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ecs2 responds to the same Nick Matzke “he said it” clipped and commented on yesterday

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One of the great things about UD is the insights that often come up in the comment boxes, by design and inadvertently. And here (at 147 in the Chemist speaks out thread) we have ecs2 responding to the same “he said it” clip I highlighted yesterday. He then continues later in the thread, in response to NM at 150.

Let us watch:

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NM: >>“Sigh. You really have no idea at all about this stuff, do you?

Here’s the issue. Picture, in your head, all 5000 mammal species currently living on the planet. Now think of how many individuals are in each species — some are almost extinct, some have populations of billions. Now think about how each of these individuals lives and reproduces and dies over the years. Now add in how all of these individuals compete with each other, each each other, etc. Continue this process for millions of years, with species splitting and going extinct, sometimes randomly, sometimes due to climate change, sometimes due to invasions of other species, etc. Add in continents moving around on the globe, ice sheets advancing and retreating, and tens of thousands of other species of vertebrates plus hundreds of thousands of plant species and millions of insect species.

Then imagine what this process would look like if all you had was a very incomplete sample with lots of biases, in the form of fossils, most of which are fragmentary.

Suppose you are interested in doing science, and you want to develop hypotheses about the patterns you observe, and developed the data and statistical methods to rigorously test those hypotheses.

Now you’re getting some vague sense of what macroevolutionary studies are really about, why it requires actual training and work to be able to avoid talking nonsense about the topic, and why you can’t just read a popular book or two and blithely assume you know what you are talking about.”>>

ecs2: >>I don’t dispute your science. Not because I accept it, nor because I deny it, but because I am a learner in this area and don’t feel I have sufficient knowledge to discuss intelligently.

But I do have some comments on the quote above. It seems that what you are saying is that this is difficult. That there is not as much evidence as one would like, that you are have piecing together the theory based on fragments of insight.

This is understandable. It would be expected there will be error in this process. There will be surprises where theory must be revised. That the scientists involved should be very conservative in their judgments and conclusions.

The problem is this is the opposite of the approach I see. I see claims that evolution is true, that the evidence is “overwhelming” and similar words from that section of the thesaurus. I see grandiose narratives, speculative interpolation, and so on.

This is not science as I was taught it. This is not the scientific process I was taught. Good science doesn’t blackball alternative or minority theories or opinions. Good science doesn’t defend, protect, or promote a favored theory. Good science doesn’t discount the opinion of scientists from other fields who note where a general theory isn’t supported by theory within their field. Good science let’s the evidence speak for science rather than scientists.

But, in the end, the approach I see in evolutionary biology (some of which you have demonstrated in this thread) is damaging, most of all to theory of evolution itself.

Abuses of the scientific process contribute to increased skepticism – it raises the guard of those who are not informed and see only the human behaviors surrounding the science. And the truth is those behaviors don’t influence whether the science is ‘true’ or not.

I am still open to the theory of evolution. I still want to learn more and follow the evidence where it leads. But I admit that I am particularly cautious as I research it because of the approach of evolutionists in championing their theory.>>

[–> NM replies at 150, which ecs2 then excerpts. It should be noted that (as far as I have seen in following the exchanges) there has been no accusation of general fraud — what “bogus” means — in the field of evolutionary biology, though there have been concerns over bias, error and the inherent limitations of science especially where the objects of research, cannot be directly observed. Also, of course, there have been noteworthy hoaxes and frauds, such as Piltdown and apparently the Feathered Dinosaurs of the late 1990’s.  In addition, there have been serious errors such as not only the Nebraska man of the 1920’s “reconstructed” from the tooth of a pig, but also the suggested early whale of the 1990’s that turned out to be nothing like the early reconstructions. Also, there have been notorious debates and contentions such as over KNM-ER 1470 and related dating of isochron radioactive samples. Here, the fundamental challenge is that we face the deep and unobservable past of origins, and may only examine traces from that past that is forever gone from our direct reach. Thus, we make models and explain on patterns of cause and effect that we may observe in the present that give rise to similar effects to the items we find as traces from the past.  NM’s declaration that we are dismissing his field as “bogus” was corrected already, but unfortunately, it appears again.  This therefore seems to be a polarising and generally unfair misrepresentation of the questions and challenges being raised, one maintained in the teeth of headlined correction, and it should cease. There are also several other serious distortions that call for editorial notes like this, following.]

