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How Keith’s “Bomb” Turned Into A Suicide Mission

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Keith brought in an argument he claimed to be a “bomb” for ID. It turned out to be a failed suicide mission where the only person that got blown up was Keith.

(Please note: I am assuming that life patterns exists in an ONH, as Keith claims, for the sake of this argument only.  Also, there are many other, different take-downs of Keith’s “bomb” argument already on the table.  Indulge me while I present another here.)

In my prior OP, I pointed out that Keith had made no case that nature was limited to producing only ONH’s when it comes to biological diversity, while his whole argument depended on it.  He has yet to make that case, and has not responded to me when I have reiterated that question.  We turn our attention now to his treatment of “the designer” in his argument.

First, a point that my have been lost in another thread:

From here, keith claimed:

3. We know that unguided evolution exists.

No, “we” do not. ID proponents concede that unguided natural forces exist that are utilized by a designed system (even if perhaps entirely front-loaded) to accomplish evolutionary goals; they do not concede that unguided process (including being unguided and unregulated by front-loaded designed algorithms and infrastructure) can generate successful evolution, even microevolution, entirely without any guided support/infrastructure.

Keith claims that we have observed “unguided microevolution” producing ONH’s, but that is an assumptive misstatement. Douglas Theobald, his source for “evidence” that unguided evolution has been observed generating ONH’s, makes no such claim or inference.  Theobald only claims that microevolution produces ONH’s.  Observing a process producing an effect doesn’t necessarily reveal if the process is guided or unguided.

Keith agrees Theobald makes no such claim or inference. The “unguided” modifying characteristic, then, is entirely on Keith; he can point to no research or science that rigorously vets microevolutionary processes as “unguided”.

When challenged on this assumption, Keith makes statements such as “even YEC’s agree that microevolution is unguided”, or that some particular ID proponent has made that concession; please note that because others elect not to challenge an assumption doesn’t mean that everyone else is required to concede the point. If challenged, the onus falls upon Keith to support his assertion that unguided microevolutionary forces are up to the task of generating ONH’s, otherwise his entire argument fails because of this unsupported premise.

Keith’s response to the challenge about the “unguided” nature of microevolution:

As you know, we actually observe microevolution producing ONHs, and microevolution does not require designer intervention, as even most YECs acknowledge.

This is simple reiteration of the very assertion that has been challenged. Keith circularly refers back to the very source that provides no support for his “unguided” inference. This has been pointed out to him several times, yet he repeats the same mantra over and over “we know unguided microevolution can produce ONH’s.”  Reiterating an assertion is not providing support for the assertion.  As I’ve asked Keith serveral times, where is the research that makes the case that microevolutionary processes/successes are qualitatively “unguided”?  Keith has yet to point us to such a paper.

That said, here is the suicidal portion of Keith’s argument.

I’ve repeatedly challenged keith to answer this question:

Are you saying that it is impossible for natural forces to generate a mismatched (non-ONH) set of trees [diversity of life pattern]?

This question follows a point I made in the Black Knight thread:

If, as Keith’s argument apparently assumes, natural forces are **restricted** to generating biological systems as evolutionary in nature and conforming to Markovian ONH progressions, why (and perhaps more importantly, how) would a designer work around these apparently inherent natural limitations and tendencies in order to generate **something else**?

It’s like Keith expects a designer to defy gravity, inertia and other natural forces and tendencies in order to get a rocket to the moon and back, just because keith imagines that a designer would have trillions of options available that didn’t need to obey such natural laws and tendencies.

Keith’s argument relies upon his claim that the designer could have generated “the diversity of life” into “trillions” of patterns that were not ONH’s, and that no such options were open to natural forces.  If a designer and natural forces both had the same number of options open to them, there would be no advantage in Keith’s argument to either.  However, Keith’s “trillions of options” argument requires that the designer can instantiate living organisms into the physical world in a manner that natural forces cannot, thus generating “diversity of life” patterns nature is incapable of producing.

