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Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
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Author | Topic: Basic Fundamentals of THE Debate (now open to anyone) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
This is simply the biggest pile of bull that I have ever read. Funny that you can't refute it then.
"It is a matter of explaining the evidence -- ALL the evidence." - Are you kidding? Are you telling me that science has an answer for everything? Please. Theory explains all the known evidence or the theory is not complete. That does NOT equate to the "answer for everything".
So if some evidence arises that seems to invalidate a theory, then the theory is automatically invalidated? Scientists should just give up on that theory and go on to something else? Let’s not investigate or attempt to figure out if it really does or not. Scientists deal with this kind of issue every day. Yes the theory - as stated - is invalidated until the new information is explained. This still means that ALL the information is explained by the theory or it is not complete. Sometimes the information can be explained in a manner consistent with the theory. Often it isn't and the theory is discarded. When it can't be explained the theory is invalidated. That IS how science works. When it can be explained in a manner consistent with the theory it is done by DEALING WITH THE EVIDENCE AND EXPLAINING IT not by ignoring it.
The earth is Young. That is what the evidence shows. Deal with it. There was a worldwide flood. That is what the evidence shows. Deal with it. You still have not dealt with the evidence that shows otherwise. Making this statement is not refutation, nor is it dealing with the issue. Rather it is blatant declaration of denial and a demonstration of your willingness to live in delusion rather than deal with the facts. I've presented evidence. You've presented opinion and denial. Neither of those refute the evidence presented. Enjoy. compare Fiocruz Genome and fight Muscular Dystrophy with Team EvC! (click) we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmericanOZen[Deist ... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ... to share.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
Edited by RAZD, : duplicate post deleted
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only You may recall that I introduced the Berkley definition and you had problems with it, so I’m familiar with what it says. Really. Let's see ... (pages up thread to where RAZD Message 9 quotes then answers Murk Message 8 ...):
The Berkeley series for “understanding evolution for teachers” An introduction to evolution - Understanding Evolution states that “the central idea of biological evolution is that all life on Earth shares a common ancestor . Through the process of descent with modification, the common ancestor of life on Earth gave rise to the fantastic diversity that we see documented in the fossil record and around us today. Evolution means that we're all distant cousins: humans and oak trees, hummingbirds and whales.” BZZZZZZTTTT!!! ... Error ... Error ... From the site you linked it clearly says:
quote: And this very clearly says that the definition is still the change in species over time. Again it is looking at the broad base of evidence of change in species over time -- long periods of time, but the essential mechanism involved is still change in species over time. This is sufficient to explain the evidence. What you quoted from is under Explanation and is getting into the theory of common descent, which is based on evolution (change in species over time), but notice the arrow at the side of each graphic and the words "Change through time" ... so we are still dealing with the definition of evolution as being the change in species over time. What I had "trouble" with was the fact that you misrepresented what Berkely said the definition was -- and did not even QUOTE the definition part that CLEARLY says evolution is the change in species over time. Stop misrepresenting the facts Murk.
I’ve refuted the rest in my latest post Re: Review. Again. (Message 53). Refuting means posting evidence, not reiterating your opinion. This is the heart of your response:
Message 53 The “degree” or amount of change is irrelevant. It is the KIND of change that is in question. The kind of change that we observe in Galapagos finches (and moths and whatever we observe today), is not the KIND of change that can change molecules into man. What you seem to fail to understand is that you ARE talking about the degree of change, whether you drag your feet kicking and screaming or not. You are talking about the differences in DNA between species, differences that are still due to mutation and selection (ie -change in species over time \ change in the frequency of alleles in a population \ descent with modification \ etc) and thus all you have is the degree of change in DNA.
However, I’ll re-iterate that changes in species that we observe today (frequency of alleles) will not add up to macro evolution no matter how many steps since it is not in the direction that evolution demands. Evolution is NOT directed, there is no such thing a a "direction that evolution demands" -- this is a creatortionist misrepresentation of evolution and does NOT deal with the SCIENCE. From Berkeley 101:
quote: Thus the site that you think I have problems with contradicts your mischaracterization of evolution and shows that you are NOT "familiar with what it says" ... here's another couple of tidbits:
quote: Now who does that sound like ... (1) RAZD: (evolution is the change in species over time) (2) Murk: (evolution must occur over billions of years and involves some other process) Pick one. Clue: evolution happens with every generation. The rest of your "argument" is nothing but your denial of evidence coupled with your incredulity - a classic argument from incredulity and a logical fallacy. Enjoy. GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only Edited by RAZD, : deleted superfluous phrase compare Fiocruz Genome and fight Muscular Dystrophy with Team EvC! (click) we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmericanOZen[Deist ... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ... to share.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only If that were how science is done, evolution would have been discarded long ago since there has been more that “one piece” of invalidating evidence from the very beginning and it is piling up into a mountain. Yet you fail to present any. Talk talk talk.
Remember the candle parable? Science is not done by parable. It is done by evidence theory testing and validation\invalidation. You can make up a parable to say anything. Interpretation involves all the evidence or it is at best incomplete. If it doesn't address the evidence that falsifies it then it is invalid. It does NOT depend on opinion.
Regarding the tree rings, I’ve already responded as much as time permits. When we get to the evidence I can respond in more detail. You can post a prolific single post regurgitating your position on definitions but can't post a single iota on tree rings. Talk talk talk.
I would prefer that we - 1) finish one debate before we go on to the next Then stop stonewalling and start dealing with the issues. Enjoy. GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only compare Fiocruz Genome and fight Muscular Dystrophy with Team EvC! (click) we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmericanOZen[Deist ... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ... to share.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only Micro-evolution is not accepted by creationists as being evolution, so there really isn’t any dividing line. Adaptation occurs, is observed and is a fact. Speciation occurs, is a result of adaptation and is also a fact. Biological evolution - CreationWiki, the encyclopedia of creation science
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quote: Speciation is evolution whether you like it or not: this is the way it is used in the science by the scientists in the field. You can try to call it something else but the only one you fool is yourself. Variation within a gene pool is also evolution, even if it has not reached the point of speciation - it is still a change in the frequency of alleles in a population, ie change in species over time. The process is on-going and continuous. Now you can either join other creationists with accepting microevolution as the process that leads up to and includes speciation OR you can continue to equivocate and stonewall with your own private interpretation of your fantasy world. It makes no difference to reality whether you do or not.
Biology is a science, which is respected and used by both creationists and evolutionists in supporting their contentions. The misapplication of that science to false interpretations of the evidence is where the disagreement lies between evolutionists and creationists. So stop with the false interpretations Murk. Accept evolution for what it is: descent with modification, change in the frequency of alleles in a population, change in species over time.
This is very strange thing to pin on creationist when evolutionists are the ones that have proposed PE to explain the lack of transitional forms in the fossil record. There is substantial disagreement whether punk eek is needed. Dawkins disagrees very strongly. There are also plenty of transitionals to show that evolution occurs - without needing punk eek. The foraminifera - Message 25 - are but one example of a plethora of such transitionals, Pelycodus - Message 50 - is another. Punk eek is just speciation, nothing more. A subspecies becomes genetically isolated from the main population, undergoes speciation, in the process acquires benefial mutations that make it more succesful (surviving and breeding) than the main population when it returns, so it spreads rapidly replacing the old population. It is very easy for a successful species to spread far from it's area of origin. Take starlings, introduced into the USA in New York in the early 1890's and spread to the west coast in 50 years (see Differential Dispersal Of Introduced Species - An Aspect of Punctuated Equilibrium for more). A blink of geological time. Fossil evidence of such a spread would show a "sudden" appearance of this species with no clue that it spread from New York. This is what the theory of punk eek proposes. Note that in the example I gave above of Pelycodus I also included two different "interpretations" of the fossil record, one for gradualistic change over time and one for punctuated equilibrium change. Both agree that it is evolution - change in species over time - and that the result is speciation.