NM, 150: >> http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/s…..ations.php

I don’t dispute your science. Not because I accept it, nor because I deny it, but because I am a learner in this area and don’t feel I have sufficient knowledge to discuss intelligently.

But I do have some comments on the quote above. It seems that what you are saying is that this is difficult. That there is not as much evidence as one would like, that you are have piecing together the theory based on fragments of insight.

The problem is this is the opposite of the approach I see. I see claims that evolution is true, that the evidence is “overwhelming” and similar words from that section of the thesaurus. I see grandiose narratives, speculative interpolation, and so on.

The evidence of some big pattern — e.g. common ancestry — can be overwhelming, without every last detail being known. The evidence for plate tectonics is overwhelming, yet we don’t know the position of every grain of sand at every point in time, or even the exact position of every fragment of every tectonic plate at every point in time.

Science is about making good approximations, not omniscience.

This is not science as I was taught it. This is not the scientific process I was taught.

A lot of people were taught an oversimplified and basically fake version of “The Scientific Method”, which was based on the assumption that all science is based on lab experiments and that it follows a black-and-white step-by-step process. The actual process is more like this:

http://undsci.berkeley.edu/art…..ceworks_01

[Insert image:]

A simple summary of Science, as highlighted by NM as inadequate

Good science doesn’t blackball alternative or minority theories or opinions. Good science doesn’t defend, protect, or promote a favored theory.

So, you’re in favor of giving equal time in chemistry classes to the idea that Atomic Theory is false. Right? Oh, and homeopathy. [–> with all due respect, this is a strawman caricature of ecs2’s remarks]

Good science doesn’t discount the opinion of scientists from other fields who note where a general theory isn’t supported by theory within their field. Good science let’s the evidence speak for science rather than scientists.

I’ve been the only one citing actual evidence in these macroevolution threads.  All the UD regulars are just throwing up objections based on their personal lack of understanding of these topics,

[–> A strawman caricature, hasty generalisation and dismissal of serious and well-known objections, some of which are in fact citing evidence, others of which are addressing interpretation issues regarding well known evidence such as the pattern of sudden appearances, stasis and disappearance in the fossil record and cases such as the Cambrian fossils.]

and then pretending that they represent huge crucial gaps in the entire field.

You guys are the ones afraid to follow the evidence wherever it leads. If you were actually brave enough to do so, you would admit that transitional fossils are common, that common ancestry is overwhelmingly supported, etc.

[–> In fact, as NM knows or should know, design theory is neutral on the question of common descent, as can be seen from the view of Michael Behe, one of the two leading design theorists, who accepts common descent; as do many supporters of Design thought here at UD. What it is raising, is the question as to whether, via Common Descent, front loading or otherwise, there are signs in the world of life and in the cosmos more broadly that point — on empirical testing — to design as a key causal feature of our world. That is, we must distinguish (a) limited common descent, (b) universal common descent and (c) blind watchmaker thesis universal common descent; if we are to be fair to the various view out there. E.g. even, many modern Young Earth Creationists hold that “species” is an ambiguous concept and speak of “created kinds” or “baramins,”  which go up to the level of a Family or the like in typical taxonomical categories and would see common descent as active through variation and adaptation within the kind. Moreover, what I have just summarised is immediately accessible and directly observable, even well known here and now in the present. NM, if you — with your background of having been a public relations person for the NCSE (a leading Darwinism advocacy group), cannot be trusted to accurately and fairly summarise what we can all directly see here and now, how can we trust you to be objective and fair on traces and interpretations on  events that may lie 500+ to 3,500+ MYA? And, does this not constitute “fear of facing evidence,” easily accessible evidence?]

But, in the end, the approach I see in evolutionary biology (some of which you have demonstrated in this thread) is damaging, most of all to theory of evolution itself.

Abuses of the scientific process contribute to increased skepticism – it raises the guard of those who are not informed and see only the human behaviors surrounding the science. And the truth is those behaviors don’t influence whether the science is ‘true’ or not.