Keith’s response was:

You think that the Designer was limited by natural forces? You might want to discuss that assumption with your fellow IDers, who may not be quite so enthusiastic about it as you are. Besides the conflict with your fellow IDers, you have another problem: what is the basis for your assumption about the limitations of the Designer? How do you know what the Designer can and cannot do? Be specific.

Note the attempt to shift the burden, as if I was the one making  a claim about what the designer “can and cannot do”. I made no such claim.  The claim was in Keith’s assertion that the designer could have generated trillions of “diversity of life” patterns that nature could not by instantiating life forms into physical existence in a manner that nature could not.  Later, Keith modified his claim:

There are trillions of logical possibilities, and we have no reason to rule any of them out. After all, we know absolutely nothing about the purported designer.

What an explosive, self-contradictory blunder.  If we cannot rule any of them out because we know nothing about the designer, by the same token we cannot rule them in.  Whether or not unguided natural forces can generate any of the same “trillions of possibilities” of diversity of life pattern (alternatives to ONH) depends on what we know about those natural forces and how they operate.  Obviously, Keith doesn’t assume that unguided natural forces can instantiate life in  “trillions” of ways that would not conform to an ONH.  Not knowing anything about “the designer” doesn’t give Keith license to simply assume the designer has “trillions of possibilities” open to actually instantiating a “diversity of life” into the physical world. If we disregard actual capacity to produce biological diversity, the same number of purely “logical” alternatives are open to both natural forces and any designer.  You have to know something about the causal agencies to know what it is “possible” for them to do or not do. Keith admits he knows nothing about the designer.

Read what Keith said again:

You think that the Designer was limited by natural forces?

Something becomes clear here: Keith’s argument must assume that the designer is supernatural, and can magically instantiate biological life into the world in any way imaginable, without regard for natural laws, forces, or molecular tendencies and behavioral rules, and without regard to what would limit any other causal agency – it’s actual capacity to engineer particular outcomes in the physical world.

Yet, Keith says that we know nothing about the designer:

 After all, we know absolutely nothing about the purported designer.

If we assume that natural forces are capable of creating non-ONH patterns, Keith’s argument fails. If we assume that natural forces can only produce an ONH, then Keith must assume extra characteristics about the designer – that it is capable of instantiating  “diversity of life” patterns that natural forces cannot.  Keith’s assumptions are not equal.  For the assumptions to be equal, we either assume both unguided forces and the designer can only produce ONH patterns in a diversity of life landscape, or we can assume both are capable of non-ONH patterns.  We cannot assume that unguided forces can actually only produce ONH, and assume that the designer can actually produce trillions of other patterns, and keep a straight face while insisting our assumptions are equal and that “we know absolutely nothing about the designer”.

