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Larry Moran doesn’t like any of us, not sure why

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Jonathan McLatchie writes to mention that University of Toronto biochemist Larry Moran is hot on the trail again, this time in response to McLatchie’s vid (below) “Is ID a science?”

I agree that many ID proponents try to use the science way of knowing to prove that creator gods must have built some complex molecular structures inside modern cells. They try to use evidence and they try to use rational thinking to arrive at logical conclusions. That qualifies as science, in my opinion, even though ID proponents fail to make their case. They don’t have the evidence and their logic is faulty. It’s science but it’s bad science.

Lot’s of genuine scientists also publish bad science.

Unclear what Dr. Moran means by “genuine scientists” here, if he agrees that ID is science. Would like to know what else he calls “bad science.”

But, you know, he might be onto a different argument next month.

In a curious passage, he writes,

As long as ID supports outspoken leaders like Denyse O’Leary, Barry Arrington, Phillip Johnson, Casey Luskin, David Klinghoffer, Paul Neslon, John West, William Lane Craig, and others who are not scientific by any stretch of the imagination, then it can’t claim to be entirely scientific.1 It’s also a movement and that movement is called Intelligent Design Creationism and their ultimate goal is to replace true science with an approach based on the premise that gods exist. It wants faith to be recognized as a valid way of knowing and it wants to destroy materialism and all the “evils” associated with it.

Tip from an old news hack: When people talk in the impersonal third person about an agglomeration of individuals, they are spouting propaganda.

Such people might be correct or not, but correctness does not correlate at all with this type of self-expression.

For one thing, as soon as one changes it to “These people want,” one is responsible for ensuring that there is some factual basis for the assertion that they all want that.

But now, to address the point: Why would the scientists at, say, Biologic Institute and Evolutionary Information Lab, stop us writer types from exposing Darwin’s and other nonsense—and spend their time doing it themselves instead of working at the bench or laptop?

But let us say they agreed to do so. Would Dr. Moran like to rid the world of all the bimboes, bimbettes, twits and twerps, dumboes, stumboes, and yo-yos on Airhead TV who claim to “believe in” evolution (= half-remembered Darwinism from high school)?

He’d have a way bigger job than us. Perhaps that is why he shows no sign of getting around to it.

Then, from Dr. Moran, we hear in closing,

This is why a spokesman for ID appears on a Christian apolgetics podcast even though the Pastor who runs the show is not a scientist and probably doesn’t accept scientific results. He knows, just as you and I know, that ID is a front for creationism. It’s an attempt to dress up creationism in a lab coat and that’s why so many Christian fundamentalists support it even thought they don’t give a damn about science.

Huh? Didn’t Dr. Moran just say that he thought ID “qualifies as science, in my opinion,” though bad science …?

Oh, you know, it doesn’t pay to try to make sense of it. This is what retirement will be for. He can spend all his time writing this stuff, and he’ll have a big following too.

Incidentally, Dr. Moran now claims that Vincent Torley’s credibility has gone way up. Sorry, Larry, the ship has sailed. No one is looking for the mid-last century faithful to establish credibility in this area now. When I sensed change on the winds, I sure sniffed right*.

Some facts of possible interest: Paul Nelson is a philosopher whose specialty is evolutionary biology. That’s actually way more useful than evolutionary biologists who moonlight as amateur philosophers.

John West has a political science background and is a senior manager at Discovery Institute, and David Klinghoffer is an editor there (sometimes my editor at a different day job, my series at Evolution News & Views). Casey Luskin has Earth Science degrees but, as he is also a lawyer, works mainly as legal counsel at DI.

Barry Arrington is a lawyer in private practice who sometimes offer insights from his experiences in that capacity in his posts. He is the president of Uncommon Descent, Inc., a Colorado non-profit, where I usually work.

*I am, as noted above, an old news hack who got sick of the stinkpile of stale ideas around Darwinism and—more significantly—sensed change on the winds.

William Lane Craig is a Discovery Institute fellow. To hear Larry Krauss (Dawkins’ heir?) go on about him, I can see why he attracts the attention of Darwin’s faithful and their friends.

A list of Discovery Institute fellows. Barry Arrington and I are not on it.

What I like best about my job: It gets to be more fun every year.

Here’s the vid:

Follow UD News at Twitter!

