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Author Topic:   What would a transitional fossil look like?
dwise1
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Posts: 5945
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.4


(1)
Message 186 of 403 (850823)
04-14-2019 7:16 PM
Reply to: Message 184 by PaulK
04-14-2019 5:14 PM


To make her argument Faith needs clear, justifiable and consistent criteria and to show the application of them to tetrapods and to trilobites.
Her criteria are not clear, seem to be made up as she goes along and don’t seem to be applied consistently at all. And we have no real examples of actual application - nothing that gets into the anatomical details.
Clearly, she has no idea what she's doing. A hint of a vague idea bubbled up to her neo-cortex, which she grabbed and started running with without ever thinking any of it through. So she's just making up stupid stuff on the fly.
Your reference to anatomical details is important and exposes the weakness of Faith's latest ramblings even more. It's not the shape of the animals that group them together as the same "kind", but rather it's the anatomical details. If we went purely by shape, then we would have to group whales with fish, penguins with seals, and many marsupial species with placental ones (eg, sugar gliders and flying squirrels). A common environment and survival lifestyle will lead to very similar, if not identical, body shapes and behaviors. Rather, it's through the anatomical details that we are able to group species together properly.
Of course, you already know that, but Faith doesn't so that was for her benefit. Of course, she will never read it because she's devoted to the practice of willful stupidity.
Edited by dwise1, : Corrected "the the" to "not the" in " It's the the shape of the animals that group"

This message is a reply to:
 Message 184 by PaulK, posted 04-14-2019 5:14 PM PaulK has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 188 by Faith, posted 04-15-2019 2:13 PM dwise1 has not replied
 Message 189 by Faith, posted 04-15-2019 2:28 PM dwise1 has not replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5945
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.4


(1)
Message 208 of 403 (850871)
04-15-2019 8:29 PM
Reply to: Message 203 by Faith
04-15-2019 4:51 PM


Re: Thought Experiment for Faith
... , capiche?
Questa parola non si scrive in questo modo! Si scrive come "(Tu) capisci?" o "(Lei) capisce". "Che" pronunciato come "que" in spagnolo.
Impari un po' del idioma, per favore!
Capisce?
I'm not impressed with the "Job-like" patience of people who believe something I object to so strenuously. Why would you expect me to?
IOW, you are a hidebound creationist terrified of dealing with the evidence because it contradicts your creationist beliefs.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 203 by Faith, posted 04-15-2019 4:51 PM Faith has not replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5945
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 209 of 403 (850872)
04-15-2019 9:27 PM
Reply to: Message 194 by Faith
04-15-2019 3:07 PM


Re: Thought Experiment for Faith
I'm happy to hear about regulatory genes that determine what the HOX genes do in a given creature. That makes sense.
... If HOX genes make an arm in one creature but a flipper in another I'm not sure why you'd want to make a big deal out of that.
The "Stan Lee Effect" is strong in this one. You latch onto a "sciencey sounding" word and, without understanding anything about it, use it to make your end product (eg, a comic book) sound "sciencey."
Body structure doesn't vary much from generation to generation ...
Yeah. One thing you overlooked is that that basic body structure controlled by essentially the same HOX genes belong to all tetrapods. That means that your imagined "cat kind" and your imagined "dog kind" have essentially the same HOX genes. As do bears. As do other mammals. As do reptiles. As do amphibians. IOW, as do all tetrapods.
HOX genes are not unique to any single "basic created kind" that you would wish to construct ad hoc, but rather they show that all those "kinds" are related to each other. And they are just one source of evidence.
If you follow the evidence, you will clearly see where it leads. But you are a hidebound creationist whose only possible response is to blind yourself to the evidence, because that's the only way you can possibly support your false creationist position and false assertions.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 194 by Faith, posted 04-15-2019 3:07 PM Faith has not replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5945
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 210 of 403 (850874)
04-15-2019 9:59 PM
Reply to: Message 194 by Faith
04-15-2019 3:07 PM