"Punk Eek" interpretation "Gradual" interpretation The only disagreement is whether the speciation split from a common ancestor population occurred over ~500,000 years or ~900,000 years. It's a matter of degree, not a different kind of change.
... and then some sudden significant change occurs which transforms one kind of creature into the next. Punk eek makes no such claim about "significant" OR that anything magically "transforms" - this is your misunderstanding of punk eek as well as evolution in general and not at all what the theory says. Certainly there is no significant change or transformation in the Pelycodus lineage - unless you consider speciation a significant transformation. You need to stop misinterpreting what the science says, Murk.
So, let’s load the next one up and head out to the planet Jupiter. This of course, is no model of a biological system, and bears no real relation to evolution except in your fantasy world. One where parables about candles are science. Evolution is not concerned with getting in the front seat of a car to drive to jupiter, it is much more interested in getting into the back seat and having sex. If some great-great-great grandchild ends up having sex in the back seat of a car on jupiter it will be due to the evolution of the species, not the car.
However, it’s rather obvious that we DO need a different kind of change. Only in your fantasy world Murk. Pick any three species of your choice: what is the difference in DNA between two of those three species and how is it different than the difference between the other two sets of two species? What is it other than a matter of degree of difference in the arrangements of DNA? What is it that cannot be achieved by substitution of DNA sequences from one species into another? What is it that cannot be achieved equally by a species mutating to achieve those same sequences? What "different kind of change" is needed?
I am getting a little tired of repeating this ... Good. Now start addressing evolution instead of your false strawman fantasy that is NOT evolution.
... and I’m not sure why you don’t seem to understand this concept. Because you are NOT talking about evolution but some straw man fantasy version. One that involves cars flying to Jupiter and where parables are science. Note this article from talkorigins: CB902: Microevolution vs. Macroevolution
quote: The dividing line between "micro"evolution and "macro"evolution is speciation. The dividing line between science and your strawman fantasy is "supermacrofragilisticextra"evolution. Address the reality: change in species over time. Foraminifera, pelycodus, horses, humans, warblers, starlings and all. Enjoy. References:
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only compare Fiocruz Genome and fight Muscular Dystrophy with Team EvC! (click) we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmericanOZen[Deist ... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ... to share.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only One need only look at the many dating fiascoes that have occurred. The most modern human remains have been found in the oldest rock and the most primitive “hominids” have been found in the most recent beds. This evidence invalidates evolution. Document this. Making such wild assertions without providing the backup information is just wasting bandwidth. Here is your chance to actually substantiate a claim of yours with evidence instead of hot air.
Darwin himself said that the fossil record invalidated his theory. Document this. Quote mine taken out of context - typical creatortionista type of attack that has nothing to do with reality (or any effect on science). This is twice you've used this falshood recently. Please quote from the original source with page reference. Back up your assertion with evidence instead of hot air.
The coelacanth was once considered an index fossil of 70my old until it was discovered alive. What happened to all those samples that were dated at 70my? They could be any age at all since the fossil was still alive today. They still date to 70my. The Coelacanths today are different species than the many species of Coelacanths that lived 70 my ago. Those species are still index fossils. You do realize that Coelacanth is an ORDER not just a SPECIES don't you? Coelacanth - Wikipedia
quote: If you want to discuss dating accuracy and methods start with the tree ring data that shows a continuous age of over 12,000 years without any flood.
No! You so easily twist things around. A SINGLE example of an irreducibly complex system invalidates evolution because NO systems have been proven to have evolved. If it is irreducible to small steps then it CANNOT have evolved and MUST have been designed. Shouting denial is not a refutation. The evidence is in, and in one series of experiments an IC system was observed to evolve. It was a side effect of the experiment, but it was still what occurred. It is not a matter of "proof" it is a matter of evidence that shows that an IC system can and DID evolve. It is a FACT.
You are living in a dream world. Mutations have never been shown to add complexity and almost always result in degradation of something that was previously better. No matter how much hand waving you engage in Murk, it has evolved. Your denial of the evidence otherwise is just demonstration of your denial of reality. An IC system evolved. It is a FACT.
Your following refutation of IC is comical. There is more hand waving, outright lies, deception, misunderstanding and liberally biased nonsense then in most of your previous posts Yet you cannot demonstrate that this is the case, just make more wild assertions without ANY evidence to back you up. Your disbelief does not make an argument other that to document your incredulity. By the way: you accuse me of lying. This is a serious breach of forum protocols. Document this. As is failure to substantiate your argument with evidence when challenged to do so. Please substantiate your position with something OTHER than more hot air. Enjoy. GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only Edited by RAZD, : ypot compare Fiocruz Genome and fight Muscular Dystrophy with Team EvC! (click) we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmericanOZen[Deist ... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ... to share.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only Message 53 If we take a look at ALL the definitions that both you and I have referenced in this debate (48 of them) we can conclude the following: 71% stated directly or implied that new features, complexity or speciation is required as part of the theory of evolution. 58% stated directly or implied that evolution is responsible for the diversity of life we see today. 54% stated directly or implied that long periods of time are required (usually corresponding to the age of the earth, assumed to be billions of years old by evolutionists). 21% explicitly mention Billions or Millions of years 46% stated directly or implied the existence of a common ancestor 15% described it as a sequence of steps or events which tells me they were defining a process, not a theory. Only 25% said it was simply "change over time" (genetic or otherwise) It's not just "change over time" it is "change in species over time" - a subtle but significant difference. Let's evaluate parts of those claims. First we'll parse your 71% "statistic" -- we'll only use "stated directly" to avoid interpretations and we'll look at each part separately. We'll also only look in the definition and not in any discussion following the definition. (A) Development of a "new feature" is directly stated as being a required part of evolution(B) Added "complexity" is directly stated as being a required part of evolution (C) Speciation is directly stated as being a required part of evolution Then we'll compare that to definitions that use(D) Change in species over time, including change in frequency of alleles and descent with modification and other variations that are of equivalent meaning. Any that don't fit one of those categories I'll label (E)
That's your 6 references (3 of which can't be verified on-line) and my 38 (with duplicates ignored between several posts) for a total of 44 sources. Correct me if I missed any. Of these 44 sources:
Adding the (A) (B) and (C) values together I get 23% (not 71% so you are misrepresenting the facts again). Your lumping of "speciation" with "added complexity" and "development of new features" is curious and can only be interpreted as an attempt to inflate your position that there must be some substantial or significant change involved in evolution. This of course means that substantial and significant change does occur seeing as speciation is an observed occurrence - speciation is a fact of life. Doing this thus refutes your position. Adding "speciation" to "change in species over time" and you get 81% which is much more representative of WHY the definition of evolution is change in species over time (or change in the frequency of alleles in a population or descent with modification, or ... speciation). Here are some more I ran across while verifying each of the linked definitions above:
That's another 6 sources, all of which are (D)'s bringing the total to 37/50 = 74% for (D) alone and 42/50 = 84% for (D) + (C) = change in species over time, including speciation. Note that I provide the evidence for my calculation while you just post numbers. Feel free to check my numbers -- the evidence is there for all to see. Enjoy (1) In the first instance for this footnote you had tried to present the Berkeley definition as “the central idea of biological evolution is that all life on Earth shares a common ancestor . Through the process of descent with modification, the common ancestor of life on Earth gave rise to the fantastic diversity that we see documented in the fossil record and around us today. Evolution means that we're all distant cousins: humans and oak trees, hummingbirds and whales.” In fact the definition they gave is the one above and clearly labeled "definition"- THUS any definition you provided that cannot be verified is suspect, as you have been shown to willfully misrepresent the truth and only pick out what meets your interpretation of the definition no matter how far from the definition it is on the page. You have accused me of lying. This is the third time I have demonstrated that you have misrepresented the truth. GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only compare Fiocruz Genome and fight Muscular Dystrophy with Team EvC! (click) we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmericanOZen[Deist ... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ... to share.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only This is laughable. That is your refutation despite all of my valid arguments against this deceptive and nonsensical definition used simply to bolster you lies and ego? See Message 66 Second, this does not invalidate IC because a multipart (IC) system was not wiped out to begin with. Only 1 component of a multipart system was deleted. While this capability was restored, it utilized an almost identical pre-existing component to do it with. Experiments have repeatedly demonstrated that only a single step like this can be performed. Multiple “evolutionary” steps required to replace multiple (IC) missing components has NEVER been demonstrated. The concept of IC is that one part being removed renders the WHOLE inactive, therefore removing one part is ALL that is necessary to render the whole inoperative. The "almost identical pre-existing component" is a component that is STILL different and that must be modified to work - there must be a mutation that did not exist in the bacterial genome before to change that element. But that was not the only element that was needed for the whole new system to operate. There was a second mutation in a second component that then made a new different IC system. Remove one component of the new system and the whole fails to work: this is the definition of IC. The new system is an IC system and it did evolve. Case closed.
