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FOOTNOTE: On Einstein, Dembski, the Chi Metric and observation by the judging semiotic agent

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(Follows up from here.)

Over at MF’s blog, there has been a continued stream of  objections to the recent log reduction of the chi metric in the recent CSI Newsflash thread.

Here is commentator Toronto:

__________

>> ID is qualifying a part of the equation’s terms with subjective observation.

If I do the same to Einstein’s, I might say;

E = MC^2, IF M contains more than 500 electrons,

BUT

E **MIGHT NOT** be equal to MC^2 IF M contains less than 500 electrons

The equation is no longer purely mathematical but subject to other observations and qualifications that are not mathematical at all.

Dembski claims a mathematical evaluation of information is sufficient for his CSI, but in practice, every attempt at CSI I have seen, requires a unique subjective evaluation of the information in the artifact under study.

The determination of CSI becomes a very small amount of math, coupled with an exhausting study and knowledge of the object itself.>>

_____________

A few thoughts in response:

a –> First, let us remind ourselves of the log reduction itself, starting with Dembski’s 2005 chi expression:

χ = – log2[10^120 ·ϕS(T)·P(T|H)]  . . . eqn n1

How about this (we are now embarking on an exercise in “open notebook” science):

1 –> 10^120 ~ 2^398

2 –> Following Hartley, we can define Information on a probability metric:

I = – log(p) . . .  eqn n2

3 –> So, we can re-present the Chi-metric:

Chi = – log2(2^398 * D2 * p)  . . .  eqn n3

Chi = Ip – (398 + K2) . . .  eqn n4

4 –> That is, the Dembski CSI Chi-metric is a measure of Information for samples from a target zone T on the presumption of a chance-dominated process, beyond a threshold of at least 398 bits, covering 10^120 possibilities.

5 –> Where also, K2 is a further increment to the threshold that naturally peaks at about 100 further bits . . . . As in (using Chi_500 for VJT’s CSI_lite):

Chi_500 = Ip – 500,  bits beyond the [solar system resources] threshold  . . . eqn n5

Chi_1000 = Ip – 1000, bits beyond the observable cosmos, 125 byte/ 143 ASCII character threshold . . . eqn n6

Chi_1024 = Ip – 1024, bits beyond a 2^10, 128 byte/147 ASCII character version of the threshold in n6, with a config space of 1.80*10^308 possibilities, not 1.07*10^301 . . . eqn n6a . . . .

Using Durston’s Fits from his Table 1, in the Dembski style metric of bits beyond the threshold, and simply setting the threshold at 500 bits:

RecA: 242 AA, 832 fits, Chi: 332 bits beyond

SecY: 342 AA, 688 fits, Chi: 188 bits beyond

Corona S2: 445 AA, 1285 fits, Chi: 785 bits beyond  . . . results n7

The two metrics are clearly consistent . . . .one may use the Durston metric as a good measure of the target zone’s actual encoded information content, which Table 1 also conveniently reduces to bits per symbol so we can see how the redundancy affects the information used across the domains of life to achieve a given protein’s function; not just the raw capacity in storage unit bits [= no.  of  AA’s * 4.32 bits/AA on 20 possibilities, as the chain is not particularly constrained.]

b –> In short, we are here reducing the explanatory filter to a formula. Once we have specific, observed functional information of Ip bits,  and we compare it to a threshold of a sufficiently large configuration space, we may infer that the instance of FSCI (or more broadly CSI)  is sufficiently isolated that the accessible search resources make it maximally unlikely that its best explanation is unintelligent cause by blind chance plus mechanical necessity. Instead, the best, and empirically massively supported causal explanation is design:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fig 1: The ID Explanatory Filter

c –> This is especially clear when we use the 1,000 bit threshold, but in fact the “practical” universe we have is our solar system. And so, since the number of Planck time quantum states of our solar system since the usual date of the big bang is not more than 10^102, something that is in a config space of 10^150 [500 bits worth of possibilities] is 48 orders of magnitude beyond that threshold.

d –> So, something from a config space of 10^150 or more (500+ functionally specific bits) is on infinite monkey analysis grounds, comfortably beyond available search resources. 1,000 bits puts it beyond the resources of the observable cosmos:

Fig 2: The Observed Cosmos search window

e –> What the reduced Chi metric is telling us is that if say we had 140 functional bits [20 ASCII characters] , we would be 360 bits short of the threshold, and in principle a random walk based search could find something like that. For, while the reduced chi metric is giving us a value, it tells us we are falling short and by how much:

