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Topic ClosedEvolution vs. Creationism

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Poll Question: What represents your opinion best?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2009 at 18:09
I don't know anything. And quite frankly, it doesn't affect me. Our beginnings are of uncertain nature, but we all know we'll end a pile of ashes and dust... I've stopped wasting my time trying to figure out if god exists long ago...

... But if you ask me in a bright day, I'll say I accept evolution as fact and creationism (the pure kind) as a sign of enlarged ventricles in the brain...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2009 at 18:16
Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:



Also, a minor beef with the poll choices, there is more to evolution than natural selection! Someone said that the theory has gone pretty much unchanged since the days of Darwin; this is most definitely false! Darwin completely screwed up heredity and it wasn't until the 1930s that Darwin's evolution and Mendel's genetics were synthesized. Ideas like genetic drift (another major force in evolution alongside natural selection) and the neutral theory have been added to the theory since.

(Unfortunately, Dawkins doesn't think genetic drift is that big of a deal...)

Edit: Not to toot my own horn, but I consider myself well-versed in evolution, so if anyone has any questions, I would be more than happy to try to answer them.




I don't think that genetic drift is all too relevant in a thread that mostly boils down to scientific theory vs. religious belief. But I'll happily admit that I'm not too versed on biology or chemistry ...

BTW: From what I could read about genetic drift, it appears to be driven by chance ... certainly not something that would hint towards a divine creator/designer/architect.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2009 at 18:21


There are quite a few videos of this kind available on his channel, but this series is really summing it up nicely, particularly the third part where he elaborates on the creation of life scenario involving extraterrestial super-human beings.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2009 at 18:27
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:



Also, a minor beef with the poll choices, there is more to evolution than natural selection! Someone said that the theory has gone pretty much unchanged since the days of Darwin; this is most definitely false! Darwin completely screwed up heredity and it wasn't until the 1930s that Darwin's evolution and Mendel's genetics were synthesized. Ideas like genetic drift (another major force in evolution alongside natural selection) and the neutral theory have been added to the theory since.

(Unfortunately, Dawkins doesn't think genetic drift is that big of a deal...)

Edit: Not to toot my own horn, but I consider myself well-versed in evolution, so if anyone has any questions, I would be more than happy to try to answer them.




I don't think that genetic drift is all too relevant in a thread that mostly boils down to scientific theory vs. religious belief. But I'll happily admit that I'm not too versed on biology or chemistry ...

BTW: From what I could read about genetic drift, it appears to be driven by chance ... certainly not something that would hint towards a divine creator/designer/architect.
You might want to read through the thread Jay started on Evolution and Spirituality back in September. While we didn't go into a great amount of detail in that thread, several of the component parts of evolution and speciation are mentioned.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2009 at 18:36
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:



Also, a minor beef with the poll choices, there is more to evolution than natural selection! Someone said that the theory has gone pretty much unchanged since the days of Darwin; this is most definitely false! Darwin completely screwed up heredity and it wasn't until the 1930s that Darwin's evolution and Mendel's genetics were synthesized. Ideas like genetic drift (another major force in evolution alongside natural selection) and the neutral theory have been added to the theory since.

(Unfortunately, Dawkins doesn't think genetic drift is that big of a deal...)

Edit: Not to toot my own horn, but I consider myself well-versed in evolution, so if anyone has any questions, I would be more than happy to try to answer them.




I don't think that genetic drift is all too relevant in a thread that mostly boils down to scientific theory vs. religious belief. But I'll happily admit that I'm not too versed on biology or chemistry ...

BTW: From what I could read about genetic drift, it appears to be driven by chance ... certainly not something that would hint towards a divine creator/designer/architect.

That is true; no need to make it more complicated than it needs to be. I just find it unfortunate that evolution = natural selection in most people's minds, including Dawkins (almost). The theory of evolution is much more interesting and complex than just natural selection (and that's what I really find interesting about it).

Actually, I have yet to read the Greatest Show on Earth but I read that Dawkins avoided drift (and chance in general) because he wanted to avoid the complaint by creationists about evolution being random, etc. People just have a fear of chance and randomness. :/

Again, I didn't mean to toot my own horn (which is something I dislike a lot) and don't want to presume I more than anyone else here, I just want to hoepfully teach someone something. :)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2009 at 19:04
^ I think that he wanted to keep the book simple and to the point, which is to explain to a non-scientific audience all the evidence that supports the concept of evolution. And the main point to understand about it is how the complex forms of life that exist today could have been "shaped". Genetic drift seems to me like a topic  that's not essential to achieving that goal, but like I said earlier, I haven't read all that much about it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2009 at 19:22
Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:

The word "proof" is being thrown around too much in this thread.

