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Some of Ann Gauger’s critics claim she says that humans are four million years old

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In “Humanly Speaking … Part 2” (Biologic Institute, July 5, 2012) Ann Gauger responds to a possible misunderstanding of her work in Science and Human Origins, Chapter 5:

here seems to be an idea on the part of some critics that my analysis in “Science and Human Origins” means that humans arose four million years ago. That is not the case.

In the book I said that we share four haplotypes with chimps, and between three and five haplotypes predate the putative split between our lineage and chimps, assuming common descent is true. How many haplotypes depends on how the tree is drawn, and where the estimated divergence time is placed.

Some have said mistakenly that this means the first humans must have appeared at four million years. I never said that and the data do not show that.

Figures: If the girl is making some sense, they have to make up something she didn’t say, so they don’t have to address what she did say. That’s life.

See also:

Science and Human Origins conclusion: It IS possible we came from just two parents

Adam and Eve could be real?: Genes’ introns and exons tell different stories here. Who to believe?

Adam and Eve possible?: Ayala’s contrary claim built in favourable assumptions

Breaking: Adam and Eve are scientifically possible

Comments
Jerad, Look at a cladogram. Only the tips of the branches are represented by actual organisms. The other points are assumed/ hypothetical populations, ie not real only imagined.Joe
July 8, 2012
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Joe,
Cladistics is based on the tips of the branches. Transitional forms would be those branches- meaning cladistics does not include them.
Umm . . . I don't think so. A clade is a group of taxa consisting only of an ancestor taxon and all of its descendant taxa. So it's based on an arbitrary ancestor. Say all the vertebra. Or all the reptiles. Or all the mammals. Or all the Primates. Or all the hominids.Jerad
July 8, 2012
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Paulmc, Cladistics is based on the tips of the branches. Transitional forms would be those branches- meaning cladistics does not include them. If they were alive today cladograms would be a total mess. That you didn't know that pretty much says it all. Do you even know what a nested hierarchy is?Joe
July 8, 2012
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Your “review” is nothing but whining.
You're much too kind.
A nested hierarchy based on what?
Well, some cladograms are made with anatomical characters, some are made with nucleotide sites, others use behavioural characters, still others use highly conserved phenotypes such as biochemical pathways.
The nested hierarch of Linnean taxonomy is based on characteristics but with evolution those can be lost
Presence and absence are both valid character states. Absence of a character can inform phylogeny if the ancestral (basal) state was presence. Using DNA as an example, a deletion can be informative.
Not only that with a gradual evolution we would expect a blending of characteristics- the very definition of “transitional form”
If what you're saying was right, cladistics could never have gotten off the ground. The nesting of clades comes from lineages splitting - cladogenesis. When lineages split, some of their characters diverge. These can be used to understand their relationships. You refer to transitional forms, but many transitional fossils have a mix of derived and basal character states, rather than a blend of everything. In fact, characters don't usually head together on a uniform trajectory that blends from one species to the next.paulmc
July 8, 2012
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Joe is right- "Population genetics does not deal with evolution by design." Population genetics is just a bunch of math and equations that has nothing to do with science. Real science is about cause and effect. The evolutionary materialist fanatics are always using trying to shove a bunch of equations and experimental results down our throats, and indoctrinate us into their religion of, as Rousas Rushdoony called it, brute factuality. James Le Fanu recently in "Why Us?" exposed the utter absurdity of using complicated math to determine if a gibbering monkey had turned into a Beethoven or a Goethe. He quoted your hero, Ronald Fisher, a founder of your so-called "population genetics":
“The purpose of reproducing here just a small part of Fisher’s twenty-five-page statistical proof of his major work, The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection, published in 1930, is not to clarify his argument, but simply to convey its most salient point—its impenetrable obscurity.”
Tell me this, atheist: if we can't understand your so-called "math", then how could it prove my grandfather is a monkey? So "population genetics" is exposed as just another faith. "Population genetics" is just your religion. Of course, in high schools around this country, this atheist religion is shoved down the throats of innocent children. Evolution by design-- Intelligent Design-- whatever you call it on Sunday in your house of worship, will not be constrained by your brutal, animalistic equations. You evolutionary materialists can never understand, the great Programmer transcends your loveless, unfeeling world of test tubes and bunsen burners and addition and multiplication.Prince of Eternity