Chi_500(140 bits) = 140 – 500 = – 360 specific bits, within the threshold

f –> So, the Chi_500 metric tells us instances of this could happen by chance and trial and error testing.   Indeed, that is exactly what has happened with random text generation experiments:

One computer program run by Dan Oliver of Scottsdale, Arizona, according to an article in The New Yorker, came up with a result on August 4, 2004: After the group had worked for 42,162,500,000 billion billion monkey-years, one of the “monkeys” typed, “VALENTINE. Cease toIdor:eFLP0FRjWK78aXzVOwm)-‘;8.t” The first 19 letters of this sequence can be found in “The Two Gentlemen of Verona”. Other teams have reproduced 18 characters from “Timon of Athens”, 17 from “Troilus and Cressida”, and 16 from “Richard II”.[20]

A website entitled The Monkey Shakespeare Simulator, launched on July 1, 2003, contained a Java applet that simulates a large population of monkeys typing randomly, with the stated intention of seeing how long it takes the virtual monkeys to produce a complete Shakespearean play from beginning to end. For example, it produced this partial line from Henry IV, Part 2, reporting that it took “2,737,850 million billion billion billion monkey-years” to reach 24 matching characters:

RUMOUR. Open your ears; 9r"5j5&?OWTY Z0d

g –> But, 500 bits or 72 ASCII characters, and beyond this 1,000 bits or 143 ASCII characters, are a very different proposition, relative to the search resources of the solar system or the observed cosmos.

h –> That is why, consistently, we observe CSI beyond that threshold [e.g. Toronto’s comment] being produced by intelligence, and ONLY as produced by intelligence.

i –> So, on inference to best empirically warranted explanation, and on infinite monkeys analytical grounds, we have excellent reason to have high confidence that the threshold metric is credible.

j –> As a bonus, we have exposed the strawman suggestion that the Chi metric only applies beyond the threshold. Nope, it applies within the threshold and correctly indicates that something of such an order could come about by chance and necessity within the solar system’s search resources.

k –> is a threshold metric inherently suspicious? Not at all. In control system studies, for instance, we learn that once you reduce your expression to a transfer function of form

G = [(s – z1)(s- z2) . . . ]/[(s – p1)(s-p2)(s – p3) . . . ]

. . . then, if poles appear in the RH side of the complex s-plane, you have an unstable system.

l –> A threshold, and one that, when poles approach close to the threshold from the LH half-plane, will show up in a tendency that can be detected in the frequency response as peakiness.

m –> Is the simplicity of the math in question, in the end [after you have done the hard work of specifying information, and identifying thresholds], suspicious? No, again. For instance, let us compare:

v = i* R

q = v* C

n = sin i/ sin r

F = m*a

F2 = – F1

s = k log W

E = m0*c^2

v = H0D

Ik = – log2 (pk)

E = h*νφ

n –> Each of these is elegantly simple, but awesomely powerful; indeed, the last — precisely, a threshold relationship — was a key component of Einstein’s Nobel Prize (Relativity was just plain too controversial). And, once we put them to work in practical, empirical situations, each of them ” . . .  is no longer purely mathematical but subject to other observations and qualifications that are not mathematical at all.”

(The objection is clearly selectively hyperskeptical. Since when was an expression about an empirical quantity or situation “purely mathematical”? Let’s try another expression:

Y = C + I + G + [X – M].

How are its components measured and/or estimated, and with how much application of judgement calls, including those tracing to GAAP? [Cf discussion here.] Is this expression therefore meaningless and of no utility? What about M*VT = PT*T?)

o –> So, what about that horror, the involvement of the semiotic, judging agent as observer, who may even intervene and– shudder — judge? Of course, the observer is a major part of quantum mechanics, to the point where some are tempted to make it into a philosophical position. But the problem starts long before that, e.g. look at the problem of reading a meniscus! (Try, for Hg in glass, and for water in glass — the answers are different and can affect your results.)

