolution.

check it out before it's deleted.

   
Chris Hyland



Posts: 705
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 07 2006,13:06   

He seems to have got confused and thinks that the bacteria magically mutate the correct genes to cause resistance:
Quote
Bacteria being poisoned don’t wait around for a lucky mutation to solve the problem. They turn on a chemical defense complex that actively seeks a solution.


He also thinks that mutation in bacteria is Lamarckism and therefore disproves Darwinism:
Quote
This is a Lamarckian mechanism - inheritance of acquired characters


Quote
Random mutation on the other hand depends on sheer luck for the background mutation rate to hit the right gene in the right way
So increasing the mutation rate just makes it slightly less 'lucky'. He's also acting like this completely rules out uncontrolled random mutation, and that all bacteria have this mechanism.

  
bfish



Posts: 267
Joined: Feb. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 07 2006,19:34   

First ever post, and I don't now how to format it so it looks nice.

You may have missed this exchange, as it was up for no more than an hour. Here is DaveScot responding to Xavier (who can't be long for Uncommon Descent):


14 All mitochondria come from mitochondria

Then why are mitochondria found in all eukaryotes so similar to each other, especially in having some of their own DNA? Chloroplasts also show remarkable similarity across the green plant kingdom. There is convincing evidence for symbiogenesis. Does intelligent design rule out the possibility that mitochondria may have once been free-living bacteria?

Comment by Xavier — February 7, 2006 @ 2:12 pm


15
Unless I’m mistaken mtDNA is a circular molecule (like bacterial DNA) while nuclear DNA is a double helix. It seems the most likely explanation would be that a cell with a nucleus containing double helix DNA incorporated a separate cell with circular DNA. Symbiotic relationships abound. This is just one more example.

Comment by DaveScot — February 7, 2006 @ 2:59 pm


Obviously someone quickly clued in DaveScot that circular DNA also takes the form of a double helix, and he removed this evidence of his deep ignorance of biology.

I don't bring this up to mock DaveScot. We're all ignorant about many things. But to be so ignorant while ridiculing people who devote their lives to studying the field.........

Oy.

Note added 2/9: I was in error about the censorship of the above comments. I checked back into the wrong thread. Doh! This is from the Behe thread. The comments are still there, and DaveScot later admits he was wrong, albeit in a save-face kind of way.

  
Inoculated Mind



Posts: 16
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 07 2006,22:02   

Who was it who responded to DaveScot's stuff about the double-helix confusion? I didn't see it.

I don't agree with his statement that it IS lamarckian, but increasing mutation rates (still controversial, BTW, even after its second supporting paper) during times of stress is vaguely neo-lamarckian. However, he is just plain wrong when he says that mutations are totally random. Certain parts of the genome mutate faster than others, and One scientist at UC Davis that I talked to for a story that never got written, (it was fascinating, though) found that the proofreading enzymes Slow down when they get to recombinant hot-spots. Cells seem to be able to encourage and discourage mutations in different areas of their genomes. Adaptation for adapability, I would gather.

Here's another doozie of a thread. This confirms exactly what I thought about Caroline Crocker. The ID folks, ever-interested in PR and not science, is now offering a reward for any teachers that get fired in Wisconsin for teaching Intelligent Design under a new proposed law that would ban it outright. And it seems that one poster, Sax, is being let back in after offering some money to the pot. Maybe we should offer to let DaveScot back in here if he mails the NCSE $100. :))))))

http://www.uncommondescent.com/index.php/archives/790#comments

Gotta Love Madison, Wisconsin. I want to go there for Grad school... a gem of intellectuality at the same longitude as the country's sand dunes of idiocy.

  
guthrie



Posts: 696
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 07 2006,23:03   

So what does the robots.txt file do when it disallows caching?  I dont know enough about internet stuff to know.  (even though I've been online on and off for 10 years)

  
Chris Hyland



Posts: 705
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 08 2006,03:28   

Quote
However, he is just plain wrong when he says that mutations are totally random

