Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

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

Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

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:

_________________

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)?>>

_________________

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

Comments
Gregory:
ID is claimed to be a natural-science-only theory...
What does that even mean, Gregory? Science is science and the adjective "natural" is unnecessary. Gregory:
You are, as an engineer, a small-d ‘designer’ after all and IDM-ID theory makes no claim that you even exist because ID theory cannot study ‘designers’.
LoL! Theories cannot study anything, Gregory, PEOPLE do. And IDists, ie PEOPLE, can study designers if those designers are ammendable to being studied.
ID theory is indifferent to the study of designers and designing processes, with which surely you are quite familiar.
You have no clue, eh, Gregory? Archaeology must also be indifferent to studying designers and the processes they used. Can we study the designers of Stonehenge? No. Can we study the processes they used? No, because we don't have any idea what those were. But I digress- ID is about the DESIGN, as in detecting and then studying it and all relevant evidence. Gregory would have known that if he were as eductated in Intelligent design as he has been telling us. That Gregory is obvioulsy ignorant of the basics of ID tells me either he skipped those classes or is just too stupid to have grasped what was said.Joe
February 22, 2013
February
02
Feb
22
22
2013
04:50 AM
4
04
50
AM
PDT
The Earth was so young 300 million years ago, the first land animals had yet to evolve into dinosaurs, most scientists believe.
LOL! Enjoy... because more than an interesting application of possible ID inference... this one's going into everyone's pipe: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/23/300-million-year-old-tooth-gear_n_2527424.html .....JGuy
February 22, 2013
February
02
Feb
22
22
2013
01:51 AM
1
01
51
AM
PDT
So — given the biases and holes in the fossil record that you have admitted — is it reasonable for people to demand, before they accept that the fossil record supports evolution, that evolutionists produce a complete ancestor-descendent chain for the origin of any major group of interest, using only exact direct ancestors, and completely ignoring all information from what are thought to be close side-branches? Yes or no?
No. But by the same token, that means the record is insufficient to give more than loosely corroborative evidence for any theory, when what is required of "support for evolution" is more, depending on what definition of "evolution" is supposed. So the obvious conclusion from the existing fossil record would be, on a first pass, agnosticism with a broad suggestion of descent with modification as opposed to de novo species creation, but probably (from what I suggested above) showing a pattern of stasis and rapid development needing to be accommodated in any hypothesis. I guess the demand for more evidence, which you rightly say is not possible, will be justified if more is claimed for the actual evidence than is warranted, eg that it proves Neodarwinism to be a "fact like gravity" etc. Then it becomes less a demand for the impossible, but a rhetorical way of saying "Don't claim what the evidence can't show."Jon Garvey
February 22, 2013
February
02
Feb
22
22
2013
12:17 AM
12
12
17
AM
PDT
Should read 'ontogeny' Oops:-/Optimus
February 22, 2013
February
02
Feb
22
22
2013
12:12 AM
12
12
12
AM
PDT
I've always been bothered by the breezy confidence with which some paleontologists make assertions about the characteristics of some long extinct organism. If we only have part of a skeleton left over, how would we determine its really important traits (e.g. ontology, age of sexual maturity, gestation, parental practices, nocturnal or diurnal, diet, predators if any, susceptibility to disease, hunting ability, group behavior)? Much less - how could we know its connection to other organisms that existed millions of years before or after?Optimus
February 22, 2013
February
02
Feb
22
22
2013
12:11 AM
12
12
11
AM
PDT
Mung @ 29 Thank you for identifying the key issue. I don't think I've seen Nick address this one head on without falling back on defensive invective. This question (i.e. Can ancestor-descendant relationships be established using fossil similarity?) is really the what has to be addressed. If it isn't, then one can spend an eternity speculating about which australopithecine goes where, who belongs in a side branch, etc and not really make any progress.Optimus
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
11:57 PM
11
11
57
PM
PDT
Forjah. I see you have a piece from a rare segment. :DJGuy
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
11:47 PM
11
11
47
PM
PDT
This mess of a discussion makes me imagine a bunch of scientists working on a 10,000 piece puzzle that they decide to split up into 100 segments. When they reach in the bag full of mixed up puzzle pieces they just happen to pull out 1 piece from each segment. And when all those segments have that one piece they tell everyone what the puzzle is a picture of!ForJah
