Evolution or Creation?

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Evolution or Creation

  • Evolution

    Votes: 86 76.1%
  • Creation

    Votes: 27 23.9%

  • Total voters
    113

Sir_Brizz

Administrator
Staff member
Feb 3, 2000
26,021
86
48
Aegeri said:
Has it now? It is funny that you mention drosophila actually, because they have already been established to have mutations that can make considerably different animals than the parent, and even become reproductively isolated. All in a mere handful of generations in a lab.

Read, "The Fly" for more information on what exactly has been shown is possible with it.
But have you seen a fruit fly become a lizard? I didn't think so.
Except, you would be wrong as if nobody told you the second organisms (which are in fact beetle like, and don't really look that much like the orginal fruit fly) were from drosophila, you more than likely wouldn't be able to spot the difference. I would bet you'd say the exact same statement about that organism to boot :)
Hmm... I think a statement, especially coming from you, should immediately DISCOUNT the use of "looks" as having any bearing on what the biological makeup of the resulting specimen is. You know as well as anyone else here that a fruit fly is still a fruit fly, whether it has large legs or small legs, wings or no wings.
Except the last isn't a lizard, it's actually a definite mammal. Unless of course, you've missed what was going on with the ear bones (sneaky I know, but it is there). Do lizards have ear bones like that? I suggest you look that up.
I wasn't talking about every single image you posted, regardless of how much you would like to think I was.
Incorrect, they have common ancestory with all mammals, because they *are* the ancestors of mammals. We are mammals. We are primates. Apes are members of the primate group. We could not be related to birds very simply: Birds are diapsids, you and I, and apes too, are synapsids.

Your statement is completely refuted on a basic comparative level.
Not quite, considering that as of yet, the only proof you have that any of these things evolved from each other is that they "look" similar. Your basica analysis of my statement here was the original reason I posted the Human<-->Albatross idea :p The idea is that if we all came from the same origin, then it should be possible to breed a human out of an albatross over an extended length of time. I know you've seen the charts. They lok something like this:
Code:
        o
    o<      > o
o<     o         >o   
    0<      > o
         o
Now, please give me the benefit of the doubt, since I haven't got the desire to draw this out in an image file. Biologically, you ought to be able to take the resulting specimen, and create the original specimen.
STRAWMAN.

Congradulations you have just completely discredited your argument.
Ummmm...no, but this shows how happy you are to call Strawman on any argument you aren't completely wrapping your brain around. I ws making a fallacical comparison because it's ludicrousness WAS THE SUBJECT OF THE ARGUMENT.
Again, wrong. This whole "well you can't say either way" stuff really doesn't fly. There is more support by the evidence for evolution, because as I keep harping on about, when it has made predictions it has found these predictions to be true. Based on the evidence and accuracy of the predictions alone, evolution is a more rock solid theory with BETTER evidence and testing behind it than even gravity.

If you want to question evolution go ahead, but I'd also like to know why you don't disbelieve gravity which has less solid evidence behind it! (And yes, I know I've already answered this question earlier)
Actually, there isn't. There is proof that evolution EXISTS, yes. But there is no evidence that it was the catalyst for the creation of the world...at least not beyond hypothesis/theory. I never claimed hat evolution was incorrect or didn't exist, I simply stated that the two sides held about as much weight as each other in regards to the beginning of the world. Mostly because the last time I checked we can't travel back 35 million years and see what was going on in the gene pool :)
 
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Metakill

Inhumane
Feb 18, 2000
2,430
0
36
Redwood City, CA USA
Why in the world should we believe evolution is reversible? Or that the forks can be crossed? I don't think any evolutionary scientist suggested that anything can become anything else than what nature allows of it.
 

Aegeri

Mad Microbiologist, of ASSHATTERY
Mar 15, 2004
514
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New Zealand
On jawbones again, because I want to clarify something from earlier, feel free to ignore unless you are bored and interested in learning why I think the 'design' argument is a crock. I'll just reference it as needed later, think of it as being stored here but not put up for debate yet as my complaints weren't addressed initially anyway..

While the original poster isn't going to defend these statements (with good reason), I'd like to go over something about the 'design' argument that never really made any good sense again, and give more of an explanation to my adverse reaction to the argument as 'evidence'.

Now, as a creationists, I see a jawbone as an example of a very efficent, well made design. If something works so well, why "re-invent the wheel"? My predisposition leads me to see that a Creator made an ideal design for a jawbone, and incorporated that basic design into multiple animals.

To which I implied the following argument with its hidden trap (as always)

And you'd be wrong based on the evidence and depending on what jaw you are talking about. Go on and establish 'well made design' however, and expect me to argue that insect jaws are infinitely better than animal jaws. Both hinged apparatus used to cut things, but the insect jaw just does it so much more efficiently. Why don't animals have insect jaws and instead have a different kind of hinged jaw? Surely one design must be good so why don't all *animals* use the same jaw?

Explain why insects jaws are unlike animal jaws and are a completely different mechanical design.

Next, explain why the hyenas jaws are different from the jaws of other Dogs.