Proof only counts in bread and booze. Tongue

Never heard of Dawkins, anyone out there know Velikovsky?


Edited by Slartibartfast - November 28 2009 at 19:23
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2009 at 19:46
Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:



Also, a minor beef with the poll choices, there is more to evolution than natural selection! Someone said that the theory has gone pretty much unchanged since the days of Darwin; this is most definitely false! Darwin completely screwed up heredity and it wasn't until the 1930s that Darwin's evolution and Mendel's genetics were synthesized. Ideas like genetic drift (another major force in evolution alongside natural selection) and the neutral theory have been added to the theory since.

(Unfortunately, Dawkins doesn't think genetic drift is that big of a deal...)

Edit: Not to toot my own horn, but I consider myself well-versed in evolution, so if anyone has any questions, I would be more than happy to try to answer them.




I don't think that genetic drift is all too relevant in a thread that mostly boils down to scientific theory vs. religious belief. But I'll happily admit that I'm not too versed on biology or chemistry ...

BTW: From what I could read about genetic drift, it appears to be driven by chance ... certainly not something that would hint towards a divine creator/designer/architect.

That is true; no need to make it more complicated than it needs to be. I just find it unfortunate that evolution = natural selection in most people's minds, including Dawkins (almost). The theory of evolution is much more interesting and complex than just natural selection (and that's what I really find interesting about it).

Actually, I have yet to read the Greatest Show on Earth but I read that Dawkins avoided drift (and chance in general) because he wanted to avoid the complaint by creationists about evolution being random, etc. People just have a fear of chance and randomness. :/

Again, I didn't mean to toot my own horn (which is something I dislike a lot) and don't want to presume I more than anyone else here, I just want to hoepfully teach someone something. :)
While I'm a firm believer in Occam's Razor I still think that not everything has a neat and simple solution and some things need to be as complicated as they are. If Punctuated Equilibrium and Genetic Drift have some influence on evolution then they must be part of the equation, even if their effect is minimal.
 
Chance does not need to be random, just coincidental - two random events occurring at the same time result in chance, but that is not to say they wouldn't or couldn't happen. Also, random is not necessarily a consequence of chance. For example, if a predictable simple harmonic event becomes dependant on the result of another equally predictable simple harmonic event then the result is not predictable -  to all intents and purposes the outcome is random. Similarly, random number generator algorithms are relatively simple to produce in software and in hardware a simple Linear Feedback Shift Register can produce pseudo-random numbers based upon the Fibonacci series (a series commonly found in nature) - neither of which require chance to generate apparent randomness. If you asked someone to fake the results of flipping a coin ten times would they write down heads, heads, heads, heads, heads, heads, heads, heads, heads, heads? Probably not, yet a sequence of ten heads is perfectly random and perfectly feasible- while it is a natural reaction to say that it is unlikely to happen, it is no more unlikely than any other sequence (1 in 1024). So while people may not be comfortable with randomness and chance, it does not stop it happening - if life on Earth is dependant on a fixed sequence of seemingly random events happening at exactly the right moments for it to have evolved to its present state does not mean that it could never happen, because evidently it did. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 29 2009 at 03:26
^ that's not *entirely* accurate. Indeed any fixed sequence of events is just as likely as any other "version" of that sequence, provided that each variation of the elements of the sequence has the same probability. But if the creation of life (or the preparation of the "scene") required several crucial steps that had to happen in a certain sequence and each of those steps was unlikely, the whole process would simply be highly improbable to have happened "by chance". But, given the time frame, why not? We can also take into account that there must be billions of planets that also had a chance to develop life. Maybe it is so extremely unlikely that it only occurred on Earth - or only on a dozen planets in the universe.

The event that I'm talking about is the creation of the first bio-chemical "entity" that was able to replicate itself. It would probably have contained RNA or a predecessor of it, for all we know today, and it would not have looked like a living thing at all - maybe indeed just a molecule that was able, in the right environment, to multiply. Multiplication in this case probably means that the molecule served as a catalyst for certain chemical reactions that resulted - probably through chain reactions - in the formation of other instances of the same molecule. This multiplication process wouldn't have been flawless and perfect, and of course instances of the molecule could have been altered by chemicals or radiation, leading to slightly different versions. And, during a very long time, it might have evolved into a version that during replication not only copied itself, but also created byproducts in the process that were able to help with the replication - for example enzymes (proteins). From that point on (a combination of RNA/DNA and proteins) natural selection (plus a few other RNA/DNA related mechanisms like genetic drift) did the rest. 