Comments
WJM, lifepsy and others, Stephen Meyer addresses Theobald’s claims extensively in 'Darwin's Doubt'. Starting here: [Part One: The Mystery of the Missing Fossils; 6. The animal tree of life; Molecules vs. Anatomy.]Box
November 9, 2014
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William J Murray: So, it’s possible that natural forces might generate all kinds of living forms that, having no vertical inheritance, do not/didnot persist. Depends what you mean by "living". William J Murray: I assume that you agree that nature might have tried out trillions of such non-common ancestor, non-vertical descent, non-ONH organisms, but that they simply did not, and do not, persist? Most theories concerning the origin of life assume a period of prebiotic conditions. Once reproduction began, then evolution also began. As there's no complete theory, no one knows exactly how this process began. William J Murray: Let me ask you another question; do you think it is possible for unliving natural forces to generate a living organism that has no vertical descent, but is so extremely hardy it can still persist? Doubtful. Even mountain erode in the timescales of Earth's history. In addition, such an organism would be competing against other organisms which reproduce and therefore evolve. William J Murray: If a designer wants a life form to persist, he must use vertical inheritance? Depends what you mean by "life form" as opposed to simply life. Reproduction means evolution and branching descent. William J Murray: Can you think of any ONH’s that exist in non-living systems, but were instantiated by a designer? Sure. The Dewey Decimal System, one of many arbitrarily devised nested hierarchies humans use. Another is a military organization. While still arbitrary, the advantage to humans is the hierarchy of control over the organization. William J Murray: Which leaves keith’s argument with no teeth. We've already expressed our disagreement with keith's argument. The nested hierarchy is an entailment of branching descent, not unguided evolution generally.Zachriel
November 9, 2014
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Zachriel, Well, we're getting close. Need a few more clarifications. You said:
If there is no vertical inheritance, then life doesn’t persist. Do you understand what is mean by vertical inheritance? It means offspring.
So, it's possible that natural forces might generate all kinds of living forms that, having no vertical inheritance, do not/didnot persist. Correct? I assume that you agree that nature might have tried out trillions of such non-common ancestor, non-vertical descent, non-ONH organisms, but that they simply did not, and do not, persist?
There still has to be a vertical component, i.e. reproduction.
Well, there doesn't have to be; it is only if it is going to persist, as you say. Let me ask you another question; do you think it is possible for unliving natural forces to generate a living organism that has no vertical descent, but is so extremely hardy it can still persist?
Life has to have a vertical component to persist, i.e. reproduction.
If life must have a vertical component to persist, doesn't this apply to a designer as well? If a designer wants a life form to persist, he must use vertical inheritance?
No, we can’t think of any offhand.
Can you think of any ONH's that exist in non-living systems, but were instantiated by a designer? As I'm sure you can see, we're approaching the logical closure on keith's argument, whereas if one makes equal assumptions about unguided forces and a designer, and start those assumptions from abiogenesis, the same options were open to both, but in order to generate a persistent life system with high fidelity, both unguided systems and any designer would have to settle on the common ancestor/vertical descent model. Which leaves keith's argument with no teeth.William J Murray
November 9, 2014
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Adapa: That’s because snakes and other legless reptiles evolved from ancestors who had four limbs. Or to express it neutrally with regard to theory, snakes have features that nest within amniotes which nest within tetrapods.Zachriel
November 9, 2014
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Querius How would we get people to stop calling it the theory of evolution when it too is a paradigm? The theory of evolution is a scientific theory because it meets all the criteria for a scientific theory:
A scientific theory is a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world that is acquired through the scientific method and repeatedly tested and confirmed through observation and experimentation. As with most (if not all) forms of scientific knowledge, scientific theories are inductive in nature and aim for predictive power and explanatory force. Scientific theories are testable and make falsifiable predictions. They describe the causal elements responsible for a particular natural phenomenon, and are used to explain and predict aspects of the physical universe or specific areas of inquiry (e.g. electricity, chemistry, astronomy).
I'll pass on your misunderstanding of both evolutionary mechanisms and the meaning of vestigial with the recommendation that you read a good biology book or take a class sometime.Adapa