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
09:42 PM
9
09
42
PM
PDT
Sagebrush Gardener you said; "We who have spent our careers designing complex systems are not throwing up our hands and saying “Oh, it is too complicated for us to understand — God must have done it.” We infer a designer because we do understand how complex systems are designed and we recognize the evidence of design in biology." Touche! I'm also an Engineer.Andre
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
09:11 PM
9
09
11
PM
PDT
Using a giant table full of fossils which represent the variety of all creatures that are living today, I wonder what various kinds of imaginary ancestorial progressions could be constructed.JGuy
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
09:03 PM
9
09
03
PM
PDT
Well, they can say it, and often have, but that just don't make it so.Mung
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
05:41 PM
5
05
41
PM
PDT
But Nick, I would say that a fair number of us here at UD are convinced that you cannot identify ancestors and descendants in the fossil record. It follows that you cannot identify a chain of such. So perhaps they are not seeking this impossible level of confirmation that you claim and you've only managed to erect a straw-man. Now, did Jon actually ask you to identify ancestors and descendants and put them in a chain? You can admit, can't you, that no one can look at the fossil record and say that one species is ancestral to another?Mung
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
05:40 PM
5
05
40
PM
PDT
Nick Matzke:
So — given the biases and holes in the fossil record that you have admitted — is it reasonable for people to demand, before they accept that the fossil record supports evolution, that evolutionists produce a complete ancestor-descendent chain for the origin of any major group of interest, using only exact direct ancestors, and completely ignoring all information from what are thought to be close side-branches? Yes or no?
No.Mung
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
05:32 PM
5
05
32
PM
PDT
So, what do you think the percentages of genera and species are recovered from the fossil record? And do you really think it is reasonable to think that we will have an equal quality of fossil record, as we go further and further back in time?
Less at the species level. I would expect that a fair measure would be to take those percentage to the fifth power. Which would still be in the range ~50% to ~85% representation. That is still very high and where we would expect no significant pattern of gaps, and enough to be statistically sure that most of what can be found has already been found. Shouldn't we expect to find more variety than less of the same fossils over & over? Yes. Why should one reject uniformity? There are already more fossils found in the lower strata than would have been expected. If you expect more at the lowest level, then don't you only expecting to compound the problem against Darwin's theory & required gradation.JGuy
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
05:10 PM
5
05
10
PM
PDT
corrected link:
Kutless - Strong Tower http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tOxeyj7itJE
bornagain77
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
05:10 PM
5
05
10
PM
PDT
Mr Matzke, though I could quote from numerous experts on the overall suddenness and extreme stasis of the fossil record, I would like to address a more fundamentally crushing problem that you have. That fundamentally crushing problem that you have relates to the naturalistic/materialistic (atheistic) presupposition that you have going into these discussions about Darwinism. You see Mr. Matzke, even if the fossil record (and phylogenetic evidence) were to give you the smooth gradual branching tree-like pattern that you imagine them to give, (they don't but if they did), this still would not be enough for you to prove that it happened by a purely naturalistic/materialistic (atheistic) account as is held in strict neo-Darwinian thinking.,,, But that is the beauty of modern science Mr Matzke (modern science which was founded within the matrix of Christian Theism by the way!).,, We can ask ourselves, Mr Matzke, if the base of reality is a materialistic foundation that is dependent on nothing else but itself to explain its continued existence within space-time (as the classic atheistic materialist has held for thousands of years), or we can ask ourselves if the material foundation of reality is sustained from 'beyond space and time' by a transcendent cause (as has been held by Theism for thousands of years).,, And the beauty of all this is that modern science has finally, after countless heated arguments, shined a light directly on this age old question Mr. Matzke!
Quantum Evidence for a Theistic Universe https://docs.google.com/document/d/1agaJIWjPWHs5vtMx5SkpaMPbantoP471k0lNBUXg0Xo/edit
