Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

He said it: Nick Matzke’s complaint against design thinkers and bloggists failing to do homework before “declaring my entire field bogus”

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In the ongoing thread on Dr Tour’s declaration of concern regarding macroevolution, Mr Matzke (late of NCSE) has popped up, declaring at 118 (in reply to Groovamos at 109):

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.

I work in a biology department where we do this stuff every day, on a campus where there are hundreds of people who work on these questions. We have several research museums supporting this work, with millions of fossil and nonfossil specimens. Why, for goodness sake, should I ignore everything I know based on years of personal experience and work in the area, for the uninformed opinions of a few anonymous internet commentators who can’t be bothered to lift a finger to do the minimum due diligence to learn the basics of what they are talking about before declaring my entire field bogus?

Before going on, it is worth noting that the same Groovamos has offered to sponsor a plane ticket and weekend in a hotel in Houston, in support of a  Luncheon meeting between Matzke and Tour, to have a discussion of the warrant for Macroevolution (provided he can sit in), at 66:

I make the offer: I will buy a ticket for Nick to Houston and will buy a night at a hotel on a weekend. I live in Houston and would like to attend the meeting, and assume Nick will record the meeting.

That gives needed context, i.e. Groovamos is only anonymous on the web, as is often wise.

I responded, at 132, as follows:

____________

>>NM, re 118 above:

This merits to be answered point by point, as it is inter alia, a declaration of confidence in a school of thought and a dismissal of those who dare question its conclusions.:

>>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.>>

1 –> We can simply observe such, and in so doing we see limited population variations, tending to be rooted in loss of genetic information or very limited potential for increase of functional info per generation; with a serious question-mark over claims that mere incremental accumulations of step by step variations can amount to body plan transformations adequate to account for the Darwinian type tree of life or to reconcile the various divergent molecular trees.

2 –> What needs to be pictured first, instead, is a warm little pond with a reasonable chemical matrix (or a volcano vent or the like) on a newly formed terrestrial planet, with a reasonable atmosphere and processes. Justify such on astrophysical and geophysical grounds. (Notice, physical and chemical sciences have now come to centre stage in terms of relevance to what needs to be explained.)

3 –> Next, justify, relative to known chemistry (including inorganic, organic and physical) the formation of credible concentrations of precursors to life, in the context of relevant thermodynamics and reaction kinetics. (The work by Thaxton et al, c. 1984, TMLO, from which modern Design Theory has largely come, starts here. If you are to genuinely understand rather than angrily scorn and dismiss the questions and objections we have, you need to understand where we are coming from. And, unsurprisingly, this is also where prof Tour is coming from. How would you feel, if we were to angrily deride and denounce you in similar terms to those you use as lazily failing to address or being incompetent to address such fields at technical level, and use that to trash your name? [Where, BTW, [ON FAIR COMMEN T] we are very aware of the tactics that NCSE — your former organisation — pursued over the years in support of polarisation, well-poisoning and unjustified career-busting.])

4 –> Thence, with reference to empirical work that supports the claimed major steps, account for origin of cell based life on the blind watchmaker thesis, especially the code based information systems pivoting on DNA and RNA.

5 –> As a preliminary to this, in light of information theory and related issues, account for the origin of functionally specific, complex organisation and associated information, by blind watchmaker processes with reference to currently observed cases. (This is required to justify claims that blind chance and mechanical necessity are known to be capable of creating such FSCO/I without intelligent direction. It is blatant that intelligence is so capable.)

>>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.>>

6 –> And, you need to extend such a projection back to the claimed unicellular life forms, accounting for claimed capacity to generate a tree of life pattern on empirical evidence of known — observed — causal processes compatible with the blind watchmaker thesis.

7 –> Otherwise, the mere extension of time is incapable of plausibly accounting for origin of body plans. Certainly, without intelligent direction or control by front-loading or otherwise, to provide the required FSCO/I.

8 –> Where, to implicitly exclude a known capable mechanism, in favour of one that is not shown capable, and in support of the sort of a priori agendas asserted by say Lewontin, is to substitute ideology for science. To wit:

. . . It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated . . . [[“Billions and billions of demons,” NYRB, Jan 1997. if you think this is a bit of quote mining or is idiosyncratic to Lewontin, kindly cf here and onwards.]

9 –> In short, we are back to Tour’s point: complex organic synthesis is known to be hard, very hard indeed. What, then, are the grounds on which it can be confidently suggested — a priori ideology excluded — that blind watchmaker incrementalism is sufficient to account for the major body plans of the world of life?

10 –> Let prof Tour now speak for himself:

I do have scientific problems understanding macroevolution as it is usually presented. I simply can not accept it as unreservedly as many of my scientist colleagues do, although I sincerely respect them as scientists. Some of them seem to have little trouble embracing many of evolution’s proposals based upon (or in spite of) archeological, mathematical, biochemical and astrophysical suggestions and evidence, and yet few are experts in all of those areas, or even just two of them. Although most scientists leave few stones unturned in their quest to discern mechanisms before wholeheartedly accepting them, when it comes to the often gross extrapolations between observations and conclusions on macroevolution, scientists, it seems to me, permit unhealthy leeway. When hearing such extrapolations in the academy, when will we cry out, “The emperor has no clothes!”?

From what I can see, microevolution is a fact; we see it all around us regarding small changes within a species, and biologists demonstrate this procedure in their labs on a daily basis. Hence, there is no argument regarding microevolution. The core of the debate for me, therefore, is the extrapolation of microevolution to macroevolution. Here is what some supporters of Darwinism have written regarding this point in respected journals, and it is apparent that they struggle with the same difficulty.

Stern, David L. “Perspective: Evolutionary Developmental Biology and the Problem of Variation,” Evolution 2000, 54, 1079-1091. A contribution from the University of Cambridge. “One of the oldest problems in evolutionary biology remains largely unsolved; Historically, the neo-Darwinian synthesizers stressed the predominance of micromutations in evolution, whereas others noted the similarities between some dramatic mutations and evolutionary transitions to argue for macromutationism.”

Simons, Andrew M. “The Continuity of Microevolution and Macroevolution,” Journal of Evolutionary Biology 2002, 15, 688-701. A contribution from Carleton University.”A persistent debate in evolutionary biology is one over the continuity of microevolution and macroevolution — whether macroevolutionary trends are governed by the principles of microevolution.”

So the debate between the validity of extending microevolutionary trends to macroevolutionary projections is indeed persistent in evolutionary biology.

