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GP on the Origin of Body Plans [OoBP] challenge

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. . . here (at 194) in his amazing engineering thread as he responds to Dionisio:

>>Dionisio:

Thank you for summarizing that interesting discussion.

I will summarize it even more.

1) Nobody knows how morphogenesis is controlled and guided.

2) Moran is no exception to that.

3) “Experts” are no exception to that.

4) However, according to Moran (and, unfortunately, he is probably quite right): “experts do not see a need to encode body plans and brain in our genome”

5) You and I, and probably some more sensible people, do see that need.

6) So, it seems, the problem is not about what we know, but about what we see as a need.

Now, I notice that Moran says:

“experts do not see a need to encode body plans and brain in our genome” (emphasis mine)

OK, that can mean two very different things:

a) Experts do not see a need to encode body plans and brain in our genome, but they think that body plans and the brain are encoded elsewhere

OR

b) Experts do not see a need to encode body plans and brain anywhere.

I will not ask Moran what he really meant, because I think it unlikely that he would respond. So, I can only guess.

I would say that he means b). Why? Because, if he means a), I could probably partially agree, and that is a rather unlikely situation, IMO.

Now, a) just means that the procedures are encoded elsewhere. That is probably true, at least in part. That “elsewhere can still mean two different things:

a1) At some epigenetic level, that we can imagine

a2) In some other way, that at present we cannot even imagine

Well, I believe that all of that is true. The procedures are encoded in the genome, both at the level of proteome (see my OP here, for that) and at the level of non coding DNA (Ouch! Moran will not like that). And they are also encoded at many epigenetic levels. And they are also encoded at other levels that at present we cannot imagine.

But there is one certainty, for me: they are encoded somewhere.

Because, you see, most neo darwinists would rather go with b): they really believe that those things are not encoded anywhere.

Now, while you and I certainly find that idea completely absurd, let’s try to understand what they think.

The best, and most honest, admission about that, in my memory, was made by Piotr, some time ago, in a discussion that was exactly about the procedures for cell (and tissue, and organ, and body) development. He said, if I remember well:

“I think it’s just the memory of what worked”.

OK, that’s a very honest statement of a neo darwinian perspective. But, as it is honest, it includes a precious little word: memory.

Now, you and I, having some love for informatics and programming, know all too well that “memory” is not a vague concept.

Memory of information must be stored to survive and be available. And that requires, in our human experience, some storage medium. Usually some physical (and often expensive) storage medium.

IOWs, no memory storage medium, no party.

So, I would like to ask Piotr (if he still reads this blog, that is unlikely), or Moran (if he likes to answer, that is unlikely), or anyone else:

Where and how are the procedure for cell (and tissue, and organ, and body) development stored?

Because, you see, they are certainly available in some way, otherwise how could the embryo of any organism generate the full body?

I suppose that the most likely argument of any neo darwinist, at this point, would be that those procedures must, after all, be very simple. A few HARs, a few hundred, at best a few thousand, nucleotides, and the deed is done.

Done? The human body plan? The human brain and nervous system? The whole immunology network? And so on, and so on?

You and I, having some love for informatics and programming, know all too well a very basic truth: very simple programs require some limited memory to be stored, but very complex programs require a lot of memory.

So, is the information for human brain really so simple? Is it like squeezing, say, Windows 10 in 1-2 KB at most?

OK, we know that the biological designer must be very good, but so good?

Ah, but I forgot: neo darwinian evolution can do practically anything: even miracles, provided we don’t call them miracles! >>

He goes on, in 201:

>>By the way, let’s comment some more on this interesting issue of development, always in the light of the results presented in this OP.

Vertebrates are considered as a subphylum of chordates: chordates with backbones.

So, in a sense, the basic body plan is set up in chordates, with the appearance of the notochord, and other features.

As we know, phyla correspond to basic body plans. But, strangely enough, they all appear very “suddenly”, during the so called “Cambrian explosion” (approximately 541 – 520 million years ago).

We know well all the debates about that amazing event. Of course, neo darwinist have tried their best to hypothesize that the explosion is not an explosion at all, and that the true information for all those new body plans was being “manufactured” more gradually during the previous times. And so on.

But the evidence of the fossils remains what it is, and I don’t think that our “polite dissenters” have succeeded in explaining away the “almost miracle” of the Cambrian events.

However, with vertebrates we are apparently observing an event slightly later than the Cambrian explosion itself. The emergence of a very important (for future developments) subphylum in the well established phylum of chordata.

That allows to localize better the emergence of the new information, to somewhat later than the Cambrian, but anyway well more than 400 million years ago.

