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Topic ClosedEvolution vs. Creationism

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Mr ProgFreak View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 01:49
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ no problem at all ... what bothers me more is that this is totally off topic and unnecessary to understand the principle of evolution by natural selection. I'm really annoyed by how Negoba is systematically trying to complicate the matter. "Willful Obscurity", I think that's the term Dan Dennett used in a similar situation.
Well, one of the reasons is to equip all evolutionist with an arsenal of knowledge to combat the criticisms from the creationist/ID lobby, this includes discussing all evolutionary mechanisms even if only among ourselves, so when they come up with some example where natural selection appears to fail such as those mutations that do survive but are not necessary for survival (like hair colour), we can point to one of the other mechanisms that does explain it.


You picked a bad example though with hair color. Hair color is connected with skin color, and that actually serves a purpose. Maybe today to a lesser degree, but still.

I don't see how knowing about the details of genetic drift would help against Creationists though - they are not taking evolution seriously anyway. Just look at the latest posts of AmbianceMan -  I think I remember that at one point he said he was not a Creationist, but now he's using their typical arguments, and they are so twisted and non-sensical from a scientific standpoint that problems like genetic drift are "pearls for swine". Such details are IMO more suited for people who have already accepted the key element to for example understanding how - through evolution - a bird could have evolved from a reptile. Which is a well documented example, and a number of intermediates have been found. To explain this process, natural selection is much more important than genetic drift (in my humble laypeople opinion).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 08:25
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ That's a relief, since it's not such a big help in explaining how evolution could have achieved complex forms of life like humans - is it? It can explain how some branches of the tree of life became extinct or others were favored, but it doesn't explain how those that were favored continued their evolution. To explain that, you need natural selection.

EDIT: Actually such a cataclysmic event could even be seen as an (extreme) case of natural selection - if the term was used in a slightly broader sense.
 
First of all, I already made your EDIT point. But I could also call it Unnatural selction if I chose.
 
Second, I never said the natural selection in the stricter sense was not a factor in evolution, just that other factors are at least equally important.
 
You keep saying that the more complex aspects of evolution have nothing to do with the debate. In fact, they are very important because you are making an argument of exclusion.
 
Finally, I'll quote Steven Jay Gould, whose credentials in evolutionist circles are without question.
 
"I speak of the supposed conflict between science and religion, a debate that exists only in people's minds and social practices, not in the logic or proper utility of these entirely different, and equally vital, subjects."
 
As to Gould's personal beliefs...
 
"I am not a believer. I am an agnostic in the wise sense of T.H. Huxley, who coined the word in identifying such open-minded skepticism as on the rational position, because, truly, one CANNOT know." (Emphasis mine.)
 
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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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 08:33
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ That's a relief, since it's not such a big help in explaining how evolution could have achieved complex forms of life like humans - is it? It can explain how some branches of the tree of life became extinct or others were favored, but it doesn't explain how those that were favored continued their evolution. To explain that, you need natural selection.

EDIT: Actually such a cataclysmic event could even be seen as an (extreme) case of natural selection - if the term was used in a slightly broader sense.
 
First of all, I already made your EDIT point. But I could also call it Unnatural selction if I chose.
 
Second, I never said the natural selection in the stricter sense was not a factor in evolution, just that other factors are at least equally important.



That's where you're wrong IMO. Remove natural selection and it all collapses like a house of cards. Do you really think that life could have evolved with only "random selection"?

Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:


 
You keep saying that the more complex aspects of evolution have nothing to do with the debate. In fact, they are very important because you are making an argument of exclusion.



I am saying that details like genetic drift play a minor role compared to natural selection. And if you disagree - fine, but please don't make it appear like that would have anything to do with scientific consensus. Name one respected biologist who would agree with you that genetic drift is such an important factor in evolution that you can't possibly leave it out of a discussion with laypeople (or Creationists, which is about the same thing ;-)).
 
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:


Finally, I'll quote Steven Jay Gould, whose credentials in evolutionist circles are without question.
 
"I speak of the supposed conflict between science and religion, a debate that exists only in people's minds and social practices, not in the logic or proper utility of these entirely different, and equally vital, subjects."
 
As to Gould's personal beliefs...
 
"I am not a believer. I am an agnostic in the wise sense of T.H. Huxley, who coined the word in identifying such open-minded skepticism as on the rational position, because, truly, one CANNOT know." (Emphasis mine.)
 