11 –> What troubles me about what we so commonly see, is the repeated glossing over of this serious issue; multiplied by the all to common resort to a priori materialism, typically presented as a mere “reasonable” methodological constraint, especially by contrast with — thumbscrews and racks! — possible supernatural intervention.

>>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.>>

12 –> This is little more than Darwin’s plea that the data are poor; more or less inescapably so. (Which BTW, should serve to make conclusions drawn therefrom rather tentative and to be presented on a “contribution to a forum of views” basis, instead of being presented in terms that declare “fact” to the level of favourable comparison with the roundness of our planet known through fairly direct observation and calculation since Aristotle’s remark on the shadow Earth casts on the moon in a lunar eclipse, and with a value known to reasonable accuracy since Eratosthenes’ shadow calculations c. 300 BC, or the like.)

13 –> However: there are now over 1/4 million fossil species from the various categories of life across the globe, with millions of specimens. Where, there is a strongly stamped pattern aptly described by Gould in some of his most famous comments:

“The absence of fossil evidence for intermediary stages between major transitions in organic design, indeed our inability, even in our imagination, to construct functional intermediates in many cases, has been a persistent [–> notice Tour’s word] and nagging problem for gradualistic accounts of evolution.” [[Stephen Jay Gould (Professor of Geology and Paleontology, Harvard University), ‘Is a new and general theory of evolution emerging?’ Paleobiology, vol.6(1), January 1980,p. 127.]

“All paleontologists know that the fossil record contains precious little in the way of intermediate forms; transitions between the major groups are characteristically abrupt.” [[Stephen Jay Gould ‘The return of hopeful monsters’. Natural History, vol. LXXXVI(6), June-July 1977, p. 24.]

“The extreme rarity of transitional forms in the fossil record persists as the trade secret of paleontology. The evolutionary trees that adorn our textbooks have data only at the tips and nodes of their branches; the rest is inference, however reasonable, not the evidence of fossils. Yet Darwin was so wedded to gradualism that he wagered his entire theory on a denial of this literal record:

The geological record is extremely imperfect and this fact will to a large extent explain why we do not find intermediate varieties, connecting together all the extinct and existing forms of life by the finest graduated steps [[ . . . . ] He who rejects these views on the nature of the geological record will rightly reject my whole theory.[[Cf. Origin, Ch 10, “Summary of the preceding and present Chapters,” also see similar remarks in Chs 6 and 9.]

Darwin’s argument still persists as the favored escape of most paleontologists from the embarrassment of a record that seems to show so little of evolution. In exposing its cultural and methodological roots, I wish in no way to impugn the potential validity of gradualism (for all general views have similar roots). I wish only to point out that it was never “seen” in the rocks.

Paleontologists have paid an exorbitant price for Darwin’s argument. We fancy ourselves as the only true students of life’s history, yet to preserve our favored account of evolution by natural selection we view our data as so bad that we never see the very process we profess to study.” [[Stephen Jay Gould ‘Evolution’s erratic pace’. Natural History, vol. LXXXVI95), May 1977, p.14. (Kindly note, that while Gould does put forward claimed cases of transitions elsewhere, that cannot erase the facts that he published in the peer reviewed literature in 1977 and was still underscoring in 2002 in his last book, 25 years later, as well as what the theory he helped co-found — Punctuated Equilibria, set out to do. Sadly, this needs to be explicitly noted, as some would use such remarks to cover over the points just highlighted. Also, note that this is in addition to the problem of divergent molecular trees and the top-down nature of the Cambrian explosion.)]

14 –> Sometimes, an apparent pattern is strongly stamped from the beginning and persistent across decades and centuries of study for the excellent reason that it reflects reality. Namely, it reflects a law of nature.

15 –> So, we need to ask ourselves seriously whether sudden appearance and stasis followed by extinction or survival, are reflecting fundamental reality worthy of being recognised in newly identified laws and theories that directly address and cogently explain them rather than marginalising them as problems for advanced study.

>>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.>>

16 –> Of course, this pivots on, what is science.

17 –> And to that, “applied a priori ideological materialism” is definitely not a good answer. A better, more balanced one can be found in good dictionaries from before the current highly polarised debates:

science: a branch of knowledge conducted on objective principles involving the systematized observation of and experiment with phenomena, esp. concerned with the material and functions of the physical universe. [Concise Oxford, 1990]

scientific method: principles and procedures for the systematic pursuit of knowledge [”the body of truth, information and principles acquired by mankind”] involving the recognition and formulation of a problem, the collection of data through observation and experiment, and the formulation and testing of hypotheses. [Webster’s 7th Collegiate, 1965]

18 –> And yet, we see the following from the US National Science Teachers Association Board as an official policy declaration (one backed up by similar stances taken by say the US National Academy of Sciences, which is known to be dominated by people of atheistical disposition . . . see how issues over motives on a matter like this cut two ways, so why don’t we simply focus on the merits instead?):

NSTA: The principal product of science is knowledge in the form of naturalistic concepts and the laws and theories related to those concepts . . . .

Although no single universal step-by-step scientific method captures the complexity of doing science, a number of shared values and perspectives characterize a scientific approach to understanding nature. Among these are a demand for naturalistic explanations supported by empirical evidence that are, at least in principle, testable against the natural world. Other shared elements include observations, rational argument, inference, skepticism, peer review and replicability of work . . . .

Science, by definition, is limited to naturalistic methods and explanations and, as such, is precluded from using supernatural elements in the production of scientific knowledge. [[NSTA, Board of Directors, July 2000. Emphases added.]

NAS: In science, explanations must be based on naturally occurring phenomena. Natural causes are, in principle, reproducible and therefore can be checked independently by others. If explanations are based on purported forces that are outside of nature, scientists have no way of either confirming or disproving those explanations. Any scientific explanation has to be testable — there must be possible observational consequences that could support the idea but also ones that could refute it. Unless a proposed explanation is framed in a way that some observational evidence could potentially count against it, that explanation cannot be subjected to scientific testing. [[Science, Evolution and Creationism, 2008, p. 10 Emphases added.]

19 –> These statements beg a raft of questions and reflect ideological a prioris that will bias conclusions, indeed will decide them before facts are allowed to speak. For instance, what constitutes “nature” and as a result “naturalistic concepts and explanations,” or the like?

20 –> In particular, we have since Plato at least [in The Laws, Bk X], the understanding that natural can be envisioned as that which proceeds on the basis of chance and mechanical necessity, and we can contrast this to the ART-ificial, which is driven by intelligent action. And surely, it is a reasonable and empirically investigatable question, as to whether here are such things as observable signs of ART vs chance and/or necessity?