November 9, 2014
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Zachriel And we gave you a counterexample, one you introduced yourself. Cetaceans are clearly classified with tetrapods, even though they don’t have hind limbs. Yes, and I'll go lifepsy one better. Lifepsy did you know that snakes are classified as tetrapods event though they have no limbs at all? That's because snakes and other legless reptiles evolved from ancestors who had four limbs.Adapa
November 9, 2014
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lifepsy: If a *basal* vertebrate evolves away from traits that define vertebrates, then its descendent traits will not nest within vertebrates. Thus the nested hierarchy pattern is violated. That is incorrect. We provided a counterexample. Why not try to respond to that instead of simply repeating your claim.Zachriel
November 9, 2014
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Zachriel
And we gave you a counterexample, one you introduced yourself. Cetaceans are clearly classified with tetrapods, even though they don’t have hind limbs.
I note the desperation in your increasingly irrelevant replies. Simply explained again for the willfully obtuse: Fact: If unique traits are lost shortly after they’ve evolved, then the descendent cannot nest within that trait. Example: If a *basal* vertebrate evolves away from traits that define vertebrates, then its descendent traits will not nest within vertebrates. Thus the nested hierarchy pattern is violated. Conclusion: Branching descent does not *necessarily* produce a nested hierarchy of traits.lifepsy
November 9, 2014
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William J Murray: I asked for an example of an ONH produced by natural forces other than that which is currently under debate. Sorry. We didn't think that paternity tests and leaves on trees were under debate. No, we can't think of any offhand. William J Murray: Are you saying that no system of living organisms other than one with a common ancestor and vertical descent can persist? No, we said that vertical inheritance tends to be advantageous to persistence. That doesn't mean no other system can persist, and there is substantial evidence of horizontal mechanisms in biology. William J Murray: I meant, when it comes to life, can natural forces produce nothing other than a system comprised of a common ancestor and vertical descent? If there is no vertical inheritance, then life doesn't persist. Do you understand what is mean by vertical inheritance? It means offspring. William J Murray: But, you’ve answered that by saying it can also create a horizontal system. There still has to be a vertical component, i.e. reproduction. William J Murray: So, let me ask further: can natural forces create life in a manner neither horizontal or vertical? Life has to have a vertical component to persist, i.e. reproduction. William J Murray: Are you claiming that horizontal mechanisms cannot persist as well or better as vertical ones? They are countervailing influences, so they both persist. More complex, slower reproducing organisms generally require greater fidelity in reproduction. Querius: The assumption by Ohno was that the non-coding DNA had no known function, so it must be junk. It’s even in the title of his paper. Notably, Ohno puts "junk" in scare-quotes. Ohno points out that a salamander has many times more DNA than humans, so genome size is not directly related to complexity. Querius: This was such an embarrassment that evolutionists eviscerated the original definition. Actually, the original definition by Darwin allowed for function, writing "An organ serving for two purposes, may become rudimentary or utterly aborted for one, even the more important purpose, and remain perfectly efficient for the other." http://darwin-online.org.uk/Variorum/1866/1866-535-c-1861.html lifepsy: If a basal vertebrate evolves away from traits that define vertebrates, then its descendent traits will not nest within vertebrates. And we gave you a counterexample, one you introduced yourself. Cetaceans are clearly classified with tetrapods, even though they don't have hind limbs.Zachriel
November 9, 2014
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Zachriel
lifepsy: Branching descent does not simultaneously spawn multiple trait assemblages. Each trait must evolve sequentially. If a trait is lost then the descendent cannot nest within that trait. Not even sure what situation you are thinking about, unless it’s a population during incipient speciation. A toy example might look like this:
I gave you a specific example before. Which you avoided. If a basal vertebrate evolves away from traits that define vertebrates, then its descendent traits will not nest within vertebrates. Simple.
Notice that we can still group the first two into their proper placement, with ZZZ being the out-group.
Um, of course you can. Your example began and ended with two distinct groups. Why wouldn't you be able to distinguish them? If shared traits stay generally conserved, while new unique traits are lost shortly after they've evolved, then the descendent cannot nest within that trait, thus the nested hierarchy pattern is broken. It's as simple as that.lifepsy
November 9, 2014