Now, if we judge from the following natural history, it seems that the emergence of vertebrates was a very successful innovation: indeed, chordates not vertebrates are a rather small bunch of organisms today, while vertebrates are, in comparison, one of the main representative groups of animals, from many points of view, even if we don’t consider the side aspect that we, as humans, are part of it.

So, it is rather interesting to observe, according to the data presented in the OP, that the transition to vertebrates was a very exceptional “jump” from the point of view of some specific functional information in the proteome, certainly the biggest step we can observe in the accumulation of human conserved protein information. In that sense, it is a much bigger step than the simple appearance of the phylum chordata, with the appearence of more than twice human conserved information (3,708,977 bits vs 1,685,550, not corrected for redundancy).

If we want to make hypotheses about that interesting fact, we could probably reason that the new body plan of vertebrates includes at least two major innovations that will be very important in all the future natural history of that branch:

1) Cephalization, and in particular the gradual development of the brain, and therefore of all new functiona connected to that

2) Adaptive immunity, which appears for the first time in jawed vertebrates.

Both these innovations have a common denominator: they are linked to the appearance and development of two very complex regulatory systems, both aimed to a very complex and nuanced interaction with the outer environment.

IOWs, they are both, in different ways, complex systems that process information from the outer world.

That is an important concept, because it bears a fundamental implication:

If the bulk of the huge informational jump that appears in the vertebrate proteome is really linked to the premises for the development of the central nervous system and the brain and of the adaptive immune system, then it is perfectly reasonable to think that much of that new information must be strongly connected, as one can expect in any big and complex system that mainly processes information and reacts to it in very complex and nuanced modalities.

Another way to say it is that, in that huge informational jump, a great part of the total information can be expected to be irreducibly complex.>>

Sobering issues, well worth headlining and inviting further discussion. Let’s see if objectors to design thought have a good, cogent and plausible counter-case that is suitably empirically well-grounded in actual observations rather than ideologically loadesd reconstructions of the inherently unobservable remote past of origins. END

PS: I have been very busy RW.

