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“Preexisting Evolutionary Potential” now a Scientific Fact

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A recent multidisciplinary study on the two-phase increase in the size of life has concluded that there must exist a “preexisting evolutionary potential” to explain the sudden increase in size and complexity which occurred twice in the history of life, both times following increases in atmospheric oxygen.

From the earliest bacteria to the largest organisms, there has been a 16 orders of magnitude increase in size. Far from the gradual progression over much time which one would expect from a Darwinian explanation, however, this increase was not incremental, but occurred in two very large steps, involving about a million times increase in size over very brief periods of time.

And things didn’t just get bigger, but much more complex as well:

Each size step required a major innovation in organismal complexity—first the eukaryotic cell and later eukaryotic multicellularity.

The investigators conclusion? There must have been a “preexisting evolutionary potential” to account for the rapid changes:

The size increases appear to have
occurred when ambient oxygen concentrations reached sufficient
concentrations for clades to realize preexisting evolutionary
potential
, highlighting the long-term dependence of
macroevolutionary pattern on both biological potential and
environmental opportunity.

They also coin the interesting phrase “latent evolutionary potential.”
From the abstract:

…latent evolutionary potential
was realized soon after environmental
limitations were removed.

These dramatic and rapid changes correspond to an increase in atmospheric oxygen. This increase appears to have unleashed an otherwise unspecified and undefined “evolutionary potential” in many different organisms.

What exactly this “evolutionary potential” was is not speculated upon. The presence of latent genetic programs is certainly the most obvious explanation. Darwinists of course are unable to offer this obvious possibility. They would then have to explain where those programs might have come from. They would then be branded ID Creationists and lose their jobs.

While the article does not directly address the implications for Darwinism of the existence of “latent” or “preexisting” evolutionary potential, the impossibility of fitting this concept into the standard neo-Darwinian paradigm is obvious. The standard explanation of life’s development, of course, requires incremental trial-and-error mutations, with nothing “preexistent” about them, selected gradually over generations to build up evolutionary change.

What these researchers have nicely documented in the fossil record, like so many other discoveries, flatly contradicts what would be expected in a Darwinian world. The findings fit quite nicely, however, with the concept of a preexistent design, with front-loaded genetic programs.