Secondly, explain why if the jaw doesn't need to be reinvented, there are an incredible variations of the jaw with only certain aspects shared.

To which, I didn't get my reply of course instead focusing on the jaws of insects as 'an absurd comparison'

Insect "jaws" (again for simplicity) - again, you're trying to twist words. I never said that just because it was a good design that it was applicable to all. A good design can be found in certain organisms, but not all. Where would the creativity (yeah, I know, cheap play on words) be if everything was the same? Not all designs are best for all circumstances...Your argument of comparing insects' mouths to those of other species is obsurd, taking something completely out of context and finding something that has absolutely nothing to do with the other. A very poor point.

Of course, if Renegade wasn't more interested in dodging the arguments put against him and had tried to define the 'good jaw design' , I could have pointed out the following.

Firstly, several species of insects, actually have jaws with a hinge system that is remarkably similar to animals, in fact directly similar in that they have both an upper and lower jaw that is open and closed by a hinge mechanism. This is, the basic idea of a jaw of the higher vertebrates.

Yet the so called open minded 'creationist' who spent his entire argument trying to discredit my position as close minded and unwilling to accept 'his' evidence, failed to even try noting that the hinged jaw system of animals does have paralellels in insects. Yet, according to him saying that some insects share a similar jaw 'design' is an absurd argument, when such insects actually exist.

Doesn't that seem odd? I certainly do think so, but lets talk about design and insect jaws anyway for sheer arguments sake, and because I want to clarify this point before it comes up again.

Insects, unlike animals, have an exoskeleton, that is they have their skeletal bits on the outside and their inside is like a large soup of liquid with organs suspended inside it. The exoskeleton, like many other things, both expands and limits what kind of appendages they can develop. On one hand, they are more malleable than vertebrates, capable of moulding the exoskeleton into a much bigger variety of shapes and sizes. On the other hand, an exoskeleton isn't very good for being large on land so no 50ft killer mantises unfortunately.

In terms of mouthparts, insects truely confound the 'design' argument on several levels. Firstly, they have the biggest diversity of mouthparts known, including things that look similar to vertebrate 'jaws' using a similar kind of base 'design'. At the same time, insects fire large rods out of a long snout to suck out blood, they have mandibles customised for a huge amount of purposes from the mantises mouth, the bettles jagged weapons, ant lions locked together jaws (for throwing sand), the damsel flies larvae that has a lower jaw that fires out and grasps prey to be scraped to death by its upper jaw and many many more. The huge diversity in the amount, variation and function of the kinds of mouthparts (jaws if you will) that insects employ is stunning.

As it turns out, most of this amazing diversity is actually encoded by very few genes, these genes, called Hox for hot box development genes, are capable of rapidly morphing and changing the basic shape, structure and even function of various insect parts. For example, with only a few mutations in these genes, drosophila mutants were observed that had wings instead of eyes, more legs (a sixteen legged beetle was also produced), different mandibles and more oddities. The dramatic changes in only a few genes altered a wide array of properties and dramatically.

Noting this, it isn't too hard to imagine where such diversity, if even so few genes have such a large effect, arose from. This can succinctly, and fairly simply explain insect diversity and why there is such a wide variety of immensely different mouthparts for all sorts of insects. Unlike with higher animals, there are a wide array of insects that just don't fit the 'design' argument at all, probably why RR doesn't want to consider them.

However, lets look at higher vertebrates. RR makes the excuse that animals have certain features because of common 'design' and then scoffs at the idea that such a design would fit an insect (yet fails to prove why), even though such an example exists! Aside from this fact however, can we really say that because certain animals have certain 'features' of design this inherently indicates a designer? Firstly, we have to define the particular aspect we are talking about is designed, in this case the jaw.

As mentioned earlier, jaws are simply (and ultimately) just a hinge with one mobile part and another usually locked in place. Hence, why insects have come up with this 'design' already because it is simple and very functional (and if someone had done their 'research' rather than scoffing first, they might not have discredited their entire argument in one fell swoop). Animals however, are not insects (to state the obvious) and have been constrained by their ancestors far more than insects have been.

Most jaws around today are variants on an ancestral jaw that animals like hagfish and lampreys have. These ancestral jaws, were later diversified into what later became the first true 'jawed' fish. You see, lampreys have a 'jaw' but not in the classical sense, merely being a sucker with teeth with contractile muscle around it. Good enough for hanging onto your favourite food and ripping chunks of flesh off, but not for complex actions like chewing.

The first jawed fish were not very complex from the basic, moveable lower bit with an upper bit. Jaws diversified by leaps and bounds since then however, with many advancements allowing for better methods of employing your lower bit to kill, maim and generall eat other bits and pieces. The jaw of a crocodile for example, is extremely long but actually not very powerful (if you firmly gripped a crocodiles snout, it could not open it's jaw, the power when it bites comes from leverage forces). Compare that to a hyena, with the pinnacle (IMO) of a predatory jaw as it is able to exert almost 3000psi (pounds per square inch) of force. That will crush bone, crush you and pretty much anything else it wants to eat.