Comments
as to: "It can’t be falsified any more than gravity can be falsified" Actually, Gravity, i.e. general relativity, could be potentially falsified whereas Darwinian evolution, unlike ID, has no rigid mathematical criteria to test against in order to potentially falsify it
“On the other hand, I disagree that Darwin’s theory is as `solid as any explanation in science.; Disagree? I regard the claim as preposterous. Quantum electrodynamics is accurate to thirteen or so decimal places; so, too, general relativity. A leaf trembling in the wrong way would suffice to shatter either theory. What can Darwinian theory offer in comparison?” - Berlinski, D., “A Scientific Scandal?: David Berlinski & Critics,” Commentary, July 8, 2003 Active Information in Metabiology – Winston Ewert, William A. Dembski, Robert J. Marks II – 2013 Except page 9: Chaitin states [3], “For many years I have thought that it is a mathematical scandal that we do not have proof that Darwinian evolution works.” In fact, mathematics has consistently demonstrated that undirected Darwinian evolution does not work.,, Consistent with the laws of conservation of information, natural selection can only work using the guidance of active information, which can be provided only by a designer. http://bio-complexity.org/ojs/index.php/main/article/view/BIO-C.2013.4/BIO-C.2013.4
As mentioned previously, ID, unlike Darwinian evolution, can be falsified:
The Law of Physicodynamic Incompleteness - David L. Abel Excerpt: "If decision-node programming selections are made randomly or by law rather than with purposeful intent, no non-trivial (sophisticated) function will spontaneously arise." If only one exception to this null hypothesis were published, the hypothesis would be falsified. Falsification would require an experiment devoid of behind-the-scenes steering. Any artificial selection hidden in the experimental design would disqualify the experimental falsification. After ten years of continual republication of the null hypothesis with appeals for falsification, no falsification has been provided. The time has come to extend this null hypothesis into a formal scientific prediction: "No non trivial algorithmic/computational utility will ever arise from chance and/or necessity alone." https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/The_Law_of_Physicodynamic_Incompleteness
To quote Popper:
"In so far as a scientific statement speaks about reality, it must be falsifiable; and in so far as it is not falsifiable, it does not speak about reality." Karl Popper - The Two Fundamental Problems of the Theory of Knowledge (2014 edition), Routledge
i.e. Darwinian evolution does not speak about reality!bornagain
October 24, 2015
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Mapou says, I bet none of those authors makes the case that naturalistic evolution is falsified. That's correct. Biological evolution is a proven fact. It is directly observable. It can't be falsified any more than gravity can be falsified or No scientist would be stupid enough to say that biological evolution has been falsified. I bet they only criticise some of the more unpalatable aspects of the theory and make suggestions on how to correct the problems. That's pretty much correct although there have been some pretty drastic changes to evolutionary theory in the past fifty years. Neutral theory and the prevalence of random genetic drift came out of molecular evolution. Punctuated equilibria were discovered by paleontologists some of whom also advocate species selection. Group selection is currently a hot topic. All of these additions refute strict Darwinism and demonstrate that you were dead wrong when you claimed that,"criticising Darwinian evolution is committing career suicide" and "The fact is that Darwinists are extremely averse to any criticism of evolution." Apology accepted. Show me one prominent biologist in the mainstream who openly denies materialism and naturalism and is still successful. There are plenty of religious scientists who deny that materialism is the only way to describe the universe. I think they are wrong but as long as they try to keep religion out of their science they can be quite successful. Are you trying to move the goalposts?Larry Moran
October 24, 2015
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"In genomes with a large amount of junk DNA, such as our own," Excuse me?
Podcast: Richard Sternberg PhD - " On Human Origins: Is Our Genome Full of Junk DNA? part 1 http://www.discovery.org/multimedia/audio/2014/11/on-human-origins-is-our-genome-full-of-junk-dna/ Podcast - Richard Sternberg PhD - On Human Origins: Is Our Genome Full of Junk DNA? Part 2 (Major Differences in higher level chromosome spatial organization) http://www.discovery.org/multimedia/audio/2014/11/on-human-origins-is-our-genome-full-of-junk-dna-pt-2/ Podcast: Richard Sternberg PhD - " On Human Origins: Is Our Genome Full of Junk DNA? Part 3 http://intelligentdesign.podomatic.com/entry/2014-11-17T14_14_33-08_00 Podcast - Richard Sternberg PhD - On Human Origins: Is Our Genome Full of Junk DNA? Part 4 http://www.discovery.org/multimedia/audio/2014/11/on-human-origins-is-our-genome-full-of-junk-dna-pt-4/ In the following podcast, Dr. Sternberg’s emphasis is on ENCODE research, and how that research overturned the ‘central’ importance of the gene as a unit of inheritance. As well he reflects on how that loss of the term ‘gene’ as an accurate description in biology completely undermines the modern synthesis, (i.e. central dogma), of neo-Darwinism as a rational explanation for biology. Podcast - Richard Sternberg PhD - On Human Origins: Is Our Genome Full of Junk DNA? Part 5 http://www.discovery.org/multimedia/audio/2014/11/on-human-origins-is-our-genome-full-of-junk-dna-pt-5/