Multiple “evolutionary” steps required to replace multiple (IC) missing components has NEVER been demonstrated. False precept. The system evolved, it is IC and this precept and conclusions are invalidated.
Then you go on to hypocritically state that information loss is irrelevant, but information gain favors your position. So how is it that you can so confidently claim that information increases when there is no way to measure it? You can either measure it or you can’t. What I said was (1) YOU have no metric for establishing what the "information level" is for any species, therefore you cannot measure whether it increases or decreases, and (2) that in an instance like this where you have boundary condition {A}, remove a part (whether an IC component or wings), and then later boundary condition {A} is restored (by evolution), that either you must have an increase in information in one of the steps OR the concept of information is useless in determining what can and cannot evolve.
You are back to your strawman again. I have never made this claim. I have said that information is lost or re-shuffled, but not gained. I gave you two different instances where this boundary condition evaluation above shows either information increases OR is irrelevant to what evolution can and cannot accomplish. This invalidates "information" as a concept worth pursuing any further.
And here is Behe’s response ... Which is also refuted by Ken Miller:http://www.millerandlevine.com/km/evol/DI/AcidTest.html quote: You do realize that Behe admitted in court under oath that there is no such thing as an IC system that can't be explained by evolution don't you? It part of the Dover trial.
It’s also extremely important to realize that after all these experiments the result was still bacteria. Therefore, no evolution occurred (by definition). Grab at those straws and hold on tight Murk. There was a change in the species over time, there was a change in the frequency of alleles within the population: that IS evolution. It does not matter that speciation was not reached (the bacteria is still considered e-coli, although it is difficult to test for reproductive isolation eh). You cannot use your definition of evolution - use the one used in science or talk about something else Murk. See Message 66.
I’ve just demonstrated that there is a barrier, one that has been called “mount improbable” by Dawkins. Information gain is required. You've demonstrated that you just ignored evidence to the contrary.
Correct. It is not a definition; How much change? Enough to change one KIND of creature into another KIND. Speciation is an arbitrary classification. ... Notice that scientist differentiate cats into various species, ... ... it has never been observed, the fossil record does not support it and no amount of time will transform one kind into another. You are still dancing around the issue Murk, and you still have not defined it. You are still talking about a matter of degree, and you FAILED to comment on the issue of degree of difference between any two of three species at the DNA genetic level to show that there is some other "kind" of change necessary. All that is needed is mutation and natural selection. Change in species over time. The fossil record shows a dogish looking herbivorous animal* evolving into the modern horse - this is one of the ancestral species to modern horses: There are other examples in the fossil record. See Transitional Vertebrate Fossils FAQ: Part 1BPage not found | Skeptical Inquirer http://www.actionbioscience.org/evolution/benton2.html For some examples. Denial doesn't make them go away.
Here you go again. I wish you’d make up your mind. In a previous post you DENIED that change in species over time was a mechanism and now you state it is again. My bad. The mechanism is mutation (change to the genetic pool of alleles in a population) and natural selection (survival and sexual selection operating over time).
The evidence does not invalidate creation theory, only your interpretation does and your interpretation is false. THAT’S REALITY. I’ll talk more about it when you agree to finish our first topic on definitions. So far all you have presented is hot air and wasted bandwidth. So far your "alternate interpretation" has been shown to be a falsified interpretation. It will be interesting to see if you EVER get around to the issues. Enjoy. GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only Edited by RAZD, : "dog-like herbiverous animal" changed to "dogish looking herbivorous animal" compare Fiocruz Genome and fight Muscular Dystrophy with Team EvC! (click) we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmericanOZen[Deist ... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ... to share.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only I have said that information is lost or re-shuffled, but not gained. Information is in the genetic code. Take part one of this claim: "information is lost" (but not gained). To evaluate the validity of this claim we can look for an instance where there is a known loss of ability or feature: what should undeniably qualify as a loss of "information" regardless of how "information" is defined or measured. Then we look at following generations to see if the ability or feature is replaced. Two such examples have already been mentioned: (1) the walkingstick insects that evolved wings, lost wings and evolved wings, and (2) the e-coli bacteria where a gene for processing lactose was intentionally removed resulting in the loss of the ability to metabolize lactose, and that was then recovered by later generations that evolved a method to do so. There are three possible results of this:
Now take part two of this claim: "or (information is) reshuffled" (but not gained). So what is being "reshuffled"?
Information is in the genetic code. So this means that the genetic code - the DNA - is rearranged or arranged anew. In effect there is no limit to the rearrangement of the DNA that could result. One could theoretically take the DNA of a slug and "reshuffle" it to match the DNA of a capucin monkey and then use it to make a "clone" capucin monkey with today's technology. This is functionally and conceptually no different than random mutation producing any arrangement in the DNA of a species. If the functional and conceptual result of "reshuffling" is identical to the functional and conceptual result of random mutation then the two are functionally and conceptually identical. ie creationist "reshuffled" = evolution random mutation. If the "reshuffled" genetic code is subsequently selected for (by increased survival or reproductive ability), such that a lost feature is regained, then that feature has evolved by random mutation and natural selection. We are now back to either (1) or (2) in the first case discussed above, where the creationist concept of "information" (cannot be gained) is either falsified or rendered irrelevant to the discussion of what can and cannot evolve. And just as there is no limit to how much the genetic code can be "reshuffled" - mutated - there is no limit on what can evolve. Recap:
Conclusion: The creationist concept of "information" is either (1) intellectually useless and does not affect what can and cannot evolve, OR (2) refuted, falsified, invalidated and shown to be just plain wrong. Enjoy. GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only compare Fiocruz Genome and fight Muscular Dystrophy with Team EvC! (click) we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmericanOZen[Deist ... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ... to share.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only (added by edit) Notes: (1) this post just evaluates the information. If you want to skip over this, you can go to Message 73 where the data is summarized and the results discussed. (2) I've modified my definition slightly to be more specific about what kinds of change in species over time is involved: hereditary traits. This was implied before, especially with reference to the other variations - descent with modification, change in the frequency of alleles in populations over generations, etc. I've done this to be consistent with the scientific definitions of biological evolution used by Berkeley and the UofMich. See Message 73. I've also added the factor of {heredity} to the evaluation to be consistent with the other factors. Modifications are in pink below. Enjoy. First, I have already demonstrated that 82% of the definitions “sound like” my definition. No you just claimed it. You did NOT provide any demonstration of it at all in any previous post. Only after I posted my evaluation did you bother to provide an accounting of your evaluation. We will now turn to that, seeing as you are wanting to only discuss definitions now. I'll note at the start that you are still misrepresenting the evidence. When an encyclopedia or article on evolution is cited, you don't search for where they say what you want to say and claim that is part of the definition - you look for the definition ("evolution is ...") statement and stop when they start discussing the application of that to the evidence. Likewise when a dictionary definition is used and there is an entry for "biol." then that is the entry to use (they are talking about the biology definition not the general definition).