July 7, 2012
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Hi Paul, I just receved the book today and have finished the first chapter. Your "review" is nothing but whining. Just what type of nested hierarchy should descent with modification form, Paul? A nested hierarchy based on what? The nested hierarch of Linnean taxonomy is based on characteristics but with evolution those can be lost. Not only that with a gradual evolution we would expect a blending of characteristics- the very definition of "transitional form"- and that would form a Venn diagram where overlapping is allowed. Overlapping is not allowed in a nested hierarchy. If you can't even get that concept then what have you?Joe
July 7, 2012
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And in some very ahead-of-the-times places it's actually Sunday morning :) Nullasalus, I appreciate your point of view. Also, let's remember that after one round of telephone, Ann's remark has lead to me being accused of lying (in the OP): "If the girl is making some sense, they have to make up something she didn’t say, so they don’t have to address what she did say." I don't think it is unreasonable of me to want to correct that.paulmc
July 7, 2012
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Pretty much what kuartus said. Listen, I can appreciate that some people - particularly swampers (Hi guys, do you really think you're not noticed?) - are perpetually on edge with this kind of thing. But really, settle down. Ann just apologized for not linking to Paul's blog, said she realizes now that she was responding to a quote rather than a whole article, and that she intends to get to it. I know, I know. It's a saturday night, and that means, arguing on the internet! But really, you couldn't ask her to promise to address this in a more proper faction. Go unwind with some Team Fortress 2 or something. ;)nullasalus
July 7, 2012
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Indium, exactly what dont you understand about the fact that gauger was unaware of paulmc's review and had only responded to an unsourced quote? Why is that so hard to understand?kuartus
July 7, 2012
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nullaus, Gauger complained that people judged here books from "snippets, or sentences taken in isolation". Now she is doing *exactly* the same thing with paulmcs review.Indium
July 7, 2012
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Paul, Settle down. I think there's a difference between responding to a quote, unaware of the larger context, and criticizing a book you haven't even read.nullasalus
July 7, 2012
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Gauger@18
Someone had sent me a quote, and that is what I responded to, having not seen the original.
And yet you were criticizing people in a previous thread for leaping to conclusions about your book without having read it.paulmc
July 7, 2012
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My apologies to paulmc for not linking to his blog. Someone had sent me a quote, and that is what I responded to, having not seen the original. I will respond to his critique when I can.gauger
July 7, 2012
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Mung, If Adam and Eve had identical DNA they would be the same sex.Joe
July 7, 2012
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The book has arrived- yeah baby...Joe
July 7, 2012
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@Mung. Actually, the video with the information addressing your question was the one about Y chromosome Adam: Origins - Creation Genetics & Adam Our Ancestor with Dr. Robert CarterJGuy
July 6, 2012
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@MMung. That is an intriguing question, and one I just so happened to hear addressed at some level last night while perusing the irrefutable source known as youtube. :) That question is addressed, and a lot of other interesting stuff regaridng population genetics as it pertains to the biblcial Eve: Origins - Eve: Real Evidence with Dr. Robert CarterJGuy
July 6, 2012
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Given that Eve was made from a rib from Adam, is there any reason at all to think that both Adam and Eve did not share the exact same identical DNA?Mung
July 6, 2012
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Hi JGuy, The Bible can be inspired and still written from the perspective of the inspired writer. There is a middle ground between skepticism and naive literalism which I believe captures the truthfulness of what God intended to reveal better than any rigid method of interpretation. For example, I believe that the flood was a world wide event but that each of the flood stories recorded by various cultures around the world represents what happened to the people in that locality. In the case of Noah, everyone that he knew of was wiped out. So the Biblical account is truthful. It is only the way in which some interpret it that I would disagree with. www.accuracyingenesis.com has a good article on the flood as well as on some of the other issues you raise which you might check out.Lamont