Comments
mike1962 @18: Yes, that's an interesting idea. I think so too.Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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KF, The could be getting ready to launch a fulminating blitzkrieg-style attack to destroy all the arguments presented here. Yeah, right. Not even in their wildest daydreaming after many sleepless nights. They lack what's required to do so.Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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gpuccio Write a book You are a force to be reckoned with Larry Moran wishes he was a smart you Just do it What are you waiting for?mike1962
April 2, 2017
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GP & D, mebbe they are marshalling their resources to reply, perhaps overnight or thereabouts. KFkairosfocus
April 2, 2017
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Dionisio: "deafening silence…" So it seems... :)gpuccio
April 2, 2017
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KF, Shouldn't science get back to where it once belonged, when Copernicus, Newton, and others could think freely, with open-mindedness, out of wrongly preconceived boxes?Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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KF, Does the second part of the first chapter of the first letter of Paul to the Corinthians imply that God could let some of His children sweep and mop the floor with the best pseudo-scientific arguments the PhDs of this world could ever present against Him, though by now we know they have none?Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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A key principle: a result that requires complex, functionally specific information-rich organisation [and that's a description, FYI] -- including, of course, assembly or construction or composition -- cannot credibly be obtained without both the information and adequate means of putting it to work; where the only empirically and analytically warranted source* of such FSCO/I is intelligently directed configuration. So, watch out for the gap where info plus means should be, or the smuggling in of same by the back-door. *PS: And no, we ourselves are contingent and our bodies are shaped through FSCO/I, we are not ultimate sources of design, we are secondary designers, similar to but more sophisticated than, say, beavers.kairosfocus
April 2, 2017
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D, after years and years we wait. Especially after several dozen attempts at counter-examples crashed in flames over the course of several years. Try Martian Canals and a simulation world that assembles clocks (failing to understand what is implicit in say a gear train! . . . I think that one never had to do a 'shop course or the like), not to mention Dawkins' Weasel. etc. KFkairosfocus
April 2, 2017
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KF:
Let’s see if objectors to design thought have a good, cogent and plausible counter-case that is suitably empirically well-grounded in actual observations [...]
where are those objectors? :)Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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KF:
Sobering issues, well worth headlining and inviting further discussion.
Yes, indeed.Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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Unlike me, gpuccio does ask honest questions. Note that he did not ask "where exactly and how exactly...?" He just asked "where and how...?" He lowered the bar to no avail... still the objectors are not seen around. Their conspicuous absence seems suspicious. I'm sure gpuccio would bold any tricky word like "exactly", but the fact is that he didn't even use that word. Such a nice guy and look at the response he gets back. :)Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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What's going on? Where are the debaters, the objectors? Did they run out of arguments? Did they run for the exit door? :)Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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gpuccio asked:
Where and how are the procedures for cell (and tissue, and organ, and body) development stored?
Here's the brilliant response he got from the politely-dissenting interlocutors:
deafening silence...
Hello! Anybody out there?
crickets chirp
:)Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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Some relevant quotes: I posed the question:
If most of our genome is junk, then where is the information stored for the (adult) body plan? Where is the information stored for e.g. the brain? And where is the information stored for how to build all this?
Here are the answers by Larry Moran and WD400:
Larry Moran: …. experts do not see a need to encode body plans and brain in our genome …
WD400: If it is not clear enough, there is no over-arching “plan” in the genome. There are genes, that have regulatory elements, which produce gene produces respond to environments and influence other genes and so on and so on.
Unfortunately VJTorley has bought into this incoherent mat evo narrative:
VJTorley: I believe about 10% of our DNA is functional – maybe 20% at a stretch. I used to think otherwise, but Moran’s posts on junk DNA have convinced me otherwise. He always manages to trounce his critics.
Eric Anderson: Do you [VJTorley] seriously think 340 beneficial mutations in DNA could turn an ape-like creature into a human, and 3000 beneficial mutations in DNA could turn a land animal into a whale?
VJTorley: I have to say (reluctantly) that I haven’t seen any rigorous quantitative argument yet as to why this could not be the case. …. For human evolution, I’m guessing that 30 to 50 separate organs (or systems) underwent transformation, and that there were 10 mutations per organ, with these mutations occurring more or less in sync (due to intelligent guidance), making 300 to 500 mutations. But I could be wrong, of course.
Eric Anderson summarized the mat evo position as follows:
Eric Anderson: … this thread may have uncovered at least one aspect of the simplistic thinking that leads a person to believe that most DNA is junk. After all, the thinking goes, all we need to do is specify some parts in the DNA and the machine will build itself all by chemistry. It’s easy! No plan needed. No program required. Just specify some gene products and we’re done. Everything else is probably just junk. Amazing what chemistry can do.
Origenes
April 2, 2017
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Folks, a note or three of my own. 1: OoL as we know it -- cell based -- likely implies a genome size of 100 - 1,000 k bases, about 100 - 1,000 times the FSCO/I threshold. Where, every additional bit DOUBLES config space to be searched. 2: For OoBP, dozens of times over (and with an eye to the Cambrian life manifestations as an indicator) we are looking at more like 10 - 100+ mn new base pairs to account for cell types, tissues, organs and networks etc. The low end is from a simplistic calc, the upper end is based on what we observe. 10 - 100 thousand times the FSCO/I threshold. 3: As for FSCO/I, I just remarked to RVB8 as follows in another thread:
When it comes to the core design inference, even to object you had to create yet another example on top of the trillions already existing, as to how functionally specific complex organisation and/or associated information, are only seen to come from intelligently directed configuration. A config space, search challenge analysis readily shows that blind, chance and necessity-driven search of such a space beyond 500 – 1000 bits, is only capable of sampling so negligible a fraction that we can disregard it as a credible explanation of such FSCO/I. In short, we have here a very strong causal inference on sign backed up by analysis of the search challenge implied by attempted blind search. Where, random document generation exercises [monkeys at keyboards on steroids] show that so far we are a factor of 10^100 short of the bottom end of the threshold zone, precisely as expected. So, when we for example look at the text in the DNA of the cell, and the associated co-ordinated molecular nanotech machinery that allows it to function as communication in controlled processes, we find that this is a strong example of FSCO/I and is therefore best explained by design. On that, we then see that OoL and Oo body plans up to our own, [are] then best explained on the same basis. to date, we find no good, empirically warranted, demonstrated causally sufficient reason to infer otherwise to blind mechanisms.
KFkairosfocus
April 2, 2017
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KF: Thank you for giving attention to my reasonings! I am really honored. :) I hope that some interesting discussion may arise about these important points. Of course, I will be happy to participate.gpuccio
April 2, 2017
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We hear some politely-dissenting folks popping up here and there claiming that there's little or no science in the ID paradigm. Well, here's an opportunity offered by KF for the politely-dissenting folks to come and challenge the presented arguments. Anybody out there?Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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KF, I agree with your decision! Well done!Dionisio
April 2, 2017
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GP, I think your summary of a summary and onward comments are far too good not to be headlined separately, so pardon my doing so! KFkairosfocus
April 2, 2017
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