It is quite hard to work out on UD sometimes what they mean by random. In the antibiotic resistant post DaveScott uses nonradom to mean that the bacteria knows specificaly which genes it needs to mutate in order to gain antibiotic resistance. In my reply I use random to be the opposite of this, ie despite all the factors that affect mutation in parts of the genome, this does not have much affect on the chance that the correct mutation will be made to confer resistance. I seem to be having the same problem when talking to JAD about his theory, when I say that chromosome rearrangements are random and selectable, perhaps i should say 'mostly-random'.

  
stevestory



Posts: 13407
Joined: Oct. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 08 2006,03:35   

Chris, I've seen your posts over there, and I'm sure we all appreciate what you're doing, but DaveScot's just going to ban you. He's really out to lunch on what random means, what 'random mutation' means. He's got this really confused mess where anything that has purpose isn't random, or anything which is initiated by a prior step isn't random, or anything which is deterministic isn't random.

Really, all the 'random' in 'random mutations' means is, nobody's picking to mutate one site instead of another site. It means that the positions of the mutations have certain statistical distributions. It doesn't have anything to do with Dave's big ol philosophical notion of randomness.

But this is what you see when people try to comment way outside their area of expertise. They make intro-level errors, misunderstanding and misapplying basic concepts.

   
stevestory



Posts: 13407
Joined: Oct. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 08 2006,03:51   

On a lighter note, get a load of this craziness:
Quote
   Natural selection is death, and the last time I checked, death did not have the power to “bring together parts of a system” for any purpose whatsoever.

   Comment by GilDodgen — February 6, 2006 @ 5:09 pm
Where exactly does one check on that? Is there a government department? Who did he call, last time he checked?

"Hi, it's been six months since I checked, does death still not have the power to bring together parts of a system for a purpose. Oh, good. Thanks." click.

   
Chris Hyland



Posts: 705
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 08 2006,04:02   

I know, but everyone else has been banned and i feel left out. The problem is there are several definitions of random and arguments about semantics are not my strong point. Anyway now Salvador Cordova is attacking systems biology which is my area and that makes me mad :angry:
Quote
Natural selection is death, and the last time I checked, death did not have the power to “bring together parts of a system” for any purpose whatsoever
Although i do fear i may be wasting my time.

  
Inoculated Mind



Posts: 16
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 08 2006,05:04   

I once spent hours and hours responding to cut-and-paste emails from a YEC. At first, when I declared victory over him, I thought I had just wasted a whole slough of my time. Then I realized that I was getting free training and practice in defeating their arguments.
You won't make any headway there at UD, but you will learn stuff about them and their arguments.

  
argystokes



Posts: 766
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 08 2006,09:20   

A hilarious "Oh Sh!t" moment from JAD:

http://www.uncommondescent.com/index.php/archives/782#comments

Check out comments 18 and 19 in particular.

I love it so!

--------------
"Why waste time learning, when ignorance is instantaneous?" -Calvin

  
Mr_Christopher



Posts: 1238
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 08 2006,12:08   

Dave Scott on Crop Circles, intelligent design, and pattern detection...

Holy cow these people are nuts!  Which if you think about it, from an IDiots perscpective, crop circles are a perfect example of "detecting a pattern/design in nature"

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Uncommon Descent is a moral cesspool, a festering intellectual ghetto that intoxicates and degrades its inhabitants - Stephen Matheson

  
tacitus



Posts: 118
Joined: May 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 08 2006,14:01   

Quote (argystokes @ Feb. 08 2006,15:20)
A hilarious "Oh Sh!t" moment from JAD:

http://www.uncommondescent.com/index.php/archives/782#comments

Check out comments 18 and 19 in particular.

I love it so!

Ironic since Davison himself has quit the board (at least for now) after becoming fed up of DaveScott's unruly commenting style.