21 –> Where, also the whole focus of Design Theory as a school of thought in science today, is that here is that possibility, and that there are some at least preliminary results in hand regarding certain forms of complexity, specified — especially functionally specific — complexity and function dependent on irreducible complexity of clusters of core parts.

22 –> Where also, to investigate signs of art in our world, is not properly — let us lay well-poisoning and atmosphere poisoning rhetorical games to one side — the same as to assume an arbitrary and chaotic supernatural intervention that turns an orderly world into a chaos.

(This is a notorious strawman caricature of theism and science resorted to in the above from NAS and NSTA, but the early scientists of modern times saw themselves as exploring the work of the architect and builder of the world who operates on rational principles, and is the God of Order not chaos. Indeed,t hey saw themselves as thinking God’s creative and sustaining thoughts after him. Indeed, that is the context in which they thought in terms of LAWS of nature, i.e as given by the lawgiver and designer of nature Nor is this solely their view, indeed it traces in some respects to Plato in the same context just referenced, where he makes a cosmological design inference on observing an orderly cosmos.)

>> 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.>>

22 –> This is a disgraceful strawman caricature, set up and pummelled.

>>I work in a biology department where we do this stuff every day, on a campus where there are hundreds of people who work on these questions.>>

23 –> Yes, we are aware of the existence of a major school of thought, the issue is not that, it is whether there is a problem of inadequate mechanisms, and associated, of the sort of subtle a priorism just noted on.

>>We have several research museums supporting this work, with millions of fossil and nonfossil specimens.>>

24 –> Yes, and what does Gould have to say on the overall results of such collection? Let us cite his The Structure of Evolutionary Theory (2002), a technical work published just two months before his death; as a “constructive critique” of contemporary Darwinian thought:

. . . long term stasis following geologically abrupt origin of most fossil morphospecies, has always been recognized by professional paleontologists. [[p. 752.]

. . . . The great majority of species do not show any appreciable evolutionary change at all. These species appear in the section [[first occurrence] without obvious ancestors in the underlying beds, are stable once established and disappear higher up without leaving any descendants.” [[p. 753.]

. . . . proclamations for the supposed ‘truth’ of gradualism – asserted against every working paleontologist’s knowledge of its rarity – emerged largely from such a restriction of attention to exceedingly rare cases under the false belief that they alone provided a record of evolution at all! The falsification of most ‘textbook classics’ upon restudy only accentuates the fallacy of the ‘case study’ method and its root in prior expectation rather than objective reading of the fossil record. [[p. 773.]

24 –> We would love to learn, just what has emerged in the past decade and has somehow managed not to be trumpeted in the headlines that overturns these persistent patterns? It seems, from your own remarks above, that the pattern persists.

25 –> Which immediately grounds the sort of concerns we have raised, and others have raised, especially over the past 25 years; some of it — despite open opposition and exposed behind the scenes machinations (some of it, as you well know, coming from the NCSE) — published in the peer reviewed literature.

>> Why, for goodness sake, should I ignore everything I know based on years of personal experience and work in the area,>>

26 –> The assertion of claimed knowledge is a strong claim, one that demands strong warrant. Which is exactly the issue and concern we have raised, the degree of warrant that is actually provided as opposed to the confident assertions of fact and knowledge that we see.

27 –> Where we are also quite aware that across the centuries, many times, schools of thought in science have been mistaken, despite the confident claims of advocates.

>> for the uninformed opinions of a few anonymous internet commentators who can’t be bothered to lift a finger to do the minimum due diligence to learn the basics of what they are talking about before declaring my entire field bogus?>>

28 –> Notice, the further strawman caricatures and polarisation.

29 –> FYI NM, “bogus” is a claim of fraud. Fraud is well beyond error or lack of warrant or explanatory failure. i do not think you can ground the claim that design thought as a school holds that the dominant school of thought is as a whole guilty of fraud; as opposed to particular incidents or individuals who may have gone the one step too far across time. That is patently a false, ungrounded — and careless, unnecessarily polarising — accusation on your part.

30 –> I THINK INSTEAD: IT IS FAIR COMMENT TO SAY THAT, AS A SCHOOL OF THOUGHT, DESIGN THEORY HAS HELD THAT THERE IS A QUESTION OF DEGREE OF WARRANT AND EMPIRICAL GROUNDING, THAT MAY HAVE LED TO ERRORS IN ESTIMATING THE DEGREE OF WARRANT FOR CERTAIN SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT ON ORIGINS. Which is fair and raises important points of concern that can be addressed in a reasonable and civil manner. (Where also, given the polarisation and targetting of those who have questioned the dominant evolutionary materialist school of thought, much less have advocated design, and the long and distinguished history of anonymous contributions in science and serious thought generally, the mere issue of anonymity is not sufficient to warrant besmirching or dismissing people.)

31 –> So, kindly retract this false accusation and correct your thinking. Then, we can proceed to a reasonable discussion on the actual merits in light of what prof Tour has put on the table.>>

________________

I think the issues for that luncheon meeting are on the table, for discussion.

