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At Big Think: Can we predict evolution?

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We can successfully predict the future arrangements of matter based on knowledge of the laws of physics that govern the interactions between particles. When too many particles exist to make detailed predictions about individual particles, we can use statistical physics to predict generally true and reliable outcomes of the larger system of particles. The 2nd law of thermodynamics provides us with a familiar example of outcomes based on statistical physics. If the future forms of living organisms are predictable, it will likewise be due to the ensemble of their systems of particles obeying fundamental laws of physics. “Evolution” is not a “law of physics” that is independent of or supersedes other known laws of physics.

Organisms respond in similar ways to similar circumstances.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Evolution has long been viewed as a largely unpredictable process, influenced by chaotic factors like environmental disruptions and mutations. 
  • However, researchers have demonstrated cases in some organisms of “replicated radiation,” in which similar sets of traits evolve independently in different regions. Now, researchers report the first evidence for replicated radiation in a plant lineage. 
  • As biology learns more about phenomena like replicated radiation, we might be able to predict the course of evolution.

Evolution has a reputation for being unpredictable, yet orderly. With mutations and the environment playing huge roles, it seems that predicting which species will evolve which traits is much like guessing the roll of a single die with millions of faces. 

However, in some cases, researchers have found that the die rolls the same way again and again. A combination of separate organisms’ natural development and the environmental pressures placed on them can create very similar forms, or ecomorphs. Researchers call this phenomenon replicated radiation. (Sometimes, the term adaptive radiation is used synonymously.)

In a new paper published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, an international group of researchers demonstrated that a plant lineage living in 11 geographically isolated regions independently evolved new species with similar leaf forms. This marks the first example of replicated radiation in plants, and the groundbreaking research gives us more insight into the possible future workings of evolution. 

Note: Reason suggests that the development of “similar leaf forms” stems from the fact that they all started from the same “plant lineage.” Furthermore, reason suggests that the original plant lineage had a built-in genomic variability that allowed the variant leaf forms to dominate when environmental pressures favored that form.

evolution
Credit: Annelisa Leinbach / Big Think

The article continues: Different species of Oreinotinus [Viburnum] have different types of leaves. Simply put, some have a large, hair-covered leaf, and others have a smaller, smooth leaf. Originally, experts postulated that both leaf forms evolved early in the group’s history and then dispersed separately through various mountain ranges, carried perhaps by birds. But the distribution pattern of the species, combined with the striking differences in leaf traits, gave researchers an ideal system to explore the possibility that these leaf forms evolved independently across different regions. In other words, they could explore whether this was a case of replicated radiation.

If replicated radiation is occurring, the researchers would expect two key results. First, species in the same area should be more closely related to each other than to species in different regions. Second, similar leaf traits should be present in most areas, but they should evolve independently of one another.

Turning over the same leaf

As Oreinotinus diversified, four major leaf types evolved independently from an ancestral leaf form. The four forms varied in size, shape, margin — that is, whether the edge of the leaf is smooth or toothed — and the presence of leaf hairs. The study grouped the leaves into four types. The researchers also backed up their assessments with a statistical analysis based on these characteristics. 

Nine of the 11 areas harbor at least two leaf forms; four areas include three forms; and one, Oaxaca, is home to four. Based on simulations and models, the authors rejected the simple evolutionary model in which the leaf forms evolved before the species dispersed. They also found that chance alone does not likely explain why nine areas of endemism host two or more leaf forms. Based on these lines of evidence, the team concluded that leaf forms evolved separately within multiple regions. The leaf morphs did not originate early in Oreinotinus evolution. Rather, as different lineages diversified within different areas, each lineage “traversed the same regions of leaf morpho-space.”

So what is this clade telling us when it evolves different leaf forms? As it turns out, different leaves provide different advantages that suit particular climate niches. For example, the smaller leaves would allow more precise thermoregulation — the leaf won’t get too hot or too cold as the weather changes. On the other hand, large leaves would be better for lower-light, frequently cloudy environments, because they improve light capture and make photosynthesis more efficient. So the different leaf ecomorphs are adapted to specific sets of subtly different but often adjacent environmental niches.

The future of evolution

Researchers can now add Oreinotinus to an exclusive list of other groups of organisms known to have undergone replicated radiation, such as Anolis lizards in the Caribbean, cichlid fishes in African rift lakes, and spiders in Hawaii.

