Evolution vs. Creationism |
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: December 05 2009 at 05:23 | ||
^ the pattern I see here though - not just in Rob - is that evidence supporting evolution is presented and the reaction is "oh, another Dawkins video - you really are a Dawkins freak". How about some comment on the topics that are presented in the videos?
If someone is not convinced that evolution by natural selection could have produced us and all the other forms of life on this planet, These Dawkins videos and books are simply the best way that I know to learn about why people like myself are convinced of it. They are detailed, they are flawlessly presented (better than I could ever present the evidence). If, in that situation, people refuse to watch them or comment on superficialities rather than the actual evidence, then that is what I call "immune to reason" or "refusing to look at the evidence". I'll gladly look at any evidence presented that falsifies evolution ... so far, none has been found. |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 05 2009 at 05:07 | ||
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: December 05 2009 at 04:52 | ||
Refuses to look at evidence = immune to reason That's what I was saying. |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 05 2009 at 04:42 | ||
I could go to Jay's summary of "what we know today" and insert "And then the Flying Spaghetti Monster..." in all the places where Jay infers we don't know or understand how certain events happened but that still doesn't reconcile the ID concepts into an all encompassing theory. At least Creationists give us Genesis 1, which as I have said before, is a pretty impressive overview of cosmology and evolution from the perspective of a Bronze Age people, even if some of the finer details and order of some things isn't quite congruent with the Evolutionist model, the basic sequence is.
I'm not asking how the trick is done, nor am I saying that it is all of the smoke and none of the mirrors (however that is how the concept looks at the moment), I won't even go as far as asking what the science is or how it works, just a overall picture will do for now..
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Kestrel
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 18 2008 Location: Minnesota Status: Offline Points: 512 |
Posted: December 05 2009 at 03:56 | ||
ID is kind of nebulous. Essentially, ID basically holds that some features of life are too complex to have evolved. Thus, an intelligent designer created that feature. (I'm sure you know this but I was just introducing the concept.) While ID as a philosophy is a form of creationism, ID as a movement is disguised Christian Creationism. The Discovery Institute, the think tank behind ID, wants to use ID as a "wedge" to introduce Christian Creationism into the science classroom. There are several evidences for this: 1) The "wedge" document was leaked and 2) A textbook the Discovery Institute pushed, Of Pandas and People, was originally a creationist textbook but they replaced every instance of "creationism" with "intelligent design" after the US Supreme Court declared creationism in the classroom was unconstitutional. ID is nebulous in the sense that creationism is: everyone has their own beliefs. For instance, Michael Behe, a biochemist and associate of the Discovery Institute, pretty much agrees with modern evolutionary thinking with the exception of some features he feels are too complex and he calls these irreducibly complex. By that, he means that if you have some complex feature and you remove a part of that feature and it no longer functions, it could not have evolved. (His argument doesn't work at all, but whatever.) As far as I have seen, intelligent design concerns itself primarily with evolution. When it comes to cosmology, ID proponents sometimes utilize the fine-tuned universe arguments and also claim that life violates entropy. So from that, it seems they attack cosmology as an indirect way to attack evolution. Basically, intelligent design as a movement is a total lie and a joke. Excuse the strong language, but it really is. Creationism is one thing, but trying to disguise your agenda and blatantly lie to people is another. I just briefly went through the wiki article on intelligent design and it is very detailed, well sourced, and is completely accurate with what I know of the subject. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligent_design Edited by Kestrel - December 05 2009 at 03:58 |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 05 2009 at 03:34 | ||
I think most of us know the rudiments of the origins of the Universe and Live on Earth from a Creationist and Evolutionist point of view, but does anyone know the Intelligent Design version?
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Kestrel
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 18 2008 Location: Minnesota Status: Offline Points: 512 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 21:48 | ||
The evolution of sex is definitely complex. As far as I know, scientists are still unsure as to how it involved although there are a few theories. Sex does promote greater genetic diversity, but I have a feeling that isn't what actually caused sex to occur... that is just what keeps it around.