July 6, 2012
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@Lamont. BTW: I'm a young earth creationist. Though, that might have been evident. :) Measured time on earth: 1. 6 literal Creation days. 2. ~6000years ago. 3. Noah + 7 family members survive a global flood. 4. Global flood was about ~4500yo. 5. Subsequent tower of Babel dispersion of man by confusion of languages from somewhere in the Middle East.JGuy
July 6, 2012
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I would like to see Ms. Gauger's take on paulmc's critic of her book. His criticisms deserve a response.kuartus
July 6, 2012
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@Lamont. Yes, people use such expressions. But why use measuements to specify how far above the mountains the water rose? And why would the rainbow then be a given by God as a promise that God would never kill people in a localised flood again? While we regularily see local floods killing large swaths of people, e.g. the one caused by the tsunami that hit Indonesia. Does this mean the bible is not inspired? And if it is just uninspired persepectives of humans, and the rainbow isn't a sign or promise of anything, but only an opined allegory. Then where is the line? Why not Adam and Eve as allegory, that means original sin is allegory, Jesus sacrifice is then an allegory, etc... Seems, it leads to a complete meltdown of the bible as a revelation by God. Thoughts?JGuy
July 6, 2012
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If you read Genesis as a YEC, then Noah and his family would be a genetic bottleneck. A more consistent approach is to read Genesis as a series of eye witness accounts that recount what those who were present actually experienced and passed on to later generations. People naturally say things like "all the mountains were covered" and "all living things were wiped out" without adding the qualifier - "as far as I could see". If you think that God simply dictated everything, how is it that we 4 Gospels which each tell the story of Jesus from a different perspective? You might also read what Luke said about how he wrote his gospel. He does not start out by saying - "God dictated all of this to me."Lamont
July 6, 2012
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And of course, the reason Noah's is mentioned, is because Noah represents the biggest genetic bottleneck in human history. So, from eight people we also have a at least one other couple that we all share a common anscestry with (i.e. Noah & his wife).JGuy
July 6, 2012
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In fact Genesis 6 tells that there are other sources of genetic material that have been inserted into the human genome.
You must be assuming the term sons of God can not refer to a human. I don't think that is neccessary. However, even if that was the case, and one assumesthe context was about genetics, then consider that Noah was considered perfect in his generation(Genesis 6:6).JGuy
July 6, 2012
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The problem with Ann Gauger's argument and paulmc's response is that both appear to assume that the claim that all modern humans can be traced back to one man and one woman includes the further claim that all modern humans have descended from only one man and one woman. Genesis certainly does not make that claim. In fact Genesis 6 tells that there are other sources of genetic material that have been inserted into the human genome. The bottom line is that if humanity has a complex genetic history, there is no way that the types of studies being done today could sort that all out with any degree of certainty.Lamont
July 6, 2012
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Joe- What is "evolution by design"? Are you asserting that varation in the HLA DR locus was "intelligently designed"? If it were true, why should we not consider that this variation was "intelligently designed" with very great SLOWNESS, so that the HLA DR locus is much OLDER than it appears? But let us suppose that variation in the HLA DR locus was intelligently designed. You don't know the identity or purposes of the Intelligent Designer, so how do you estimate how long it took for each haplotype or allele to be intelligently designed? It could taken the Intelligent Designer thirty million years, for all you know, so any alleged two person population bottleneck could be very, very far in the past.Diogenes
July 6, 2012
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PaulMC- Population genetics does not deal with evolution by design.Joe
July 6, 2012