Thus Mr. Matzke, according to the best science we now have our hands on from quantum mechanics, we can be extremely confident in our belief that we live in a Theistic universe, and the atheistic version of neo-Darwinism, which you, by hook or by crook, cling so tenaciously to, is an excercise in futility (to put it mildly)!,,, I could probably go much farther into the details, than you care to hear now, as to the ultimate cause of 'randomness', and such things that you appeal to as to your ultimate cause, but suffice it to say that your atheistic belief is neatly crushed by the findings of modern science from quantum mechanics.,,, Of note: the following is a rather easy way to get the basic point across that we live in a Theistic universe:
The Galileo Affair and the true "Center of the Universe" Excerpt: The Galileo Affair and the true "Center of the Universe" Excerpt: I find it extremely interesting, and strange, that quantum mechanics tells us that instantaneous quantum wave collapse to its 'uncertain' 3D state is centered on each individual conscious observer in the universe, whereas, 4D space-time cosmology (General Relativity) tells us each 3D point in the universe is central to the expansion of the universe. These findings of modern science are pretty much exactly what we would expect to see if this universe were indeed created, and sustained, from a higher dimension by a omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent, eternal Being who knows everything that is happening everywhere in the universe at the same time. These findings certainly seem to go to the very heart of the age old question asked of many parents by their children, “How can God hear everybody’s prayers at the same time?”,,, i.e. Why should the expansion of the universe, or the quantum wave collapse of the entire universe, even care that you or I, or anyone else, should exist? Only Theism, Christian Theism in particular, offers a rational explanation as to why you or I, or anyone else, should have such undeserved significance in such a vast universe. [15] Psalm 33:13-15 The LORD looks from heaven; He sees all the sons of men. From the place of His dwelling He looks on all the inhabitants of the earth; He fashions their hearts individually; He considers all their works. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1BHAcvrc913SgnPcDohwkPnN4kMJ9EDX-JJSkjc4AXmA/edit
Music:
Kutless - Strong Tower http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NawddLbdqLA
bornagain77
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
05:06 PM
5
05
06
PM
PDT
Or '"directed" retroconjecture'! ('directed' being underlined!)Axel
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
04:25 PM
4
04
25
PM
PDT
'There is not a single entity called ‘THE’ scientific process. There are multiple processes. Studies in history, philosophy and sociology of science (HPSS) have revealed this.' Absolutely, Greg. Unfortunately, UDers are not 'au fait' with the new, more tenuous and subtle field of retroscience. If they were, the blackguards would probably call it 'retroconjecture'!Axel
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
04:22 PM
4
04
22
PM
PDT
18 Jon GarveyFebruary 21, 2013 at 4:47 pm And do you really think it is reasonable to think that we will have an equal quality of fossil record, as we go further and further back in time? It’s a sampling question, isn’t it, really? One needs to look at number of specimens, as well as numbers of species. There are about 250K fossil species, far less than even the modern total – so many don’t get fossilised: many are just not suited to preservation anyway, of course. But how much less than the overall total is that, without assuming the mechanism? Estimate some millions of catalogued specimens in each major natural history museum, and one gets a total of some tens of specimens, crudely averaged, for each named fossil species. There are about 30 T. rex fossils (ie one species, not genus or above), spread across western North America – so they are fortuitously preserved it seems, unlike say a dozen or so Archaeopteryx which are all from one classy deposit. There are “large numbers” of Iguanadon from across Eurasia and North Africa, all now designated to one or maybe two species. Bob Bakker considered the sampling of fossil dinosaurs adequate enough to estimate predator/herbivore ratios and make his hypothesis that dinosaurs were warmblooded. Hyracotherium (dawn horse as was) is of course newer, and is known from hundreds of specimens across the Northern hemisphere – but all are from only one species. The whole equine tree has some 30 genera (and rather more species) over 50 million years. But may suggest a bizarrely weighted preservation pattern (Many Tyrannosaurus, Iguanadon, Hyracotherium specimens from single species across the world – yet not even one specimen of their immediate precursors or descendants). Or it may rather reflect a genuine pattern of stasis and rapid or saltational change, where all we see is the stasis and the change is always happening off the fossil record. To me Neodarwinian gradualism, at least, doesn’t look good on that showing, because the pattern should usually be individual specimens of very many species, not many specimens of few (when they are not found together, of course). So it’s not just the paucity, but the pattern, of the fossil record that suggest that major change is rapid and intermittent.