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Part 2 of my point-by-point rebuttal of the OP. WJM writes:
We turn our attention now to his treatment of “the designer” in his argument. First, a point that my have been lost in another thread: From here, keith claimed:
3. We know that unguided evolution exists.
No, “we” do not. ID proponents concede that unguided natural forces exist that are utilized by a designed system (even if perhaps entirely front-loaded) to accomplish evolutionary goals; they do not concede that unguided process (including being unguided and unregulated by front-loaded designed algorithms and infrastructure) can generate successful evolution, even microevolution, entirely without any guided support/infrastructure.
As I've explained more than once, my argument makes no assumptions about OOL. How things are set up initially doesn't matter. As long as the mutation rate is slow enough and inheritance is primarily vertical after OOL, an ONH will be produced and my argument applies.
Keith claims that we have observed “unguided microevolution” producing ONH’s, but that is an assumptive misstatement. Douglas Theobald, his source for “evidence” that unguided evolution has been observed generating ONH’s, makes no such claim or inference. Theobald only claims that microevolution produces ONH’s. Observing a process producing an effect doesn’t necessarily reveal if the process is guided or unguided.
You're making the same mistake as nullasalus.
Keith agrees Theobald makes no such claim or inference. The “unguided” modifying characteristic, then, is entirely on Keith; he can point to no research or science that rigorously vets microevolutionary processes as “unguided”.
Still more of the nullasalus mistake.
When challenged on this assumption, Keith makes statements such as “even YEC’s agree that microevolution is unguided”, or that some particular ID proponent has made that concession; please note that because others elect not to challenge an assumption doesn’t mean that everyone else is required to concede the point.
So you and nullasalus are making a mistake that even YECs are too smart to make. How does that feel?
If challenged, the onus falls upon Keith to support his assertion that unguided microevolutionary forces are up to the task of generating ONH’s, otherwise his entire argument fails because of this unsupported premise.
See my reply to nullasalus.
Keith’s response to the challenge about the “unguided” nature of microevolution:
As you know, we actually observe microevolution producing ONHs, and microevolution does not require designer intervention, as even most YECs acknowledge.
This is simple reiteration of the very assertion that has been challenged. Keith circularly refers back to the very source that provides no support for his “unguided” inference. This has been pointed out to him several times, yet he repeats the same mantra over and over “we know unguided microevolution can produce ONH’s.” Reiterating an assertion is not providing support for the assertion. As I’ve asked Keith serveral times, where is the research that makes the case that microevolutionary processes/successes are qualitatively “unguided”? Keith has yet to point us to such a paper.
See my reply to nullasalus. Part 3 of my rebuttal will come tomorrow.keith s
November 9, 2014
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Just reread my #124. "inversion" should be "reversion" in the last line.keith s
November 9, 2014
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Mapou,
Of course, it is intelligent guidance. It was pre-programmed in the genome from the beginning.
And you know this how?keith s
November 8, 2014
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keith s @121:
Seriously, Mapou? You don’t understand that we are talking about intelligent guidance?
Of course, it is intelligent guidance. It was pre-programmed in the genome from the beginning. How much more intelligent can you get? The brain is pre-programmed to turn off and turn on various genes in response to certain environmental pressures. Darwinists have nothing to say on the matter that makes any kind of sense. In fact, they continually and stupidly conflate micro-evolution with macro evolution. It's all BS, of course.Mapou
November 8, 2014
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Vishnu requested a point-by-point response to William's OP, so as an un-owed favor to him, here it is. I'll be doing it in stages. William wrote:
Keith brought in an argument he claimed to be a “bomb” for ID. It turned out to be a failed suicide mission where the only person that got blown up was Keith.
After a little over two weeks, there are already at least eight threads at UD containing discussions of my argument. People, including you, are still scrambling to refute it. Every day that goes by without a refutation is a further embarrassment to ID (and UD). Your "suicide mission" claim is about as believable as one of Baghdad Bob's.
(Please note: I am assuming that life patterns exists in an ONH, as Keith claims, for the sake of this argument only.
You're getting off to a bad start if you don't recognize the existence of the ONH as a fact. How could the morphological and molecular data yield matching cladograms of the 30 major taxa, to an accuracy of 1 in 10^38, if the ONH didn't exist?