Re: Thought Experiment for Faith
Parte Deux
In Message 209 I stated:
DWise1 writes:
If you follow the evidence, you will clearly see where it leads. But you are a hidebound creationist whose only possible response is to blind yourself to the evidence, because that's the only way you can support your false creationist position.
Do the name "Michael Denton" ring a bell?* He is/was an MD with a PhD in biochemistry who for some reason felt uncomfortable about evolution and, purportedly inspired by "intelligent design" proponents, wrote an anti-evolution book, Evolution: A Theory in Crisis. That book sparked many conversations which revealed to Denton that he knew a lot less about evolution than he thought he did, yet Wikipedia still reports that he's a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute. Wikipedia also reports:
quote:
Since writing the book Denton has changed many of his views on evolution, however he still believes that the existence of life is a matter of design.
Denton's book contains an example of what happens when you follow the evidence, namely that you arrive at the only possible answer. I last posted this a couple years ago in Message 128.
In his book (page 284), Denton tries to attack evolution through patterns in protein comparisons. His problem was that he was using typical creationist "Ladder of Life" reasoning instead of Darwinian branching. I should point out here that most creationists also fall victim to "Ladder of Life" reasoning, which is most definitely false. The comparisons under "Ladder of Life" make no sense, but then when he used a branching model, which is what evolution actually teaches, then all the protein comparisons fell into place. Despite Denton's wishes, the evidence still pointed the right way.
Although I got this from a Creation/Evolution Newsletter article, I did refer directly to my copy of Denton's book to write this. Here's what I wrote:
quote:
However, you did make the same mistake as Michael Denton did in misinterpreting the findings. Since proteins continue to change over generational time, we cannot realistically expect comparison of modern proteins to yield the progression of changes from species to species; modern terrestrial vertebrates did NOT descend from modern lampreys, but rather they and modern lampreys descended from a common ancestor. Rather, what we would expect from evolutionary theory would be that the more time that has passed since the two species shared a common ancestor, the greater the differences would be between their proteins and when comparing a member of one such group of species against the members of the second group, we should expect the latter to all have the same degree of difference from the former (unless natural selection had come into play, of course; "molecular clocks" rely on the accumulation of neutral mutations -- see my bullfrog.html file for more on this). Therefore, we would expect to find that humans and apes would be more similar to each other since they shared a more recent common ancestor. We would also expect all felines to be more similar to each other for the same reason. And we would expect the lamprey to be about equally different from terrestrial vertebrates since the terrestrial vertebrates share the same common ancestor with the lamprey just before it split off from that line.
And what does the evidence show? Precisely what we would expect and precisely what would make sense. Your findings are indeed supportive of what evolutionary theory would lead us to expect.
Indeed, when Denton went through this exercise himself, he sought to discredit the standard phylogenetic trees of evolutionary descent by using these degrees of difference to construct Venn diagrams and assigning the various species considered into their place in that diagram according to their degrees of difference. However, it turns out that his Venn diagrams quite naturally produce the very same standard phylogenetic trees of evolutionary descent that Denton had tried to discredit.
Let me explain (something that would be impossible on the phone, since it involves graphical aids).
It seems that Denton made the typical creationist mistake of using "Ladder of Life" thinking (which, BTW, is Lamarckian, not Darwinian) -- i.e. assuming that all modern "primitive" organisms are identical to the earliest copies and that neither they nor their proteins have evolved since that group first appeared in the fossil record. Then he proceeds to compare the proteins of various groups of species looking for a linear progression and complaining when he does not find it.
For example, on page 284 of his book, Denton compares hemoglobin sequences of the lamprey and five other species (carp, frog, chicken, kangaroo, and human) and fails to find the linear progression of [cyclostome --> fish --> amphibian --> reptile --> mammal] that HE expects. The same thing happens when he makes the comparison based on cytochrome c.
But based on the cytochrome c data, he also constructs a Venn diagram which divides the species into classes and subclasses -- a set of nested areas which are not supposed to be a phylogenetic tree. I have copied that diagram here from page 286 (rendered in text graphics -- if your e-mail viewer uses a proportional font, then it will probably garbles this up; change the font to a monospace font, like Courier New):
________________________________
/ \ ___________________
| Jawed Vertebrates | / \
| | | Jawless |
| (Bony Fish) | | Vertebrates |
| (Cartilaginous Fish) | | |
| ____________________________ | | |
| / \ | | |
| | Terrestrial Vertebrates | | | (Cyclostomes -- |
| | | | | e.g. Lampreys) |
| | (Amphibia) | | \___________________/
| | ________________________ | |
| | / \ | |
| | | Amniota | | |
| | | | | |
| | | (Reptiles) | | |
| | | | | |
| | | (Mammals) | | |
| | | | | |
| | \________________________/ | |
| \____________________________/ |
\________________________________/
Not surprisingly, this does indeed yield a phylogenetic tree as follows:
Cyclostomes Bony Fish Cart. Fish Amphibia Reptiles Mammals
----------- --------- ---------- -------- -------- -------
\ \ / \ \ /
\ \ / \ \ /
\ \ / \ \ /
\ \/ \ \/
\ \ \ /
\ \ \ / Amniota
\ \ \ /
\ \ \ /
\ \ \ /
\ \ \/
\ \ /
Jawless \ \ / Terrestrial Vert.
Vertebrates \ \________________/
\ /
\ / Jawed Vertebrates
\ /
\_________/
Vertebrates
Furthermore, on page 287 Denton applies the same technique to primates:
________________________________
/ \ ___________________
| Gibbon | / \
| | | Monkeys |
| ____________________________ | | |
| / _________ ___________ \ | | |
| | / \ / \ | | \___________________/
| | | | | | | |
| | | Apes | | Man | | |
| | | | | | | |
| | \_________/ \___________/ | |
| \____________________________/ |
\________________________________/
From which we get the following phylogenetic tree:
Monkeys Gibbon Apes Man
------- ------ ---- ---
\ \ \ /
\ \ \ /
\ \ \ /
\ \ \/
\ \ /
\ \ /
\ \ /
\ \ /
\ \/
\ /
\ /
\ /
\ /
\/
Very interesting. Both trees fit the evolutionary view to a "T".
Of course, the linear view, the "Ladder of Life," is both wrong and unwarranted. Why should we expect ALL change to stop for the "more primitive" forms? The more correct way to view the data, the way in which biologists actually view it, is as I have told you already and as Denton finally describes it on page 294:
"The only way to explain this [pattern of protein differences] in
evolutionary terms is to propose that since all the different lines
of a group diverged each particular protein, such as haemoglobin or
cytochrome C, has continued to evolve in each of the lines at its own
characteristic uniform rate."
Scientists have known that all along. Even Darwin said the same thing, that the longer it has been since two organisms shared a common ancestor, the greater would be the differences between them. Furthermore, this is what we find in "green" fossils, fossil leafs which have not petrified and which still contain their proteins and DNA: while the form (morphology) of the fossil leaves was virtually indistinguishable from modern leaves, their biochemistry was very different and those differences are very orderly and allow scientists to construct phylogenetic trees.
Also on page 294, Denton plots a phylogenetic tree based on cytochrome sequence differences and for which the numbers fit very well. But now that Denton has finally stumbled onto a correct explanation, he spends the rest of the chapter trying to explain it away. For example, he discounts the possibility that the proteins could have continued to change because he cannot think of a mechanism that would direct those changes, even though he does mention, and discount out of hand, the "molecular clock" idea of the accumulation of neutral mutations. My problem is the opposite of Denton's; I cannot think of a mechanism outside of natural selection that would freeze a protein's sequence, which would not happen in the case of neutral mutations (ie, by definition a neutral mutation would not change the expression of that gene, thus giving natural selection nothing with which to distinguish the mutated gene from the unmutated gene).
Of course, presenting that to you, Faith, is casting pearls before swine (a bad habit of mine that my minister tried to warn me about, especially when dealing with religiously bigoted idiots like Boy Scouts of America, Incorporated). But while you will eternally remain willfully ignorant and stupid, there is a chance that lurkers will still learn something.
------------------------------------------
FOOTNOTE *:
I'm almost embarrassed to remember this from my childhood, but I blame Sammy Davis Jr. for bringing it up on Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In with his line, "Do the name Ruby Begonia ring a bell?" I do not remember any thing about her nor her role in the story, but I somehow associated that name with Amos 'n Andy.
The TV show continued to play as I was growing up. I remember being confused about the title, since all the stories were instead about the Kingfish and his dodgy relationship with his wife whose favorite perfume was called, "Manslaugher".
Edited by dwise1, : footnote