Fig 3: Reading a meniscus to obtain volume of a liquid is both subjective and objective (Fair use clipping.)

p –> So, there is nothing in principle or in practice wrong with looking at information, and doing exercises — e.g. see the effect of deliberately injected noise of different levels, or of random variations — to test for specificity. Axe does just this, here, showing the islands of function effect dramatically. Clipping:

. . . if we take perfection to be the standard (i.e., no typos are tolerated) then P has a value of one in 10^60. If we lower the standard by allowing, say, four mutations per string, then mutants like these are considered acceptable:

no biologycaa ioformation by natutal means
no biologicaljinfommation by natcrll means
no biolojjcal information by natiral myans

and if we further lower the standard to accept five mutations, we allow strings like these to pass:

no ziolrgicgl informationpby natural muans
no biilogicab infjrmation by naturalnmaans
no biologilah informazion by n turalimeans

The readability deteriorates quickly, and while we might disagree by one or two mutations as to where we think the line should be drawn, we can all see that it needs to be drawn well below twelve mutations. If we draw the line at four mutations, we find P to have a value of about one in 10^50, whereas if we draw it at five mutations, the P value increases about a thousand-fold, becoming one in 10^47.

q –> Let us note how — when confronted with the same sort of skepticism regarding the link between information [a “subjective” quantity] and entropy [an “objective” one tabulated in steam tables etc] — Jaynes replied:

“. . . The entropy of a thermodynamic system is a measure of the degree of ignorance of a person whose sole knowledge about its microstate consists of the values of the macroscopic quantities . . . which define its thermodynamic state. This is a perfectly ‘objective’ quantity . . . it is a function of [those variables] and does not depend on anybody’s personality. There is no reason why it cannot be measured in the laboratory.”

r –> In short, subjectivity of the investigating observer is not a barrier to the objectivity of the conclusions reached, providing they are warranted on empirical and analytical grounds. As has been provided for the Chi metric, in reduced form.  END