Also, there are many other, different take-downs of Keith’s “bomb” argument already on the table.
All of which failed, including your your own personal attempts. That's why the discussion is still going strong after more than two weeks.
In my prior OP, I pointed out that Keith had made no case that nature was limited to producing only ONH’s when it comes to biological diversity, while his whole argument depended on it. He has yet to make that case, and has not responded to me when I have reiterated that question.
An ONH is what you get with sufficiently low mutation rates and primarily vertical inheritance. It isn't controversial at all (among knowledgeable people, anyway). Vincent Torley understands it; I don't know why you have such trouble. Evolution has been observed in real time to produce ONHs. You can simulate bifurcating processes of descent with modification to demonstrate this. You can see it by simply thinking about it, if you're smart enough. Zachriel even provided a small textual example showing how the ONH can be inferred despite the presence of an inversion.keith s
November 8, 2014
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Adapta,
That sounds very reasonable to me. How do we get people here to stop calling it the theory of ID?
That's not my concern. How would we get people to stop calling it the theory of evolution when it too is a paradigm?
Q: ID would have a better track record than the evolutionary paradigm, which assumes things are randomly generated and abandoned. A: That’s not what evolution says, but whatever.
Then you don't understand the current thinking about evolution. Every genotype is randomly generated (drift) and is in stages of abandonment or change.
Q: A couple of examples are the assumption that most human DNA is “junk” A: That’s an empirical observation, not an assumption.
No it's an assumption based on ignorance. The assumption by Ohno was that the non-coding DNA had no known function, so it must be junk. It's even in the title of his paper. This assumption hindered scientific progress. In contrast, ID would assume non-coding DNA is part of a designed system, so must have some function as is worthy of study.
Q: and that organs of unknown function must be “vestigial.” A: Vestigial doesn’t mean useless, it means degraded or modified from its original function. Under that scientific definition many parts of animals are vestigial.
Yes, I know. Then everything is vestigial having been derived from earlier structures, making the designation useless. Vestigial once meant something different. According to Wikipedia
The zoologist Horatio Newman said in a written statement read into evidence in the Scopes Trial that "There are, according to Wiedersheim, no less than 180 vestigial structures in the human body, sufficient to make of a man a veritable walking museum of antiquities."
With the evolutionary paradigm, the assumption is that the 180 structures on that list, having no known function at the time, were evolutionary leftovers, "antiquities," such as the pineal gland. This was such an embarrassment that evolutionists eviscerated the original definition. -QQuerius
November 8, 2014
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Collin You are right to ask the “how” and “when” questions. But are you asking as a curious scientist, or as a critic? I'm asking because I'd like to know. Positing a "how" and "when" would at least lead to some testable predictions. Here’s a hypothesis: Without knowing the identity of the designer, or when the design took place, or even how the design took place, artifacts that are actually designed, will exhibit certain qualities that can be objectively verified. My questions to you are, is that a scientific hypothesis? Not as that is written, no. To be a scientific hypothesis it would have to make some specific testable predictions relevant to the idea, actually test the predictions, and be falsifiable (i.e. the predictions can fail). Is it possibly true? If so, how do we find out? Make some testable and falsifiable predictions based on the idea, test them. Would you allow public funding to find that out? If not, why? Sure. Nothing is stopping ID proponents from writing up grant proposals for experiments and submitting them for funding. To my knowledge that isn't being done. Can you explain why not?Adapa
November 8, 2014
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Seriously, Mapou? You don't understand that we are talking about intelligent guidance?keith s
November 8, 2014
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keith s:
You’re not doing ID any favors by arguing that microevolution might be guided. It just makes you look foolish.
You are doing your side fewer favors by claiming that microevolution is not guided. Of course it is guided. This is what epigenetics is all about. This is what adaptation is all about. This is what sexual selection is all about. It is all guided by the environment which has a direct influence on gene expression. There is no Darwinian process in adaptation and epigenetics. No random mutations and no natural selection. It's all front loading. It's all pre-programmed in the genome. Live with it. Who's looking foolish now?Mapou
November 8, 2014
