Originally posted by Ben Kenobi
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Do our resident conservatives and republicans truly believe women are biologically suited to be barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen?
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That is a ridiculous requirement. We can't reverse the process of a star aging, but you still accept we understand the process.
A split ->A + B -> A as B goes extinct?
Or even:
A split -> A + B -> A reforms from A+B.Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!
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Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostIn short, the ground work hasn't even been done yet for evolution to be compared. Would anyone here suggest that our current understanding of biodiversity is even close to complete?
We can infer from statistical probabilities, precisely how long a star would stay at each age by the proportion of start actually at that age. Can we do this with evolution? Do we even understand the process sufficiently well to establish a direction of evolution?
We see differentiation. Darwin's hypothesis is that the two were the exact same process.
We know that changes in genetics leads to changes in the organism. It's obvious that changing enough genes would result in creating a new species (or changing one species to another).
Not to mention that "species" tends to be an inexact classification with rather arbitrary allowances for differentiation within a species before it gets reclassified as another species. (This happens all the time as our observations about specific organisms leads to understanding and classifying them better. There is no absolute "species".)
He provides examples of sheep breeding, etc, but what he fails to realize is that in thousands of years of breeding sheep, we have not changed the species.
Also, it's not surprising that we'd breed sheep to express the traits they were initially domesticated for, rather than trying to change them to something dramatically different and likely economically less valuable. With enough funding Monsanto could probably change sheep into frogs, and we can already make them hairless or with human ears on their butts. But there's really no point in doing so.
How do we establish a 'rate of change of mutation', based upon theoretical models, and how do we establish how environment can increase or reduce this number? We don't know. All we know is 'creatures adapt to their surroundings and become fitter to their more surroundings. Then we proceed to 'Just So Stories' as to how the camel got it's hump.
To label x a mutation and y is not a mutation requires an understanding as to what has changed and what has not - stuff that we are just getting into now. It also requires the understanding of a template, ie, "this is the non-mutation form of this species". This is as crucial as it was identifying atomic mass to the periodic table.
I am skeptical about the transmutation of one species into another as opposed to the differentiation within one species observed by Darwin.
It's rather obvious that changing enough of the genes will lead to a change in the species classification of the organism. This holds true whether it was done in a laboratory or out in nature.
What if there's not just one speed on the dial but two? Two forces, and not simply one?
Yet the theory itself predates Genetics.
Metallurgy predates chemistry. Chemistry predated knowledge of the atom. We're still learning things about sub-atomic particles and forces. This is how knowledge progresses. Just because we aren't omnipotent yet doesn't mean we can't apply the knowledge we do have.
Therefore it stands to reason that some of the presuppositions of the theory created without the knowledge and understanding of the existence of genes are in fact incorrect.
What is obvious is that evolution of some sort does happen. That we can force it to happen. How to fit all the organisms on earth into a "family tree" is something that will take a long, long time and may not ever be complete due to lack of data. But it is obvious that some organisms are closely related, and we have observed organisms differentiating enough that we've decided to reclassify them. (Again, not an important step. If pigs in the future grew wings and started flying, they'd be flying whether we said they were a new species or not.)
Again, genetic changes!= evolution.
What is important is we can see how changing genetic makeup changes expressed traits in organisms. It doesn't matter whether we decide that change in traits warrants classification as a new species or not ... the traits have changed.
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Our understanding of anything is incomplete.
That doesn't change that we do know some things well enough to make consistent predictions. Such as when we change a specific gene in a plant, we get a specific resistance to a chemical or pest ... thus allowing us to more efficiently produce food.
We understand dating of organic compounds and strata well enough to determine that fossils are from the past, not the future ...
]No. We see genetic mutations as well.
Same here. By definition we know that any changes in the genetic structure are generally caused by mutations. It's not enough to say, oh, mutation = evolution. If that were so, we could simply irradiate everyone and claim that this was evolution at work. And you'd be correct at that - it would be evolution. That's the problem. The term is not specific enough to cover a peculiar process.