So -- given the biases and holes in the fossil record that you have admitted -- is it reasonable for people to demand, before they accept that the fossil record supports evolution, that evolutionists produce a complete ancestor-descendent chain for the origin of any major group of interest, using only exact direct ancestors, and completely ignoring all information from what are thought to be close side-branches? Yes or no?NickMatzke_UD
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
04:16 PM
4
04
16
PM
PDT
Gregory is right. And wrong. What's new? I wonder which of the numerous and varied "scientific methods" Gregory think ID falls under. And let's not forget that Gregory seems to think that humans and human activities are not natural, and thus fall outside the natural sciences. I suppose that helps him in his argument that human artifacts are only analogous to the artifacts we find elsewhere in nature.Mung
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
04:00 PM
4
04
00
PM
PDT
Gregory:
I merely claimed that ID theory is dysanthropic.
Claimed as in made an unsupported assertion? ID theory hates humans like the TOE hates life. Which is to say that there are things about which both are agnostic.Phinehas
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
02:54 PM
2
02
54
PM
PDT
And do you really think it is reasonable to think that we will have an equal quality of fossil record, as we go further and further back in time?
It's a sampling question, isn't it, really? One needs to look at number of specimens, as well as numbers of species. There are about 250K fossil species, far less than even the modern total - so many don't get fossilised: many are just not suited to preservation anyway, of course. But how much less than the overall total is that, without assuming the mechanism? Estimate some millions of catalogued specimens in each major natural history museum, and one gets a total of some tens of specimens, crudely averaged, for each named fossil species. There are about 30 T. rex fossils (ie one species, not genus or above), spread across western North America - so they are fortuitously preserved it seems, unlike say a dozen or so Archaeopteryx which are all from one classy deposit. There are "large numbers" of Iguanadon from across Eurasia and North Africa, all now designated to one or maybe two species. Bob Bakker considered the sampling of fossil dinosaurs adequate enough to estimate predator/herbivore ratios and make his hypothesis that dinosaurs were warmblooded. Hyracotherium (dawn horse as was) is of course newer, and is known from hundreds of specimens across the Northern hemisphere - but all are from only one species. The whole equine tree has some 30 genera (and rather more species) over 50 million years. But may suggest a bizarrely weighted preservation pattern (Many Tyrannosaurus, Iguanadon, Hyracotherium specimens from single species across the world - yet not even one specimen of their immediate precursors or descendants). Or it may rather reflect a genuine pattern of stasis and rapid or saltational change, where all we see is the stasis and the change is always happening off the fossil record. To me Neodarwinian gradualism, at least, doesn't look good on that showing, because the pattern should usually be individual specimens of very many species, not many specimens of few (when they are not found together, of course). So it's not just the paucity, but the pattern, of the fossil record that suggest that major change is rapid and intermittent.Jon Garvey
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
02:47 PM
2
02
47
PM
PDT
Gregory: I am thread owner, and you have some outstanding issues. One and only warning. KFkairosfocus
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
02:40 PM
2
02
40
PM
PDT
Gregory:
Otherwise you are attempting to universalise or drastically extend the concept ‘design’ to non-humans, even to gods.
The concept 'design' has already been universalized and drastically extended beyond humans, even to 'nature.' This 'nature' so exceeds humans in its ability to design and produce that it might as well be labelled a god. Is it so strange that ecs2 or sg should be skeptical?Phinehas
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
02:38 PM
2
02
38
PM
PDT
ecs2 Absolutely wondeful post Eric, real brain candy. And I think Nicks response was inadequate, even though I agree with him and disagree with what you're implying. It really seems to me though that you've gotten to the heart of the question of how we know what we know in science. I think your post deserves a very long and carefully thought out response. RodWRodW
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
02:38 PM
2
02
38
PM
PDT
I merely claimed that ID theory is dysanthropic. Calm down, IDist. I'm not an evolutionist. It does seem like you've *snorted*.Gregory
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
02:31 PM
2
02
31
PM
PDT