I am still open to the theory of evolution. I still want to learn more and follow the evidence where it leads. But I admit that I am particularly cautious as I research it because of the approach of evolutionists in championing their theory.

I try to be patient. But I’m human. When people who don’t know what they are talking about start declaring my field bogus, and then start blaming it for Nazis etc., I get annoyed. Anyone would be.

[–> As noted, this is a strawman caricature of objections. In addition, no-one has been

Logo, 2nd Int’l Congress, Eugenics Movement, 1921, showing claimed scientific roots [HT: Wiki]

raising the issue of the ethical challenges of materialism and of scientific racism that was deeply connected to Darwinism in Germany and elsewhere that did contribute beyond reasonable dispute to the rise of eugenics and did historically contribute to the genocides carried out by Nazi Germany. A responsible view of the ethical responsibilities of science in society, would frankly address such troubling issues from history. And, without trying to use this as an atmosphere-poisoning distractor, as this comment by NM plainly opens up.]

My advice for you is to keep reading, and start testing the creationist/antievolution claims for yourself.

[–> NM/NCSE know or should know, that design theory is not equivalent to creationism, or to antievolutionism. However, this rhetorically convenient conflation has consistently been used, despite repeated correction.  In addition, serious concerns on the limitations of evolutionary materialistic, blind watchmaker thesis narratives of the past of origins, are too often brushed aside as ” creationism” or the like.]

Is it really true that there are no transitional fossils? Start there and then start reading. It won’t be long.

[–> This ducks the issues just above, and fails to address the vexed question of the dominance of the fossil record at its various levels, of suddenness of appearance, stasis and disappearance. If the fundamentally gradualist, incrementally emergent tree of life model were true, from the root up, and if this were overwhelmingly evident to the point that we are justified in teaching High School students and the general public that this is a “fact,” the overwhelming majority of the fossil record should be of the many, many transitional forms — samples do strongly tend to reflect the bulk of a distribution, however crudely; and, arguably, many such should be quite evident in the world today. In addition, there is a basic challenge that from the root on up, the Darwinist three of life needs to be a tub that stands on its own bottom. That is, we need to see good warrant for the blind watchmaker thesis narrative on origin of life. We need to see good evidence on the pattern of chance variation and differential reproductive success in ecological zones, leading tot he descent with unlimited modification that accounts for the various tree of life models [I here advert to the inconsistencies between traditional trees and the various molecular ones]. It also needs to credibly account for the origin of human language and mind as a knowing, reasoning, perceiving entity required for such a theory to exist and have credibility.  NM knows or should know that the 6,000 word UD Darwinism essay challenge of Sept 23 on, is still standing, coming on five months without a serious response, though at least one has been promised. ]>>

ecs, 173: >>N.Matzke @150

“The evidence of some big pattern — e.g. common ancestry — can be overwhelming, without every last detail being known…Science is about making good approximations, not omniscience.”

This really evades my point, which was that you can’t do these things together:

1) in one aspect, articulate how difficult and explorative the process of building evolutionary theory is

2) in a separate aspect, act like these delicate and hard-to-build-and-interpet theories are bulletproof articulate how sound the theory is and how ‘overwhelming’ the evidence is

3) in a third aspect, act like the theories are beyond reproof, flippantly and rudely rebuffing eminent scientists who have questions.

One who tries to express these three things at once looks silly.

– If #1 then not #2. That is, if there is less evidence is desired and there are holes where interpolation is required, then the theory can’t possibly establish the confidence to state #2.

– If #2 then not #3. That is, if the evidence is overwhelming and the theory is sound, then you are happy to discuss it with other scientists whose fields overlap and you would expect your theory to hold up to those inquiries.

And so on. >>

ecs2, 174: >>

“A lot of people were taught an oversimplified and basically fake version of “The Scientific Method” …”

[–> In context, this is dismissing ecs2’s views on the methods of science as ill-informed; cf. a 101 here on this at IOSE, especially the expanded description of scientific methods; also here on on the debate in Kansas on scientific methods as taught in schools, in which NM’s former institution, NCSE, played a significant part. Bottomline: the “method” traditionally commonly taught in schools is somewhat simplistic, but it does capture some major and characteristic features of scientific investigation. In addition those trained in pure and applied sciences to graduate level are inculcated in a tradition of research that goes beyond what any description or definition can summarise — experience based expertise.]