What do you think? END

Comments
Really because they look similar they are indeed similar?
That's what similarity means.NickMatzke_UD
February 20, 2013
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Please can you provide the evidence and the facts for this possibility? It is also possible that the multiverse exist, it is possible that God exist, it is possible that the pink unicorn exist, please provide your evidence for this possibility, that is all I’m asking for,
It's very simple. H. sapiens fossils range from ~0.5 million years ago to present. H. erectus fossils range from something like 1.5 million years ago to 150,000 years ago at least. Therefore, H. sapiens split off in the middle of H. erectus, they did not evolve out of the very last H. erectus known in the fossil record.
Speaking for myself however I require absolute proof to backup any of these claims and until such time I will reserve my judgement on its “possibility”, “may have been” or “thought to have”.
No science, anywhere, is about "absolute proof". It's about picking the most probable hypothesis based on the available evidence, and not accepting hypotheses that are flatly contradicted by the evidence. We've got hundreds of fossils that oh-so-gradually come to resemble modern humans. Anyone who is familiar with this evidence and who has a sense of fairness and objectivity would admit this basic fact straight up. Any other option is sticking your head in the sand, probably to protect some particular literalist interpretation of the Bible.NickMatzke_UD
February 20, 2013
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Nick you say; "rather than focusing on the morphological data which is the only actually important thing." Really because they look similar they are indeed similar? Is that your scientific method? Because the look the same they are the same! You call that science? Anybody can be a scientist if you use that definition!Andre
February 20, 2013
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52 AndreFebruary 20, 2013 at 11:50 pm http://www.stanford.edu/~harry...../chp22.htm “The problem of defining Homo erectus is that it is viewed at present as a grade of human evolution intermediate between the small-brained early Pleistocene hominids and the large brained Homo sapiens. The term grade is used to encompass a population that has reached the same adaptive stage. It does not require that the organisms belong to the same group (species). Peter Andrew stated just because the erectus specimens are all the same size or similar size brains is not evidence that they belong to the same species. When the primitive characters are removed from the list of traditional Homo erectus, only a small number of derived characters remains. Significantly, these characters are found exclusively within Asian fossils leaving African fossils outside the group and they don’t form a link with Homo sapiens. In other words, the Asian Homo erectus population appears to be evolutionarily separated from those hominids of a similar grade in Africa, and eventually became extinct. The African populations would have other species names applied to them such as Homo ergaster and Homo leakeyi. One African species of the Homo erectus grade might have been ancestral first to European archaic sapiens and later to anatomically modern humans.”
This is just the debate about the Asia/Africa question I discussed earlier. No matter how you apply the names, the African ones are ancestral, and gradually approach the H. sapiens condition, even in the sources you cite. The fact that you have a grade not a clade is EXACTLY WHY it is highly likely that the African H. erectus are direct ancestors of H. sapiens -- if they were a clade that didn't include H. sapiens, they would, by definition, be a side branch rather than a direct ancestor! Grades cause problems for naming, precisely because they are not distinct groups, but grade into later groups gradually.
I want to draw people’s attention to something… Whenever you hear someone say “thought to be” or “might have” you can take comfort that none of what is being said is based on any facts.
This, sir, is total bunkum. There can be uncertainty about fine details while the overall big picture remains very clear. There is uncertainty about how many moons go around Jupiter, but we know for dang sure how many big moons above a certain size there are. You are like someone who argues that uncertainty about the exact count means there are no moons going around Jupiter. The simplemindedness you are exhibiting on this point is just staggering, and wouldn't be taken seriously by any scientist talking about the uncertainties in their field.
I am an evolutionary sceptic precisely because I don’t care what others might think about something, until facts are displayed beyond contestation my position won’t change.
You have shown no interest in even learning the basic wikipedia-level facts necessary for discussing the question of human origins. Your boasting about independence is just anti-intellectual, too-proud-to-do-the-work-to-really-understand-the-topic puffery.
Nick if you do have these facts please spill it we are waiting!
I've already showed you the fossils. I'll do it again. Follow the evidence wherever it leads. Here it is: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/hominids.html http://pandasthumb.org/archives/2006/09/fun-with-homini-1.html Please explain why there are NO valid transitionals ANYWHERE in these hundreds of fossils with clearly intermediate morphology. You are taking a ludicrous position in sheer defiance of the data which I have provided again and again.NickMatzke_UD
February 20, 2013
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Nick you say; "It’s perfectly possible that the lineage leading to H. sapiens split off from the H. erectus population somewhere in the middle of the history of H. erectus. In fact, virtually everyone would agree with this" Please can you provide the evidence and the facts for this possibility? It is also possible that the multiverse exist, it is possible that God exist, it is possible that the pink unicorn exist, please provide your evidence for this possibility, that is all I'm asking for, you see the current theories are not satisfactory if they are good enough to convince you I say well done, Speaking for myself however I require absolute proof to backup any of these claims and until such time I will reserve my judgement on its "possibility", "may have been" or "thought to have".Andre
February 20, 2013
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Nick you say "It only seems that way because you are focusing on quote-mining random inexpert sources that are using slightly different taxonomies, rather than focusing on the morphological data which is the only actually important thing." Accusing me of quote mining is not answering the questions.... What facts do you have that Homo Erectus is our direct Ancestor? The question is simple.Andre
February 20, 2013
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Nick you say; "Some people think that Asian “Homo erectus” and African “Homo erectus were different enough to be separate species." Think it is, is not facts.... Again I don't care what people may think about something unless they have the facts available!Andre
February 20, 2013
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Nick One last thing if I may; You have made several appeals that we should follow the evidence wherever it may lead, can I perhaps suggest you start following your own advice? Try it you will be pleasantly surprised how the world of science opens up to you if you do that!Andre
February 20, 2013
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51 AndreFebruary 20, 2013 at 11:39 pm http://global.britannica.com/E.....mo-sapiens “A few researchers have generally opposed the view that H. erectus was the direct ancestor of later species, including Homo sapiens. Louis Leakey argued energetically that H. erectus populations, particularly in Africa, overlap in time with more advanced Homo sapiens and therefore cannot be ancestral to the latter. Some support for Leakey’s point of view has come from analysis of anatomic characteristics exhibited by the fossils.”
Another secondary source, but, even so -- First of all, it's "a few researchers", not what most of the field says, and second, the logic would only apply to the latest Homo erectus, which are much different from the earliest ones. It's perfectly possible that the lineage leading to H. sapiens split off from the H. erectus population somewhere in the middle of the history of H. erectus. In fact, virtually everyone would agree with this, for the latest H. erectus, since on anyone's account we have modern H. sapiens living in Africa at 200,000 years ago, and H. erectus in Indonesia persisting to at least to 150,000 years ago.NickMatzke_UD