(ABC) - Development of new features, complexity, speciation, responsibility for all the diversity of life or a common ancestor is included in the definition. This qualifies the type of change involved as molecules to man evolution since change in species over time is vague, confusing and requires explanation. How is a species NOT changed by the development of a new feature? How is a species NOT changed by becoming a new species? How is a species NOT changed by a change in complexity? No, Development of new features IS change in species over time, Speciation IS change in species over time, Complexity IS change in species over time. You lump these together with other elements to misrepresent the definition given and misrepresent your results. This kind of misrepresentation falsifies your accounting before you begin.
(D) - Change in species over time, including change in frequency of alleles and descent with modification and other variations (although these are not equivalent) is the ONLY part of the definition with no other explanation that includes ABC or F. These are equivalent, as I have pointed out and used them several times to make just that point. Furthermore, not counting "change in species over time" when it is also included in any other definition presents a false misrepresentative under counting of it in the numbers of definitions.
Message 17: And the definition of evolution as used in biological science is change in species over time, or some variation on that theme (change in frequency of alleles etc). It is also the definition universally accepted as demonstrated above.
Message 32: Speciation IS evolution.
You need to get the point of understanding that if you are arguing against evolutionary biology you WILL USE the definitions of evolutionary biology OR you are arguing against SOMETHING ELSE. The "real" definition of evolution is the one evolutionary biology uses: simply stated it is change in species over time (or some more complex variation on that theme, like change in frequency of alleles within populations in succeeding generations etc). The list above confirms this. Message 46: The Galapagos finches example is still a "genetic difference in organisms from generation to generation" because the frequency of the alleles for the different sized beaks changes within the population, first towards larger more robust beaks and then back to smaller slender beaks. In each case there were existing genes within the population for natural selection to operate on when one type was favored over the other for survival. Yes this is evolution, it just has not been "captured" by the process of speciation yet. This is change in species over time at the sub-species level.
Message 48: Evolution is change (modification) in species (population) over time (generations = descent). The amount of change possible is related to the amount of time available.
Within one generation the amount of change possible in a population of a species is a shift in the frequency of alleles within that population. Some alleles are added (mutation), some are eliminated (death before reproduction), and some are more numerous than before while others are less numerous (drift or selection). Change from generation to generation is sometimes additive -- resulting in a trend -- and sometimes revertive -- fluctuating about a basic pattern. Message 50: Nonetheless, what we have here is "micro"evolution with a speciation event that divides a population of primates into two daughter populations, each of which will continue to evolve by "change in species over time" within their respective populations -- by "micro"evolution.
In all cases (before and after) evolution proceeds in response to selection pressure for survival and breeding. The mechanism by which this is realized is still "micro"evolution - the change is species over time - within each population. Variation and selection. Change in the frequency of alleles within a population. Adaptation and selection. Pelycodus is an example of non-arbitrary speciation of one species into two - related - species. The process of that speciation is in accordance with the working definition of "micro"evolution given above. Message 55: Evolution IS the change in species over time ... whether it is stated as "descent with modification" (Darwin) OR the "change in the frequency of alleles in a population" OR similar.
By evolution. By mutation and selection. By change in species over time. By the change in the frequency of alleles in a population. Message 59: What you seem to fail to understand is that you ARE talking about the degree of change, whether you drag your feet kicking and screaming or not. You are talking about the differences in DNA between species, differences that are still due to mutation and selection (ie -change in species over time \ change in the frequency of alleles in a population \ descent with modification \ etc) and thus all you have is the degree of change in DNA.
Message 63: Speciation is evolution whether you like it or not: this is the way it is used in the science by the scientists in the field. You can try to call it something else but the only one you fool is yourself. Variation within a gene pool is also evolution, even if it has not reached the point of speciation - it is still a change in the frequency of alleles in a population, ie change in species over time. The process is on-going and continuous. So stop with the false interpretations Murk. Accept evolution for what it is: descent with modification, change in the frequency of alleles in a population, change in species over time. So when I say
Message 66: Then we'll compare that to definitions that use (D) Change in species over time, including change in frequency of alleles and descent with modification and other variations that are of equivalent meaning. It is not a new claim but a consistent one that has been carried throughout the debate on my part. I also said:
First we'll parse your 71% "statistic" -- we'll only use "stated directly" to avoid interpretations and we'll look at each part separately. We'll also only look in the definition and not in any discussion following the definition. And yet you still go and add back other parts into your evaluation that ARE part of the discussion and not the definition. That is misrepresenting what is the definition in those discussions. You do this again here even when it has already been pointed out as false misrepresentation of the definitions involved. The most blatant one of these is the Berkeley one. Let's cut to the chase: the disagreement is over whether "change in species over time" is a complete definition of the scientific theory.
Those other things are clearly included because “Change in species over time” cannot stand on its own and is not a statement of the theory of evolution, only an observation which could mean literally ANYTHING. I suspect that some of the people responsible for posting a bogus “CISOT only” definition in these references may either have their own political, theological or materialistic biases, have been swayed by evolutionist propaganda or simply copied unintentionally from another incorrect definition. Or they are just really using the scientific definition, and YOUR bias and misconceptions are hindering your understanding of the evidence.
So here are the correct classifications of the definitions. Definitions or parts of definitions in another color is what you left out. So let's take them one at a time, focus on the definition that best represents the scientific definition that would be used in biology and see where that leads us. We will also look at whether the definition essentially consists of "change is species over time" (including change in the frequency of alleles, descent with modification, or the like), or whether some other element is seen as necessary. We will start with: (R) = "change in species over time" (and variations previously noted) OR(X) = something else is said and "change in species over time" is NOT included at all in the definition I will post the text that applies plus other definitions and discussions down to where you add your elements so that all can see their relationships. Within these I will highlight in yellow what I feel is the definition part of these that applies to this debate. I will also highlight in orange what you added in your "evaluation" of the definitions.
(1) Dictionary.com Evolution Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com 3.Biology. change in the gene pool of a population from generation to generation by such processes as mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift. (D) We agree on this one. Just for reference we'll also look at the total definition given:
quote: Note that the only definition that applies to biological evolution is the one listed as "biology" ...
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(2) Wikipedia.org Evolution - Wikipedia In biology, evolution is the change in the heritable traits of a population over successive generations, as determined by shifts in the allele frequencies of genes. Over time, this process can result in speciation, the development of new species from existing ones. All contemporary organisms are related to each other through common descent, the products of cumulative evolutionary changes over billions of years. Evolution is the source of the vast biodiversity on Earth, including the many extinct species attested in the fossil record.[1][2] (ABC) (F) Going again to the source (especially seeing as this one has changed again):
quote: After the highlighted part is discussion of this definition and application of it.
(R) (D-) (H+) (3) Encarta Encyclopedia http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761554675/Evolution.html Evolution, in biology, complex process by which the characteristics of living organisms change over many generations as traits are passed from one generation to the next. The science of evolution seeks to understand the biological forces that caused ancient organisms to develop into the tremendous and ever-changing variety of life seen on Earth today. It addresses how, over the course of time, various plant and animal species branch off to become entirely new species, and how different species are related through complicated family trees that span millions of years. (ABC) (F) quote: After the highlighted part is discussion of this definition and application of it. We can argue over whether "many generations" is a lot of time, but this is also what we see with breeding of animals - that it takes many generations - so I can't see this as being a requirement for deep time.
(R) (M-)(G+) (S-) (H-) (4) Lexicon http://www.lexicon-biology.com/biology/definition_45.html Evolution is the process that has led to the appearance and transformation of living species on earth. The first living beings - undoubtedly very rudimentary cells , algae, or bacteria - appeared 3.8 billion years ago. Since then, life forms have diversified and adapted to their environments. All living species today have, therefore, the same origin. (ABC) (F) Going again to the full listing:
quote: Appearance of living species would be the descent of living species from (no longer living) ancestors. Transformation of living species would be change from those ancestors. The separation line clearly distinguishes between the definition part and a discussion of that definition. The further discussion on the second page also clearly shows what they mean.