This one actually annoyed me a little. I have a PhD in Engineering. I feel sufficiently familiar with the scientific process. You seem to make poor assumptions about those you read – because one has simple or rudimentary knowledge in your area of expertise does not make them simple overall or in other focused areas.

Two observations based on the link to ‘the real process of science’ which jumps off the page you linked.

1) There is no room on that graphic for the behaviors I mentioned. Of course science can be interpolative and exploratory. But the interpolation and exploration should still be dictated by the data. When I say grandiose narratives and speculative interpolation, I am saying that in my view some of what I have seen from the evolution community (not you specifically) violates the boundary condition of following rather than leading the data.

2)I noted in the exploration and discovery phase, the process you provided call the scientist to ‘ask questions’ (and presumably by extension to graciously receieve questions also) and also to share data and ideas (like across disciplinary boundaries (such as, I don’t know, organic chemistry and evolutionary biology). I think I have the process down. Do you (look back over this thread before you answer)?>>

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A word or two to the wise, and food for thought. END

Comments
wd400 @110:
Most likely through the developmental and biochemical cutes for nymphal being supressed and various stages, untill the whole adult development was crammed into one stage. Once the two-stage life cycle was in effect natural selection can act (do a point) separately on each stage, meing the difference btween each would become much greater.
OK. Yet metamorphosis had to arise at some point. So if I'm understanding you, you don't view metamorphosis as having come about through slight successive changes preserved by natural selection (you mention natural selection acting after the whole is in place, but not before). So presumably metamorphosis came about through slight successive changes that were not preserved by natural selection? Meaning they were preserved just by chance (drift, silent/neutral mutations, and the like)? Just trying to make sure I understand how you think the overall system would have come about . . .Eric Anderson
February 26, 2013
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Mr Fox states:
So the ID explanation of insect metamorphosis, according to mung’s link is “it’s a miracle!” Is that it?
It seems Mr. Fox believes in miracles too, he just labels the miracles 'random' and supposedly he becomes 'scientific' (although he commits epistemological suicide in the process): Evolution and the Illusion of Randomness - Talbott - Fall 2011 Excerpt: The situation calls to mind a widely circulated cartoon by Sidney Harris, which shows two scientists in front of a blackboard on which a body of theory has been traced out with the usual tangle of symbols, arrows, equations, and so on. But there’s a gap in the reasoning at one point, filled by the words, “Then a miracle occurs.” And the one scientist is saying to the other, “I think you should be more explicit here in step two.” In the case of evolution, I picture Dennett and Dawkins filling the blackboard with their vivid descriptions of living, highly regulated, coordinated, integrated, and intensely meaningful biological processes, and then inserting a small, mysterious gap in the middle, along with the words, “Here something random occurs.” This “something random” looks every bit as wishful as the appeal to a miracle. It is the central miracle in a gospel of meaninglessness, a “Randomness of the gaps,” demanding an extraordinarily blind faith. At the very least, we have a right to ask, “Can you be a little more explicit here?” http://www.thenewatlantis.com/publications/evolution-and-the-illusion-of-randomness Nobel Prize-Winning Physicist Wolfgang Pauli on the Empirical Problems with Neo-Darwinism - Casey Luskin - February 27, 2012 Excerpt: "In discussions with biologists I met large difficulties when they apply the concept of 'natural selection' in a rather wide field, without being able to estimate the probability of the occurrence in a empirically given time of just those events, which have been important for the biological evolution. Treating the empirical time scale of the evolution theoretically as infinity they have then an easy game, apparently to avoid the concept of purposesiveness. While they pretend to stay in this way completely 'scientific' and 'rational,' they become actually very irrational, particularly because they use the word 'chance', not any longer combined with estimations of a mathematically defined probability, in its application to very rare single events more or less synonymous with the old word 'miracle.'" Wolfgang Pauli (pp. 27-28) - http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/02/nobel_prize-win056771.htmlbornagain77
February 26, 2013