Anyone who believes our genome is mostly junk is simply not living in the real world but is living in a fantasy land: DNA is, without doubt, mind blowing in its integrated complexity and far, far, surpasses anything man has ever devised:
What Is The Genome? It's Certainly Not Junk! - Dr. Robert Carter - video - (Notes in video description) http://www.metacafe.com/w/8905583 Multidimensional Genome – Dr. Robert Carter – video (Notes in video description) http://www.metacafe.com/w/8905048 Scientists' 3-D View of Genes-at-Work Is Paradigm Shift in Genetics - Dec. 2009 Excerpt: Highly coordinated chromosomal choreography leads genes and the sequences controlling them, which are often positioned huge distances apart on chromosomes, to these 'hot spots'. Once close together within the same transcription factory, genes get switched on (a process called transcription) at an appropriate level at the right time in a specific cell type. This is the first demonstration that genes encoding proteins with related physiological role visit the same factory. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/12/091215160649.htm
bornagain
October 24, 2015
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Perhaps that DNA isn't junk and it is there precisely for that reason- to absorb mutations.Virgil Cain
October 24, 2015
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What if the genetic change wasn't due to damage or copying error but was actually controlled by the organism's programming? Is it still a mutation? Directed evolution is modeled by genetic and evolutionary algorithms. How do we model unguided evolution?Virgil Cain
October 24, 2015
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Mung asks, Is it still a mutation if it is in a non-coding or “junk” region? How about if it has no effect on which amino acid appears in a polypeptide? What is the percentage of mutations of no effect? I hope you now understand the difference between DNA damage and mutation. Damage can be repaired but if it escapes repair and is passed on to daughter cells it becomes a mutation. Mutations in any part of the genome are still mutations. Mutations that have no effect on fitness are called neutral mutations or "nearly neutral" mutations. The percentage of neutral and nearly neutral mutations depends on the population size—that's where "nearly neural" comes in. A given mutation may be strictly neutral or it may be beneficial or deleterious in large populations but effectively neutral in smaller populations ("nearly neutral"). In genomes with a large amount of junk DNA, such as our own, the vast majority of mutations are neutral (>90%). That's why we can survive as a species even though each newborn baby has about 100 new mutations. This is the genetic load argument for junk DNA and we've known about it for more than half a century.Larry Moran
October 24, 2015
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Larry Moran:
If you can show that some current model is wrong then your career is made and you might even win a Nobel Prize.
There isn't any model for evolutionism and no one has won a Nobel Prize for anything to do with unguided evolution. But yes I am sure if someone could actually demonstrate that natural selection and drift could produce something like ATP synthase or the genetic code, they would win a Nobel Prize. If someone could elucidate the evolutionary pathways that led to the emergence of humans they would win a Nobel Prize. Perhaps if someone could figure out how to quantify unguided evolution so that it qualifies as science, they would win a Nobel prize. We finally got a white heavyweight boxing champ so you never know. ;)Virgil Cain
October 24, 2015
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Box, do you hold that natural selection reduces information? Natural selection reduces diversity in a population. If the presence of multiple alleles in a population represents more information than a single allele the, yes, natural selection reduces total information in a population.Larry Moran
October 24, 2015
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Dionisio asks, Do YOU know exactly HOW morphogen gradients are formed, at least one case? Please, just answer YES or NO, without any additional explanation, comments or questions. Yes.Larry Moran
October 24, 2015
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Mung, Typically "mutation" means any change in DNA that slips past the repair mechanisms anywhere in the genome regardless of its effect. Each of us are born with an average of 60-150 such mutations (according to various measurements). Most are neutral (hopefully). :-)goodusername
October 24, 2015
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Moran @86, I bet none of those authors makes the case that naturalistic evolution is falsified. I bet they only criticise some of the more unpalatable aspects of the theory and make suggestions on how to correct the problems. Show me one prominent biologist in the mainstream who openly denies materialism and naturalism and is still successful.Mapou
October 24, 2015
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Larry Moran @69