OK, scratch that last comment - he's back already. Guess it got lonely on his own blog nobody ever vists

  
Inoculated Mind



Posts: 16
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 08 2006,19:12   

http://www.uncommondescent.com/index.php/archives/791

Dembski Says:
Quote
I take this as a clear sign that we are winning. ID proponents can afford to take political action to promote ID. Its critics, on the other hand, look foolish when they have to take political action to quash ID. That’s because of a fundamental inequity in public school science education: Materialistic evolution already holds a de facto monopoly over public school science education. ID proponents resort to political measures only to break up that monopoly (think of ID’s political component as trust-busting). Thus, for materialistic evolution to require legislation to preserve its monopoly will in the end be seen as heavy-handed and self-serving. Accordingly, for academics with stellar reputations like Sober and Numbers to be actively supporting such political interference signifies that they are losing not only the war of ideas but also their position of cultural dominance.

Dover certainly wasn’t ID’s Waterloo. Wisconsin may well be evolution’s Waterloo.


bwa ha ha ha ha!
That was a well-deserved laugh from reading so much at uncommon pissant.  What I find interesting is that Dembski is offering money to any teacher who gets fired by teaching ID in Wisconsin after the bill passes into law, and starts a lawsuit over it. Umm, isn't paying someone to break the law illegal in itself?

ID's political component? ID is nothing but a political component. At least he admits that ID points to the supernatural, contrasting with evolution's materialistic nature in this post.

Since WHEN has materialism been culturally dominant? I must have missed it.

  
keiths



Posts: 2195
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 08 2006,20:01   

Quote
Wisconsin may well be evolution’s Waterloo.

Denial and harsh reality are fighting it out in Bill Dembki's head.  Looks like denial is winning at the moment.

--------------
And the set of natural numbers is also the set that starts at 0 and goes to the largest number. -- Joe G

Please stop putting words into my mouth that don't belong there and thoughts into my mind that don't belong there. -- KF

  
GCT



Posts: 1001
Joined: Aug. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 09 2006,03:40   

If I had a dime for every time Dembski declared that something would be evolution's Waterloo, I would be rich by now.

  
tacitus



Posts: 118
Joined: May 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 09 2006,05:08   

Quote
What I find interesting is that Dembski is offering money to any teacher who gets fired by teaching ID in Wisconsin after the bill passes into law, and starts a lawsuit over it. Umm, isn't paying someone to break the law illegal in itself?

Whether or not its breaking the law, who in their right mind would be encouraged to lose their livelihood over a measley $1000?

In any case, this is simply another empty Kent Hovind publicity stunt. Dembski knows he's unlikely to have to pay out considering the lengthy sequence of events he's stipulating. This is a cowardly act. If he really had the balls, he'd start submitting scientific papers and run the gauntlet of peer review, not hide behind the skirt (or trousers) of some hapless Wisconsin high school teacher.

  
BWE



Posts: 1902
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 09 2006,05:48   

#

The only beautiful liberal women are concentrated in Hollywood and they are mostly dumb as a box of rocks.

Comment by John Davison — February 9, 2006 @ 9:13 am

-I didn't know where to post this but he just insulted my wife! She lives in Oregon.

--------------
Who said that ev'ry wish would be heard and answered
When wished on the morning star
Somebody thought of that, and someone believed it
Look what it's done so far

The Daily Wingnut

   
Mr_Christopher



Posts: 1238
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 09 2006,05:50   

Quote (GCT @ Feb. 09 2006,09:40)
If I had a dime for every time Dembski declared that something would be evolution's Waterloo, I would be rich by now.

The man is obsessed with anything "Waterloo"  I think he started his Waterloo fetish back when he got sh** canned at Baylor.

Ever since then it is Waterloo this and Waterloo that.  What a weirdo.

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Uncommon Descent is a moral cesspool, a festering intellectual ghetto that intoxicates and degrades its inhabitants - Stephen Matheson

  
The Ghost of Paley



Posts: 1703
Joined: Oct. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: Feb. 09 2006,07:42   

Quote
The only beautiful liberal women are concentrated in Hollywood and they are mostly dumb as a box of rocks.

Well, I wouldn't go that far - plenty of academic women are attractive. And actors tend to be brighter than most; they just don't use it. But it's true that liberalism draws primarily from two groups - twinkies and bitter people. And since attractive people tend to be more outgoing and successful (with no need of political crutches to justify their failure), the Professor has a point.

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Dey can't 'andle my riddim.

  
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