Gregory:
IDM-ID theory makes no claim that you even exist because ID theory cannot study ‘designers’.
*snort* Credibility--; And the TOE makes no claim that any of us exist because it cannot study OOL. Obviously, any theory that cannot study everything it suspect, right?Phinehas
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
02:11 PM
2
02
11
PM
PDT
"someone designed it that way." - sg That 'someone' = a human being. Right? Which 'someone/anyone' are you refering to if not a human being(s)? Otherwise you are attempting to universalise or drastically extend the concept 'design' to non-humans, even to gods. KF is fond of beavers. But beavers didn't create the origins of life or the origins of biological information or human origins, which is the IDM's main (oftentimes exclusive) focus. Human designers themselves (e.g. engineers, programmers, architects, artists, etc.) are rarely professional/vocational theorists of human designing; that's part of the disconnect here. "do not “just happen”, they do not “arise”, and they do not “emerge”." - sg Have you thought to inquire with actual, living theorists of human design and intentionality, almost none of whom inhabit biological fields?Gregory
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
01:44 PM
1
01
44
PM
PDT
Eric and KF/GEM, "Did you notice, that I was citing a claim made by ecs2?" - KF/GEM Nope, that one tricked me. My apology to ecs2 for mistaking his words for KF/GEM's. ecs2 wrote in #7, "Regarding scientific processes, I agree with you and the words I used were intended to convey a similar point. If I had used the term scientific method I could see your complaint, but by scientific process I was envisioning something dynamic and multi-dimensional composed of multiple sub-processes." That's o.k. - I taught English language for several years and just out of habit correct people when mistakes are made. There are multiple methods and processes, so a singular is simply wrong. Surely with this you agree. When people today speak of 'THE scientific method,' they demonstrate a lack of familiarity with philosophy of science (PoS) advances in recent years. That is understandable since PoS in the USA is highly underdeveloped and under-taught. People who have studied PoS know that there are multiple methods, multiple processes and that a single 'THE scientific method' or 'THE scientific process' is a myth. Even some people who haven't studied PoS know this, while others repeat such a myth as reality. "My words may have been clumsy but my intent was in-family with your usage, I think." - ecs2 Thank you, yes, I see that now. "I am not necessarily an active IDer" - ecs2 Yeah, me neither. I reject IDism as a wishful scientistic fantasy. ID is claimed to be a natural-science-only theory, which is laughable. 'Teach the controversy' is likewise unfortunately riddled with IDM propaganda and politics. Folks like KF (applied physics, voice software), who parade FSCO/I like it's a natural scientific proof directly from the Creator discredit the Movement. I can understand why you hesitate to become part of it, ecs2, while accepting your humble and respectful sympathy towards IDism. You are, as an engineer, a small-d 'designer' after all and IDM-ID theory makes no claim that you even exist because ID theory cannot study 'designers'. ID theory is indifferent to the study of designers and designing processes, with which surely you are quite familiar. Indeed, ID theory is actually one of the most dysanthropic theories to have confronted the Academy in recent years. People need to be warned about this, but not "summarily discounted" as if they are "uninformed."Gregory
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
01:31 PM
1
01
31
PM
PDT
ecs2: I have a PhD in Engineering.
I find it interesting that so many Darwin skeptics have backgrounds in engineering or computer science. (I see that Dr. Tour, in addition to his expertise in chemistry, is also a professor of computer science and mechanical engineering.) In these fields, we have to design complex systems with reliable and reproducible results. I think this ingrains in us a manner of thinking that is not found in fields where storytelling and hand-waving generalities are the accepted norm. We know that functional complex systems with multiple interacting subsystems (themselves made of other complex subsystems, almost ad infinitum) do not "just happen", they do not "arise", and they do not "emerge". We know that every detail, down to the smallest pixel on a computer screen or the tiniest bearing in an airliner, is there because someone designed it that way. And the more we learn of the complex molecular machinery of biology, the more it looks like it was designed. We who have spent our careers designing complex systems are not throwing up our hands and saying "Oh, it is too complicated for us to understand -- God must have done it." We infer a designer because we do understand how complex systems are designed and we recognize the evidence of design in biology.sagebrush gardener
February 21, 2013
February
02
Feb
21
21
2013
01:13 PM
1
01
13
PM
PDT
1 5 6 7 8

Leave a Reply