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(5) Berkely U An introduction to evolution - Understanding Evolution (the real definition(1))Biological evolution, simply put, is descent with modification. This definition encompasses small-scale evolution (changes in gene frequency in a population from one generation to the next) and large-scale evolution (the descent of different species from a common ancestor over many generations). Evolution helps us to understand the history of life . The central idea of biological evolution is that all life on Earth shares a common ancestor . Through the process of descent with modification, the common ancestor of life on Earth gave rise to the fantastic diversity that we see documented in the fossil record and around us today. (ABC) (F) It kind of amazes me that you repeat this misrepresentation after it has already been uncovered in previous posts and repeated as evidence of such on your part.
quote: Note the selective picking of elements that fit your preconceived notion of what the definition is rather than looking for what the article says is the definition: this is blatant misrepresentation of the definition here. After the highlighted part is discussion of this definition and application of it to the evidence ("one generation to the next" or "descent of different species from a common ancestor over many generations"). The following "explanation" part then specifies "descent through genetic inheritance" and applies this to the whole fossil record as we know it. It discusses the application back to a first common ancestor, but the definition is "simply put" ...
(R) (G-) (S+) (D-) (A-) (H-) (6) Modern Biology, Its Conceptual Foundations” by Elof Axel Carlson evolution: a theory of complexity in the organization of life from the origins of life to the present with the premise that all life is related by common descent to the first forms of life on earth. (ABC) (F) I have this on order for my library. Until I see it I take your presentation with a grain of salt. Tentatively (until verified), this involves change in species over time, plus a single common ancestor
{added by edit} I now have this book from the library. What you have is the definition in the glossary, which also lists the pages where this is discussed:
quote: Looking at these (briefly), p 6 is the introduction and it discusses the difference between fact and theory, p 229 is the start of Section V: Evolution, and it discusses some of the historical theories, p 257 discusses "recapitulation" and the study of heredity in germ-cells, p 260 discusses the random probability distribution of mutations and a tendency for statis in stable environments, change in unstable environments, p 264 discusses 3 competing theories of evolution, p 267 says evolution is an application of basic scientific processes, and p319 involves a study of the changes in hemoglobin between humans and other apes. In none of those references is the descent from a single common ancestor at the origins of life necessary to the discussion of evolution. (R) (O+) (A+)
(7) Barnes and Noble Thesaurus of Biology evolution: the process by which more complex forms of life have arisen from simpler forms over millions of years (ABC) (F) The full entry:
quote: This is still change in species over time. The change from simpler to more complex is still change. Millions of years is also only the time span for the evolution of Homo sapiens from Homo habilis, not that significant in the total evolutionary picture. This also does not relate to the different rates of evolution for different species, some of which go through many generations in a matter of weeks.
(R) (M+) (C+) (H-) (8) Concise Dictionary of Biology (Oxford University Press) Defines evolution as “The gradual process by which the present diversity of plant and animal life arose from the earliest and most primitive organisms, which is believe to have been continuing for at least the past 3000 million years.” (ABC) (F) This one is not available from my library, so I'll have to wait until I can get to the big city. Until then I will also take this presentation from you with a grain of salt. Tentatively (until verified), this involves change in species over time, plus an early common ancestor
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(9) U of Michigan Evolution and Natural Selection The university of Michigan teaches that Darwin's theory of evolution has four main parts: 1) Organisms have changed over time 2) All organisms are derived from common ancestors 3) Change is gradual and slow, taking place over a long time and 4) The mechanism of evolutionary change was natural selection (ABC) (F) This one gets a little long ... and I've left out some parts.
quote: This is a discussion of Darwin's theory of evolution and not the modern science one. Furthermore, the summary section would list the elements that are critical to it, and that summary is all about "change in species over time" ... But that is not all: the previous lesson in the series has the current scientific definitions: The Process of Speciation
quote: Both of those definitions of biological evolution involve "change in species over time" and that is what the University of Michigan really teaches as the definitions of evolution. You completely ignore the definitions listed for evolution and go on until you can find something - anything - that meets your false misconception of what the definition should be. This is not the way honest research is done.
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(10) American Heritage Dictionary Bartleby.com: 3. Biology. a. Change in the genetic composition of a population during successive generations, as a result of natural selection acting on the genetic variation among individuals, and resulting in the development of new species. b. The historical development of a related group of organisms; phylogeny. 1. A gradual process in which something changes into a different and usually more complex or better form. (ABC) (F) Here you go mixing non-scientific definitions with the scientific one. We will look at this the same way we looked at definition #(1) above:
quote: Note that, as for definition #(1) above, the only definition that applies to biological evolution is the one listed as "biology" ... and it's relation to phylogeny. The one you added is very general and does NOT apply to biology.
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(11) American Heritage Stedman's Medical Dictionary: Evolution Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com 2. The theory that groups of organisms change with passage of time, mainly as a result of natural selection, so that descendants differ morphologically and physiologically from their ancestors. (D) Again we agree, but we will still look at this the same way we looked at definition #(1) above:
quote: The second definition applies to biology.
(R) (12) Merriam-Webster's Dictionary: Evolution Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster c (1) : a process of continuous change from a lower, simpler, or worse to a higher, more complex, or better state. 4 a : the historical development of a biological group (as a race or species). 4 b : a theory that the various types of animals and plants have their origin in other preexisting types and that the distinguishable differences are due to modifications in successive generations (ABC) (F) Again we will look at this the same way we looked at definition #(1) above:
quote: Note that, as for definition #(1) above, the only definition that applies to biological evolution are the ones listed as 4a phylogeny and 4b theory ... of change in species over time ... and the one you added is about GROWTH, not evolution. Another blatant misrepresentation.
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(13) Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary: Evolution Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com 1: a process of change in a certain direction. 2 a : the historical development of a biological group (as a race or species) : PHYLOGENY 2 b : a theory that the various types of animals and plants have their origin in other preexisting types and that the distinguishable differences are due to modifications in successive generations. (ABC) (F) And again ...
quote: The second (and yes we can use both parts - similar to previous definitions) applies to the biological process. The first definition applies to the development of disease - cancer - and not to the evolution of organisms. Note also that a direction of change could be from {A} to {B} or from {B} to {A} in the first definition.
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(14) Wordnet Evolution Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com 2. (biology) the sequence of events involved in the evolutionary development of a species or taxonomic group of organisms (ABC) Again the full definitions list:
quote: This is still change in species over time. Compare this to the UMich definitions.
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(15) Encarta Dictionary http://encarta.msn.com/dictionary_/Evolution.html 1. biology theory of development from earlier forms: the theoretical process by which all species develop from earlier forms of life. According to this theory, natural variation in the genetic material of a population favors reproduction by some individuals more than others, so that over the generations all members of the population come to possess the favorable traits. 2. biology developmental process: the natural or artificially induced process by which new and different organisms develop as a result of changes in genetic material (ABC) Again the full listing:
quote: Descent with modification, changes in alleles within populations, change in species over time ...
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(16) The Compact Oxford English Dictionary Oxford Languages | The Home of Language Data 1 the process by which different kinds of living organism are believed to have developed, especially by natural selection. (ABC) The full listing:
quote: This doesn't really describe what is going on or what the process is. Is it change in species over time or something else? We can't really tell from this (too concise?). They also list a number of other links for comparison. So I also looked up "evolve" with this result:
quote: And "speciation" ...
quote: And "Darwinism" ...
quote: And "develop" ...
quote: Develop over successive generations, the formation of new and distinct species, by natural selection, the process by which different kinds of living organism start to exist ... I don't see anything in this that is NOT change in species over time.
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(17) Cambridge Dictionary Cambridge Dictionary | English Dictionary, Translations & Thesaurus the way in which living things change and develop over millions of years, or a gradual process of change and development: Darwin's theory of evolution. (ABC) (F) The full listing:
quote: We have two choices - change in species over time (millions of years is the time span for the evolution of Homo sapiens from Homo habilis), OR change in species over time (a gradual process). This later one means that "millions of years" is not a necessary component of the definition.