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Adapa, You are right to ask the "how" and "when" questions. But are you asking as a curious scientist, or as a critic? Here's a hypothesis: Without knowing the identity of the designer, or when the design took place, or even how the design took place, artifacts that are actually designed, will exhibit certain qualities that can be objectively verified. My questions to you are, is that a scientific hypothesis? Is it possibly true? If so, how do we find out? Would you allow public funding to find that out? If not, why?Collin
November 8, 2014
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nullasalus, the self-described "regular ID critic", writes:
You say microevolution is unguided? That there is no, nada, zero, nyet guidance, design, in any sense at work in it? Fine. Give me the scientific, peer-reviewed experiment showing as much.
Science isn't about proof, nullasalus. Surely you've heard that somewhere along the way. Sure, microevolution might be guided. The grains falling out of my salt shaker might be guided by invisible leprechauns to their final resting place on my french fries. Raindrops might be gathered, shaped, and dropped by the Rain Fairy in a precise pattern. The swirl of water in your toilet bowl might be guided by Shamu, the invisible Toilet Whale. But anyone insisting on these things would be justly regarded as a loony. There is no evidence that these things are guided, so intelligent people rightly regard them as unguided. Most ID proponents are smart enough to recognize that it's a very bad idea to argue for a teleological explanation when a non-teleological explanation works just fine. Even WJM understands that, which is why he wrote:
IF natural forces can plausibly produce **whatever** artifact is in question, even ID admits that natural forces is the best available explanation.
You're not doing ID any favors by arguing that microevolution might be guided. It just makes you look foolish. But maybe it's intentional. After all, you did describe yourself as a "regular ID critic". Perhaps this is your way of undermining ID from within?keith s
November 8, 2014
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Zachriel said:
This thread concerns the biological nested hierarchy, and what can be concluded from that observation.
Which is why your example is not what I asked for. I asked for an example of an ONH produced by natural forces other than that which is currently under debate. You're offering up another example within the currently debated biologial nested hierarchy. Can you give me an example of an ONH, generated by natural forces, that is not biological?
Not ‘chosen’, but what persists.
Not sure what you're saying here. Are you saying that no system of living organisms other than one with a common ancestor and vertical descent can persist?
Of course they are. How could you have life without natural forces? You wouldn’t even be able to feed yourself.
That's not what I meant. I meant, when it comes to life, can natural forces produce nothing other than a system comprised of a common ancestor and vertical descent? - But, you've answered that by saying it can also create a horizontal system. So, let me ask further: can natural forces create life in a manner neither horizontal or vertical? Can natural forces create multiple unique, unrelated life-forms?
We specifically said that early life probably had rampant horizontal mechanisms along with vertical inheritance.
Are you claiming that horizontal mechanisms cannot persist as well or better as vertical ones?William J Murray
November 8, 2014
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Querius First of all, people are not all going to agree on a definition of ID. Here’s my perspective: ID is not a theory, it’s a paradigm. If something has the appearance of design, then one should research it as if it were designed by an intelligent agency. That’s it That sounds very reasonable to me. How do we get people here to stop calling it the theory of ID? ID would have a better track record than the evolutionary paradigm, which assumes things are randomly generated and abandoned. That's not what evolution says, but whatever. A couple of examples are the assumption that most human DNA is “junk” That's an empirical observation, not an assumption. and that organs of unknown function must be “vestigial.” Vestigial doesn't mean useless, it means degraded or modified from its original function. Under that scientific definition many parts of animals are vestigial.Adapa
November 8, 2014
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Adapta, First of all, people are not all going to agree on a definition of ID. Here's my perspective: ID is not a theory, it's a paradigm. If something has the appearance of design, then one should research it as if it were designed by an intelligent agency. That's it. No intimations or conclusions are made regarding the designer, who could be God, aliens, or some unknown self-organizing principle of the universe. Pragmatically, ID would have a better track record than the evolutionary paradigm, which assumes things are randomly generated and abandoned. A couple of examples are the assumption that most human DNA is "junk" and that organs of unknown function must be "vestigial." -QQuerius
November 8, 2014