The only thing directly similar between that jaw of the Hyena and that of a crocodile is that they have a hinge, a bit that moves and a bit that doesn't (oh and teeth!). Now, sorry for the somewhat long windedness of this, I am getting to a point I promise, but we have to ask is does that similarity indicate an ancestor from common descent or does it indicate intelligent design?

Well, as the design advocates have been failing to do, we clearly cannot make a prediction based on a good design we can test (seeing as they refuse to do so). The argument of design is also unassailable philosophy, not science based off evidence, because ultimate we can be broad at first "Jaws are evidence of design" to, "A crocodiles jaw is good design because that organism is clearly able to survive" essentially explaining nothing. As we make the standard ever more narrow even down to individual animals, we can see why this 'evidence' is just really nothing more than a belief that as I've been explaining, ultimately finds itself answerable to no one.

But lets for the sake of argument say that RR did make a prediction, the moment he insisted that insects could not have a jaw similarly designed to animals. If we look at that prediction, we immediately find it false, there is nothing special about the 'design' of a jaw that warrants it a 'good design' for one set of organisms (vertebrates) and yet not for another (invertebrates). We see that 'design' automatically and straight away fails a simple test to support one of its basic tenants.

So let us test evolution then. According to an evolutionary theory we can make a prediction based on the time it took for different animals and their jaws to evolve. If an animal has a similar kind of jaw, we can assume that the structural genes (remember those hox genes from earlier, they are in animals too!) would be more similar to it's relatives than it would to animals that appeared earlier.

More importantly, to go back to the whole synapsids and the mammalian jaw evolving from a synapsid reptillian ancestor we would expect the following predictions if the evolutionary model is correct (based on the evidence available). We would expect that the jaws of mammals are closest to those of reptiles, than they are to fish. This is because fish moved onto land from an evolutionary view, and as they were the first 'development' of the 'jaw' we should expect that they are the MOST divergent from a mammal, more similar to reptiles than mammals (which evolved later from reptiles) and different from birds, though with some similarity.

So what would genetics say? Essentially we could measure the difference in the nucleotide sequences of the genes involved in 'production' of the jaw components to see how far ago they diverged. Predictably, the mammalian/reptile link bears out and the gene sequences of the jaws of mammals are closest to that of reptiles. The gene sequence of a birds 'jaw' is MORE similar to reptiles than it does to mammals (because they evolved from a different form of dinosaur, which were diapsids not synapsids, but I'm trying to keep this simple to avoid too much science rubbish which will just confuse). Reptiles have a more similar gene sequence to fish than either mammals or birds, and fish are the most divergent from all groups, but most similar to reptiles.

Again, I demonstrate only that:

Statements that design and evolution have 'equal' evidence is utter trollop. When you make predictions and look at those predictions, 'design' doesn't hold up, yet evolution does manage to explain the evidence and it's predictions actually manage to hold up.

Again, if RR or anyone wants to argue design is a credible theory that can 'scientifically' prove anything it needs to make predictions that hold up under scruitiny. As noted earlier, when asked why an insect jaw would not be a good design, or why insects wouldn't have the vertebrate jaw from a design standpoint (or a similar jaw to a mammalian jaw) the only response was'that would be absurd!'. Yes, this 'scientific' theory, that has been based on 'evidence' and clearly indicates a designer because of common design, cannot even give a reason why this design is actually good for 'that animal' beyond 'just because'.

I hope, for those who managed to read all this rambling, you can see the irony in that.
 

Aegeri

Mad Microbiologist, of ASSHATTERY
Mar 15, 2004
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Sir_Brizz said:
But have you seen a fruit fly become a lizard? I didn't think so.

So, this is an irrelevant strawman. Flies never became lizards, evolution doesn't even imply this is the case.

The more you strawman this, the more ridiculous you make your argument look.

Hmm... I think a statement, especially coming from you, should immediately DISCOUNT the use of "looks" as having any bearing on what the biological makeup of the resulting specimen is. You know as well as anyone else here that a fruit fly is still a fruit fly, whether it has large legs or small legs, wings or no wings.

Actually genetically it isn't, nor reproductively and in fact, I suggest you actually read up on drosophila experiments.

Have fun looking at the massive amount of evidence for evolution from drosophila experiments.

I wasn't talking about every single image you posted, regardless of how much you would like to think I was.

Yes, because the whole lot was supposed to be taken in context with the other diagrams, not just on their own.

Not quite, considering that as of yet, the only proof you have that any of these things evolved from each other is that they "look" similar.

I see we've ignored the DNA arguments I've bought up previously.

Your basica analysis of my statement here was the original reason I posted the Human<-->Albatross idea :p

Which I disproved quite readily and simply. You're simply wrong and should go back to the drawing board for a new strawman.

The idea is that if we all came from the same origin, then it should be possible to breed a human out of an albatross over an extended length of time. I know you've seen the charts. They lok something like this:

Now, please give me the benefit of the doubt, since I haven't got the desire to draw this out in an image file. Biologically, you ought to be able to take the resulting specimen, and create the original specimen.

....

....

....

Can I print this off and frame it? There are many people around the lab that would be sent into histerics with this alone. Honestly, this just about ranks right up there with some of the most ridiculous and blatant strawmans I've ever heard.