Edited by Mr ProgFreak - November 29 2009 at 03:27
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 29 2009 at 05:05
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:

The word "proof" is being thrown around too much in this thread.

Proof only counts in bread and booze. Tongue

Never heard of Dawkins, anyone out there know Velikovsky?
 
 
I know Velikovsky (read a number of his books) and, generally spoken, I support his reconstruction of the Egyptian chronology. Have to read Dawkins yet when I have some time to spare for less important matters (my brother recommended him and Dawkins is obviously a guru in his field).


Edited by someone_else - November 29 2009 at 05:05
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 29 2009 at 05:26
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ that's not *entirely* accurate. Indeed any fixed sequence of events is just as likely as any other "version" of that sequence, provided that each variation of the elements of the sequence has the same probability. But if the creation of life (or the preparation of the "scene") required several crucial steps that had to happen in a certain sequence and each of those steps was unlikely, the whole process would simply be highly improbable to have happened "by chance". But, given the time frame, why not? We can also take into account that there must be billions of planets that also had a chance to develop life. Maybe it is so extremely unlikely that it only occurred on Earth - or only on a dozen planets in the universe.

The event that I'm talking about is the creation of the first bio-chemical "entity" that was able to replicate itself. It would probably have contained RNA or a predecessor of it, for all we know today, and it would not have looked like a living thing at all - maybe indeed just a molecule that was able, in the right environment, to multiply. Multiplication in this case probably means that the molecule served as a catalyst for certain chemical reactions that resulted - probably through chain reactions - in the formation of other instances of the same molecule. This multiplication process wouldn't have been flawless and perfect, and of course instances of the molecule could have been altered by chemicals or radiation, leading to slightly different versions. And, during a very long time, it might have evolved into a version that during replication not only copied itself, but also created byproducts in the process that were able to help with the replication - for example enzymes (proteins). From that point on (a combination of RNA/DNA and proteins) natural selection (plus a few other RNA/DNA related mechanisms like genetic drift) did the rest. 
  okay, I was addressing Kele's comment that creationists complain about the random chance element of evolution. I gave simplified examples of random events not being governed by chance, the probability of the last coin turning up heads is exactly the same as the probability first coin turning up heads. A complex molecule such as RNA (and DNA) is a chain of smaller less complex molecules composed of Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen and Carbon, formation of those simpler molecules is a chemical reaction equivalent to the flipping of a coin, their combination into RNA is no different to achieving ten "heads" in a row. Again - that's in (non-fear inducing) simplistic terms, the formation of molecules of simple nucleic acids is more "difficult" than just putting Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen in a bowl and giving it a damn good stir. LOL
 
However, I agree with what you have said, yet abiogenesis requiring a specific sequence of low-probability events to occur does not imply that chance is the overriding factor. Several stages in that sequence may be a logical consequence of preceding steps and that many of those events could be interdependent, providing feedback and feedforward paths that result in a closed-loop system (or at least one of many possible closed, open and partially closed loops, only one of which is required to result in a self regulating system). While it may appear as chance governing the initial conditions, the resultant cyclic behaviour is anything but and through self-regulation maintains and replicates those initial conditions and thus propogates through self-replication. The chemistry behind the initial conditions is not random, it is predictable and repeatable, as is the physics (quantum or otherwise).
 
My point is that regardless of how improbable this is given then vast number of initial conditions that result in failure, the existence of RNA and DNA indicates that the initial conditions resulting in success (a sequence of ten heads) did occur.


Edited by Dean - November 29 2009 at 05:27
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 29 2009 at 05:47
Bacteria - that's what it's all about,... intelligent bacteria.  Bacteria rules the earth, its cells created everything for its own amusement, it could destroy everything, it is the creator and the worst enemy of all living things especially man.,..we are just ahead of the game...Ermm  
 
There could be bacteria floating around in space, sleeping on an icy comet, waiting for its next "hit" in some distant Galaxy...our ours...Confused
 
 
BOO! LOL
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Edited by mystic fred - November 29 2009 at 05:57
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 29 2009 at 06:53

Seriously, I think that creationist theory is something like cruel joke. First I laughed, but then I was worried that some people actually can think about it as a fact. Evolution is simply everywhere around us, in human's life, in nature, so why man (another animal, just intelligent one) should be exception. 