I know who Steven J. Gould is ... and although I always enjoy reading quotations, again I wonder whether they have anything to do with the point you're trying to make.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 08:33
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

 

Such details are IMO more suited for people who have already accepted the key element to for example understanding how - through evolution - a bird could have evolved from a reptile. Which is a well documented example, and a number of intermediates have been found. To explain this process, natural selection is much more important than genetic drift (in my humble laypeople opinion).
 
I get your point, but if you're going claim to be a scientific thinker who believes only what the evidence shows, you need to take in the evidence.
 
For example, the explosion of birds is a classic example of genetic drift. The ancestors of birds were initially part of the wide variation in the dinosaur body plan, but after a cataclysm, a huge part of that variation were killed off and / or could not longer survive in the new environment. 
 
I know it seems like splitting hairs, but the diversity of birds we know see is directly tied to an environmental change, i.e. genetic drift. And yes, natural selection was very much involved also.
 
BTW, creationists use the fact that the fossil record is not smooth and continuous all the time as an argument against evolution. Punctuated equilibrium and genetic drift erase that argument.
 
 
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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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 08:44
^ it seems like you're saying that in order to claim to be a scientific thinker, you *always* have to be splitting hairs and mention every little detail. I strongly disagree about that. It would mean that I would have to study biology in excruciating detail before I would be allowed to even begin talking about natural selection.

And about the bird example: Natural selection explains why there were dinosaurs and birds. Genetic drift might explain why the birds (or bird ancestors) "suddenly" had an advantage and pretty much replaced the dinosaurs, but without natural selection you would neither have dinosaurs nor birds. Genetic drift is a secondary mechanism that, no matter how strongly, only influences the course of evolution, to which the driving, "guiding" force is still natural selection.

BTW: Of course you'll always have both. Natural selection is not something that could be taken out of the equation ... except for us humans maybe, since we are the first animals on this planet who are capable of planning ahead, and tweak our chances for survival. It remains to be seen whether we're clever enough to use that power though ...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 08:48
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


That's where you're wrong IMO. Remove natural selection and it all collapses like a house of cards. Do you really think that life could have evolved with only "random selection"?

I am saying that details like genetic drift play a minor role compared to natural selection. And if you disagree - fine, but please don't make it appear like that would have anything to do with scientific consensus. Name one respected biologist who would agree with you that genetic drift is such an important factor in evolution that you can't possibly leave it out of a discussion with laypeople (or Creationists, which is about the same thing ;-)).
 
 
You're missing the beauty of the very thing you're worshipping. The driving force for evolution is diversity. And natual selection alone does not produce diversity to the degree that genetic drift does, in fact it can tend to produce less in some situations.
 
from Wiki:
 
"In natural populations, genetic drift and natural selection do not act in isolation; both forces are always at play. However, the degree to which alleles are affected by drift or selection varies according to population size."
 
In general, at high population sizes, probability and statistics are useful models to predict the nature of the group.
 
At very low sizes, simple linear dynamics is in play.
 
And here's the fun part....
 
Somewhere in between, the math gets very screwy to the point that no one can yet model it. This is where the field of complexity theory comes into play which I've mentioned in the path.
 
 
So the question is how big were the populations?
 
The answer differs based on species. In general, the numbers involved in more complex species is in the range where drift is extremely important. Migrating groups of hominids for certain would have fallen in this category.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 08:55
^ I understand all that, and it makes sense to me (I agree). I still don't find it necessary to use it to confuse people who are trying to understand the concept of evolution. I think that only very, very few people would, if told the principle of evolution by natural selection, scratch their head and miss that factor? What I'm trying to say is that genetic drift is not necessary to be explained in detail during a introduction of the theory of evolution.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 08:59
Because I'm dumb enough to think math is the only inarguable thing that exists....that's only partly a joke.
 
What do think of this point...
 
"BTW, creationists use the fact that the fossil record is not smooth and continuous all the time as an argument against evolution. Punctuated equilibrium and genetic drift erase that argument."
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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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 09:23
Originally posted by AmbianceMan AmbianceMan wrote:

Regarding the wolf to dog video.  This actually goes against your theory of evolution and is used in the creationist argument.  (But you already knew that I'm sure)
 
You do realize that there is no species change here right?  Micro-evolution is a fact, we see it, we breed it.  But not species differentiation (macro-evolution).  These are highly different.  Breed a bird into a velociraptor and I'll be impressed.
 
I believe the only "evolution" happening is de-evolution or devolution depending on who you ask.  In order to breed animals such as dogs or horses, you "breed out" bad genetic information.  You are not "breeding in" better information.  So in each case we are talking about genetic information being lost.  Nothing is gaining genetic material, only losing.  (Detractors paste your wikipedia link here, we know how reliable they are) So I postulate that humans are less intelligent and less healthy than when man began.  That's why we have so many imperfections, crooked ears, asymmetrical faces, more cases of cancer, DNA anomalies.
 