A) Hox genes will encode and produce the same structure in any animal they are inserted into. For example, if you take the hox genes that encode the development of the eye spot in Anthozoans and replace that gene with the normal eye development gene in drosophila, you will produce a fully functional eye. If you did the other way around, you would also produce a fully functional eye spot. The structural genes for these are the same and still function either way, but the corresponding hox gene only sets the regulation of cells to produce an 'eye' in the right place but needs the other genes around it to produce the full eye (in the case of going from drosophila to a Cnidarian).

B) Over time organisms delete out or modify genes that they either no longer use or don't require anymore (which would be predicted by evolution incidently). Over time, the accumulated changes in an organisms DNA would build up making it ever more different than the original ancestor. While some proteins would be left, and indeed we do find these and we use them as molecular clocks such as Glutamate synthase. Another example, nobody would have the genes for the nanotech weapons of the cnidarians anymore, because these would be deleted out as they would have no selective benefit for a whole organism. A digestive enzyme from the pancreas, may have been changed into another protein entirely such as an antifreeze protein. Again, evolution can make a prediction based on this and even test it (Ref: See molecular clocks).

Sorry, I would say more, but I think I've just split my gut at this one. I'm not even sure I know where to start actually, because this is so completely out of left field that I'm not sure if I should laugh or simply be amazed at your sheer creativity.

Congradulations, this is the first 'new' argument I've ever heard from a creationist in 3 years and it sure takes the cake.

Ummmm...no, but this shows how happy you are to call Strawman on any argument you aren't completely wrapping your brain around

This is a strawman, but it comes nowhere near your last statement, which is just ignorant.

. I ws making a fallacical comparison because it's ludicrousness WAS THE SUBJECT OF THE ARGUMENT.

Indeed, in case you've wondered though, I did the same with an invisible pink unicorn but I'll deliberately admit it was a strawman for the same reason.

Actually, there isn't.

Not really...sorry, I'm still stunned at that absolute shocker above. I'd have no idea where the hell you came up with that one, because it certainly isn't true, and if you SAW that I would say that would be better evidence of DESIGN than evolution.

There is proof that evolution EXISTS, yes. But there is no evidence that it was the catalyst for the creation of the world...at least not beyond hypothesis/theory.

Pst, here's a hint: Evolution as a theory isn't about the worlds origins to begin with. The theory of evolution is that organisms change over time into new species, which divulge into further species. Essentially descent by modification.

As mentioned, this is fact. What is theory is the mechanisms and reasons why this occured.

Again, go to a library or other facility with journal article access, click the two links above and knock yourself out on the massive amount of evidence on the two referenced topics.

I never claimed hat evolution was incorrect or didn't exist, I simply stated that the two sides held about as much weight as each other in regards to the beginning of the world.

Since when did evolution cover that anyway? There are ideas, but ultimately evolution is a theory that covers something pretty specific. I'll happily argue about evolution, but if you want to argue about the origins of the world, why not try a new topic, because that ISN'T evolution.
 
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Dus

Confused, I think, maybe.....
May 9, 2000
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First of all :clap: to Aegeri for stating all the comments I wanted to say and saving me the trouble. :D

But seriously: What I notice about some people in this debate (I'm not naming anyone, you know who you are) is that they are making statements without backing them up with arguments. And frankly some of those statements are just ridiculous. I'm not saying that anyone that doesn't know as much about Biology as us is stupid, we just had the advantage of 5+ years of study in the field. However, if you make a statement related to Biology, make sure you know enough about the subject and are abled to back it up. I commend Worf for backing up his arguments even though he doesn't know anything about Biology, like he said himself.
Again, I'm not trying to say that anyone is stupid, but some people in this debate just don't know **** about Biology and evolution, yet they still try to make statements about it. And if we point them to this fact they say we are arrogant....... I mean wtf? It is you who is arrogant, thinking you can disprove an entire theory which you actually don't know anything about.

I stopped reading this thread at one point because of the utterly stupid comments made by some people, but I must say that especially Aegeri and Worf (and also Metakill) have made this thread much more enjoyable. CArry on the good work boys ;)

In conclusion I agree with Aegeri: don't debate unless you can back up your statements with valid arguments.
 

Aegeri

Mad Microbiologist, of ASSHATTERY
Mar 15, 2004
514
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Dus said:
First of all to Aegeri for stating all the comments I wanted to say and saving me the trouble.

It gets better.

Finally, I give you woodpeckers.

As a biologist, you know that the woodpecker is unique in that it's tounge is not attached in the throat like most other organisms, but instead raps around the skull and attaches to it's nostril. If this attribute is unique to the woodpecker, then how did it evolve from other species?

First and foremost we must dissect your misleading statements that aren't actually true of all these animals first, and then we can begin discussing it rationally. The immediate statement should be that you've been caught in your own lies RR, and now it's time to pay the piper. I was wondering why you were so quick to run from this debate after your woodpecker challenge, and I nearly fell for it thinking that I shouldn't bother following you up. But I did, and here you are, exposed for anyone to see how 'credible' you really are.