Sorry, could not resist.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 29 2009 at 14:17
I agree with the above
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 30 2009 at 17:40
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ that's not *entirely* accurate. Indeed any fixed sequence of events is just as likely as any other "version" of that sequence, provided that each variation of the elements of the sequence has the same probability. But if the creation of life (or the preparation of the "scene") required several crucial steps that had to happen in a certain sequence and each of those steps was unlikely, the whole process would simply be highly improbable to have happened "by chance". But, given the time frame, why not? We can also take into account that there must be billions of planets that also had a chance to develop life. Maybe it is so extremely unlikely that it only occurred on Earth - or only on a dozen planets in the universe.

The event that I'm talking about is the creation of the first bio-chemical "entity" that was able to replicate itself. It would probably have contained RNA or a predecessor of it, for all we know today, and it would not have looked like a living thing at all - maybe indeed just a molecule that was able, in the right environment, to multiply. Multiplication in this case probably means that the molecule served as a catalyst for certain chemical reactions that resulted - probably through chain reactions - in the formation of other instances of the same molecule. This multiplication process wouldn't have been flawless and perfect, and of course instances of the molecule could have been altered by chemicals or radiation, leading to slightly different versions. And, during a very long time, it might have evolved into a version that during replication not only copied itself, but also created byproducts in the process that were able to help with the replication - for example enzymes (proteins). From that point on (a combination of RNA/DNA and proteins) natural selection (plus a few other RNA/DNA related mechanisms like genetic drift) did the rest. 
  okay, I was addressing Kele's comment that creationists complain about the random chance element of evolution. I gave simplified examples of random events not being governed by chance, the probability of the last coin turning up heads is exactly the same as the probability first coin turning up heads. A complex molecule such as RNA (and DNA) is a chain of smaller less complex molecules composed of Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen and Carbon, formation of those simpler molecules is a chemical reaction equivalent to the flipping of a coin, their combination into RNA is no different to achieving ten "heads" in a row. Again - that's in (non-fear inducing) simplistic terms, the formation of molecules of simple nucleic acids is more "difficult" than just putting Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen in a bowl and giving it a damn good stir. LOL
 
However, I agree with what you have said, yet abiogenesis requiring a specific sequence of low-probability events to occur does not imply that chance is the overriding factor. Several stages in that sequence may be a logical consequence of preceding steps and that many of those events could be interdependent, providing feedback and feedforward paths that result in a closed-loop system (or at least one of many possible closed, open and partially closed loops, only one of which is required to result in a self regulating system). While it may appear as chance governing the initial conditions, the resultant cyclic behaviour is anything but and through self-regulation maintains and replicates those initial conditions and thus propogates through self-replication. The chemistry behind the initial conditions is not random, it is predictable and repeatable, as is the physics (quantum or otherwise).
 
My point is that regardless of how improbable this is given then vast number of initial conditions that result in failure, the existence of RNA and DNA indicates that the initial conditions resulting in success (a sequence of ten heads) did occur.

I agree. I think. Haha.

I don't think we currently know enough about abiogenesis to say if it's based on chance or not. I think there is a possibility that given Earth's conditions, life itself may be inevitable. Miller-Urey's experiment (which had the false initial conditions, I believe) and subsequent experiments have shown that chemicals like amino acids are commonly produced in an early Earth. Perhaps some replicating chemical is equally as likely. *shrug*

Also, wouldn't it be more accurate to call such processes probabilistic, rather than random?


Edited by Kestrel - November 30 2009 at 17:43
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 30 2009 at 20:47
I would state my opinion but it would just wind up being shot down Ermm
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 30 2009 at 21:11
^ With a name like ''The Truth'', I would expect something at least half-way logical to come from you. Have I assumed too much?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 01 2009 at 05:22
^ Truth is beyond logic.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 01 2009 at 08:26
Well, I didn't read the whole thread because you are using too much technical and quemical knowledge that I don't understand, at least in english... well, what I have to say is that I refuse to believe that we are only a lucky step, followed by other lucky step followed again by other lucky step... I think evolution is a little more complicated that just natural selection process, and BTW, I believe we are special because we havee porpuse, meaning... we don't come here to mess around -funny, i'ts just what we're doing right now- but I believe in the existence of a perfect essence who guide us... so, I believe in evolution guided by a holy hand...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 01 2009 at 08:36
It is interesting that as you've set up the poll, evolution (natural selection only) is already completely disproven and it's winning.
 
 
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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