The evolution of reproductive organs would be a bit different since not all sexually-reproducing organisms have the same organs. For example, most birds and reptiles have cloacas - holes by which urinary wastes, digestive wastes and gametes are expelled. Also in mammals, the penis and clitoris are developmentally the same organs. The same applies to the testes and ovaries. ...Then you have sexual reproduction in plants... So unfortunately I can't give you any specific answers at the moment, but hopefully you can see why the answers are going to be so complex. Because it isn't a topic I've really had to think about, I can't give you much for answers. I'll try to look around a bit. I'll be busy for the next couple weeks so I don't know how much I can actually do. It's almost winter break! Also sorry for your biology professor. Having crappy teachers and professors really suck, especially when it has effects later on. I had a bad calculus professor my freshman year and dropped the class and so my math stops at Calc I and that is hurting me a little bit now.
Edited by Kestrel - December 04 2009 at 21:51 |
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32524 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 18:08 | ||
Doesn't agree with Mike = immune to reason
Thanks Dean for finding that...I didn't realize I had posted the question in The Christian Thread (I was thinking it was somewhere else). I intend to read over your responses again and perhaps I will understand what you (and Linus) were saying a bit better. |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 17:43 | ||
^ Nah, it wasn't like that at all.
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 17:38 | ||
^ thanks for the warning ... unfortunately some people simply are immune to reason.
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 17:29 | ||
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 17:04 | ||
^ please tell me which of my posts you are referring to - I can't remember every off topic post.
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32524 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 16:47 | ||
Nah...I'd rather just ignore the book and raise another argument. That's how things work around here, isn't it? |
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 16:44 | ||
^ then you might consider my advice, get the book by Dawkins and read it ... then you'll know what we're arguing about here.
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32524 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 16:42 | ||
My point was that he was a crappy professor...he was unprofessional as well, but I don't feel the need to go into that. Edited by Epignosis - December 04 2009 at 16:42 |
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 16:35 | ||
It seems like you should have been paying more attention to what your biology professor was saying than to whether he spit during talking. |
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Negoba
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 24 2008 Location: Big Muddy Status: Offline Points: 5208 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 16:30 | ||
Population forces, migration, and genetic reassortment are much more important than mutations in the diversity we see. Natural selection is poorly envisioned as primarily being a process between species. Though that occurs, what's much more important is the interaction of each individual species with its particular environment.
Mathematically, I loosely talk about a system's boundary conditions (the environment) and initial conditions (the species) and the chances that some equilibrium can be sound without runoff to zero or infinity.
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You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Negoba
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 24 2008 Location: Big Muddy Status: Offline Points: 5208 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 16:17 | ||
The fundamental question you're asking is a critical one though. What fuels the trend for more energy demanding, complex life forms?
It's that when the right random complexity meets the right environment, they have a field day, rapidly expanding and reproducing. An easier example is when alien species are introduced to new enviroments. The most common things that happen are A) They aren't suited and die or B) They have no natural competitors and go hog wild. A) is much more common. But we don't see the A) because they're all dead. We only see the B)'s and all their descendants.
I am highly skeptical that genetic mutations have a significant part to play in this story. Edited by Negoba - December 04 2009 at 16:18 |
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You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32524 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 16:12 | ||
I understand about genetic diversity, and I can also somewhat understand the simple process of genetic transfer...I just don't see any impetus for not one but two separate, extremely complex sexual systems that would not work (or work well) incomplete. And surely one or two mutations couldn't do the trick. But as I've said, this ain't my field. |
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Negoba
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 24 2008 Location: Big Muddy Status: Offline Points: 5208 |
Posted: December 04 2009 at 16:08 | ||
Juggling the genetic code in as many ways as possible allows for greater diversity of individuals. Greater diversity allows for greater chance for better fit with various environments.
Sexual reproduction started as a very simple process of genetic transfer long before there was anything we would call an "organ."
You're right that sexual reproduction is more energetically demanding than asexual reproduction. But all things that are more complex do. Especially in unicellular and simple multi-cellular lifeforms, the number of duplications (and potential for variation) is enormous. They get over the fact that 90% of the varieties being fatal by shere numbers.
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You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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