Macro and Micro evolution are the same thing. A velociraptor from a bird is reverse evolution - sorry, it doesn't quite work like that in the exact same way that reverse creation cannot unmake things..
 
Wolves to Dogs is a good one since it can appear to bat for both teams, however there is a major difference in how that information is used. Domestic dog breeding is artificial and unnatural, controlled by the Kennel Club to preserve the pedigree of each breed, which is a form of inbreeding (thus reducing biological fitness blah blah blah - broken ). However, there are examples of in nature where it is permitted to run unchecked (ie naturally), that is in wild breeds of dogs such as jackals and coyotes (and to a lesser extent dingos, more of them later). Dogs (domestic, jackals, coyotes and dingos) are of the same species as wolves. Domestic dogs can interbreed with wolves and their offspring are fertile and can communicate with their parents, (they also have better biological fitness than their dog parent - ie the wolf genes strengthen the gene-pool) - therefore they are still the same species. Domestic dogs can also interbreed with jackals and coyotes, but the offspring are not as fertile and have communication difficulties with the parents - wild dogs and domestic dogs are diverging as subspecies. Crossbreeds between the wild dogs and wolves have the same problems - in other words they are also diverging from the wolf species - not a new species yet, but well on their way.
 
The dingo is an anomaly (yahoo! you say arming your creationist water-pistol, but wait) - it can breed with domestic dogs and wolves to produce a "compatible" offspring - the catch there is that dingos are unique in being the only placental animal on the Australian subcontinent - ie they are not native, which means they came from somewhere else (Asia) - current mDNA evidence suggests they are not wild dogs at all, but ancient domestic dogs gone feral.
 
 
I really cannot be bothered to comment on your postulation on human "evolution".
 
 
 
Don't want a wiki link? Okay, here's a Scientific American one for your amusement: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=an-immodest-proposal Tongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 09:28
Though I am a firm  believer in evolution, I do not think that the simple mechanism of random mutation and natural selection is the only thing behind it. Jean has already pointed out that mutation is far from being random at all. Evolutionists usually all are quick to point out that evolution is not teleogenic at all. This is, however, not really true. Take the evolution of the eye: Once an organ that was capable of detecting light in whatever primitive matter it was almost inevitable that we would arrive at something like the modern eye. It is no coincidence that the eye of the octopus and the eye of us human beings are so similar, though they definitely developed independently. There is a limited number of options to increase its functionality. You may say "well, ok, but there is no spirit behind it", but how does one actually detect a spirit? How do you detect the spirit in a human being? Is it not true that you deduct the spirit of the person sitting on the other side of the table by its actions? The strange thing is that modern science does everything to deny such a spirit, no matter how much it appears to be there. For me this is just as close-minded as sticking word by word to what has been written in some holy book centuries ago. I see no contradiction in believing in science and in some kind of deity, and neither do may leading scientists, though most are not "relgious" in the common sense. But ask ANY scienctist, and they will tell you they feel a kind of awe at how the world is structured, an awe which is very close to a religious feeling. Scientists are usually not believers in any of the old religions, at least not in the literal sense. Perhaps what we need is a religion for the scientific age.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 09:31
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

Because I'm dumb enough to think math is the only inarguable thing that exists....that's only partly a joke.
 
What do think of this point...
 
"BTW, creationists use the fact that the fossil record is not smooth and continuous all the time as an argument against evolution. Punctuated equilibrium and genetic drift erase that argument."


I don't think that it's very scientific to say that those theories "erase" the whole argument (some gaps in the fossil record can be explained by other reasons).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 09:35
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Though I am a firm  believer in evolution, I do not think that the simple mechanism of random mutation and natural selection is the only thing behind it. Jean has already pointed out that mutation is far from being random at all. Evolutionists usually all are quick to point out that evolution is not teleogenic at all. This is, however, not really true. Take the evolution of the eye: Once an organ that was capable of detecting light in whatever primitive matter it was almost inevitable that we would arrive at something like the modern eye. It is no coincidence that the eye of the octopus and the eye of us human beings are so similar, though they definitely developed independently. There is a limited number of options to increase its functionality. You may say "well, ok, but there is no spirit behind it", but how does one actually detect a spirit? How do you detect the spirit in a human being? Is it not true that you deduct the spirit of the person sitting on the other side of the table by its actions? The strange thing is that modern science does everything to deny such a spirit, no matter how much it appears to be there. For me this is just as close-minded as sticking word by word to what has been written in some holy book centuries ago. I see no contradiction in believing in science and in some kind of deity, and neither do may leading scientists, though most are not "relgious" in the common sense. But ask ANY scienctist, and they will tell you they feel a kind of awe at how the world is structured, an awe which is very close to a religious feeling. Scientists are usually not believers in any of the old religions, at least not in the literal sense. Perhaps what we need is a religion for the scientific age.