February 20, 2013
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From the following “Despite its long survival and continually increasing brain size — and cultural advances that included geographic dispersion throughout southern Asia, the domestication of fire, refinement to Acheulean tools, and long-term cave habitation — erectus is apparently a specialization of ergaster that is not a precursor to modern human populations.” http://www.handprint.com/LS/ANC/homofs.html
Answered this above.NickMatzke_UD
February 20, 2013
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47 AndreFebruary 20, 2013 at 11:07 pm Nick You said “A is a direct ancestor of species B. One such case is Homo erectus being ancestral to Homo sapiens.” Do you consider this a fact? If so please clarify considering the following; http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com.....aintenance
This article confirms my point of view, but you have to understand some details of taxonomy. Some people think that Asian "Homo erectus" and African "Homo erectus were different enough to be separate species. If this is true, then it is the Asian "Homo erectus" that get to keep the name, because the first erectus (the type specimen) was discovered in Asia. Proponents of this view then rename the African erectus as Homo ergaster, and then it is ergaster that is considered the ancestor of more modern Homo species like sapiens. Either way, ergaster and erectus are very close, such that you would have to be an expert to tell them apart, and many experts consider them one species anyway. The problem with defining erectus exactly is precisely that there are so many fossils, and they grade into each other so completely, that there is no place where you can confidently draw a line and not find exceptions and ambiguities. But when you look at the earliest vs. the latest erectus, they look a lot different, especially in brain size, which gets much bigger. Essentially all of the "controversies" about erectus that creationists love to ignorantly and carelessly quote-mine in shodden fashion are actually about this detailed issue of putting discrete names on a large range of continuous morphological variation, rather than disputing the big picture which is that you have a group of fossils that quite gradually get more and more like modern humans over a million years.
http://smithsonianscience.org/.....o-erectus/
All this says is that "Scientists show that modern humans never co-existed with Homo erectus" -- the article says this about a site in Indonesia. There, they say, Homo erectus went extinct over 100,000 years ago, and modern humans showed up only 40,000 years ago. There are reasons this is debatable, but it has nothing to do with the origin of Homo sapiens, which was in Africa 200,000-500,000 years ago, depending on where you want to subjectively draw the line between H. sapiens and H. erectus/ergaster.
http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~kemme.....ectus.html This is interesting and I quote from Rice University’s article; “A more authoritative site, which explicitly does not consider Erectus to be a direct human ancestor, is part of the Smithsonian site mentioned above”
This is a page by a linguist inexactly and inexpertly summarizing other popular presentations. It is somewhat confused by the ergaster/erectus issue.
http://www.handprint.com/LS/ANC/evol.html#chart
This page is:
Another timeline, this one made by the American artist Bruce MacEvoy, who dabbles in paleoanthropology (among many other things) is this: MacEvoy's Handprint site "Chart of Human Evolution".
So, it's another inexpert source. Any cladistic or other quantitative analysis I've ever seen puts ergaster/erectus specimens closer to H. sapiens than H. habilis etc. is to H. sapiens. There are all kinds of similarities that sapiens and erectus share that habilis doesn't, e.g., body size (from the neck down, erectus is almost indistinguishable from sapiens), fully erectus posture, bigger brains, use of fire, more sophisticated tools, etc. Heck, this is precisely why both most YECs and people like Casey Luskin from the Discovery Institute long ago gave up trying to split sapiens from erectus and instead endorse the (ridiculous!) view that they are all just part of the variability of H. sapiens. I'm sure we'll see this tactic endorsed here in a few posts, once people realize just how amazingly good the fossil evidence is connecting the two species.
Why does everybody have their very own story and only on a superficial level do they seem to agree….. Do you know something that others don’t? If so please share your knowledge with us so we might understand!
It only seems that way because you are focusing on quote-mining random inexpert sources that are using slightly different taxonomies, rather than focusing on the morphological data which is the only actually important thing.NickMatzke_UD
February 20, 2013
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http://www.stanford.edu/~harryg/protected/chp22.htm "The problem of defining Homo erectus is that it is viewed at present as a grade of human evolution intermediate between the small-brained early Pleistocene hominids and the large brained Homo sapiens. The term grade is used to encompass a population that has reached the same adaptive stage. It does not require that the organisms belong to the same group (species). Peter Andrew stated just because the erectus specimens are all the same size or similar size brains is not evidence that they belong to the same species. When the primitive characters are removed from the list of traditional Homo erectus, only a small number of derived characters remains. Significantly, these characters are found exclusively within Asian fossils leaving African fossils outside the group and they don’t form a link with Homo sapiens. In other words, the Asian Homo erectus population appears to be evolutionarily separated from those hominids of a similar grade in Africa, and eventually became extinct. The African populations would have other species names applied to them such as Homo ergaster and Homo leakeyi. One African species of the Homo erectus grade might have been ancestral first to European archaic sapiens and later to anatomically modern humans." I want to draw people's attention to something... Whenever you hear someone say "thought to be" or "might have" you can take comfort that none of what is being said is based on any facts. I am an evolutionary sceptic precisely because I don't care what others might think about something, until facts are displayed beyond contestation my position won't change. Nick if you do have these facts please spill it we are waiting!Andre
February 20, 2013
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http://global.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/270386/Homo-erectus/249984/Relationship-to-Homo-sapiens "A few researchers have generally opposed the view that H. erectus was the direct ancestor of later species, including Homo sapiens. Louis Leakey argued energetically that H. erectus populations, particularly in Africa, overlap in time with more advanced Homo sapiens and therefore cannot be ancestral to the latter. Some support for Leakey’s point of view has come from analysis of anatomic characteristics exhibited by the fossils."Andre
February 20, 2013
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http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/08/070813093132.htm "Human evolution over the last two million years is often portrayed as a linear succession of three species: Homo habilis to Homo erectus to ourselves, Homo sapiens. Of these, Homo erectus is commonly seen as the first human ancestor which is like us in many respects, but with a smaller brain. The new fossils are significant because both their relative geological ages and their physical attributes directly challenge these views about our human ancestry"Andre
February 20, 2013
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From the following "Despite its long survival and continually increasing brain size -- and cultural advances that included geographic dispersion throughout southern Asia, the domestication of fire, refinement to Acheulean tools, and long-term cave habitation -- erectus is apparently a specialization of ergaster that is not a precursor to modern human populations." http://www.handprint.com/LS/ANC/homofs.htmlAndre