With a plant on the list, evolutionary biologists know this is not a trend exclusive to animals isolated on islands, where most of the other examples come from. Like island archipelagos, the cloud forest environments of Oreinotinus are separate from one another. A plant example will help evolutionary biologists pinpoint the broad circumstances under which we can make solid predictions about evolution.

Whether it’s Darwin’s finches, Oreinotinus, or a group of sugar-hungry E. coli, we are all subject to the mysterious workings of evolution. But perhaps, as a diverse set of research groups work to tackle the problem, the mystery will fade. As Michael Donoghue, a co-corresponding author of the Oreinotinus  study, said in a statement, “Maybe evolutionary biology can become much more of a predictive science than we ever imagined in the past.”

Full article at Big Think.

Predictive success alone does not guarantee the success of a theory of how nature works. Additional consequences of a theory must also make sense and not contradict established laws of nature. Naturalistic evolution still contradicts the principle that natural causes will on average degrade the information content (loss of functional complexity) of a system over time.

Comments
Regarding your skills, KF... What is your background in biochemistry? And in digital systems, if you will permit me to point a finger at that, too?Alan Fox
September 1, 2022
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semantics (s??mænt?ks) n (functioning as singular) 1. (Linguistics) the branch of linguistics that deals with the study of meaning, changes in meaning, and the principles that govern the relationship between sentences or words and their meanings 2. (Logic) the study of the relationships between signs and symbols and what they represent 3. (Logic) logic a. the study of interpretations of a formal theory b. the study of the relationship between the structure of a theory and its subject matter c. (of a formal theory) the principles that determine the truth or falsehood of sentences within the theory, and the references of its terms se?manticist n Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014kairosfocus
September 1, 2022
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SemanticsAlan Fox
September 1, 2022
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F/N: Let's call up AmHD, for an interesting subtlety of distraction:
tem·plate also tem·plet (t?m?pl?t) n. 1. A pattern or gauge, such as a thin metal plate with a cut pattern, used as a guide in making something accurately, as in woodworking or the carving of architectural profiles. 2. Computers a. A document or file having a preset format, used as a starting point for a particular application so that the format does not have to be recreated each time it is used: a loan amortization template for a spreadsheet program. b. An overlay that fits over all or part of a keyboard and has labels describing the functions of each key within a particular application. 3. A horizontal piece of stone or timber used to distribute weight or pressure, as over a door frame. 4. Biochemistry A molecule of a nucleic acid, such as DNA, that serves as a pattern for the synthesis of a macromolecule, as of RNA. [Probably from French templet, diminutive of temple, temple of a loom; see temple3.] American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
The primary meaning underscores that templates are generally analogue information systems, used to set a pattern for precise replication, such as a cluster of drill holes or the like. What opens up the rhetoric game is that DNA does serve as a template in one context: each DNA strand matches its complement which builds in redundancy. Then too, when RNAs are to be made, this property of complementarity is used to match the RNA strand. A-T and C-G. Where further, the three-letter anti-codon in tRNA uses this complementarity too. What's being side-stepped? Much.
1: The information in D/RNA is in the functionally specific sequence along the chain, which sets up in effect a prong-height pattern that allows complementarity matching at right angles to the chain. 2: In making mRNA, the string that has start, elongate and stop elements for AA chaining, there is often an editing step after the RNA string is first composed. Wikipedia, seeing thumbscrews, confesses:
In molecular biology, messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) is a single-stranded molecule of RNA that corresponds to the genetic sequence of a gene, and is read by a ribosome in the process of synthesizing a protein. mRNA is created during the process of transcription, where an enzyme (RNA polymerase) converts the gene into primary transcript mRNA (also known as pre-mRNA). This pre-mRNA usually still contains introns, regions that will not go on to code for the final amino acid sequence. These are removed in the process of RNA splicing, leaving only exons, regions that will encode the protein. This exon sequence constitutes mature mRNA. Mature mRNA is then read by the ribosome, and, utilising amino acids carried by transfer RNA (tRNA), the ribosome creates the protein. This process is known as translation. All of these processes form part of the central dogma of molecular biology, which describes the flow of genetic information in a biological system. As in DNA, genetic information in mRNA is contained in the sequence of nucleotides, which are arranged into codons consisting of three ribonucleotides each. Each codon codes for a specific amino acid, except the stop codons, which terminate protein synthesis. The translation of codons into amino acids requires two other types of RNA: transfer RNA, which recognizes the codon and provides the corresponding amino acid, and ribosomal RNA (rRNA), the central component of the ribosome's protein-manufacturing machinery. The concept of mRNA was developed by Sydney Brenner and Francis Crick in 1960. While performing the experimental verifications, François Jacob and Jacques Monod coined the name "messenger RNA". In 1961, mRNA was isolated and described independently by James Watson's research team and a team of Jacob, Monod and Matthew Meselson.