Comments
MathGrrl @160:
I strongly suggest you read the source material, namely the ev paper and Schneider’s PhD thesis for yourself.
Even better than the source material is the source code. Have you read that yet? Schnedier's PhD thesis isn't about ev. Not sure why you think it's relevant, especially since it explicitly discusses targets.
If you still believe that ev models a targeted search, please explain why you think so, with reference to the ev paper and the program source code, and we can no doubt have an interesting discussion.
Already been there and done that. No discussion ensued. Merely further repetition of the same assertion on your part, which stands refuted. Enough with the false promises please. Please define what you mean by a "target." Perhaps once you've done that we can proceed. I can't show you something you refuse to admit even exists. Let me give you an example: I'm a gunner on a ship in WWII. I'm trying to hit an enemy aircraft that threatens to destroy my ship. Does that aricraft qualify as a target in your mind? Does my ship qualify as target? Why?Mung
May 26, 2011
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KF, Sorry, in my last post, I noticed something missing - it should read; "Yes it is, I agree. It’s actually a parallel to what’s going on in the ev algorithm with a moving target, and what's necessary in order to hone in on that target."CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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O/T:
Acts 17:31Because He has fixed a day when He will judge the world righteously (justly) by a Man Whom He has destined and appointed for that task, and He has made this credible and given conviction and assurance and evidence to everyone by raising Him from the dead.
kairosfocus, how's your Greek? Here's Young's Literal Translation:
because He did set a day in which He is about to judge the world in righteousness, by a man whom He did ordain, having given assurance to all, having raised him out of the dead.'
http://www.greeknewtestament.com/B44C017.htm See Also Weymouth:
seeing that He has appointed a day on which, before long, He will judge the world in righteousness, through the instrumentality of a man whom He has pre-destined to this work, and has made the fact certain to every one by raising Him from the dead.'
Mung
May 26, 2011
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KF, "The comparison to a missile tracking a flying jet is a bit closer than just analogy." Yes it is, I agree. It's actually a parallel to what's going on in the ev algorithm with a moving target.CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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KF, "10^48" Whoops, in quoting Meyer, I wrote those out as "10>48." (for example) Must get that right. :)CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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My little corner: I would say that ev implements one or more algorithms [algor + coding + data structures --> programs], rather than being strictly speaking an algorithm itself. But that is a minor refinement Yes, I thought of wording my post differently in order to make a distinction but for now i'll not worry about it unless it becomes an issue. :) ev consists of a number of algorithms and/or modules, but in it's essence it at least pretends to be an evolutionary algorithm.
Mung
May 26, 2011
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Skipping ahead: Perhaps this has already been mentioned, perhaps not. markf, I'll understand if you don't have either of these. On information in nucleotides and what they code for, and in amino acid sequences: Information Theory, Evolution, and The Origin of Life See also Yockey's earlier work: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0521169585Mung
May 26, 2011
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CY: The comparison to a missile tracking a flying jet is a bit closer than just analogy. A targetting system that is moving towards a target in a config space is in effect a servosystem, so the similar analysis to a targetting system in physical space applies. Regulators try to maintain a state, servos try to track a target, two of the major facets of control systems. Such a system is going to require:
1: a set point input -- that is what tells the system what is to be tracked. 2: A comparator, giving rise to an error function by comparing desired to actual performance, that 3: drives an actuator that moves 4:the plant towards the target. Where also 5: A sensor will detect actual current performance, to produce the 6: feedback signal for comparison.
There is a whole discipline of engineering and related fields on this. if ev is tracking towards a moving target, it will need these or similar elements. And, from Mung's earlier clippings and the analysis by Dembski et al, such are not exactly missing in action. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
May 26, 2011
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Mung: MG has had her well-warranted explanations for the CSI metrics, and for how they apply to real world, biological systems. She has had her answers to her four original questions and her was it a dozen more. And more. Again and again, week after week, for coming on three months now. She simply refuses to accept that there are answers on the table. That is why I keep repeating the following now. On CSI and its "rigour," that has been addressed over and over again, in most specificity to the issue of rigour, at 34 - 5 above. Similarly, the talking points MG tends to use over and over as thought hey have not been cogently answered, were last dissected in 23 - 24 above. And, the overall summing up of the issues MG has needed to explain herself on has been kept up in the editorial response to Graham at no 1 in the CSI newsflash thread; which MG has persistently ignored. When it comes to ev, 137 above shows my links to the places in the CSI Newsflash thread where it is dissected by Mung. (One of MG's tactics seems to be to wait until something is buried under enough posts in a thread, or has been continued in a successor thread, before repeating the assertion that was rebutted.) She knows or should know better than she has acted. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
May 26, 2011
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Mung: Useful questions and observations. My little corner: I would say that ev implements one or more algorithms [algor + coding + data structures --> programs], rather than being strictly speaking an algorithm itself. But that is a minor refinement GEM of TKIkairosfocus
May 26, 2011
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Rather than criticize me for doing so, perhaps you could help move the conversation forward by providing a mathematically rigorous definition of CSI, as described by Dembski, and demonstrate in detail how to calculate it for the four scenarios described in my guest thread?