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Dear Ann, As the Biologic site doesn't allow comments, I shall respond here. I hope you find this response, and undoubtedly someone will let you know I have responded here if not. Firstly, I would like to point out that when you refer to "some critics" in your post at the Biologic Institute you are most likely referring to my chapter-by-chapter (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) review of Science and Human Origins on my blog, although you give no indication who these critics are. As far as I know, I am the only person to have given such a detailed discussion of your book, and I feel it must be my criticism that you are addressing. I did indeed use the figure "4 million years" but did not make the argument you claim, or anything approaching it. I think it would also be good etiquette to clarify who you were referring to on the Biologic website and, assuming it was indeed me, at a minimum link to my review and this discussion here for the readers at that site, so that they can make up their own mind about what was and was not said. Allow me to reiterate the argument I made here for clarity. In your response to my comments you stated:
There seems to be an idea on the part of some critics that my analysis in “Science and Human Origins” means that humans arose four million years ago. That is not the case. In the book I said that we share four haplotypes with chimps, and between three and five haplotypes predate the putative split between our lineage and chimps, assuming common descent is true. How many haplotypes depends on how the tree is drawn, and where the estimated divergence time is placed.
You go on to cite Bergstrom et al. that:
the vast majority (greater than 90%) of the more than 135 contemporary HLA-DRBl alleles have a very recent origin
Several clarifications are necessary. Firstly, I did not state that you had claimed "humans arose four million years ago". Secondly, the bottleneck argument is not dependent on allelic diversity at HLA-DRB1 (as per your citation of Bergstrom et al.) but rather the wider HLA-DR locus, of which there are major haplotypes that substantially pre-date the recent increase in DRB1 diversity. I said that the minimum time since a bottleneck in the human population based on the HLA-DR locus was four million years. The reason for this is that there are five major haplotypes (that you discuss), which date to a minimum age of four million years. This should be uncontroversial. You state in Science and Human Origins:
Based on the amount of background genetic change in the introns, three haplotypes appear to be ancient, going back thirty million years or more. These are the haplotypes we have in common with chimps and macaques. Two haplotypes are more recent, based on their accumulated background mutation, and dateback to about four to six million years ago.
So it is your argument that 1) Homo sapiens have 3 haplotypes of the HLA-DR locus that are ancient and definitively shared with chimpanzees, and 2) we also have 2 additional haplotypes that are approximately four and six million years old. This is a total of 5 ancestral haplotypes that share a minimum age of 4 million years. Because five haplotypes cannot have been inherited from two ancestors, we know that as a starting point, any two-person bottleneck in the human population has to have occurred a minimum of 4 Mya, otherwise we could not have retained these 5 ancestral haplotypes. ---- Now, in Chapter 3 of Science and Human Origins, Casey Luskin has argued that modern humans appear suddenly in the fossil record at 2 million years ago, with the arrival of post-cranially-modern humans in the form of Homo erectus. Before this, Luskin emphatically states, there is only evidence of ape-like hominins. The Homo lineage then underwent strong, directional selection for increased cranial capacity, arriving at humans with a modern language capability within the last 100,000 years. Even if we ignore the doubling of cranial capacity in Homo and accept for the sake of argument that erectus shared a similar capacity for thought and language, then there is still a two million year shortfall between the last possible time that Adam and Eve could have existed, and the emergence of modern humans. While on the basis of HLA-DR alone we cannot rule out Adam and Eve existing more than four million years ago, we can definitively rule out that they were human in the modern sense. In short, there cannot have been a single, modern human couple like Adam and Eve that founded the extant human population. ---- All of this ignores the wider evidence that rules out a population bottleneck of the magnitude required for an Adam and Eve situation. I cited in my review the recent paper by Li and Durban (2011) who use whole-genome analyses to demonstrate ancestral population sizes in several human lineages. Thus, any additional, vaguely stated doubts about more recent population bottlenecks are extinguished. There is no evidence of a population bottleneck in their analysis that could allow the radical conclusion you reach in Science and Human Origins that:
[t]he argument from population genetics has been that there is too much genetic diversity to pass through a bottleneck of two individuals, as would be the case for Adam and Eve. But that turns out not to be true.
In fact, population genetics demonstrates a level of genetic diversity that is substantially inconsistent with a bottleneck of this magnitude at any point in the Homo lineage, or for millions of years preceeding it. As it stands, a human Adam and Eve couple is not scientifically defensible.paulmc
July 6, 2012
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The rule around here is that if it is over a week old, it is "whatever." ;)News
July 6, 2012
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