3: We see here, editing. Itself a highly information as text focussed activity. 4: Next, tRNA does use complementarity to match codons, but the AA is not chemically or physically controlled by the anticodon at the bottom of the L of a folded tRNA. 5: Instead, it is at the CCA tool tip end, which is matched to the COOH end of the AA. Any CCA sequence chemically matches any COOH, so chemical-physical determinism is broken. 6: As Yockey highlights in his information system chart for protein synthesis that is studiously ignored by resident objectors and therefore the penumbra of attack sites, it is the aminoacyl tRNA synthetase enzymes that load the right AA to the right tRNA, this is where the encoding happens. Wikipedia needed to be shown the rack for this confession:
Aminoacylation is the process of adding an aminoacyl group to a compound. It covalently links an amino acid to the CCA 3? end of a tRNA molecule. Each tRNA is aminoacylated (or charged) with a specific amino acid by an aminoacyl tRNA synthetase. There is normally a single aminoacyl tRNA synthetase for each amino acid, despite the fact that there can be more than one tRNA, and more than one anticodon for an amino acid. Recognition of the appropriate tRNA by the synthetases is not mediated solely by the anticodon, and the acceptor stem often plays a prominent role [--> i.e. overall configuration counts, it's not just 6 bits of info here] .[17] Reaction: amino acid + ATP ? aminoacyl-AMP + PPi aminoacyl-AMP + tRNA ? aminoacyl-tRNA + AMP Certain organisms can have one or more aminophosphate-tRNA synthetases missing. This leads to charging of the tRNA by a chemically related amino acid, and by use of an enzyme or enzymes, the tRNA is modified to be correctly charged. For example, Helicobacter pylori has glutaminyl tRNA synthetase missing. Thus, glutamate tRNA synthetase charges tRNA-glutamine(tRNA-Gln) with glutamate. An amidotransferase then converts the acid side chain of the glutamate to the amide, forming the correctly charged gln-tRNA-Gln.
7: We therefore see transcription [which uses a templating property], editing, translation from 64-state D/RNA code to 20 state AA sequencing, with one of the codons, UAG both being start and beginning the AA chain with methionine. Then, there are three stop codons. 8: These fulfill a specific algorithmic function: forcing halt. Halting, being a central challenge in computing. 9: Thus, we see coded algorithms, involving symbolic strings of alphanumeric elements and protocols for effecting their meaning, i.e. text expressing algorithms. Which are inherently goal-directed.
KFkairosfocus
September 1, 2022
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Kairosfocus AF, the evasions continue. It is time to draw conclusions. You know full well that it is the consensus based on multiple Nobel Prize winning work, now taught literally starting in primary school
The basis why some people won't accept the reality of code is because they follow correctly where the logic would lead ( they don't like the conclusion so they won't accept the premise ) . Why wouldn't they do it like Dawkins did : accept the obvious reality of the genetic code and then spin the logical significance ? What Dawkins did is smarter he doesn't deny the obvious because he would sound crazy and lose his credibility instead he just tweak the logical conclusion.Lieutenant Commander Data
September 1, 2022
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Sev, in order to object to function based on configuration of elements, thus functionally specific complex organisation and/or information, you have composed an alphanumeric string data structure expressing meaningful statements in English. Which you can readily contrast to repetitive, crystal cell like elements or the sort of random strings found in tars. This was pointed out in the 1970's by Orgel and Wicken, on the record. The self referential incoherence is manifest. KFkairosfocus
September 1, 2022
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There is also an extensive series of blog posts about "junk DNA" and the "function wars" - discussing what is meant by "function" in genetics - on Larry Moran's blog Sandwalk for anyone who is actually interested.Seversky
September 1, 2022