I don't think it's unfair to be critical of your stance, as you just keep repeating the same demands over and over. And that's precisely what they are, demands. That's not the sort of thing reasonable people do, especially when invited to guest post. A reasonable person doesn't take a hard stance that unless someone meets their demands to their satisfaction that there is no room for discussion. If you wanted to move things long you would have responded to vjtorley's quite reasonable request. If you want to move things along, that would be a good start. When you do, I'll begin to take seriously your claim that you want to understand CSI. Until then, I refuse to play your game. Plenty of others have gone down that path with you to no avail.Mung
May 26, 2011
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CY: Useful elaboration. It is indeed the balance of accessible resources and the scope of config space that determines a reasonable outcome. I do however stress that the real crunch factor is not so much a probability estimate as the search challenge in a config space. When the available P-time q-state search resources in terms of number of available states are like 1 in 10^48 of the configs for 500 bits (on the gamut of our solar system) or 1 in 10^150 of the possibilities for the configs of 1,000 bits (on the gamut of the observed cosmos) then you cannot claim to be mounting a credible search of the space of possibilities. Multiverse speculations try to get around this by imagining either an extension to our observed domain or separate domains so that somehow with enough sub-cosmi there is enough room for resources so someone gets lucky. But, what is the evidence for that multiverse? Only, the desire for such additional resources. Philosophical speculation, not science. And, speculation that runs into the other side of the design inference, as a multiverse would have to have in effect a cosmos bakery to cook up sub cosmi suitable for life. That makes the underlying bakery itself quite fine-tuned. And, complicated, fine tuned objects at an operating point are a strong sign of design anyway. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
May 26, 2011
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MathGrrl, Let's see if we can find anything we both (all) agree on. Is ev an algorithm? How would you define or describe an algorithm? Is ev an evolutionary algorithm? If so, what makes it so? Is there such a thing as a search algorithm? Is an evolutionary algorithm a class of search algorithm? RegardsMung
May 26, 2011
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If you believe that ev can be modeled as a targeted search
There's no need to model ev as a target search. It is a target search. No "model" required. Tell us MathGrrl, what do you know about search algorithms?Mung
May 26, 2011
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KF, "That the target — a flying jet usually — normally moves, does not remove the fact of targetting, and the missile hits as long as it can move fast enough to close to the moving target and as long as it has an oracle — the IR signal from the jet exhaust being the usual one." Good analogy, and this should make it abundantly clear.CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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I for one understand that when there's limited resources, there's no (magical) free lunch.CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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On a related matter. Here's Meyer from Chapter 10, discussing Dembski: "As I investigated the question of whether biological information might have arisen by chance, it became abundantly clear to me that the probability of the necessary events is exceedingly small. Nevertheless I realized, based on my previous conversations with Bill Dembski, that the probability of an event by itself does not alone determine whether the event could be reasonably explained by chance. The probabilities, as small as they were, were not by themselves conclusive. I remember that I also had to consider the number of opportunities that the event in question might have had to occur. I had to take into account what Dembski called the probabilistic resources." (SITC pg. 215) He then addresses issues pertaining to the typical Darwinian understandings of how by chance, "amino acids or nucleotide bases, phosphates, and sugars" in an "ocean-sized soup" were able to arrange the elementary building blocks for life. Then he states: "Dembski's calculation was elegantly simple and yet made a powerful point. He noted that there were about 10>80 elementary particles in the observable universe. (Because there is an upper limit on the speed of light, only those parts of the universe that are observable to us can affect events on earth. Thus, the observable universe is the only part of the universe with probabilistic resources relevant to explaining events on earth.) Dembski also noted that there had been roughly 10>16 seconds since the big bang......He then introduced another parameter that enabled him to calculate the maximum number of opportunities that any particular event would have to take place since the origin of the universe. Due to the properties of gravity, matter, and electromagnetic radiation, physicists have determined that there is a limit to the number of physical transitions that can occur from one state to another within a given unit of time. According to physicists, a physical transition from one state to another cannot take place faster than light can traverse the smallest physically significant unit of distance (an indivisible "quantum" of space). That unit of distance is the so-called Planck length of 10>-33 centimeters. Therefore, the time it takes light to traverse this smallest distance determines the shortest time in which any physical effect can occur. This unit of time is the Planck time of 10>-43 seconds." (SITC pg. 215-216) Based on this, "there are a limited number of opportunities for any given event to occur in the entire history of the universe" since the Big Bang. The probabilistic resources that would be required for Darwinian process alone to account for the origin of life far exceeds those available, and Meyer discusses this at length in this chapter. Thus, and in short, it's not that a large improbability or small probability for Darwinian processes is sufficient to dispel chance and necessity as adequate to account for the origin of life and complex biological information, it's that Darwinian processes alone and of necessity, far exceed the available probabilistic resources; and this argument leaves me further mystified as to how any hypothetical multiverse could add anything to the necessary probabilistic resources to affect events on Earth, since any universe outside our own is far outside the observable universe, so it would be irrelevant