As you know, having done biology apparently, woodpeckers actually are of the family Picoides that is actually a group that doesn't consist of one member with exactly the attributes you have described to the point of being deliberately misleading (1,2). For example, the way you have described this, it sounds as if it's a horrifically complex evolution whereby the bird has somehow grown it's tongue through it's skull and through it's nostril or something equally as ridiculous. You haven't even alluded to the fact that the tongue is still attached in the same way as a normal birds (1), but what is special is the way in which the hyroid horns (funny though you didn't call them that) attach to the skull (or in reality, the lack thereof). Once again, why lie RR if you have the facts on your side?

Unfortunately for you, this is not the case. The main connections between the woodpecker's hyoid apparatus (which is a Y shaped thing that goes back up the skull and comes to rest inside the animals nostril from around the base of the beakm but does NOT grow out from the nostril down (discussed shortly)). The rest of the structure composes muscles and ligaments which attach the hyoid to the jawbone, cartilage of the throat, and base (not top) of the skull. For those confused, the same basic structure found in all other birds despite what RR would have you 'believe' and yes, there's that word again (1).

So where the differences come in is in what is called the hyroid horn (part of the tongue, which is a Y in shape, with the straight bottom part of the Y being the tongue attached to the base of the lower jaw (the beak) and the diagonal bits of the Y being the two horns that wrap up around the skull. Now oddly, it's strange you mention this as 'unique' yet this basic structure is actually found in chickens (1).

The hyoid horns are not attached as RR wants people to believe, but rather either grow that way during life (1) or in fact are no longer than normal birds (1). What a longer hyoid means, is that the animal has a tongue with a much longer reach, because the hyoid 'moves' down upon the contraction of muscles that pull on it to thrust the tongue out, and a longer hyoid means you can thrust the tongue out further.

So far, are we all with me?

Now there are actually multiple kinds of woodpeckers that have different variations on this theme, why RR feels he needs to be dishonest and claim only 'one' woodpecker exists with such elongated hyroid horns is unknown. What is worse, he forgets that not all woodpeckers have long hyoids (1, 2), such as the sap sucker, here are some woodpecker pictures for reference and severual other non-long tongued species (1, 2).

So why would such a structure evolve? Contrary to RR intellectually dishonest and quite frankly inaccurate description of a woodpecker, we should note that nothing new needs to have evolved off previous birds to develop the woodpeckers elongated hyoid horns (1). The structure is already there as looking at any diagram of a chicken would prove, the tongue has no particular attachments that are different than other birds (1), so what exactly is so complicated about this?

Well firstly, we must analyse why a woodpecker would want such a long tongue, and this involves looking at what many woodpeckers ultimately do: peck wood and put holes in it to attempt to get burrowing insects from inside it. Here, an extended hyoid horn suddenly makes sense, becuase you can begin to reach your tongue further down the holes you make in your little tree. This allows you to get insects that are deeper down in the tree, and it makes perfect sense that mutations that elongate the hyoid, and allow a bird to get insects it couldn't before would be of considerable selective advantage.

Unlike what RR tried to initially hide under a large pretense of false 'facts' the existing structures are already present, and selection for longer hyoid horns has a definitive point. Woodpeckers don't all actually peck wood (see picture site for that, or read reference 1), and not all of them have the structure that RR described as having 'evolved in one step' especially as there are several species of woodpecker that are intermediate in length (of they hyoid horns) from the extreme he bought up.

Simple selection, with a gradual increase in the hyoid length is a definite possibility, because all the existing structures are already there. Many woodpeckers have in between hyoid horns as it is, so you can certainly argue that there may be intermediates, and in fact, reference (2) establishes that some of these are adaptations that have occured multiple times. There is no problem for evolution here.

Congradulations Renegade retard, if you think the use of :rolleyes: makes me lose credibility, what does lying do to yours? No wonder you were so desperate to leave this debate, and how uncanny you just proved what I've pointed out time and time again about creationists using fraudulent arguments right here for all to see. Take a bow Renegade Retard, you just ended this debate without even realising it. I maintain: I have never met a creationist who had any grasp of biology. Congradulations again, for proving me right.

1) Bock, W.J. 1999. Functional and Evolutionary Morphology of Woodpeckers. The Ostrich, 70: 23-31 (Who can be found on pubmed here., though the paper is not found online unfortunately)

2) Weibel A.C. and Moore W.S. (2002). A Test of a Mitochondrial Gene-Based Phylogeny of Woodpeckers (Genus Picoides) Using an Independent Nuclear Gene, small beta, Greek-Fibrinogen Intron 7. Molecular phylogenetics and evolution. Volume 22:2.
 
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Metakill

Inhumane
Feb 18, 2000
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Redwood City, CA USA
Another thing, suggesting to people that they "think for themselves" implies they should THINK, i.e. use discernment to reach a conclusion with some basis, not just believe any old crap they so choose.
 

Aegeri

Mad Microbiologist, of ASSHATTERY
Mar 15, 2004
514
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New Zealand
Metakill said:
Another thing, suggesting to people that they "think for themselves" implies they should THINK, i.e. use discernment to reach a conclusion with some basis, not just believe any old crap they so choose.