February 20, 2013
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Nick wrote: "...we can statistically test for phylogenetic structure nonetheless, and such tests typically yield massive statistically significant support for phylogenetic structure." I am struck by the fact that those phylogenetic tree reconstructions only compare organisms that researchers already feel are closely related. I think within your community, there are those aware of the potential for circularity that exists here. If you only make trees of species that already share general similarities, how can you be sure you haven't cherry-picked the data before the analysis has begun? (And thus toasted each other prematurely on how statistically significant your results are?) Another question: In which camp are you, the one that says "just let the character data speak for itself, with all characters weighted equally", or the one that says "you have to subjectively weight characters because only experience is a good guide as to which characters will best reveal ancestry"? Or perhaps a third camp that I'm not aware of.EDTA
February 20, 2013
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Nick You said "A is a direct ancestor of species B. One such case is Homo erectus being ancestral to Homo sapiens." Do you consider this a fact? If so please clarify considering the following; http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/evan.1360010204/abstract?systemMessage=Wiley+Online+Library+will+be+disrupted+on+23+February+from+10%3A00-12%3A00+BST+%2805%3A00-07%3A00+EDT%29+for+essential+maintenance http://smithsonianscience.org/2011/07/scientists-show-that-modern-humans-never-co-existed-with-homo-erectus/ http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~kemmer/Evol/habiliserectus.html This is interesting and I quote from Rice University's article; "A more authoritative site, which explicitly does not consider Erectus to be a direct human ancestor, is part of the Smithsonian site mentioned above" http://www.handprint.com/LS/ANC/evol.html#chart Why does everybody have their very own story and only on a superficial level do they seem to agree..... Do you know something that others don't? If so please share your knowledge with us so we might understand!Andre
February 20, 2013
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If all that was not bad enough to show that Mr. Matzke places way too much unwarranted enthusiam on Theobald's 'test' for common ancestry, the fact is that Darwinists cannot even account for the fixation of two (hypothetical) coordinated beneficial mutations within a single lineage within a reasonable amount of time, much less can they account for the countless billions upon billions coordinated mutations they imagine must have become fixated in the history of all life to produce the unfathomed levels of highly integrated functional information that we find in the genomes of life: notes: The Real Barrier to Unguided Human Evolution - Ann Gauger - April 25, 2012 Excerpt: Their results? They calculated it would take six million years for a single base change to match the target and spread throughout the population, and 216 million years to get both base changes necessary to complete the eight base binding site. Note that the entire time span for our evolution from the last common ancestor with chimps is estimated to be about six million years. Time enough for one mutation to occur and be fixed, by their account. To be sure, they did say that since there are some 20,000 genes that could be evolving simultaneously, the problem is not impossible. But they overlooked this point. Mutations occur at random and most of the time independently, but their effects are not independent. Mutations that benefit one trait inhibit another (Negative Epistasis). http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/04/the_real_barrie058951.html Response from Ralph Seelke to David Hillis Regarding Testimony on Bacterial Evolution Before Texas State Board of Education, January 21, 2009 Excerpt: He has done excellent work showing the capabilities of evolution when it can take one step at a time. I have used a different approach to show the difficulties that evolution encounters when it must take two steps at a time. So while similar, our work has important differences, and Dr. Bull’s research has not contradicted or refuted my own. http://www.discovery.org/a/9951 Epistasis between Beneficial Mutations - July 2011 Excerpt: We found that epistatic interactions between beneficial mutations were all antagonistic—the effects of the double mutations were less than the sums of the effects of their component single mutations. We found a number of cases of decompensatory interactions, an extreme form of antagonistic epistasis in which the second mutation is actually deleterious in the presence of the first. In the vast majority of cases, recombination uniting two beneficial mutations into the same genome would not be favored by selection, as the recombinant could not outcompete its constituent single mutations. https://uncommondescent.com/epigenetics/darwins-beneficial-mutations-do-not-benefit-each-other/ Mutations : when benefits level off - June 2011 - (Lenski's e-coli after 50,000 generations, which is approx. equivalent to 1 million years of supposed human evolution)) Excerpt: After having identified the first five beneficial mutations combined successively and spontaneously in the bacterial population, the scientists generated, from the ancestral bacterial strain, 32 mutant strains exhibiting all of the possible combinations of each of these five mutations. They then noted that the benefit linked to the simultaneous presence of five mutations was less than the sum of the individual benefits conferred by each mutation individually. http://www2.cnrs.fr/en/1867.htm?theme1=7 The preceding experiment was interesting, for they found, after 50,000 generations of e-coli which is equivalent to about 1,000,000 years of 'supposed' human evolution, only 5 'beneficial' mutations. Moreover, these 5 'beneficial' mutations were found to interfere with each other when they were combined in the ancestral population. Needless to say, this is far, far short of the functional complexity we find in life that neo-Darwinism is required to explain the origination of. Even more problematic for neo-Darwinism is when we realize that Michael Behe showed that the 'beneficial' mutations were actually loss or modification of function mutations. i.e. The individual 'beneficial' mutations were never shown to be in the process of building functional complexity at the molecular level in the first place! More from Ann Gauger on why humans didn’t happen the way Darwin said - July 2012 Excerpt: Each of these new features probably required multiple mutations. Getting a feature that requires six neutral mutations is the limit of what bacteria can produce. For primates (e.g., monkeys, apes and humans) the limit is much more severe. Because of much smaller effective population sizes (an estimated ten thousand for humans instead of a billion for bacteria) and longer generation times (fifteen to twenty years per generation for humans vs. a thousand generations per year for bacteria), it would take a very long time for even a single beneficial mutation to appear and become fixed in a human population. You don’t have to take my word for it. In 2007, Durrett and Schmidt estimated in the journal Genetics that for a single mutation to occur in a nucleotide-binding site and be fixed in a primate lineage would require a waiting time of six million years. The same authors later estimated it would take 216 million years for the binding site to acquire two mutations, if the first mutation was neutral in its effect. Facing Facts But six million years is the entire time allotted for the transition from our last common ancestor with chimps to us according to the standard evolutionary timescale. Two hundred and sixteen million years takes us back to the Triassic, when the very first mammals appeared. One or two mutations simply aren’t sufficient to produce the necessary changes— sixteen anatomical features—in the time available. At most, a new binding site might affect the regulation of one or two genes. https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/more-from-ann-gauger-on-why-humans-didnt-happen-the-way-darwin-said/ Experimental Evolution in Fruit Flies (35 years of trying to force fruit flies to evolve in the laboratory fails, spectacularly) - October 2010 Excerpt: "Despite decades of sustained selection in relatively small, sexually reproducing laboratory populations, selection did not lead to the fixation of newly arising unconditionally advantageous alleles.,,, "This research really upends the dominant paradigm about how species evolve," said ecology and evolutionary biology professor Anthony Long, the primary investigator. http://www.arn.org/blogs/index.php/literature/2010/10/07/experimental_evolution_in_fruit_flies Believe it or not, it just gets worse for Darwinists the further you look into it!bornagain77