Did you read Dawkins book - especially the chapter about intelligent design?

The major argument against a designer "guiding evolution on its way" is that when you look closely at most of the most ingenious achievements of evolution, you see that they are usually textbook examples of bad design. The human eye, since you mention it, is a good example, with the retina placed facing inward, and the nerves on the inside of the eyeball, so that the light has to pass through the nerves in order to reach the receptor cells.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 09:47
Baldfriede give an interesting example... I just shoot an idea and then will see what reaction it causes...
 
In the study of communications we have to study public reactions and audiences... there's a clear "feeling" on the silence of the reaction in the middle of a speach... how can you distinguish where a silence is a show of dissaprove, or is sadness, or is a show of hostility or missunderstanding...??? you can felt it and any priecher -a president, a musician, whoever who is over a stage- can feel it... how can all this dissarticulated people, as a mass, can give you a feeling and how can you distinguish when silence means something...??? well... I think that's the most fascinating thing that happen on the massive audience phenomena... that knowledge of "feeling" or sense, is there, and we don't need physical proof to that... so... I hope you understand my question here... It could be there a "spirit", a collective spirit that can be felt...??? not as a ghost or god.. but is there a non-physical feeling on it...???


Edited by jampa17 - December 07 2009 at 10:01
Change the program inside... Stay in silence is a crime.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 09:58

Again, for natural selection to work, you have to have diversity. Natural selection, again, produces diversity slowly or even decreases it.

If you are going to be able to meaningfully defend your position, you have to understand it as deeply as you can. You also need to clearly know the gaps so that you're ready when someone questions them.

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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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 10:03
I've always had an issue with "intelligent design".
 
I would have thought something like "obtuse design" or "a little bit stupid designer" or "whoops thats another mess waiting to happen design" would have been more appropriate. Tongue
 
I mean, who else would have set everything up but to allow the one thing that keeps everything alive to burn out after a period of time. Doh!
 
I reckon he must have skipped a couple of important lectures on his "Lets build a universe" course.
 
Makes sense then why his "son" was a carpenter, he must have inherited the same quality of brains! LOL
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 10:24
Intelligent design is a subset of the teleological argument which basically says that the Universe is too complex to have happened by "natural" processes. Then a conclusion is made that the cause must be a designer.
 
This argument has holes all over it, but also has one strength, which is just how friggin' complex things actually are.
 
That why I love studying complexity and my personal crusade is I think all people who love science should study it too!
 
BTW, this argument is the one that appeals most to me.
 
 
The qualifications I always make is that these things imply "something more" but give only minor clues as to what the "something more" might be. And they certainly don't exclude the natural phenomenon that we observe.
 
And this is why I criticize those who limit themselves to strict empiricism or fundamentalism.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 11:22
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Though I am a firm  believer in evolution, I do not think that the simple mechanism of random mutation and natural selection is the only thing behind it. Jean has already pointed out that mutation is far from being random at all. Evolutionists usually all are quick to point out that evolution is not teleogenic at all. This is, however, not really true. Take the evolution of the eye: Once an organ that was capable of detecting light in whatever primitive matter it was almost inevitable that we would arrive at something like the modern eye. It is no coincidence that the eye of the octopus and the eye of us human beings are so similar, though they definitely developed independently. There is a limited number of options to increase its functionality. You may say "well, ok, but there is no spirit behind it", but how does one actually detect a spirit? How do you detect the spirit in a human being? Is it not true that you deduct the spirit of the person sitting on the other side of the table by its actions? The strange thing is that modern science does everything to deny such a spirit, no matter how much it appears to be there. For me this is just as close-minded as sticking word by word to what has been written in some holy book centuries ago. I see no contradiction in believing in science and in some kind of deity, and neither do may leading scientists, though most are not "relgious" in the common sense. But ask ANY scienctist, and they will tell you they feel a kind of awe at how the world is structured, an awe which is very close to a religious feeling. Scientists are usually not believers in any of the old religions, at least not in the literal sense. Perhaps what we need is a religion for the scientific age.

Did you read Dawkins book - especially the chapter about intelligent design?