To me, I've never argued to convince the other side (though I've done so a couple of times now), but merely for others who may be reading (but not actively involved). By presenting arguments, counter arguments and generally supporting my position, I give reasonable amounts of evidence or arguments for my viewpoint. In doing so, the people I am debating with do the same and ultimately, after a while of rubbish going back and forth, you have two fairly complete arguments on either side. People can then read them and make up their own minds which idea/ideas they agree with more based on the arguments presented.

All this time I've maintained that creationism has A) no evidence supporting it, that it B) merely presents misconstrued facts and distortions of scientific principles to 'disprove' evolution but not to actually prove its position. I have asked, C) time and time again for the creationists to present a testable prediction that 'creation science' would in fact come up with to verify itself.

As a summary to this, because, I'm tired and I think I'll leave this as my last post for the night:

A) At no time has anyone presented 'evidence' that proves creationism in this entire thread, just evidence that attempts to refute evolution (ties in with B).

B) Renegade Retard, touting a 'supposed' biology degree just proved this to be 100% correct with his gross distortion of facts concerning the woodpecker. He claims he approached evolution/creationism with an open mind and decided upon intelligent design due to the facts. Well, if his research led him to facts such as claiming that a woodpeckers tongue wouldn't actually be connected to the base of it's beak, causing it to swallow its tongue because the hyoid horns aren't attached to the skull (another fact he mangled), then I have nothing more I need to establish or prove about his 'research'.

C) So far, not one prediction that ID/Creationism could make has been proposed nor tested, yet it is continually maintained that creationism is 'science' with just as much 'evidence' explaining it. Well if it can't make predictions that can be tested based on that evidence, either the evidence is wrong or the theory doesn't have anything to stand on. I've made my case on this one, you can decide for yourself if I'm right or not. Based on the previous track record (Jaw, bird tongues) I'd say creationism is doing pretty badly.
 

Renegade Retard

Defender of the newbie
Dec 18, 2002
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I've never said that, I will, and ALWAYS will maintain that you can say what you want. But if you make a point about some aspect of biology, make sure you know it is correct or be prepared to defend the position from the other side. Again, if you're going to make such incredibly bold statements as "there is just as much evidence for creation as there is evolution" or "the changes in the jaws shown are only small" be prepared to defend that position when someone thinks you are horribly wrong, AND is presenting evidence.

So this is the meat of your disagreement with me. Okay, fine.....

"there is just as much evidence for creation as there is evolution"

1.) I've given you the example of the woodpecker, which gives much more indication toward design than evolution.
2.) I've argued the theory of design by arguing that prinicples common in even today's engineering (don't tell you that you don't regard mechanical enineering as a science). Sound principles are common in multiple structures, but are not applicable to all (hince why you see similarities in various kinds, but that design is not applicable to such organisms as an insect).
3.) I've stated very early in this thread that one of evolution's greatest hurdles is mathematics, especially the laws of probability. You should know through your studies that the chances for a "change" on the smallest scale of any kind is quite high. Multiply that by the billions and billions of changes that need to take place (see your example of the jawbone) just to change from one species to the next, and the number becomes astronomical. Then, multiply that times the number of changes needed to change that species to a different genre, then kind, etc, and the number becomes so great that even the most devout evolutionary minded mathemeticians admit that the probability of change is zero. Aslo keep in mind, that if these changes were to occur an exceptional rate, that there still would not be enough time for all the changes to occur in the evolutionary time frame (what is it now, 500 billion years? I can't remember).
4.) The evolution model has had to repeatedly change it's stance in order to not disprove itself. Case in point, our newest found reptile-eating mammal. Early to mid 20th Century evolutionists held fast to the point that these two could not exist at the same time in history. However, it has now changed it stance. Also, we know know that carbon dating is inaccurate. However, at one time in the not too distant past, this process was evolution's "smoking gun". Evolution has again changed it stance and explained away what was once believed as fact. Yet creationism is the one always accused of changing its philosophy.
5.) I've also stated that the geologic column is one of creationism's weakest areas. However, evolutionists still have a problem with it as well. Though often the fossils are layed out in an order that would support evolution, there are many areas where the fossils are "mixed up" and even reversed in order. There's not much of an explanation for this other then some type of massive force such as water (a large flood? Don't worry, that's crossing into a debate of Scripture, and I won't get into that). Also, though carbon dating is now considered flawed, the evolutionists still hold to the age of the various strata and their fossils based on the dates arrived from carbon dating. If the methodology is flawed, then the dates and ideas of the stratas are flawed. However, creationism has always maintained that the exact same formations could be made by a Genesis Flood.

"the changes in the jaws shown are only small"

I've already explained this one as your misinterpretation of what I had said. You can keep hounding me for technicalities if you wish, but I'm not going to repeat what I've stated in regards to this.

There you go. Have your field day! :)
 

W0RF

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I think this is where the lines between science and philosophy become dangerously blurred.