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Moreover, as if all the preceding wasn’t devastating enough to evo-devo as envisioned by Neo-Darwinism, The entire 'modern synthesis' is, despite its hype through the years, a big flop,, Peer-Reviewed Paper Concludes that Darwinism “Has Pretty Much Reached the End of Its Rope” – Jonathan M. – February , 2012 Excerpt: Contrary to the Darwin lobby’s oft-repeated assertion that there are absolutely no weaknesses in Darwinian theory, the paper offers the concession that the modern synthesis has never provided an account of “how major forms of life evolved” — an omission that is not unsubstantial, to put it mildly. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/02/has_darwinism_p055941.html Moreover, mutations expressed early in embryonic development, as is held in evo-devo, are, by far, the least likely to be tolerated, Understanding Ontogenetic Depth, Part II: Natural Selection Is a Harsh Mistress – Paul Nelson – April 7, 2011 Excerpt: The problem may be summarized as follows: – There are striking differences in the early (embryonic) development in animals, even within classes and orders. – Assuming that these animals are descended from a common ancestor, these divergences suggest that early development evolves relatively easily. – Evolution by natural selection requires heritable variation. – But heritable variations in early development, in major features such as cleavage patterns, are not observed. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2011/04/understanding_ontogenetic_dept_1045581.html Darwin or Design? – Paul Nelson at Saddleback Church – Nov. 2012 – ontogenetic depth (excellent update) – video Text from one of the Saddleback slides: 1. Animal body plans are built in each generation by a stepwise process, from the fertilized egg to the many cells of the adult. The earliest stages in this process determine what follows. 2. Thus, to change — that is, to evolve — any body plan, mutations expressed early in development must occur, be viable, and be stably transmitted to offspring. 3. But such early-acting mutations of global effect are those least likely to be tolerated by the embryo. Losses of structures are the only exception to this otherwise universal generalization about animal development and evolution. Many species will tolerate phenotypic losses if their local (environmental) circumstances are favorable. Hence island or cave fauna often lose (for instance) wings or eyes. http://www.saddleback.com/mc/m/7ece8/bornagain77
February 26, 2013
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As to Mr Fox's appeal to evo-devo, ’ (not that evidence ever really matters to him), but the evidence for evo-devo, particularly the Darwinian reliance on HOX genes to drive major morphological novelties of body plans, has been brought into severe doubt: Evo-devo: Relaxed constraints on Hox gene clustering during evolution – B Galliot1 Excerpt: Hox genes were initially identified in Drosophila as grouped regulatory genes, known as homeotic genes. They encode positional information during development following the colinearity rule, that is, their physical location in the cluster parallels the physical order of their expression along the anterior to posterior (AP) axis of the developing embryo (Lewis, 1978). Some years later, their molecular characterisation in both Drosophila and vertebrates proved that they code for proteins that bind DNA through the homeodomain, a domain of 60 highly evolutionarily conserved amino acids. Furthermore, mammals have the same clustered chromosomal organisation, where four copies of the Hox cluster, homologous to that of Drosophila, were found. Transcriptional analyses performed on sectioned and whole-mount embryos subsequently demonstrated the conservation of the colinearity rule (McGinnis and Krumlauf, 1992). So it seemed that Hox genes might provide a common molecular representation of the body plan at an early stage of the development of all animals. This is referred to as the phylotypic stage, during which embryos from distinct species tend to resemble to each other (Slack et al, 1993). Consequently, it was expected that the Hox gene cluster might have had this crucial developmental role even in the common ancestor of all bilaterally symmetrical animals. However, in vertebrates, the spatial colinearity rule turned out to be only part of the story. In mammals, it was shown that the temporal order of activation of the Hox genes during development also corresponds to the order that these genes are arrayed in the genomic cluster (Kmita and Duboule, 2003). This temporal regulation is not observed in Drosophila embryos, where Hox genes are split into two half-clusters and are activated simultaneously. Genetic manipulations in mice show that the clustered organisation of Hox genes is required to implement such a tight temporal control. In contrast, Hox clustering is not necessary to achieve a proper spatial expression in other numerous cases (see in Kmita and Duboule, 2003).,,, http://www.nature.com/hdy/journal/v94/n3/full/6800624a.html i.e. Many times evolutionists will mention evo-devo (Evolutionary Developmental Biology) to try to support the Darwinian claim that minor changes/mutations to DNA can drive major morphological novelty fairly rapidly, yet, in this following comment, from a 2005 Nature review article, evolutionary geneticist