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(18) Wiktionary evolution - Wiktionary 2. (biology) The change in the genetic composition of a species' population over successive generations. 1. A gradual process of development, formation, or growth, esp. one leading to a more advanced or complex form. (ABC) Again ...
quote: Do I need to say it? You even omitted where it said "(general)" in your misrepresentation of the definition. Do you really think this is valid?
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(19) Wordsmyth Dictionaries and vocabulary tools for English language learners | Wordsmyth 1. the continuous modification and adaptation of organisms to their environments through selection, hybridization, and the like. 2. The theory or study that describes this process as the cause of species' existence and characteristics. 3. a gradual process of change and development that something goes through, usu. becoming more complex and sometimes better. (ABC) Again ...
quote: Electronic weaponry is NOT biological evolution, thus this 3rd definition is general and does not apply to biological evolution.
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(20) infoplease evolution: Meaning and Definition of | Infoplease 3. Biol. change in the gene pool of a population from generation to generation by such processes as mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift. (D) Another one where we agree, but still the full listing is:
quote: And as before
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(21) Ultralingua Online Dictionary http://www.ultralingua.com/onlinedictionary/ The sequence of events involved in the evolutionary development of a species or taxonomic group of organisms; theory of evolution n. A scientific theory of the origin of species of plants and animals (ABC) The listing for evolution:
quote: The listing for "evolve"
quote: The listing for "theory of evolution" quote:
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only To be blunt however, this debate is overall becoming a colossal waste of time, ... Not for me. I've barely touched the surface of the information available. Nor has anything you've provided caused any concern.
First, your tone from the very beginning of this debate has been inflammatory and it has only gotten worse as we have proceeded. Truth hurts. Facts that contradict beliefs are hard to accept, and I can't sugarcoat the facts for you. You can choose to accept them, you can show how they fit an alternative explanation (not just claim this to be the case), or you can choose to deny them, depending on how committed you are to maintaining your beliefs in the face of this evidence.
Your posts are largely littered with false and unsubstantiated claims, misrepresentations and continual accusations of denial, delusion, living in fantasy worlds and other uncalled for attacks and abusive, goading and belittling language. Yet I have provided substantiation for all my points while you have provided none. The lists of references at the ends of posts are not just for window dressing. I have also substantiated where I have claimed you misrepresent the information, and you have not done that for a single claim. Claims are easy to make.
I suspect, as is common with evolutionists, that this is because you have lost the argument a long time ago and there is nothing left than to use this obvious debate tactic. One wonders what evidence you base this conclusion on.
Second, I never intended this debate to go on forever. Again, I have other things I would like to do with my life other than debate you. In addition, I’d like to read or participate in other topics that may not have been explored. Whether you wish to believe it or not, I am telling you again that my intention and my understanding was that we were only to address the definitions in this debate. I think this is undeniably clear from the very beginning based on all of my comments and arguments. From Message 8 (your first post on this thread) - just the headings used, you can review the comments made below them. I don't see a single one of those that you did NOT want to address:
(1) Response to Definitions Additional Responses (2) The age of the Earth (3) What evolution “says” (4) “Information” (5) Creationists did it first Also from Message 1 Personally I would like to start with his First point(1) Definitions, but I wouldn’t want to miss (2) The age of the Earth or (4) Information either. We would probably cover (3) What evolution says in the discussion of (1). (5) Creationists did it first is contentious and less important, so I think we could dispatch that one pretty quickly by clearing up some misunderstandings. Thus it is very clear to me that at the start you wanted to discuss these other topics as much as you wanted to address the issue of definitions. You can move the goal posts and back down if you want to, but it will be your choice to do so.
However, I feel the most compelling is simply this: A: Change in species over time is a FACT B: Change from one kind to another kind has never been observed and is NOT a fact. To define evolution as A and then imply B is a fact is not only a logical fallacy, but is dishonest and meant not only to deceive the public but to delude oneself. I've said before that your real issue is not with evolution. It is with the extent of time available for it and the concept of common ancestor being carried back to the first known evidence of life on this planet. In addition, you refuse to define "kind" and refuse to address the issue of defining "micro"evolution as (A) and "macro"evolution as (B) to see where the evidence leads, nor have you providing some kind of usable definition for (B). All you've done is waffle on the issue:
Message 67
#1 - Start with Macro Evolution: Where have you been? I’ve been defining macro evolution since this debate began. What is your definition of "macro"evolution?
Macro-evolution is not about just any change in species over time. We’re talking about the kind of change that can change one kind of organism into another. And that’s my point. There IS no mechanism that can account for that type of change.
This is not a definition of "macro"evolution, it is claiming that {something else that is totally undefined} happens. Do you think that the fact that there is "no mechanism" for what you think "macro"evolution is could be a CLUE that your concept of "macro"evolution is false? How much change and in what time-frame? In one sense this occurs at the moment of speciation: one species has become another. They no longer interbreed because they are different. Or do you need the accumulated change from, say, two speciation events
How much change? Enough to change one KIND of creature into another KIND. All you've done is try to redefine evolution as "macro"evolution, defined that with some undefined and variable parameter ("kind") subject to change at whim and then insisted that it is something different from what evolution actually is - as used by scientists. You just don't seem to understand that if you don't use the definitions used by science, that then you are not discussing the science but something else. Disproving a "fantasy evolution" has no effect on scientific evolution. Let me be very specific, your claim here that "My concept of macroevolution is TRUE specifically because there is no mechanism that can account for it" is a logical fallacy, and actually proof that it is a straw-man argument and inherently INVALID -- there is no scientific mechanism for it because you are NOT addressing what the science is addressing but something of your imagining. This is what a straw man argument means. Science is based on testable mechanisms and theories, NOT wishful thinking. Your insistence on including some nebulous concept that is not present in any scientific discussion of evolution shows that you are NOT discussing the science of evolution but some other concept that even you cannot define sufficiently to evaluate it;s validity or applicability. You can't redefine evolution as something that doesn't exist within the science and then claim that it's non-existence is proof that evolution is not true. There is no (B) in the science of evolution as you use it, there is only (A) and the accumulated effect of it over time. The longer you go back in time the more accumulated effect you have. I have said before that your argument is NOT with evolution, (A), but with the long age of the earth and the concept of common ancestor. You insist that long periods of time are integral to the definition of evolution. I present evidence for the age of the earth to show that this is part of reality that you cannot just wave away as irrelevant. You proceed to wave it away as irrelevant. You say you have an argument to refute the ages shown by the tree rings but refuse to present it or substantiate your claim in any way. This is YOU not addressing the issue YOU raise.
Message 67 You still have totally failed to address the issue of the evidence that shows (1) no world wide flood for over 12,000 years (minimum) and (2) the earth is OLDER than any YEC model.
The evidence does not invalidate creation theory, only your interpretation does and your interpretation is false. THAT’S REALITY. I’ll talk more about it when you agree to finish our first topic on definitions. The evidence invalidates a YEC model and this makes it pointless to discuss any part of a YEC model or any hypothesis based on it. It is falsified. That's reality. And yet you provide no alternative "interpretation" that fully explains the evidence. You fail to substantiate your assertion. You also refuse to use "change in species over time" as even a working definition for "micro"evolution and see where the argument goes with the evidence. I present evidence for the change in species over time with the foraminifera to show that change in species over time does occur. You proceed to wave it away as irrelevant, saying that "flood sorting" caused the pattern. You also refuse to show (substantiate) how a flood can sort the different layers of foraminifera within the consistent layers of sediment in such a way that the layers of foraminifera show the progress of evolution AND while the density of foraminifera skeletons is different from the density of the sediment AND while the foraminfera skeletons have different densities within each layer. In other words you refuse to really confront the evidence that "flood sorting" is totally inadequate as an explanation for the evidence. Nor do you address AT ALL the evidence for evolution within the foraminifera. I present evidence for the change in species over time with Pelycodus to show that change in species over time is sufficient to cause speciation - in the fossil record as well as in current observations of such occurrences. What is your response? That you don't want to discuss the evidence - that demonstrate the validity of the scientific definitions - until after the definitions have been agreed on.