The major argument against a designer "guiding evolution on its way" is that when you look closely at most of the most ingenious achievements of evolution, you see that they are usually textbook examples of bad design. The human eye, since you mention it, is a good example, with the retina placed facing inward, and the nerves on the inside of the eyeball, so that the light has to pass through the nerves in order to reach the receptor cells.
I have mentioned this before (man these multiple threads on the same subject are getting confusing...) but this design flaw in the human eye is corrected in the octopus eye. But even then the octopus eye is still not the pinnacle of eye evolution, the eye of the mantis shrimp is even "better".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 12:06
Maybe we should keep the biology stuff on this thread and the more religious stuff on the Theist / Agnostic / Atheist thread.
 
I'm not really sure why we needed a third simultaneous one, as I don't know that anything new that isn't in the T/A/A will be covered.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 12:17
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Though I am a firm  believer in evolution, I do not think that the simple mechanism of random mutation and natural selection is the only thing behind it. Jean has already pointed out that mutation is far from being random at all. Evolutionists usually all are quick to point out that evolution is not teleogenic at all. This is, however, not really true. Take the evolution of the eye: Once an organ that was capable of detecting light in whatever primitive matter it was almost inevitable that we would arrive at something like the modern eye. It is no coincidence that the eye of the octopus and the eye of us human beings are so similar, though they definitely developed independently. There is a limited number of options to increase its functionality. You may say "well, ok, but there is no spirit behind it", but how does one actually detect a spirit? How do you detect the spirit in a human being? Is it not true that you deduct the spirit of the person sitting on the other side of the table by its actions? The strange thing is that modern science does everything to deny such a spirit, no matter how much it appears to be there. For me this is just as close-minded as sticking word by word to what has been written in some holy book centuries ago. I see no contradiction in believing in science and in some kind of deity, and neither do may leading scientists, though most are not "relgious" in the common sense. But ask ANY scienctist, and they will tell you they feel a kind of awe at how the world is structured, an awe which is very close to a religious feeling. Scientists are usually not believers in any of the old religions, at least not in the literal sense. Perhaps what we need is a religion for the scientific age.
Albert Einstein had this feeling of awe which he explained in this quote:
 
"I said before, the most beautiful and most profound religious emotion that we can experience is the sensation of the mystical. And this mystically is the power of all true science. If there is any such concept as a God, it is a subtle spirit, not an image of a man that so many have fixed in their minds. In essence, my religion consists of a humble admiration for this illimitable superior spirit that reveals itself in the slight details that we are able to perceive with our frail and feeble minds."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 07 2009 at 12:42
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Though I am a firm  believer in evolution, I do not think that the simple mechanism of random mutation and natural selection is the only thing behind it. Jean has already pointed out that mutation is far from being random at all. Evolutionists usually all are quick to point out that evolution is not teleogenic at all. This is, however, not really true. Take the evolution of the eye: Once an organ that was capable of detecting light in whatever primitive matter it was almost inevitable that we would arrive at something like the modern eye. It is no coincidence that the eye of the octopus and the eye of us human beings are so similar, though they definitely developed independently. There is a limited number of options to increase its functionality. You may say "well, ok, but there is no spirit behind it", but how does one actually detect a spirit? How do you detect the spirit in a human being? Is it not true that you deduct the spirit of the person sitting on the other side of the table by its actions? The strange thing is that modern science does everything to deny such a spirit, no matter how much it appears to be there. For me this is just as close-minded as sticking word by word to what has been written in some holy book centuries ago. I see no contradiction in believing in science and in some kind of deity, and neither do may leading scientists, though most are not "relgious" in the common sense. But ask ANY scienctist, and they will tell you they feel a kind of awe at how the world is structured, an awe which is very close to a religious feeling. Scientists are usually not believers in any of the old religions, at least not in the literal sense. Perhaps what we need is a religion for the scientific age.

Did you read Dawkins book - especially the chapter about intelligent design?

The major argument against a designer "guiding evolution on its way" is that when you look closely at most of the most ingenious achievements of evolution, you see that they are usually textbook examples of bad design. The human eye, since you mention it, is a good example, with the retina placed facing inward, and the nerves on the inside of the eyeball, so that the light has to pass through the nerves in order to reach the receptor cells.
I have mentioned this before (man these multiple threads on the same subject are getting confusing...) but this design flaw in the human eye is corrected in the octopus eye. But even then the octopus eye is still not the pinnacle of eye evolution, the eye of the mantis shrimp is even "better".


Careful though with those words - "corrected" and "design flaw" could play into the hands of Creationists.Tongue
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