Jerry Coyne, (certainly no friend to ID), expressed strong skepticism at the proposed mechanism of ‘gene switches’ for evo-devo: “The evidence for the adaptive divergence of gene switches is still thin. The best case involves the loss of protective armor and spines in sticklebacks, both due to changes in regulatory elements. But these elements represent the loss of traits, rather than the origin of evolutionary novelties…We now know that Hox genes and other transcription factors have many roles besides inducing body pattern, and their overall function in development – let alone in evolution – remains murky.” http://www.evolutionnews.org/2010/06/scott_f_gilbert_developmental035931.html as well,, Research on stickleback fish shows how adaptation to new environments involves many genes – April 2012 Excerpt: A current controversy raging in evolutionary biology is whether adaptation to new environments is the result of many genes, each of relatively small effect, or just a few genes of large effect. A new study published in Molecular Ecology strongly supports the first “many-small” hypothesis.,, “I suspect that as more and more studies use these methods, the tide of opinion will swerve strongly to the view that adaptation is a complex process that involves many genes spread across diverse places in the genome,” says Prof. Hendry. http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-04-stickleback-fish-environments-involves-genes.html As if that wasn’t bad enough for the evo-devo hope Darwinians had placed in HOX genes,,, Turns out sharks and skates don’t need HoxC genes – December 2011 Excerpt: “Our work illustrates the value of studying elasmobranch fishes such as skates and sharks to gain new insights. If elasmobranchs do not need HoxC genes to develop properly, we must consider the possibility that there is more flexibility in the role of the various Hox clusters than we previously thought.” https://uncommondescent.com.....oxc-genes/ SHOX2 – Nested Hierarchy violated – video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ucps091jGh0 Here is a more thorough critique of evo-devo: Nature’s “Gems”: Microevolution Meets Microevolution – Casey Luskin – August 2010 http://www.evolutionnews.org/2010/08/nature_gems_microevolution_mee037171.html Moreover, body plans are not even reducible solely to the information in DNA in the first place as is held in the ‘central dogma’ (modern synthesis) of neo-Darwinism,,, In Embryo Development, Non-DNA Information Is at Least as Important as DNA – Jonathan Wells – May 2012 Excerpt: Evidence shows that non-DNA developmental information can be inherited in several ways. For example, it can be inherited through chromatin modifications, which affect gene expression without altering underlying DNA sequences. Another example is cytoplasmic inheritance, which involves cytoskeletal patterns and localization of intracellular molecules. Still another example is cortical inheritance, which involves membrane patterns. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/05/in_embryo_devel060031.html “Live memory” of the cell, the other hereditary memory of living systems – 2005 Excerpt: To understand this notion of “live memory”, its role and interactions with DNA must be resituated; indeed, operational information belongs as much to the cell body and to its cytoplasmic regulatory protein components and other endogenous or exogenous ligands as it does to the DNA database. We will see in Section 2, using examples from recent experiments in biology, the principal roles of “live memory” in relation to the four aspects of cellular identity, memory of form, hereditary transmission and also working memory. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15888340 The Mysterious Epigenome. What lies beyond DNA – video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpXs8uShFMobornagain77
February 26, 2013
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Spot on, UB. M. Renard even confuses 'genres' with 'cuisine', me semble-t-il'. Ce qui est diabolique, pour un renard evidemment francais. Renard, truly and beyond all peradventure, failure to accept Intelligent Design is the ultimate hallmark of folly. And all, to protect a world-view and/or life-style! Such simple-MINDED folly.Axel
February 26, 2013
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That right, and a recent argument Alan put forth was that no one would ever claim that Darwinian evolution did not require a genotype/phenotype distinction (or some such nonsense).Mung
February 26, 2013
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Alan, the "general consensus" you speak of is held only by those who couldn't refute the evidence, and chose to ignore it in order to protect their ideology. You are left to your own manner of avoiding it, as you've demonstrated above.Upright BiPed
February 26, 2013
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So the ID explanation of insect metamorphosis, according to mung’s link is “it’s a miracle!” Is that it?
Indeed, everything about the natural world is miraculous. Or haven't you noticed? And at least miracles are caused. Yes, I'll take that over "it just happened, that's all."Mung