This message is a reply to:
 Message 194 by Faith, posted 04-15-2019 3:07 PM Faith has not replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5945
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 295 of 403 (851125)
04-20-2019 2:48 AM
Reply to: Message 294 by Faith
04-19-2019 10:26 PM


Gosh the usual gobbledygook. Because you CAN'T describe how to get from one species to another, all you can do is assert it.
And yet you accomplished exactly that in the evolution of the "basic felid kind". To which your only response was to frantically try to redefine the entire world in order to avoid your own discovery.
So now all you can do is to lie. So typical of creationists.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 294 by Faith, posted 04-19-2019 10:26 PM Faith has not replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5945
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.4


(3)
Message 360 of 403 (851342)
04-22-2019 2:18 PM
Reply to: Message 349 by Faith
04-22-2019 1:17 PM


First, my religious beliefs are nothing but the standard orthodox ...
So which is it? Greek or Russian?
... historical Protestant Christian theology.
Which is not the least bit ORTHODOX!. Just what the fuck are you talking about? Don't you have any understanding of Christianity at all?
Second, I am here because I genuinely believe I can show, and have, shown, the falseness of the ToE in many ways, yes with evidence, and offered some reasonable creationist alternatives, and that, truly, nobody has answered me effectively.
What? That you have asserted the just removing water from sediments creates rocks? And when I merely suggested to you to talk with actual geologists to answer that stupendously stupid idea your response was a series of emails that continuously escalated into extreme hysteria (not just mere hysteria, but rather extreme hysteria with extremely large fonts of all kinds of different colors -- that kind of hysteria cannot be spontaneous, but rather meticulously planned and thoroughly deliberate).
{typical creationist nonsense}
You have proven nothing whatsoever. All you have tried to do is to change the meanings of terminology in an attempt to redefine reality by redefining words, which only works in theology and weasel-lawyer-weasel-wording. All your efforts are pure bullshit and everybody knows that it's all just bullshit, so who are you deluding besides yourself?
And as for your politics, you have already disgraced that and yourself so many times over. And your latest propaganda film, "Unplanned", has already been exposed as yet another ham-fisted hatchet job.
Just what kind of purpose do you actually think that you serve here?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 349 by Faith, posted 04-22-2019 1:17 PM Faith has not replied

  
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