Comments
dr.time@ns.sympatico.ca The wisest of the wise wish well whether wonderful winds wind wandering whispers or not. Slow and easy enjoys more. Fast and wild know what to explore.Dr. Time
January 14, 2009
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Thanks Earvin. So Patrick, depending on myelination and diameter of the axon, the designer would have to factor in the time required to get the impulse to the destination. Another factor would would temperature variance. The colder it gets the slower the impulse travels. You also would have to package this in a single cell. That cell, when given the go-ahead, has to develop into the metazoan it becomes. And I would bet that alone places design constraints in the form of routing. Also we have to remember that which we observing today is the result of random effects acting on the design over time.Joseph
January 14, 2009
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Hey Doctor Cook! Long time no read.
Well, I've been quite busy...you know me...making the blind walk and the lame see...
Did you read Rob Sheldon’s paper on panspermia via comets? The guy’s a long time NASA physicist.
I haven't seen it but I'll look for it.
Drop a comment under one of my articles so I can get your email address.
OK.
And don’t be such a stranger!
OK. Though they may not come much stranger than me! But thanks. I have been kinda busy with other things lately, but I do drop in several times a week to see what's going on.dacook
January 14, 2009
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Patrick said:
Speaking of “bad design = no design” arguments I happened to use a waterproof cell phone the other day. The problem was that the protective layer rendered the voices almost unintelligible.
I hear The Voices through a radio.Earvin Johnson
January 14, 2009
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"These dramatic and rapid changes correspond to an increase in atmospheric oxygen. This increase appears to have unleashed an otherwise unspecified and undefined "evolutionary potential" in many different organisms."
I may be wrong, but I think the authors of the paper said that 'evolutionary potential' meant the development of eukaryotic cells (which are much larger than prokaryotic cells) and the development of multicellular organisms. In their graph of the change of size of organisms vs time, they actually have these developments on the graph. Maybe God designed all life to be able to take advantage of changes in the environment by adapting to the new conditions?Joshua
January 14, 2009
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Jospeh said,
Nerve signals travel about 100mph.
The fastest impulses (in vertebrates with myelinated neurons)travel at about 100 meters/second, which equates to about 224 mph.Earvin Johnson
January 14, 2009
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Patrick, Besides the genome there has been talk of the mebranenome(sp?). That is the membranes of the cell and cellular components which have one also have to have the information required to rebuild themselves. As for the nerve issue, think timing. Nerve signals travel about 100mph. IOW perhaps if the nerve were shorter the signal would reach the target sooner which could possibly cause a malfunction. I once put platinum spark plugs in my Grand National because I figured they would allow it to run better. Wrong! The spark reached its destination too soon throwing off the timing! Once I started investigating nerves, because of wet electricty, I started to better understand the need for timing, which distance can help determine. For example if a signal leaves the brain and I it need to reach its destination in X amount of time, that would determine how far it would have to travel. I would then design the nerve accordingly.Joseph
January 14, 2009
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Response to #6 Origin of Rabbits Discovered Scientists are tantalizingly close to discovering the secret to the origin of rabbits. Researchers in La Jolla released several rabbits into an enclosure, and within months discovered that the rabbits were replicating. "It's not the same as observing the initial evolutionary origins of rabbits," one researcher said, "but we're knocking on that door."ScottAndrews
January 14, 2009
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The new school has the front loading being the genetic algorithm embedded in/ on the DNA and other cellular components.
That's why there's all this talk of "active information" and "intelligent evolution". Then there's fractals and the fractogene concept. But personally I would think that a limited set of components would need to be explicitly predefined. Otherwise I would presume you'd run into the same problems of gradually traversing indirect pathways. Also, even if we presume that evolution via algorithms is not true we at least know that in modern creatures that complex morphological features are constructed algorithmically. Like plants and the repeating pattern of the leaves (the name for that escapes me at the moment). I've read that nerve and blood vessel growth in limbs is supposedly derived algorithmically. Darwinists will also cite the anterior and recurrent laryngeal nerves of the giraffe as an example of "poor design" since it loops ~15 feet around the neck and back from the brain to the larynx, presumably resulting in ~13 feet of "waste" (although I should note that there's potentially other functional reasons for this design I'm not aware of). Well, sure, that does not seem to make sense if it's body plan was statically defined like blueprints for a house. But it makes perfect sense if it's partially defined algorithmically in order to compensate for variations in body shape. Speaking of "bad design = no design" arguments I happened to use a waterproof cell phone the other day. The problem was that the protective layer rendered the voices almost unintelligible.Patrick
January 14, 2009
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DaveScot said:
By the way, oxygen level triggering a major front loaded evolutionary step was something I predicted based on front loaded ID a few years ago. It’s in the archives here somewhere.