February 20, 2013
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Douglas Theobald's Test Of Common Ancestry Ignores Common Design - November 2010 http://www.evolutionnews.org/2010/12/douglas_theobalds_test_of_comm041071.html Eugene Koonin: The Pot Calls the Kettle Black - November 2010 http://darwins-god.blogspot.com/2010/11/eugene-koonin-pot-calls-kettle-black.html But Isn't There a Consilience of Data That Corroborates Common Descent? - Casey Luskin - December 2010 http://www.evolutionnews.org/2010/12/but_isnt_there_lots_of_other_d041111.html Regardless, of how much confidence Mr. Matzke may have in Theobald's 'test' for common ancestry (more like force fitting the evidence into a preconcieved conclusion), the fact is that he simply does not have any compelling evidence: Pattern pluralism and the Tree of Life hypothesis - 2006 Excerpt: Hierarchical structure can always be imposed on or extracted from such data sets by algorithms designed to do so, but at its base the universal TOL rests on an unproven assumption about pattern that, given what we know about process, is unlikely to be broadly true. http://www.pnas.org/content/104/7/2043.abstract A Primer on the Tree of Life - Casey Luskin - 2009 Excerpt: The truth is that common ancestry is merely an assumption that governs interpretation of the data, not an undeniable conclusion, and whenever data contradicts expectations of common descent, evolutionists resort to a variety of different ad hoc rationalizations to save common descent from being falsified. http://www.discovery.org/a/10651 An Enzyme’s Phylogeny Reveals a Striking Case of Convergent Evolution – Jonathan M. – February 11, 2013 Excerpt: The authors attempt to account for the incongruity by positing that “the STC gene has been laterally transferred among phylogenetically diverged eukaryotes through an unknown mechanism.” They thus attribute the shared genes to horizontal gene transfer (with no offered mechanism), a proposition that has become a catch-all to explain away severe conflicts between evolutionary phylogenies.,,, “phylogenetic conflict is common, and frequently the norm rather than the exception” (Dávalos et al., 2012). Is it possible that the real reason for such striking and widespread phylogenetic discordance is that evolutionary biologists are looking at biology through the wrong lens? Could the reason that there is so much difficulty in correlating organisms to a tree be that no such tree exists? http://www.evolutionnews.org/2013/02/an_enzymes_phyl068911.html Common Ancestry: Wikipedia vs. the Data - Casey Luskin - October 5, 2012 Excerpt: In fact, the largest category of genes here is eukaryotic (cells with a nucleus) genes that have no homolog among prokaryotes (cells without a nucleus) -- they don't even have any possible candidate ancestors to explain where these genes came from, much less a consistent pattern of similarity pointing to one particular ancestor. All this is the opposite of "a direct correlation with common descent.",,, ,,, if two phylogenetic trees aren't congruent, the problem isn't that common descent is wrong, but rather the conflict is simply evidence of HGT.,,, Syvanen, (in "Evolutionary Implications of Horizontal Gene Transfer," Annual Review of Genetics, Vol. 46:339-356 (2012), invokes widespread HGT (Horizontal Gene Transfer), but he's uncommonly honest about the data and its implications, offering the radical suggestion that "life might indeed have multiple origins.",,, let's now look within eukaryotes.,,, The biochemical organization of the innate immune systems of plants and animals is strikingly similar -- but this is a direct non-correlation with common descent. Thus, evolutionary scientists are forced to call them "unexpectedly similar," postulating that the similarities were "independently derived." This data is not explained by Darwinian evolution and common descent. It is explained by common design. Somehow, something tells me not to expect any corrections over at Wikipedia. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/10/common_ancestry_1065001.html A New Model for Evolution: A Rhizome - Didier Raoult - May 2010 Excerpt: Thus we cannot currently identify a single common ancestor for the gene repertoire of any organism.,,, Overall, it is now thought that there are no two genes that have a similar history along the phylogenic tree.,,,Therefore the representation of the evolutionary pathway as a tree leading to a single common ancestor on the basis of the analysis of one or more genes provides an incorrect representation of the stability and hierarchy of evolution. Finally, genome analyses have revealed that a very high proportion of genes are likely to be newly created,,, and that some genes are only found in one organism (named ORFans). These genes do not belong to any phylogenic tree and represent new genetic creations. http://darwins-god.blogspot.com/2010/05/new-model-for-evolution-rhizome.html Didier Raoult, who authored the preceding paper, has been referred to as 'Most Productive and Influential Microbiologist in France'. Here is what he had to say about Darwinism: The "Most Productive and Influential Microbiologist in France" Is a Furious Darwin Doubter - March 2012 Excerpt: Controversial and outspoken, Raoult last year published a popular science book that flat-out declares that Darwin's theory of evolution is wrong. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/03/the_most_produc057081.htmlbornagain77
February 20, 2013
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So many falsehoods so little time,, this one for instance: "we can say with good confidence that species A is a direct ancestor of species B. One such case is Homo erectus being ancestral to Homo sapiens." Hominids, Homonyms, and Homo sapiens - 05/27/2009 - Creation Safaris: Excerpt: Homo erectus is particularly controversial, because it is such a broad classification. Tattersall and Schwartz find no clear connection between the Asian, European and African specimens lumped into this class. “In his 1950 review, Ernst Mayr placed all of these forms firmly within the species Homo erectus,” they explained. “Subsequently, Homo erectus became the standard-issue ‘hominid in the middle,’ expanding to include not only the fossils just mentioned, but others of the same general period....”. They discussed the arbitrariness of this classification: "Put together, all these fossils (which span almost 2 myr) make a very heterogeneous assortment indeed; and placing them all together in the same species only makes any conceivable sense in the context of the ecumenical view of Homo erectus as the middle stage of the single hypervariable hominid lineage envisioned by Mayr (on the basis of a much slenderer record). Viewed from the morphological angle, however, the practice of cramming all of this material into a single Old World-wide species is highly questionable. Indeed, the stuffing process has only been rendered possible by a sort of ratchet effect, in which fossils allocated to Homo erectus almost regardless of their morphology have subsequently been cited as proof of just how variable the species can be." By “ratchet effect,” they appear to mean something like a self-fulfilling prophecy: i.e., “Let’s put everything from this 2-million-year period into one class that we will call Homo erectus.” Someone complains, “But this fossil from Singapore is very different from the others.” The first responds, “That just shows how variable the species Homo erectus can be.” http://creationsafaris.com/crev200905.htm#20090527abornagain77
February 20, 2013
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If Archaeopterix [sic], for instance, is a transitional fossil can you show me what you think it is a direct ancestor to, or didn’t its evolutionary line survive? Also Synapsids, can you pinpoint one that is a direct ancestor to a later form of life? Do toed horses count as transitionals of horses? And what about your ‘whale with legs’, would this creature lie somewhere between Ambulocetus and the modern day whale (as the story goes)?