Message 67 In what time frame? Scientists say billions of years to create the diversity of life we see today from a common ancestor, but that’s only the theory. In reality, it has never been observed, the fossil record does not support it and no amount of time will transform one kind into another. Again, bare assertion without any substantiation. You have shown absolutely no mechanism that prevents change at any level. Saying something doesn't occur doesn't stop it from occurring, and saying it is not in the fossil record is ignoring evidence in the fossil record of it occurring - as demonstrated by formaminifer and Pelycodus. Of course you can always dodge by redefining "kind" as needed to suit.
Having said that, let me respond specifically to some of the comments in your most recent posts.
[A] Theory explains all the known evidence or the theory is not complete. . When it can't be explained the theory is invalidated.
You are talking in circles again. Is the theory “not complete” or is it “invalidated” when things cannot be explained? I’ll repeat my prior question. Are you trying to tell me that evolutionists have a watertight explanation for all of the evidence regarding evolutionary theory? Here you go misquoting and misrepresenting again.
Message 57 Please. Theory explains all the known evidence or the theory is not complete. That does NOT equate to the "answer for everything". (Color for emPHAsis), and:
Message 57 So if some evidence arises that seems to invalidate a theory, then the theory is automatically invalidated? Scientists should just give up on that theory and go on to something else? Let’s not investigate or attempt to figure out if it really does or not.
Scientists deal with this kind of issue every day. Yes the theory - as stated - is invalidated until the new information is explained. This still means that ALL the information is explained by the theory or it is not complete. Sometimes the information can be explained in a manner consistent with the theory. Often it isn't and the theory is discarded. The "information that seems to invalidate a theory" is not incomplete information but contradictory information:
Message 49 An alternative explanation confronts and deals with the evidence, it shows HOW it came to be and HOW it supports your position. It confronts and deals with the evidence that contradicts the concept or it relinquishes the field. There can be evidence FOR any possible conclusion you want to reach - even that the earth is the center of the universe and that the sun orbits it. The real issue is dealiing with the evidence that INVALIDATES the conclusion -- that is what science does. The young earth and WWF concepts are invalidated by the evidence. It is not a matter of an alternative interpretation, it is a matter of explaining the evidence -- ALL the evidence. Without confronting the evidence that invalidates both the young earth model and the WWF concept all you are doing is ignoring evidence, not "interpreting" it. Any scientist that does not deal with the evidence that DOES invalidate their theory is not doing science, and will quickly be cut to shreds by his peers. Cold Fusion. Thus YOU are attempting to change my comment concerning contradictory evidence to one concerning incomplete evidence by your misrepresentation of what was said, using "..." to completely ignore that a new and different point was being discussed. That is a flagrant misrepresentation.
When it can be explained in a manner consistent with the theory it is done by DEALING WITH THE EVIDENCE AND EXPLAINING IT not by ignoring it.
Then why do evolutionists ignore the evidence? And yet you fail to present any examples to substantiate this assertion. How can one "ignore" non-existent evidence?
This is nonsense. You are misrepresenting what evolution is and again missing the point. That evolution has no direction is an evolutionista misrepresentation of evolution and does NOT deal with the SCIENCE. Mechanisms such as adaptation (change within kinds) may not be directed, but evolution MUST be. Why murk? Why MUST it be? Because only then does if fit your straw-man misrepresentation of what evolution is? All evolution requires is that species continue to survive and reproduce, that as conditions change that those variations that are best able to deal with the changes will continue to survive and reproduce, or they go extinct. What direction is that? Big beaks, small beaks, and back: what direction is that?
Darwin himself said that the fossil record invalidated his theory. Document this. Quote mine taken out of context - typical creatortionista type of attack that has nothing to do with reality (or any effect on science). This is twice you've used this falshood recently. Please quote from the original source with page reference. Back up your assertion with evidence instead of hot air. It’s hard for me to believe that you would deny that Darwin recognized the inadequacy of the fossil record. It is a typical evolutionista tactic to accuse their opponents of quote mining in order to deny reality. This should wait until we finish with definitions, but perhaps I can use it to reflect on some pertinent issues. So let’s take a look at Darwin’s own words from the origin of species 1st edition, 1859. Not ONE of your quotes says that the fossil record invalidates his theory. That is what you were specifically requested to substantiate, you haven't, and the conclusion is that you can't. You asserted something that is false. You misrepresented what Darwin said. This also has no bearing on the validity of evolution: the fossil record is now much more complete than it was, we have evidence from the foraminifer of just the kind of long term gradual evolution that Darwin proposed, we also have the genetic information. You are clutching at straws, making straw man arguments.
In any case, I DID NOT accuse you of lying Message 64 Your following refutation of IC is comical. There is more hand waving, outright lies, deception, misunderstanding and liberally biased nonsense then in most of your previous posts Caught again.
Again, you are the one in denial of the evidence and of reality. It DID NOT evolve and I have soundly shown that this is the case with solid reasoning. No wild assertions were necessary except by you. No all you did was assert that you had. The bacteria had a part of an IC system removed - thus rendering it inoperative in accordance with the definition of IC. The bacteria then evolved a second system that replaced the first - it did not repair it or just replace the missing element, but evolved a new IC system - one where removing one of the elements would also render it inoperative in accordance with the definition of IC. To refute this you need to show that either (a) it did not evolve or (b) is not an IC system. You have done neither.
There is hardly a story on Coelacanth that doesn’t call it a “living fossil”, virtually identical to ones found in the fossil record. This does not change the fact that this modern fish is still a different species from the ancient ones used to verify dates in sediments.
Apparently we need to talk more about this and other issues regarding evidence one at a time. However, as I’ve said repeatedly this is not the time or manner in which they should be discussed. Another dodge.
In the meantime, the topic of definitions has not been completed. I’m officially making the decision now that I will not go into detail on any evidence regardless of how much goading and name calling you may do until we finish our first topic. You still have not documented any name-calling. You still refuse to move off the pot on definitions. You still refuse to address the evidence.