Differentiation is by definition defined as changes within a species. We see this in animal husbandry and it goes back long, long before the present synthesis. Evolution is somethine else entirely - it is a transformative process, not a restructuring process. You are changing what a thing is in evolution, whereas with differentiation, you are preserving the identity of the thing, while changing physical characteristics. Differentiation spreads the seeds - evolution grows them in the first place.
New gene sequences that aren't just a recombination of the parents' genes. These happen in laboratories at our will. They can happen in nature due to radiation. They can also happen due to viruses and even chemical processes.
We know that changes in genetics leads to changes in the organism.
It's obvious that changing enough genes would result in creating a new species (or changing one species to another).
This is why as you're claiming, any and all changes equate with evolution. That's like saying in Chemistry, any changes in atomic weight result in a new element. We know this is not true, because of the existance of isotopes.
Differentiation = chemical isotopes.
Evolution = nuclear synthesis - the transformation of one element into another different element. It's the same process that can produce either result - but the resultant chemistry is very different. It's important to understand the difference between an isotope and an element, just as it is important to understand the difference between variations within a species and variation across species.
Not to mention that "species" tends to be an inexact classification with rather arbitrary allowances
Just because something is very, very, difficult to observe doesn't mean that the folks advancing the theory get a pass by saying, "of course it must be right". Umm, no, that's not how science works at all. The ultimate question is how you would go about proving transmutation. And you can't even get out of the dock without a clear empirical definition of what constitutes a species.
for differentiation within a species before it gets reclassified as another species. (This happens all the time as our observations about specific organisms leads to understanding and classifying them better. There is no absolute "species".)
There is often a lot of debate about what species an organism belongs to, and new species arise all the time even from previously known organisms based on new information about their traits and how some scientists decide it deserves to be classified.
Also, it's not surprising that we'd breed sheep to express the traits they were initially domesticated for, rather than trying to change them to something dramatically different and likely economically less valuable. With enough funding Monsanto could probably change sheep into frogs, and we can already make them hairless or with human ears on their butts. But there's really no point in doing so.You say it can be done. I say it cannot. Science is about proving me wrong by trying to get it done. I would say that if it were possible they would be trying to do it. That they aren't doing it isn't evidence that it is impossible, but it is evidence that it's not about the money - it's just not technically feasible.
Just because we can't predict random events doesn't mean those random events don't occur.
We've observed these events happening
Pretending they don't happen is just absurd.
Am I suggesting that Camels never grew humps? No. What I am saying is that we don't know how this happened and claiming that we do know how this happened when we have never witnessed it is wrong. It would be better to stop and say, whoa. We don't really know how it went down. Maybe we should try to find out how it did happen!
There is no template.
Treating "species" as if it was a fundamental element is just absurd.
All "species" are in flux
(both in terms of classification, and in genetic makeup), and the lines that separate species are often rather arbitrary.
Genetically there can be just as much differentiation within a species as there is between species.
This is exactly the old problem with the Aether. You've got an entire system built up on this one presupposition that species can change. Just like the Aether had to exist to explain stellar aberration. Of course the reality was much weirder (and frankly, much more cooler), with Special Relativity which did away with all that nonsense.
The same thing is going to happen to biology, and it starts with an empirical definition of what constitutes a species. All the information is right there. Working from substances and ignoring accidents like appearances is probably going to crush the total number of 'species' way, way down. Which is why the cladists won't do it. Who wants random bug 17 to lose it's special status as bugus apolytonis, a whole *new* species.
We can map out the genetic makeup of two similar species.
It's rather obvious that changing enough of the genes will lead to a change in the species classification of the organism.
This holds true whether it was done in a laboratory or out in nature.
Then once we have data that shows the other process actually exists the theory would expand to include it.
So did livestock breeding. That didn't stop people from changing their domesticated animals to serve specific purposes over time. People made metal tools thousands of years before they knew exactly how heating the metal and combining it with other types of metal actually worked on an atomic level. But those metal tools still worked.
Metallurgy predates chemistry. Chemistry predated knowledge of the atom. We're still learning things about sub-atomic particles and forces. This is how knowledge progresses. Just because we aren't omnipotent yet doesn't mean we can't apply the knowledge we do have.