Philosophically, one could look at nature and deduce that design has a designer, that creation has a creator, that a pattern has a tailor. This unto itself does not require evolution to be categorically untrue, as one could just as easily claim God's handiwork in the pattern.

Scientifically, implicit design is irrelevant. The task of science is to observe and increase our understanding of the physical world. There are some who seek to take the claims of science and use them as the foundation for philosophical naturalism, and there's really no reason for a pure scientist to make such conclusions, unless he were being aggressively anti-religious.

In other words, it's not enough to point out that science doesn't have all the answers, or to say "evolution can't be right for reason X". A paradigm shift requires two things to take place, the old model has to be demonstrated inadequate, and a new model must be presented which better fits the facts.

Poking holes in evolution is well enough for its purpose but for another theory to succeed it would have to demonstrate a Young Earth, and that their model is a better fit than the Old Earth model. Now efforts are being made in this direction, which I think Aegeri discounts a little too quickly, research into helium trapped in the strata, sediment and erosion levels, Dr. Gentry's work with radiohalos and redshift models... but the research isn't going to be accepted by the scientific body proper until the methods can withstand scrutiny, and the conclusions provide a better model. And even then, it's conceivable that evolutionists would simply reconfigure their calculations to account for the Young Earth, which brings us right back to philosophy.

And even if the Old Earth model remains consistent, then you can start getting into discussions about string theories, and multi-dimensionality, and speed-of-light decay theories, or even move completely metaphysical and proclaim that God simply snapped the universe into existence with a pre-existing set of conditions that achieve the same result as a universe that developed over billions of years. Such a concept would honor the observances of science without diminishing in any way the power of God, but it's not a scientific claim and I would not expect that to be written into the textbooks of the next generation.

So I don't know if ID is the route to go. It only demonstrates flaws in the current model which can be corrected or replaced over time, and nobody denies in any event that design exists, at which point it becomes yet again a philosophical question of whether that design is intentional or incidental.
 

Dus

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\/\/0RF said:
In other words, it's not enough to point out that science doesn't have all the answers, or to say "evolution can't be right for reason X". A paradigm shift requires two things to take place, the old model has to be demonstrated inadequate, and a new model must be presented which better fits the facts.
Quoted for truth :clap:
 

Renegade Retard

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I agree totally Worf. That's why I've tired to avoid the debate. However, he persisted, so I thought I'd muse him and let him have fun scurrying about spending hours discounting facts. Let him have his fun at my expense.

As I've said, the creationist stance is difficult to discuss without moving into the philisophical realm, which would be discounted anyhow.
 

Aegeri

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Renegade Retard said:
So this is the meat of your disagreement with me. Okay, fine....

I disagree with you because you're not credible and nor is your basic factual information correct.

1.) I've given you the example of the woodpecker, which gives much more indication toward design than evolution.

You were wrong and dishonest to boot.

2.) I've argued the theory of design by arguing that prinicples common in even today's engineering (don't tell you that you don't regard mechanical enineering as a science). Sound principles are common in multiple structures, but are not applicable to all (hince why you see similarities in various kinds, but that design is not applicable to such organisms as an insect).

And I proved you wrong again.

3.) I've stated very early in this thread that one of evolution's greatest hurdles is mathematics, especially the laws of probability.

Not really, I've had this probablity discussion before, but as you've already mangled biology I don't think we need to mangle statistics.

Again RR, you have no credibility and have been exposed for what you are.

5.) I've also stated that the geologic column is one of creationism's weakest areas.

Who cares, I've pointed out that biology is your weakest area. You just proved it with ridiculous asserations that woodpeckers would have a tongue that was not actually attached to its mandible, so it would swallow it.

Also, though carbon dating is now considered flawed,

No it isn't, stop making stupid statements.

the evolutionists still hold to the age of the various strata and their fossils based on the dates arrived from carbon dating. If the methodology is flawed, then the dates and ideas of the stratas are flawed.

Fossils from millions of years ago cannot be dated by carbon dating, as carbon dating has a maximum age restriction of 30,000 years. Of course, if you were being honest, you would have understood that and realised that people do not use carbon dating to date very old fossils, it wouldn't work anyway.

This alone proves you have utterly no clue what you are talking about, another blatant lie.

I've already explained this one as your misinterpretation of what I had said. You can keep hounding me for technicalities if you wish, but I'm not going to repeat what I've stated in regards to this.

There you go. Have your field day! :)

I already did. Have fun explaining why you felt the need to blatantly lie about the woodpeckers biology to attempt to support your already poor position. Or are we just going to ignore this now are we?

fun scurrying about spending hours discounting facts.

"Facts" such as woodpeckers have an unattached tongue and that their hyoid horns aren't all the size you described? Are we getting facts and "blatant lies" mixed up RR?

Worf said:
A very good post that I can't find much to inherently disagree with

Very good post and basically to the point, I particularly agree with:

In other words, it's not enough to point out that science doesn't have all the answers, or to say "evolution can't be right for reason X". A paradigm shift requires two things to take place, the old model has to be demonstrated inadequate, and a new model must be presented which better fits the facts.

Which is how any model goes through the paces, such as physics accepting the ideas of relativity because it explains certain things better than existing ideas.