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AF, the evasions continue. It is time to draw conclusions. You know full well that it is the consensus based on multiple Nobel Prize winning work, now taught literally starting in primary school [so much for how much Biochem do you know . . . the answer is primary, secondary and college level commonplace facts driven by organic chemistry applied to life and widely reported . . . ], that a molecular biology breakthrough from 1953 on established that there are string data structure, alphanumeric codes in D/RNA that express algorithms for protein synthesis. Of course, such an extension of molecular nanotech is into digital technology, which is much less widely understood or taught. This is the point of general ignorance that seems exploitable. So, as you try to discredit ID, you have realised that this consensus on facts at the core of life from Crick to the US NIH to Dawkins to Dictionaries to Wikipedia is ultimately fatal to your preferred evolutionary materialistic scientism and/or fellow travellers. So you have chosen to put up rhetoric to try to discredit it. A clue should be that Wikipedia is unable to discredit and dismiss, nor Dawkins. The latter deploys the favourite phrase, natural selection, neatly skipping over that protein synthesis is antecedent to self replication [and metabolism] therefore to differential reproductive success. So there is a dilemma, come up with a way to get evolution before evolution is at least possible or else deny a massive fact of digital information. Dawkins is gored on the horn of reproduction, and you on that of a massively evident fact of digital technology in the heart of cell based life. Fail. KFkairosfocus
September 1, 2022
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In old "heist" movies, the criminals would sometimes need to get a copy of the key used to open a lock to a secure vault. They would often find a way to take an impression of the key in a block of wax or clay. That impression would then be used to make a functional copy of the original key for use in the robbery. The wax or clay impression of the key is a template. The sequences of DNA which are transcribed into RNA "impressions" are analogous to the key "template". The strands of DNA can be viewed as a string of such physical templates. Are those strings a code or cipher? Is that how machine code or the various programming languages work in a computer?Seversky
September 1, 2022
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PS, what is your background in digital systems?
What is your background in biochemistry?Alan Fox
September 1, 2022
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When your quarrel is with Dawkins...
Richard Dawkins is not God. He has written and said many things I agree with and some things I disagree with. So what? Just out of curiosity, what particular issue do you think I disagree with him about? Incidentally, Dr Stern-Cardinale's video take-down of ICR's Dr Tomkins has a bit about genetic "codes". Watch Dan's hands showing templating.Alan Fox
September 1, 2022
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BTW, a Template is an analogue information system typically used to ensure consistency of manufactured elements that need to be precise. We are dealing with molecular nanotech. Similarly, while the map is not the territory, a good map is a sound guide to the territory, which extends to validated models, simulations etc.kairosfocus
September 1, 2022
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A primer for Querius on Junk DNA: https://youtu.be/FOXrsaCpt-AAlan Fox
September 1, 2022
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AF, more clever but self defeating rhetoric of denial games. Your desperation to not acknowledge the manifest tells us the true balance on merits is not in your favour. When your quarrel is with Dawkins' open admission that we are dealing with 4-state digital information elements, that says a lot. KF PS, what is your background in digital systems?kairosfocus
September 1, 2022
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Goodness me, KF. All that effort to argue semantics. As Seversky points out, your model doesn't fit reality. My template is a better fitAlan Fox
August 31, 2022
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@Martin_r:
Andy, i am afraid, that you are confused. You guys (Darwinists) always are, confused/wrong.
Yep, you're confused.AndyClue
August 31, 2022
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F/N: I did a web search on digital, and can see a common failure to recognise that this is not just about two state elements but about discrete state elements. I recall here my introductory lecture for digital topics where the comparison was climbing a ladder vs a rope as continuous state. Binary, decimal, duodecimal, hexadecimal and sexagesimal cases were highlighted. Astronomers were still using 60-state numerals in the 1600's for calculations. The last, always got a chuckle. I don't know if many are aware that the USSR produced three state computers [and a textbook that extends the math of digital systems to arbitrary numbers of states], or that something like the 20-pin 74LS245 uses tri-state, eight line bidirectional bus buffers with a high impedance state as a control on information flow. Digital is not equivalent to binary digital. KF PS, AmHD,
dig·i·tal (d?j??-tl) adj. 1. a. Relating to or resembling a digit, especially a finger. b. Operated or done with the fingers: a digital switch. c. Having digits. 2. Expressed in discrete numerical form, especially for use by a computer or other electronic device: digital information. 3. Electronics a. Relating to or being a device that can generate, record, process, receive, transmit, or display information that is represented in discrete numerical form. b. Relating to or being a service that provides information expressed in discrete numerical form: We subscribe to digital cable. 4. Relating to or being a profession or activity that is performed using digital devices: a digital librarian; digital photography. 5. Using or giving a reading in digits: a digital clock. 6. Characterized by widespread use of computers: living in the digital age. n. A key played with the finger, as on a piano. dig?i·tal·ly adv. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