Wouldn't we expect (if Darwinian evolution were at work) that a significant change in the biosphere would "trigger" evolutionary changes? How can we distinguish frontloading from natural evolution? Another thing I don't understand about the concept of frontloading is how future contingencies (the billions of possible combinations of stimuli that might occur) are predicted by the "frontloader."Earvin Johnson
January 14, 2009
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The new school has the front loading being the genetic algorithm embedded in/ on the DNA and other cellular components.
Hmmmm. How do irreducibly complex mechanisms get embedded here?
By design. Now we don't know the EXCAT process but if we did then we wouldn't need science.
In the Edge of Evolution, Behe proposes that most, if not all, protein-protein interactions are IC. It’s hard to fathom an algorithm that creates such ubiquitous complexity.
Behe is also one of those biologists who should be introduced to and experience computer science. Feb 2003 article in SciAm titled "Evolving Inventions" demonstrates that ubiquitous complexity can arise if designed to do so.Joseph
January 14, 2009
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Anybody have any comments on GilDodgen's post at #6? I'm not sure what to think of it. It doesn't explain how they almost created life either. I'm guessing they used intelligence, and most definitely not chance. :-PDomoman
January 14, 2009
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Jerry in dry humor. Channeling Jimmy Stewart.Upright BiPed
January 13, 2009
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By the way, oxygen level triggering a major front loaded evolutionary step was something I predicted based on front loaded ID a few years ago. It's in the archives here somewhere.DaveScot
January 13, 2009
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Hey Doctor Cook! Long time no read. Front loading all the way down. Did you read Rob Sheldon's paper on panspermia via comets? The guy's a long time NASA physicist. Drop a comment under one of my articles so I can get your email address. And don't be such a stranger!DaveScot
January 13, 2009
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Vote for “Watts Up With That”!
Before doing so you may search that blog for "intelligent design", "Dembski" or "Behe".sparc
January 13, 2009
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The new school has the front loading being the genetic algorithm embedded in/ on the DNA and other cellular components. Hmmmm. How do irreducibly complex mechanisms get embedded here? In the Edge of Evolution, Behe proposes that most, if not all, protein-protein interactions are IC. It's hard to fathom an algorithm that creates such ubiquitous complexity. In either case, these mechanisms and algorithms should be uncoverable, and I find that exciting.WeaselSpotting
January 13, 2009
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The exciting thing here is that ID researchers should be able to isolate 1) the genes that preserve front-loaded mechanisms when they’re not being used and 2) frontloaded genes that have yet to be expressed.
Old school. The new school has the front loading being the genetic algorithm embedded in/ on the DNA and other cellular components. Said algorithm in conjunction with available resources can create the genes required to make to necessary proteins and enzymes, as well as control the assembly of complex cellular machinery. The state-of-the-art open-source evolution simulation program, Stylus, may help us determine the extent front loading can go.Joseph
January 13, 2009
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"Pre-existing evolutionary potential" flat out screams, "front-loading"! The exciting thing here is that ID researchers should be able to isolate 1) the genes that preserve front-loaded mechanisms when they're not being used and 2) frontloaded genes that have yet to be expressed. This is truly an exciting direction in research, but don't expect the evolutionists to pick up on it with any enthusiasm.WeaselSpotting
January 13, 2009
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PZ lost to the climate change sketics. In case anybody is wondering.Jehu
January 13, 2009
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Aren't the two episodes just the appearance of eukayotes and the Cambrian Explosion? Or complex uni cellular life and multi cellular life.jerry
January 13, 2009
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This just in: Life As We Know It Nearly Created in LabGilDodgen
January 13, 2009
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This discovery dovetails very nicely with Mike Gene's frontloading concept. I wonder how this will be dealt with. It would seem to be a deathknell for the idea of Darwinism, but it should be entertaining.Jason Rennie
January 13, 2009
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"evolutionary potential"
LOL!!!! Shes goin' down in flames capn'...tha whole dern theory...with an oxymoronic term! It's random and incremental, yet it's pre-determined and sudden at the same time. Amazing.bb
January 13, 2009
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"They would then be branded ID Creationists and lose their jobs." ....sorry, but I am still laughing.Upright BiPed
January 13, 2009
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In ID terms the "evolutionary potential" would be the design's target zones.Joseph
January 13, 2009
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Stop PZ Myers from winning best science blog! Today is the last day for voting in the best science blog pole and PZ Myers has launched an angry campaign to win. He is currently in second place and gaining on the first place blog- "Watts Up With That"- which belongs to climate change skeptic Anthony Watts. Vote against PZ now! Vote for "Watts Up With That"! Here is the link: http://2008.weblogawards.org/polls/best-science-blog/ Sorry, that was off topic.Jehu
January 13, 2009
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