Of course. But the theory of evolution itself evolves as new information is added.
It's like this.
1. Magic elves capture goats.
2. Breed goats with one another
3.......
4. Goats transform into cows
5. Profit!
But he never explains step 3. He just assumes that one process automatically leads to the other, without any other evidence that this is in actuality the case.
He didn't even know anything about genes. Do you really feel comfortable with the basis of his reasoning here given that he lacked the evidence in order to explain why this worked this way?
So far the explanations offered by evolution are superior to the competing theories.
What is obvious is that evolution of some sort does happen.
How to fit all the organisms on earth into a "family tree" is something that will take a long, long time and may not ever be complete due to lack of data.
But it is obvious that some organisms are closely related
Genetic changes are how evolution functions. You're just operating from an unsupported viewpoint that there's some sort of absolute "species" delineation
Start from there. Then some real scientific progress can be made and biology will move to becoming an empirical science.Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!
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Treating "species" as if it were a fundamental element is not going to work for obvious reasons. Most organisms aren't homogeneous and interchangeable the way atoms are. (Some very simple organism may be.) Classifications of organisms are necessarily going to involve much more room for variation within the classification, unless the classification happens to be each organism in it's own classification.
Species is a rather wide classification. Often there isn't a bright line between one species and another and so the line becomes arbitrary.
You don't like this because it sinks your whole line of argument. Your entire argument relies upon there being something magical about species classifications, and so any other changes in traits that don't result in a new species is not evolution in your estimation. You're absurd.
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Originally posted by Al B. Sure! View PostBecause it's ****ing random mutations in a too-complex and variable environment to predict! You'd have to predict the nature of and frequency of random mutations and how they affect the reproductive capabilities of organisms in the chaos of nature.
In comparison, a star follows relatively simple chemical laws.
Also, there's no guarantee that humans will evolve dramatically at any point in the foreseeable future (unless you're asking a transhumanist). We're very skilled, intrinsically adaptable generalists. Lots of well-adapted species stay the same for very, very long periods of time. E.g. sharks, crocodiles...and moss. The moss growing around the trees in my yard is essentially unchanged from the stuff dimetrodons crawled around on.
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Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostWhat if I believe the Church is a woman?
One would think that someone who really was God's gift to women would be able to stay married, if, as you said, she wasn't a *****.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View Post
Paul says I am supposed to be willing to die for my wife just like Christ died for his Church.
May I suggest a hurried match with an unpicky homicidal mail order bride ?Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.
...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915
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Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostI'm arguing that it's impossible to establish evolution as an empirical science without an absolute delineation of the species.
Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostYou don't even have the framework right to be able to prepare a table to classify families. It's like trying to discover elements when you don't even know how they all fit together or where the holes exist. Biology is in it's infancy, and it would be a lot further along if they discarded the archaic notions that dictate how they classify animals.
Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostStart from there. Then some real scientific progress can be made and biology will move to becoming an empirical science.
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Originally posted by ElokAlso, there's no guarantee that humans will evolve dramatically at any point in the foreseeable future (unless you're asking a transhumanist). We're very skilled, intrinsically adaptable generalists. Lots of well-adapted species stay the same for very, very long periods of time. E.g. sharks, crocodiles...and moss. The moss growing around the trees in my yard is essentially unchanged from the stuff dimetrodons crawled around on.
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Originally posted by kentonio View PostGiven the vast number of humans in a huge variety of environments and the biological complexity of our species, it would be absolutely incredible if we didn't evolve dramatically given enough time. It seems more likely though that the species will branch rather than just evolve in a single direction.
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They did differentiate markedly from the population in Eurasia though, to the point they lacked the genes to survive/attenuate a lot of diseases common there.
Elok's point that our brains allow us to adapt to many situations without depending on genetic change is certainly valid. Plants and animal in the arctic have traits that evolved over millions of years to allow them to live there, but usually are detrimental to living in warmer areas. Humans adapted to living in the arctic in a much shorter timespan just by relying on their brains to come up with solutions to the same hardships.Indifference is Bliss
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