kairosfocus
August 31, 2022
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PPS, the linked video clip in which Dawkins opens with the key admission (then immediately fails to recognise that the genetic code is antecedent to self replication so to differential reproductive success) has a telling comment thread. First, there is failure to recognise that digital means discrete state, and so a four state system is digital. There are demands for where are the numbers, failing to see that 1/0 is also hole/no hole for punched tape or card, high/low, true/false, N/S etc for two state elements. Here we have four state elements A/G/C/T (or U), forming an alphanumeric, discrete state system. These are then composed as s-t-r-i-n-g data structures where any of the four may follow any other of the four. Next, we have three element codons, defining a 64 state system that is reflected in code tables [with was it 24 variants]. In this context we have start and stop codons, with a chain of extending codons, which match anticodons of loaded tRNAs in the ribosome. At the other end of the tRNA as folded into an L, we have a standard CCA tool tip loaded at the COOH end with a particular AA. Notice, a universal joint, which means chemically any tRNA could bond with any AA; as Yockey illustrates, it is the loading enzymes that assign a particular AA from the key 20 to particular tRNAs, thus effecting the encoding. These L shaped molecules act as taxis for AAs and as position-arm devices that are used to click together the chained AAs. Folded, agglomerated and modified AA chains thus formed in the cells through onward steps of course are the proteins of life, the system uses such proteins, especially enzymes. That is we have a going concern chicken-egg loop. The YT commenters seem to struggle to acknowledge these well known points established through multiple Nobel Prize winning work. That is a flag as to what is going on, in a day where it is a few clicks away to learn what digital and code as well as algorithm mean.kairosfocus
August 31, 2022
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PS, to claim truth -- accurate description of reality -- is not the same as to have it, which is obvious. This is well known.kairosfocus
August 31, 2022
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Sev, you are determined to go over old ground established from the first. Of course you wish to project hypercredulity as the "real" problem. Nope, it is a secondary issue as when one disbelieves what s/he should believe it is because s/he has a prior belief or ideological commitment that s/he should not; rendering the individual closed and sometimes hostile to what they resist beyond reason. In short, we are seeing crooked yardstick thinking by which the crooked is used to condemn the straight. And, the pivot is thus the pattern of demanding arbitrarily -- irresponsibly -- high warrant for what one disbelieves when for what one is inclined to believe no such demand is going to be made. This is the lurking error in "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." Nope, only reasonable and adequate warrant. BTW, Hume may well have opened the door to the hyperskepticism we are dealing with, through step two, oh there's no evidence that X, where in fact there is wilful refusal to acknowledge evidence. As can be seen just above regarding the genetic code, which manifestly exemplifies and instantiates coded algorithms but that seems to be fatal for a priori evolutionary materialistic scientism as was inadvertently exposed by Lewontin and its fellow travellers. The ideology leads to the undue suspicion and resistance to what is manifestly well warranted, thence all sorts of specious deflective arguments. KFkairosfocus
August 31, 2022
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Kairosfocus/167
Hyperskepticism is a millennia-old problem, and has been identified and discussed.
Which is worse, "hyperskepticism" or its antithesis "hypercredulity" - an unquestioning belief in a faith, philosophy or person? Isn't the wisest course of action that proposed by David Hume in An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
“In our reasonings concerning matter of fact, there are all imaginable degrees of assurance, from the highest certainty to the lowest species of moral evidence. A wise man, therefore, proportions his belief to the evidence.”
PS, truth claims are not equivalent to truth.
What is the difference?
But then it seems we are going through a wave of recycled objections as there is little substance forthcoming on the Haldane challenge, just for starters.
What is Haldane's challenge other than the standard objection that we have no account as yet of how the conscious mind arises from the physical brain?
As for the attempt to deny that the genetic code is a code, that just shows desperation.
The concept of a code is a model of - or analogy for - the nature and function of the genome. But a model is not the same as the thing being modeled and the explanatory value of an analogy rests on taking full account of both the similarities and the differences of the cases being compared.Seversky