to the problem at hand. The only process that could originate biological information within the parameters of the available probabilistic resources (and it's interesting that teleology actually transcends the necessity of probabilistic resources), is design. The evidence leads to this conclusion, and this conclusion alone. Also, this dispels the oft repeated charge that ID is an argument from incredulity. http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Argument_from_incredulityCannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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KF, "Once we have CSI beyond that, we are most credibly there by design. On induction from consistent empirical observations and on related analysis of available search resources on chance plus necessity." Yes. This is pretty much the main point of SITC. Which is why Darwinists appear reluctant to acknowledge issues regarding CSI as it pertains to a design inference. If they admit to it, then the whole Darwinian rhetorical strategy crumbles. Another issue that is related is the multiverse hypothesis. If Darwinian natural processes (resources) alone are sufficient for the origin of complex biological information, then an increase in such resources provided by a hypothetical multiverse should not be required. So with that, I'm mystified why it's even brought up in materialist circles. It's as if it's a solution they apply to a problem they don't admit exists.CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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CY: Shannon was using a metric for info based on symbol frequencies in typical messages. The relative frequencies were interpreted as probabilities and this was used with the log metric to get additivity: Ik = log (1/pk) = - log pk Meaning and/or function are secondary to their context which was things like channel capacity in the presence of noise. When we use that metric and then use the restriction that we are coming from events E on an island of function or zone of interest T (T being the detachable specification that puts you there), we are almost at a CSI metric. The threshold is then put in to identify when the needle in the haystack hurdle exceeds the search resources of our solar system or of the observed cosmos. Once we have CSI beyond that, we are most credibly there by design. On induction from consistent empirical observations and on related analysis of available search resources on chance plus necessity. (Information depends on high contingency, and the only credible explanations for a contingent outcome like that are choice or chance. And chance will be controlled by the relative weight of identifiable clusters of possibilities. Here, on/off the zone of interest.) GEM of TKIkairosfocus
May 26, 2011
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Joseph - I'm trying to find out how you (well you and kairosfocus) define meaning and function in a way that is formal enough that we start doing mathematical analyses. I'm still non the wiser, I'm afraid. I'm not sure what your quote of Weaver is meant to say, as you previously wrote this:
IOW “information” as it is used by IDists is the same as every day use.
Weaver's saying that the Shannon Information isn't the same as the everyday use. So are you saying he's wrong, or that ISists don't use Shannon Information?Heinrich
May 26, 2011
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Heinrich- Here are a couple of clues for you to follow: Pertaining to Shannon:
The word information in this theory is used in a special mathematical sense that must not be confused with its ordinary usage. In particular, information must not be confused with meaning.- Warren Weaver, one of Shannon's collaborators
Pertaining to function:
Biological specification always refers to function. An organism is a functional system comprising many functional subsystems. In virtue of their function, these systems embody patterns that are objectively given and can be identified independently of the systems that embody them. Hence these systems are specified in the same sense required by the complexity-specification criterion (see sections 1.3 and 2.5). The specification of organisms can be crashed out in any number of ways. Arno Wouters cashes it out globally in terms of the viability of whole organisms. Michael Behe cashes it out in terms of minimal function of biochemical systems.- Wm. Dembski page 148 of NFL
If you really have difficulty understanding meaning and function then perhaps you are in the wrong place.Joseph
May 26, 2011
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Here's what Meyer says regarding the DNA enigma: "When Watson and Crick discovered the structure and information-bearing properties of DNA, they did indeed solve one mystery, namely, the secret of how the cell stores and transmits hereditary information. But they uncovered another mystery that remains with us to this day. This is the DNA enigma-the mystery of the origin of the information needed to build the first living organism." Stephen C. Meyer, "Signature in the Cell," pg. 13.CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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"Notice, how persistently resistant evo mat advocates and fellow travellers are to the issue of getting TO islands of function in a sea of a vast space of configs on random walks and trial and error, where by far and away most of these will be decidedly non-functional." Excellent point. I think MG "and fellow travelers" would do well to re-read Dembski's book on the matter and continuously consider origins of life - and what Meyer refers to as the DNA enigma. ev and programs like it are irrelevant in consideration of the arrival of the first life.CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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CY: What I will say is that it is pretty clear that originally MG was part of a co-ordinated group with KL and another. What happened is that the latter two patently became too rowdy. MG haws continued with a rhetorical strategy of ignoring substantial answers and corrections, and repeating her talking points ad nauseum. To a point where her behaviour is now unfortunately willfully insistent and deceptive. Not to mention, making some pretty nasty snide allegations or insinuations. There is a very long list of points where she needs to answer seriously on the merits, or to explain herself. unfortunately, she shows scant indication of doing so. In absence of such, he needs to be regularly reminded of what she needs to do. You will see that I now have a standard challenge to her:
On CSI and its "rigour," that has been addressed over and over again, in most specificity to the issue of rigour, at 34 - 5 above. Similarly, the talking points MG tends to use over and over as thought they have not been cogently answered, were last dissected in 23 - 24 above. And, the overall summing up of the issues MG has needed to explain herself on has been kept up in the editorial response to Graham at no 1 in the CSI newsflash thread; which MG has persistently ignored. When it comes to ev, 137 above shows my links to the places in the CSI Newsflash thread where it is dissected by Mung. (One of MG's tactics seems to be to wait until something is buried under enough posts in a thread, or has been continued in a successor thread, before repeating the assertion that was rebutted.) She knows or should know better than she has acted.
I will consistently re-post this challenge until she begins to answer seriously on the merits. So that all who care about the truth and about serious warrant for claims, will be able to see the real balance on the merits. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
May 26, 2011
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CD, "Fortunately, we have a few serious, courteous opponents who are open-minded and conversant with the facts. More like them please!" Yes we have, and I appreciate them as much as those I agree with.CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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Hear Hear, Kairosfocus. I'm currently reading Wells' "The Myth of Junk DNA" and I'm beginning to fully appreciate just how much introns have changed the game. The Scientific American article, "The Unseen Genome: Gems Among the Junk" says it all with this statement: "The failure to recognize the importance of introns 'may well go down as one of the biggest mistakes in the history of molecular biology'" If a given nucleotide performs different functions [depending on the different ways (and times) it can be used to express genes], then it is simply inadequate to talk about random mutations in DNA without addressing the full range and impact of such mutations with reference to the influence of introns.Chris Doyle
May 26, 2011
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markf, Thanks for the clarification regarding your blog. I guess I've been reading posts under one thread entitled "in Moderation?" However, the top banner seems to suggest that this is a blog in itself. I think the bottom line with MG is that her question has been sufficiently answered, and that she is not about to have UD posters and ID supporters change their minds on the issue, given the strategy she is applying. I think a better strategy would be to research new information to support her views. She has not done so. When she has raised objections, the strategy of KF and others has been to further clarify with just such new information - but ultimately, there is probably even more information that has not been mentioned here. But so far, the record speaks for itself.CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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KF and others, "It seems that we are at a stage where the Alinsky mentality has so pervaded sectors of the public, that they are unable to think that protecting civil discussion towards assessing the warrant of claims is a legitimate act." Alinsky - the ends justify the means. The problem with the means is that they don't always produce the desired ends (as Marxism has shown), and we've demonstrated that with MG. We can control the ends such that the means are counterproductive. UD has already done such controlling here by allowing MG to have her own thread, and by continuing to put up with her repetitive talking points - thus dispelling that those with dissenting views are arbitrarily moderated by the emotional whims of the moderators. So we have control over that perception (that the perception continues on one particular blog is inconsequential - given the actions here), and I think the moderators here have been quite fair with those who come here with dissenting views. As I mentioned in an earlier post, some of those who have been moderated posted here for several years - I can name some of them, but I'd like to respect their privacy. Bottom line is that UD would not be UD without the contribution of dissenters towards the discussions at hand. UD would be biting off it's own foot if it arbitrarily and emotionally booted out those who dissent form ID. But if the decision comes down to moderating her, it is not because she has not been superficially civil in language, but because by her own repetitive talking points, she's not bringing anything new to the discussion; which I think would be quite a legitimate reason for moderation. This is why I suggested to her that she move on; even if she doesn't for one reason or another, accept the conclusions. No one is forcing her to do so, but it wouldn't be an arbitrary and emotional whim to finally end the repetition in light of her apparent and underlying motives.CannuckianYankee
May 26, 2011
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CD: At most, such simulations may help us see how micro evo can happen, within an island of existing function. Which is not controversial, even among modern Young Earth Creationists. Notice, how persistently resistant evo mat advocates and fellow travellers are to the issue of getting TO islands of function in a sea of a vast space of configs on random walks and trial and error, where by far and away most of these will be decidedly non-functional. That holds for the first body plan, and it holds for major new body plans thereafter. Including accounting for the linguistic capacity that is so central to our humanity. The same linguistic capacity that the evo mat advocates have to use to make their claims. In short, the whole debate is a massive exercise in self-referential incoherence on their part. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
May 26, 2011
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#202 CY I just stumbled upon your comment (I have not been following this discussion for several days). 1) Delighted that you have been reading my blog from time to time - welcome. 2) There is only one thread on the blog about UD moderation policy. Other threads are devoted to different items. Most of the participants are anti-ID ex-contributors to UD - but that was by evolution not design. 3) You are right that in that thread I did argue that there is no strategy on UD to suppress dissent through moderation or banning and I deliberated responded to an item in more personal language than I would normally use to prove my point.( I was not moderated - so I guess my point was made.) 4) I have absolutely no reason to suppose that Mathgrrl is making any kind of test of UD moderation policy. She could have been a lot less polite if she wanted to try that out. I am sure she genuinely believes her concerns have not been met. 5) I still have no idea who she is or even if she is really a "she". (I did once think I knew - but it turns out there is more than one Mathgrrl in the world.)markf
May 26, 2011
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