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Collin ID can be a true theory and not answer all questions. Both Creationism and evolutionism are world views that tend to try to answer everything. ID, on the other hand, is a narrow scientific theory that states that some things in the universe exhibit reliable signs of design. That’s it. Hi Collin. I'm not asking for answers to all questions. I'm not even asking for a majority of questions. I'd just like to get a few ID answers to the most basic questions on ID I can think of. Things like how and when. Things that other theories answer long before they ever reach theory status. Is that still expecting too much? It is a humble theory that doesn’t try to explain everything As far as I can tell as currently presented ID doesn't explain anything. Lots of "evolution can't explain it" no actual details of their own. I wish that weren't the case but it is.Adapa
November 8, 2014
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Box: Why do we share so much DNA with bananas (50% ?) and zebrafish (89% ?). While the calculation depends on many variables, humans have DNA in common with bananas because they are both eukaryotes, sharing much of the same cellular structure. Humans share more with zebrafish than with bananas because humans and zebrafish are both gnathostomes, that is, more closely related to each other than to bananas. William J Murray: Life – biological evolution – is what is under debate. This thread concerns the biological nested hierarchy, and what can be concluded from that observation. William J Murray: Why would unliving natural process pick a persistent fidelity living system to generate? Not 'chosen', but what persists. William J Murray: I asked, what options were available to unguided natural forces (unliving) in terms of generating a living system? Without at least a theory of the origin of life, not sure such an answer can be given. Indeed, even if the origin of life on Earth were solved, it may vary on other planets, if life exists elsewhere. William J Murray: Are natural forces required to generate life on the planet with a common ancestor and vertical descent? Of course they are. How could you have life without natural forces? You wouldn't even be able to feed yourself. William J Murray: However, when asked why unguided (unliving) natural forces would generate life (abiogenesis) into a common ancestor/vertical descent system in the first place, you answer “fidelity is more likely to persist” sounds like you are saying that unliving natural forces generated the common ancestor/vertical descent system because it wanted fidelity to persist. Heavens no. Where would you get that idea? We specifically said that early life probably had rampant horizontal mechanisms along with vertical inheritance.Zachriel
November 8, 2014
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Adapa, ID can be a true theory and not answer all questions. Both Creationism and evolutionism are world views that tend to try to answer everything. ID, on the other hand, is a narrow scientific theory that states that some things in the universe exhibit reliable signs of design. That's it. It is a humble theory that doesn't try to explain everything.Collin
November 8, 2014
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Z: ZZZZZZZZZ(out-group) Oops. Wrong thread.Zachriel
November 8, 2014
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box:
Did you read the part on ‘quote-mining’? Your “Meyer is a rather shameless quote-miner”, does not indicate that you did.
Box what would you say about an individuals intellectual integrity if they quoted a persons work where they took part of the fabricated quote from one section....added a few ellipses....then finished the quote with 21 words found fifteen pages further into the authors manuscript? Would you think that some context might be missing?franklin
November 8, 2014
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lifepsy: Branching descent does not simultaneously spawn multiple trait assemblages. Each trait must evolve sequentially. If a trait is lost then the descendent cannot nest within that trait. Not even sure what situation you are thinking about, unless it's a population during incipient speciation. A toy example might look like this: AAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAB ZZZZZZZZZ(out-group) Let's say the B mutation is accompanied by reproductive isolation, i.e. a branch. After time the two populations might look like this: AAyzAxAAA AArAsAtAB ZZZjZkZZZ Now, the B reverts, and we have this. AAyzAxAAA AArAsAtAA ZZZjZkZZZ Notice that we can still group the first two into their proper placement with ZZZ being the outgroup. Furthermore, we can easily distinguish any descendants of the second string because they will inherit the r,s,t mutations. We might even call this lineage the B-lineage for historical reasons, even though it longer has the B trait. With longer sequences, it's even more obvious. This is easy to simulate algorithmically. As per your example, modern tetrapods share many traits. Even if one lineages loses the their limbs (Cetaceans), we can still discern their position within the nested hierarchy.Zachriel
November 8, 2014
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