February 26, 2013
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I am sure there are many things I must do, one of them is to seek out those whom might challenge the details of my argument, without succumbing to the pretense that I havent provided any details.
Leaving aside the difficulty that the general consensus is that you have yet to formulate a coherent argument, let alone marshal any supporting evidence for it, in order to get people's attention, you may need to venture beyond the confines of UD.Alan Fox
February 26, 2013
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“I wouldn’t join any club that would have me as a member” perhaps?
I sure its nothing quite as poingent as that. I should have inserted a :) I suppose.
I still admire your self-confidence.
As I just indicated, my confidence has nothing to do with it. Like charges repel, while opposite charges attract. That is the demonstrated nature of reality. You have nothing more to admire than I would in admiring your decision not jump off a cliff and start flapping your arms.
However, you will at some stage need to detail some evidence and then explain how that leads on to or otherwise supports an ID
I am sure there are many things I must do, one of them is to seek out those whom might challenge the details of my argument, without succumbing to the pretense that I havent provided any details. cheers...Upright BiPed
February 26, 2013
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So the ID explanation of insect metamorphosis, according to mung's link is "it's a miracle!" Is that it?Alan Fox
February 26, 2013
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The Metamorphosis of Plants The Mystery of Metamorphosis: A Scientific Detective Story Insect Development: Morphogenesis, Molting and Metamorphosis Somewhere in storage I have some books on this topic if anyone near Seattle is interested, lol. (Not the above books. I don't recall the titles.)Mung
February 26, 2013
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What is the current thinking about metamorphosis in, say, insects among ID researchers?
http://www.metamorphosisthefilm.com/Mung
February 26, 2013
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AF: I think Berlinsky lives in France.
Paris, apparently. He'd be welcome chez Fox. But is he still an ID advocate, if he ever was?Alan Fox
February 26, 2013
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...do not pretend that Metamorphosis is not a big deal to evolution...
Researching phenomena like metamorphosis is a big deal. Evo-devo is a very productive branch of research in this area. What is the current thinking about metamorphosis in, say, insects among ID researchers?Alan Fox
February 26, 2013
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AF: I think Berlinsky lives in France. KFkairosfocus
February 26, 2013
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wd400, contrary to the gradual (atheistic/materialistic) process you would prefer to believe in, as far as the fossil record can tell us, insects with the ability to undergo 'complete metamorphosis' appeared abruptly with the signature complex larval stage, indicative of 'complete metamorphosis', already present from the very beginning of their existence on earth:
Humble bug plugs gap in fossil record - August 2012 Excerpt: One day 370 million years ago, a tiny larva came to a sticky end when it plunged into a shrimp-infested swamp and drowned.,, Named Strudiella devonica, the eight-millimetre invertebrate - while in far from mint condition - is thought,, to be the world's oldest complete insect fossil. http://www.news24.com/SciTech/News/Humble-bug-plugs-gap-in-fossil-record-20120801
Moreover wd400, despite your snide comment here:
the people who make the most noise about metamorphosis being a knock-down argument don’t seem to understand current thinking with regards metamorphosis
The fact is that the scientists included in the film 'Metamorphosis' include:
Ronald Boender is the founder and managing partner of Butterfly World in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. It is the first park of its kind in North America and the largest butterfly exhibit in the world. Boender is one of the foremost experts on the rearing of butterflies and their host plants. He is also the founder of the Passiflora Society International and the Endangered Species Laboratory at the University of Florida. and: Thomas C. Emmel is a professor of zoology and entomology at the University of Florida and the Director of the McGuire Center for Lepidoptera and Biodiversity at the Florida Museum of Natural History. He received his doctorate in population biology from Stanford University and was a postdoctoral fellow in genetics at the University of Texas. Emmel is the author of nearly 400 publications, including 35 books on biology, evolution, genetics, behavior and ecology of butterflies. He has led Lepidoptera expeditions to more than 40 countries. http://www.metamorphosisthefilm.com/scientists.php
You can see the trailer of the movie here (as well as download a free e-book)
http://www.metamorphosisthefilm.com/