Why do things have to be exact direct ancestors, and not closely-related side branches? The typical phylogenetic methods in use today do not allow us to distinguish these two possibilities, yet we can statistically test for phylogenetic structure nonetheless, and such tests typically yield massive statistically significant support for phylogenetic structure. You should have read the FAQ about the statistics involve, which I have highlighted several times: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/section1.html#independent_convergence And, anyway, there are some cases where we have so many fossils, such that we think we have most of the related species in a region and time zone, and we have enough fossils to do population-level descriptions of each, where we can say with good confidence that species A is a direct ancestor of species B. One such case is Homo erectus being ancestral to Homo sapiens.NickMatzke_UD
February 20, 2013
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If you expand your range wide enough no doubt you can find similarities between three distinct objects. Call one a transitional. Call anyone who disagrees a Creationist.Mung
February 20, 2013
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Hi Nick, Thank you for your reply. 1. I understand what you mean by ‘lack of transitional fossils at the species level’, which you say is largely due to what is called ‘punctuated equilibrium’. This would indeed explain, at least to some degree, why the fossil record is severely wanting in this area with major gaps that cannot be accounted for without this assumed process. 2. However, “transitional fossils between larger groups — genera, families, classes, etc. — where one fossil species or a chain of fossil species exists with morphology intermediate between the two living groups, and not easily placed in either one, are common.” is actually where I struggle most. You site various fossils (which you say are common) like ‘Synapsids - mammal like reptiles’,‘Horses, with various toes’, ‘archeopterix’, ‘Fishapods’ , ‘Rhino’s (which you suggest can be traced back to a species similar to the horse ancestor Hyracotherium). All of these fossils I am well aware of, and this will no doubt annoy you, but I fail to see how any of them can be used as evidence for evolution, the kind we are discussing here. If Archaeopterix, for instance, is a transitional fossil can you show me what you think it is a direct ancestor to, or didn’t its evolutionary line survive? Also Synapsids, can you pinpoint one that is a direct ancestor to a later form of life? Do toed horses count as transitionals of horses? And what about your ‘whale with legs’, would this creature lie somewhere between Ambulocetus and the modern day whale (as the story goes)? Before you call me out on my ignorance, or laziness in searching out the finer details for myself, please believe me when I say that I have looked very hard at the evidence for evolution and don't find it all convincing. After all it is this particular group that you claim has the most evidence going for it, but is perhaps even more lacking than 1. Thanks again for taking the time to reply. Ps. Hope you are looking forward to your trip :)PeterJ
February 20, 2013
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Since when is "hand-waving" a field? But I have to agree with Nick, calling hand-waving bogus is a bit over the top. Proper hand-waving takes a great deal of time and effort to master.Mung
February 20, 2013
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Nick Matzke: Now, if what [Professor Tour] meant wasn’t “macroevolution”, but specifically the evolution of developmental systems, i.e. evo-devo (…) then the request for “chemical details” would make a tiny bit more sense, but it’s still bizarre.
Maybe he's thinking of single-celled organisms. Or is macro-evolution not applicable to single celled organisms? Maybe he's talking about all those systems within the cell that actual do involve organic molecules and that must have come about by "it just happened, that's all" that you and so many others of your ilk just take for granted because you just can't be bothered with the actual science. Why isn't that macro-evolution? And it it's not macroevolution, and it's not evo-devo, and it's not just changes in gene frequencies in a population (microevoltion) what is it and what's it's place in your "modern synthesis"?Mung
February 20, 2013
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Well done VJT! I am interested to hear the results of this meeting between almost-Dr. Matzke and Dr. Tour. One point of contention from Tour's email: "It [the meeting] shall not be recorded or extend beyond the three of us as this is not for show but for my edification." Dr. Tour's challenge is clearly 'for show,' since he made it public. One wouldn't want Dr. Tour to turn into a kind of Kent Hovind-type or Ken Ham-type, denying other peoples' enlightenment because he wants only to feed his own edification. One might think Dr. Tour is worried that his lack of knowledge of the relevant fields will show that he has over-spoken in making his challenge. Recording Dr. Tour's responses (in voice or text) should be part of the deal. If this meeting takes place, what transparent record of it will do justice to Nick Matzke's willingness to travel to Houston to educate Dr. Tour about 'macroevolution'? GregoryGregory
February 20, 2013
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Gregory:
First, there are many, many theories of design, not a single ‘Design Theory.’ And almost all ‘design theories’ are found not in natural sciences, like what KF is suggesting, but in non-natural scientific fields.
Non-Natural Science.Mung
February 20, 2013
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Nicky’s claims about good hominin fossil records (post 19) are completely wrong. Earlier he wrote:
Nick (101): (..) over in the real-life science of hominid origins, we have hundreds of dated fossils skulls, showing the very gradual, step-by-tiny step acquisition of the features that make up the modern human head, (..)
Nick is on par with Ronald Wetherington’s testimony before the Texas State Board of Education in 2009:
R.W.: “Human evolution has arguably the most complete sequence of fossil succession of any mammal in the world. No gaps. No lack of transitional fossils... So when people talk about the lack of transitional fossils or gaps in the fossil record, it absolutely is not true. And it is not true specifically for our own species."
>>> But what does the scientific literature tell us?
"When we consider the remote past, before the origin of the actual species Homo sapiens, we are faced with a fragmentary and disconnected fossil record. Despite the excited and optimistic claims that have been made by some paleontologists, no fossil hominid species can be established as our direct ancestor." (Richard Lewontin, Human Diversity, p. 163 (Scientific American Library, 1995).)
"About half the time span in the last three million years remains undocumented by any human fossils." (Donald Johanson and Blake Edgar, From Lucy to Language (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996), 22-23.)
"No gradual series of changes in earlier australopithecine populations clearly leads to the new species, and no australopithecine species is obviously transitional." (John Hawks, Keith Hunley, Sang-Hee Lee, and Milford Wolpoff, "Population Bottlenecks and Pleistocene Human Evolution," Journal of Molecular Biology and Evolution, 17 (2000): 2-22.)
"The anatomy of the earliest H. sapiens sample indicates significant modifications of the ancestral genome and is not simply an extension of evolutionary trends in an earlier australopithecine lineage throughout the Pliocene. In fact, its combination of features never appears earlier." (Ibid.)
more ..Box
February 20, 2013
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"nobody here is arguing against common descent" Right, sure, o.k. And that's why the blog is called 'Uncommon Descent'? Does that make sense?Gregory
February 20, 2013
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We have a good theory of canyon making. But MACRO canyon making, that's canyon making at the GRAND scale. It's a mistake to think that the GRAND canyon came about by MACRO canyon making just because of it's name, it came about by MICRO canyon making, like all other canyons. MACRO canyon theory is canyon making at the planetary level and above. Ever notice how you never find one canyon inside another? That's the sort of thing the theory of MACRO canyon making attempts to explain. You people are juts ignorant.Mung
February 20, 2013
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