I followed the links but it wasn’t clear to me what the questions were and which ones you want answered. Could you post ONE question here at a time?
Professor Moran, Thank you for your comment and for your willingness to graciously share your vast scientific knowledge here. Ok, as per your request, let's do one question at a time, and let's start from a simple Yes/No question: Do YOU know exactly HOW morphogen gradients are formed, at least one case? Please, just answer YES or NO, without any additional explanation, comments or questions. Only one word: yes or no. That's all for now. Thank you again.Dionisio
October 24, 2015
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Larry Moran, do you hold that natural selection reduces information?Box
October 24, 2015
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goodusername, Thank you. Is it still a mutation if it is in a non-coding or "junk" region? How about if it has no effect on which amino acid appears in a polypeptide? What is the percentage of mutations of no effect? And from what's left we still get all the diversity of life. Prof Moran must believe in miracles.Mung
October 24, 2015
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as to:
"There’s abundant evidence that the allele for lactose persistence has been recently selected in human populations."
and yet,
Adult Lactose Tolerance Is Not an Advantageous Evolutionary Trait - Juan Brines, MD Excerpt: In short, evidence does not support the evolutionary hypothesis of lactase persistence in human adults as a consequence of selection. A founder effect could be a more suitable explanation to justify this trait, and this mechanism does not need the cooperation of natural selection. http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/114/5/1372.1.full
Moreover, the adaptation was the result of loss of information not a gain of information:
Got milk? Research finds evidence of dairy farming 7,000 years ago in Sahara Excerpt: In premature babies, the gene coding for lactase is sometimes not yet active. And in much of the world’s population, the gene is downregulated after weaning, eventually producing some degree of lactose intolerance. Those whose genes are not downregulated are said to have “lactase persistence.” However, even lactose-intolerant people still have genes coding for lactase enzyme; they are just switched off. In an adult with lactase persistence, one or both alleles of the lactase gene remain switched on. http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2012/07/07/news-to-note-07072012
Loss of an instruction (information) to downregulate the gene and only one or two alleles were involved in the degradation of information. Dr. Sanford comments
Critic ignores reality of Genetic Entropy - Dr John Sanford - 7 March 2013 Excerpt: Where are the beneficial mutations in man? It is very well documented that there are thousands of deleterious Mendelian mutations accumulating in the human gene pool, even though there is strong selection against such mutations. Yet such easily recognized deleterious mutations are just the tip of the iceberg. The vast majority of deleterious mutations will not display any clear phenotype at all. There is a very high rate of visible birth defects, all of which appear deleterious. Again, this is just the tip of the iceberg. Why are no beneficial birth anomalies being seen? This is not just a matter of identifying positive changes. If there are so many beneficial mutations happening in the human population, selection should very effectively amplify them. They should be popping up virtually everywhere. They should be much more common than genetic pathologies. Where are they? European adult lactose tolerance appears to be due to a broken lactase promoter [see Can’t drink milk? You’re ‘normal’! Ed.]. African resistance to malaria is due to a broken hemoglobin protein [see Sickle-cell disease. Also, immunity of an estimated 20% of western Europeans to HIV infection is due to a broken chemokine receptor—see CCR5-delta32: a very beneficial mutation. Ed.] Beneficials happen, but generally they are loss-of-function mutations, and even then they are very rare! http://creation.com/genetic-entropy
bornagain
October 24, 2015
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Mung,
1.) He accepts random mutations. (Else what is the need for repair?)
Technically, mutations are changes/damage to DNA that slip past the repair mechanisms (i.e. if a piece of DNA is damaged but detected and repaired then it's not a mutation).goodusername
October 24, 2015
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Mapou says, But everyone knows that criticising Darwinian evolution is committing career suicide. It’s not easy doing good science in a Big Brother system. The fact is that Darwinists are extremely averse to any criticism of evolution. You have no idea what you're talking about. Here's a partial list of posts that are just from my blog. Every one of them is a criticism of some aspect or model of evolutionary biology, ESPECIALLY "Darwinian" evolution, which has come under heavy attack for the past 35 years. Attacking current paradigms in science is far from being career suicide. If you can show that some current model is wrong then your career is made and you might even win a Nobel Prize. In contrast, I challenge you to show me any posts on Uncommon Descent or Evolution News & Views where an aspect of intelligent design is being subjected to the same scrutiny by ID advocates. Is the "Modern Synthesis" effectively dead? Rethinking evolutionary theory Gould on Darwinism and Nonadaptive Change Arlin Stoltzfus explains evolutionary theory The Mutationism Myth, VI: Back to the Future Michael Lynch on Adaptationism What do they mean when they say they want to extend the Modern Synthesis? A New View of Evolution The Altenberg 16 Make It into Nature Macromutations and Punctuated Equilibria Constructive Neutral Evolution (CNE) The "Null Hypothesis" in Evolution Dawkins, Darwin, Drift, and Neutral Theory A Critique of the Adaptationist Programme Richard Dawkins' View of Random Genetic Drift Visible Mutations and Evolution by Natural Selection Michael Lynch on modern evolutionary theory Does natural selection constrain neutral diversity? Larry Moran