It has been proved that fossils can form quickly. Where? Document this assertion please. That would include providing evidence for it. Enjoy. GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only compare Fiocruz Genome and fight Muscular Dystrophy with Team EvC! (click) we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmericanOZen[Deist ... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ... to share.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only Message 70 So the facts are in again - out of 50 definitions, only 9 (18%) of them define evolution using ONLY some variation of your deceptive slogan “change in species over time”. The others (82%) almost universally specify the type of change by including increased complexity, or responsibility for all diversity of life or significant speciation or some variation of my definition (not 23%, so you are misrepresenting the facts again). In addition, 27 (54%) include long periods of time, often mentioning billions or millions of years. The definitions were reviewed again to show that MurkyWaters was misrepresenting some arguments and counting definitions that did not apply to biological evolution. All the definitions that included "change in species over time" (with variations) were then counted. Every factor that Murkywaters lists as a part of the definition were also then individually counted (with variations), just as change in species over time was individually counted (with variations) -- for the number of times they appeared in any of the actual definitions (but NOT in discussions of the application of the theory nor in the more general definitions). The data for the analysis can be found in Message 71. These are the results:
"Change in species over time" is a required part of the definition of evolution theory 100% of the time. "Speciation" (change) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (21/54) = 39% of the time. "Generation to Generation" (time) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (17/54) = 31% of the time. "Higher Taxons" (change) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (8/54) = 15% of the time. "Diversity" (change) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (4/54) = 7% of the time. "Inherited traits" (heredity) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (3/54) = 6% of the time. "Origin of Life" (heredity) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (3/54) = 6% of the time. "Complexity" (change) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (3/54) = 6% of the time. "Common Ancestor" (heredity) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (2/54) = 4% of the time. "Many Generations" (time) is a required part of evolution theory (1/54) = 2% of the time. "Long Periods of Time" (time) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (1/54) = 2% of the time "Millions of years" (time) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory ((1/2)/54)= 1% of the time. "Billions of years" (time) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (0/54) = 0% of the time. "New Features" (change) is a required part of the definition of evolution theory (0/54) = 0% of the time. Lumping "Billions of years", "Millions of years", "Long Periods of Time" and "Many Generations" together (time) only gets to (2.5/54) = 5%, so therefore long time is NOT a required universal element of the theory of evolution. "Generation to Generation" (time) is a part of "change in species over time" - it is one of the time-frames in which things change. Yet even with "Generation to Generation" lumped with the other time-frames identified they still only come to 40%. The operative element is time, not any specific unit or span of time. Lumping "New Features" and "Diversity" and "Complexity" (change) only gets to (7/54) = 13% so the appearance of new and novel features, increased complexity, etc., is not a required universal element of the theory of evolution. Lumping "New Features" with "Diversity", "Complexity" and "Higher Taxons" (change) still only gets to (15/54) = 28% so novel features plus the accumulation of change at higher levels over longer time is still not a required universal element of the theory of evolution. "Speciation" (change) is a part of "change in species over time" - it is one of the things that changes. Yet even with "Speciation" lumped with the others, the different kinds of changes identified still only come to (36/54) = 67%. The operative element is change, not any specific kind or level of change. Lumping "Origin of Life" and "Common Ancestor" together (heredity) only gets to (5/54) = 9%, so therefore origins and first common ancestor is NOT a required universal element of the theory of evolution.
"Inherited traits" with "Origin of Life" and "Common Ancestor" together (heredity) only gets to (8/54) = 15%, so therefore specific elements of heredity are NOT a required universal element of the theory of evolution. The operative element is heredity, not any specific kind or level of heredity.. The ONLY element that is close to universal IS universal and it is "change in species over time" "Change in species over time" as a stand alone definition occurs 16 times = 30% of the time Any other element that stands alone as a definition of evolution occurs 0 time = 0% of the time. The ONLY element that stands alone as a definition of evolution is "change in species over time" Lumping "Change in species over time" with "Speciation" and "Generation to Generation" as stand alone definitions occurs 31 times = 57% of the time. This is also still plain "Change in species over time" with these two minor modifiers of change levels and time frames. The only logical rational conclusion is that the definition of evolution is change in species over time. That "change in species over time" (alone) can and does stand alone as a definition of evolution shows that this is sufficient definition. Lets also review the two definitions used by universities from this list: (A) BerkeleyAn introduction to evolution - Understanding Evolution quote: Note the clear reference to change in species over time (descent with modification) and the application of that to both microevolution and macroevolution. It then goes on to discuss the relation of the vast evidence of time and fossil data to these concepts. (B) University of MichiganThe Process of Speciation quote: Note that these are very similar, down to the distinction between (small-scale) microevolution and (large-scale) macroevolution. Proposed compromise #2: We can combine these to formulate a scientific theory of biological evolution as represented by these schools that (actually) teach biological evolution:
Definition of Biological EvolutionBiological evolution is descent with modification. This definition encompasses small-scale evolution (microevolution) and large-scale evolution (macroevolution) as follows:(a)
(a) - Where the division between the two levels of evolution is marked by non-ambiguous speciation, the seperation of a previous parent population into non-breeding daughter populations. The only difference of any significance between microevolution and macroevolution as listed above is the inclusion of the concept of descent from previous common ancestors, parent populations that existed before non-arbitrary speciation separated the daughter populations. Hereditary relationships and hierarchies are not new at this point - that is the basis for the change in the frequency of alleles from generation to generation, for descent with modification, for the change in species over time - but it is now being applied to populations of species rather than to individuals within species. Note how this also conforms to what I previously proposed for elements for microevolution:
Message 17
(edited to match structure below)Small scale Evolution DOES NOT logically imply large scale Evolution. These are 2 very different things.
Ahhh ... and there it is! "Micro"evolution is different from "Macro"evolution ...Tell you what Murk, let's start by discussing "Micro"evolution. We can start by stipulating that:
The purpose will be to fully define what "micro"evolution is and what "micro"evolution is NOT. We can further stipulate that speciation here refers to non-arbitrary speciation, where daughter populations no longer interbreed, although this "line" may take a while to be formalized completely. From this, and from application of what we know about microevolution, we can hypothesize that recent daughter populations will:
So what can we infer would be a similar description for the elements of macroevolution based on these combined scientific definitions of biological evolution?
Information related to hereditary hierarchies: Classic taxonomyhttp://www.msu.edu/%7Enixonjos/armadillo/taxonomy.html is based on observed hereditary hierarchies in the fossil record and current life. The levels of the different taxons is based on the length of time from the common ancestor population that is the parent of the taxon group, whether that group is species, genus, family, order, class, phylum, kingdom or all of life as we know it -- seeing how the evidence that we have fits the theory at each different level. It is also NOT dependent on the whole picture being valid to investigate the hereditary hierarchies at any level desired: that is all part of testing the theory against the evidence. CladisticsFossilNews.com – A Blog On All Things Fossil And More… is based on analyzing the evolutionary relationships between groups to construct their family tree. ... classified according to their evolutionary relationships, and that the way to discover these relationships is to analyze what are called primitive and derived characters. This does away with taxon groups above species and replaces them with "Clades" Cladistics is just a different way of looking at the same data and developing the same hereditary hierarchies, without any confusion with the (un)importance of different taxons. Cladistic analysis also lends itself to analyzing genetic hereditary hierarchies with homologous genes. The classifications are not based on, nor dependent on, special features, abilities, functions, forms or any other aspect derived by evolution, but on the hereditary relationships. Instead such derived aspects are used as the evidence of the hereditary relationships. You are not a mammal because you have four limbs, you have four limbs because you are a mammal, evolved from the first common ancestor mammal that happened to have four limbs and who's own ancestor had four limbs. The evolution of that first common ancestor mammal - by the application of the theories of biological evolution as discussed above - would still have been a speciation event, the result of microevolution within the population of it's ancestor species until the speciation event, and then by microevolution within the daughter species as it diverged from it's ancestral stock and then diversified with speciation events that then developed new species of mammals from the first one. This proposed compromise combines my definition of "change in species over time" with your concern that "something else" is involved that results in "higher" taxonomic classifications, ... but one with a mechanism that exists and that can be tested (common descent). If you accept this we can move on to the evidence for age and evolution. Enjoy. GREAT DEBATE - RAZD and MurkyWaters only Edited by RAZD, : red banners Edited by RAZD, : formating, expanded to add combined definition, compromise #2 Edited by RAZD, : edited to match changes to msg 71 compare Fiocruz Genome and fight Muscular Dystrophy with Team EvC! (click) we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmericanOZen[Deist ... to learn ... to think ... to live ... to laugh ... to share.
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1406 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
RAZD and MurkyWaters only |
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Message 70 by MurkyWaters, posted 03-26-2007 9:51 PM | MurkyWaters has replied |
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Message 88 by MurkyWaters, posted 06-24-2007 1:40 AM | RAZD has not replied |
Message 75 of 121 (404899)
06-10-2007 12:40 PM |
Reply to: Message 70 by MurkyWaters 03-26-2007 9:51 PM |
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Message 70 by MurkyWaters, posted 03-26-2007 9:51 PM | MurkyWaters has replied |
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Message 89 by MurkyWaters, posted 06-24-2007 2:16 AM | RAZD has not replied |
Message 77 of 121 (405056)
06-11-2007 1:02 AM |
Reply to: Message 76 by pelican 06-10-2007 10:34 PM |
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Message 76 by pelican, posted 06-10-2007 10:34 PM | pelican has not replied |
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