Blow it off is you must wd400, but do not pretend that Metamorphosis is not a big deal to evolution (as if it did not have problems enough already!)bornagain77
February 26, 2013
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Certainly not. They wouldn’t have me.
“I wouldn’t join any club that would have me as a member” perhaps?
The only thing that matters is the evidence itself, which is unrefuted and will remain so.
I still admire your self-confidence. However, you will at some stage need to detail some evidence and then explain how that leads on to or otherwise supports an ID explanation for the pattern of diversity of life that exists and has existed on Earth. (And perhaps outline an ID explanation.)Alan Fox
February 26, 2013
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Is Upright Biped an acknowledged spokesman for the ID movement?
Certainly not. They wouldn't have me. But then again, in relation to the truth value of my argument, it doesn't matter. This is something your side constantly forgets (and sometimes my side as well). In relation to the truth, who I am simply doesn't matter; my affilations (if I had any) don't matter; my education doesn't matter; if I should come to my argument only after a spectral flash of light, it does not matter. The only thing that matters is the evidence itself, which is unrefuted and will remain so. Protein synthesis is semiotic, and its origin will require a mechanism capable of establishing a semiotic state prior to the onset of both information-based organization and Darwinian evolution.Upright BiPed
February 26, 2013
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WD: With all ue respect, repeating an ill-founded and brusquely dismissive objection -- as you just did -- does not suddenly confer warrant upon it. It does, however, abundantly show to onlookers that the goods are not there behind the confident manner declarations. KFkairosfocus
February 26, 2013
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Rather, it claims that there was creature that included both a caterpillar-like stage and a butterfly-like stage at the outset? Not quite. Just a direct developer, which, like a dragonfly, could be very different from first-nymph to adult. If, rather than going through a series of nymphal moults it could cut it's development in two - a fattening up stage and a reproductive one - the difference would be marked. And how did this system come about? Most likely through the developmental and biochemical cutes for nymphal being supressed and various stages, untill the whole adult development was crammed into one stage. Once the two-stage life cycle was in effect natural selection can act (do a point) separately on each stage, meing the difference btween each would become much greater. I'm not trying to claim every step of this process is well understood - simply the the people who make the most noise about metamorphosis being a knock-down argument don't seem to understand current thinking with regards metamorphosiswd400
February 26, 2013
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( I should probably say large transformation, and not complete, as there are adult tissues in larvae, and larval memories are retained by adults)wd400
February 26, 2013
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All at once, and right the first time. This is the bit that makes your argument rubbish. It doesn't follow that because modern holometabloud insects undergo a complete transformation that their ancestors did.wd400
February 26, 2013
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Actually, my wife is a superb cook in several genres, especially Mediterranean and particularly Moroccan. She also does a mean Rice and Peas if Mr. M wants to try an explanation of FCSId/Oh. But I digress. Mung's link does not lead to any ID explanation that I can see. Is Upright Biped an acknowledged spokesman for the ID movement?Alan Fox
February 26, 2013
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Alan Fox:
Do you know of an ID explanation of anything?
And around and around we go. https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/ub-sets-it-out-step-by-step/Mung
February 26, 2013
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ok, but none of that French stuff.Mung
February 26, 2013
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I'm tempted to offer a free lunch to an accredited expert in ID theory who would be prepared to explain ID theory to me. :)Alan Fox
February 26, 2013
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Oops
Alan, almost anything is a better explanation than “it just happened, that’s all.”
Well, no. But what has that got to do with anything I asked? Do you know of an ID explanation of anything?Alan Fox
February 26, 2013
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Alan, almost anything is a better explanation than “it just happened, that’s all.” Well, no. But what has that got to do with anything I asked? Do you know of an ID explanation of anything?Alan Fox
February 26, 2013
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Alan, almost anything is a better explanation than "it just happened, that's all."Mung
February 26, 2013
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