August 31, 2022
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Still waiting on evolutionists to provide observable and testable direct data of an organism evolving to form a new family of organisms... As BA77 posts the quote all the time... what do we actually KNOW regarding macroevolution? Not infer, not presuppose, not hope, not think... what do we know?zweston
August 31, 2022
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Relatd/168 Like I said, it’s a big world out there and most of it is not Christian……..chuckdarwin
August 31, 2022
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CD at 166, You should understand that when I use the word men it is based on the word mankind. Below is each religion's total estimated population for 2020: Christianity - 2.38 billion Islam - 1.91 billion Hinduism - 1.16 billion Buddhism - 507 million Folk Religions - 430 million Other Religions - 61 million Judaism - 14.6 million Unaffiliated - 1.19 billion Source: https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/religion-by-countryrelatd
August 31, 2022
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CD, word games in distraction from the substantial. Hyperskepticism is a millennia-old problem, and has been identified and discussed. Selective forms have been observed in the wild, they were even part of the exchanges over sexual harassment at an atheist conference some years ago, where IIRC, they actually spoke of hyperskepticism. It's a prob, it has a label, deal with the prob. KF PS, truth claims are not equivalent to truth. That brings up the little matter of warrant. But then it seems we are going through a wave of recycled objections as there is little substance forthcoming on the Haldane challenge, just for starters. As for the attempt to deny that the genetic code is a code, that just shows desperation.kairosfocus
August 31, 2022
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Relatd/164 You know, Relatd, there's a lot more to the world than Christians and "secular men" (the sexism of your statement is duly noted). There are literally billions of folks out there that are neither Christian nor "secular" as you put it. Hindus, Buddhists, Taoists, Muslims, and every other flavor of God worshiper you can imagine--they all have a claim on the truth.chuckdarwin
August 31, 2022
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Better to use what you actually mean: closed-minded.
How about unreasonably close-minded? That should describe you fairly accurately. Maybe we can have a contest for the new most best word. But why not hyperskeptical now that we have a definition for it.jerry
August 31, 2022
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CD at 163, What is a search for the truth? If Christianity is rejected then whatever secular men write is left.relatd
August 31, 2022
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KF Well, we've at least established that "hyperskeptical" is not a real word. Better to use what you actually mean: closed-minded. Greenleaf's treatise on the rules of evidence, published over a century and a half ago, has long been superseded by the modern rules of evidence. Apropos my "self-preening one-liner," Greenleaf's publication using the Gospels as evidence for the truth of Jesus' death and claimed resurrection is a work of pure motivated reasoning based upon Greenleaf's own strong belief in Christianity. It is a work of advocacy, not objective truth. It was published, I believe in the 1840s at a time when Christian evangelism reached a fevered pitch in the northeastern US, e.g., the "Burned Over" district. And, in fact, it has been hailed one of the first true works of Christian apologetics. And apologetics is apologetics, not a search for the truth.chuckdarwin
August 31, 2022
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PPPS, Wikipedia has been shown the thumbscrews again, >> The genetic code is the set of rules used by living cells to translate information encoded within genetic material (DNA or RNA sequences of nucleotide triplets, or codons) into proteins. Translation is accomplished by the ribosome, which links proteinogenic amino acids in an order specified by messenger RNA (mRNA), using transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules to carry amino acids and to read the mRNA three nucleotides at a time. The genetic code is highly similar among all organisms and can be expressed in a simple table with 64 entries. The codons specify which amino acid will be added next during protein synthesis. With some exceptions,[1] a three-nucleotide codon in a nucleic acid sequence specifies a single amino acid. The vast majority of genes are encoded with a single scheme (see the RNA codon table). That scheme is often referred to as the canonical or standard genetic code, or simply the genetic code, though variant codes (such as in mitochondria) exist. >> A caption: >>A series of codons in part of a messenger RNA (mRNA) molecule. Each codon consists of three nucleotides, usually corresponding to a single amino acid. The nucleotides are abbreviated with the letters A, U, G and C. This is mRNA, which uses U (uracil). DNA uses T (thymine) instead. This mRNA molecule will instruct a ribosome to synthesize a protein according to this code.>> See how ill founded this objectionism is? AF has been corrected many times on this, we can freely conclude his credibility is negative.kairosfocus
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