So I don't know if ID is the route to go. It only demonstrates flaws in the current model which can be corrected or replaced over time, and nobody denies in any event that design exists, at which point it becomes yet again a philosophical question of whether that design is intentional or incidental.

This is essentially all I've been trying to get accross the entire time. You cannot use 'science' to establish 'design' or 'it's too impossible to evolve' without making massive factual distortions (as RR as kindly proved for us, see the woodpecker analysis). Ultimately, this quote is one of the best statements made in the thread.
 
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Dus

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Renegade Retard said:
1.) I've given you the example of the woodpecker, which gives much more indication toward design than evolution.
Aegeri just did a pretty good job of providing some facts that contradict your example.....
2.) I've argued the theory of design by arguing that prinicples common in even today's engineering (don't tell you that you don't regard mechanical enineering as a science). Sound principles are common in multiple structures, but are not applicable to all (hince why you see similarities in various kinds, but that design is not applicable to such organisms as an insect).
I don't see how this proves the intelligent design theory..... or disproves evolution for that matter. The only thing you say with this is that the insect jaw works best for insects and the mammalian jaw works best for mammals. Maybe that's why it evolved that way?
One could even argue that methods used in engineering today evolved from earlier methods. I won't go into that though, as I freely admit that I don't know **** about engineering.
But nonetheless, saying that something is true for one science (engineering) doesn't mean it's automatically true for another science as well.
3.) I've stated very early in this thread that one of evolution's greatest hurdles is mathematics, especially the laws of probability. You should know through your studies that the chances for a "change" on the smallest scale of any kind is quite high. Multiply that by the billions and billions of changes that need to take place (see your example of the jawbone) just to change from one species to the next, and the number becomes astronomical. Then, multiply that times the number of changes needed to change that species to a different genre, then kind, etc, and the number becomes so great that even the most devout evolutionary minded mathemeticians admit that the probability of change is zero. Aslo keep in mind, that if these changes were to occur an exceptional rate, that there still would not be enough time for all the changes to occur in the evolutionary time frame (what is it now, 500 billion years? I can't remember).
That's not entirely true. Mutations happen all the time in populations. Most mutations however die out, because they result in less fit individuals. However, if one individual has a mutation that improves his fitness, the chance for reproductive success increases dramatically. And therefore the percentage of individuals with this mutation will increase, increasing the chance the mutation will persist.
I agree with you that the chance that consecutive mutations lead to such dramatic changes are quite low, but that doesn't mean they don't occur. The chance a plain crashes is quite low as well, but still it happens. I'm not trying to compare the two, all I'm saying is that a really low chance is not the same as no chance at all.
4.) The evolution model has had to repeatedly change it's stance in order to not disprove itself. Case in point, our newest found reptile-eating mammal. Early to mid 20th Century evolutionists held fast to the point that these two could not exist at the same time in history. However, it has now changed it stance. Also, we know know that carbon dating is inaccurate. However, at one time in the not too distant past, this process was evolution's "smoking gun". Evolution has again changed it stance and explained away what was once believed as fact. Yet creationism is the one always accused of changing its philosophy.
Ehm.... last I checked evolution was a scientific theory. And last I checked science is the proces of forming a theory based on facts, test the theory, find new facts, rebuild the theory etc. etc.
Yes, the evolution theory has to change over and over and over, because that's how science works. The fact that the evolution theory changes to reperesent the fact speaks more in favor of the theory than against it..... so I don't see how this is prove in favor of the design theory (looking at the numbers in front of the text this is still 'prove' in favor of the design theory, right?)
5.) I've also stated that the geologic column is one of creationism's weakest areas. However, evolutionists still have a problem with it as well. Though often the fossils are layed out in an order that would support evolution, there are many areas where the fossils are "mixed up" and even reversed in order. There's not much of an explanation for this other then some type of massive force such as water (a large flood? Don't worry, that's crossing into a debate of Scripture, and I won't get into that). Also, though carbon dating is now considered flawed, the evolutionists still hold to the age of the various strata and their fossils based on the dates arrived from carbon dating. If the methodology is flawed, then the dates and ideas of the stratas are flawed. However, creationism has always maintained that the exact same formations could be made by a Genesis Flood.
Again, how is this proof in favor of the design theory? Sure, the methods we use to date fossils is not perfect, but until a better method comes along there's no way to get more accurate data. A theory can not be disproven by missing data, that's scientifically impossible. The only thing that can disprove a theory is new data. Provide me with some real data proving fossils are actually younger then we think and I'll consider the facts and adjust my view. Until then I'll stick to the most accurate dating we have, i.e. carbon dating.
 

Aegeri

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Until then I'll stick to the most accurate dating we have, i.e. carbon dating.

For fossils within 30,000 years, if we start dating something that is much older we can use Potassium/Argon dating which is even more accurate again ;)
 

bobtheking

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Renegade Retard said:
4.) The evolution model has had to repeatedly change it's stance in order to not disprove itself.
OMG FLIPFLOPPER

edit: how can anyone that claims to have a degree in ANY science POSSIBLY think that this is a bad thing?
 
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