October 24, 2015
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Prof. Moran, Given that Andre clearly accepts the existence of "multiple integrity checks, multiple repair mechanisms and the multiple Apoptosis mechanisms and Necrosis that are evolutionary conserved," doesn't that tell you at least two things? 1.) He accepts random mutations. (Else what is the need for repair?) 2.) That he accepts natural selection. (Else how are they conserved?) Now if it is random mutations that are the source of all the diversity in living things, what a miraculous sweet spot that must be. Goldilocks indeed.Mung
October 24, 2015
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Larry Moran- The whole debate is about whether or not all genetic changes are accidents, errors and mistakes. Yes mutations happen. That doesn't mean they are accidents, errors and mistakes. It isn't NS if the mutations are directed. And we see the creative power of directed evolution with genetic and evolutionary algorithms. What you need is some way to correlate the mutations with the physiological and morphological differences observed between, say, chimps and humans. What makes a chimp a chimp, Larry? How can we test that? And something else to consider:
On the Derivation of Ulysses from Don Quixote I imagine this story being told to me by Jorge Luis Borges one evening in a Buenos Aires cafe. His voice dry and infinitely ironic, the aging, nearly blind literary master observes that "the Ulysses," mistakenly attributed to the Irishman James Joyce, is in fact derived from "the Quixote." I raise my eyebrows. Borges pauses to sip discreetly at the bitter coffee our waiter has placed in front of him, guiding his hands to the saucer. "The details of the remarkable series of events in question may be found at the University of Leiden," he says. "They were conveyed to me by the Freemason Alejandro Ferri in Montevideo." Borges wipes his thin lips with a linen handkerchief that he has withdrawn from his breast pocket. "As you know," he continues, "the original handwritten text of the Quixote was given to an order of French Cistercians in the autumn of 1576." I hold up my hand to signify to our waiter that no further service is needed. "Curiously enough, for none of the brothers could read Spanish, the Order was charged by the Papal Nuncio, Hoyo dos Monterrey (a man of great refinement and implacable will), with the responsibility for copying the Quixote, the printing press having then gained no currency in the wilderness of what is now known as the department of Auvergne. Unable to speak or read Spanish, a language they not unreasonably detested, the brothers copied the Quixote over and over again, re-creating the text but, of course, compromising it as well, and so inadvertently discovering the true nature of authorship. Thus they created Fernando Lor's Los Hombres d'Estado in 1585 by means of a singular series of copying errors, and then in 1654 Juan Luis Samorza's remarkable epistolary novel Por Favor by the same means, and then in 1685, the errors having accumulated sufficiently to change Spanish into French, Moliere's Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme, their copying continuous and indefatigable, the work handed down from generation to generation as a sacred but secret trust, so that in time the brothers of the monastery, known only to members of the Bourbon house and, rumor has it, the Englishman and psychic Conan Doyle, copied into creation Stendhal's The Red and the Black and Flaubert's Madame Bovary, and then as a result of a particularly significant series of errors, in which French changed into Russian, Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilyich and Anna Karenina. Late in the last decade of the 19th century there suddenly emerged, in English, Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, and then the brothers, their numbers reduced by an infectious disease of mysterious origin, finally copied the Ulysses into creation in 1902, the manuscript lying neglected for almost thirteen years and then mysteriously making its way to Paris in 1915, just months before the British attack on the Somme, a circumstance whose significance remains to be determined." I sit there, amazed at what Borges has recounted. "Is it your understanding, then," I ask, "that every novel in the West was created in this way?" "Of course," replies Borges imperturbably. Then he adds: "Although every novel is derived directly from another novel, there is really only one novel, the Quixote."
Do you consider such a story to be possible? That is do you think that accumulations copying errors could somehow produce different books starting from one?Virgil Cain
October 24, 2015
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bFast says, Or scientists that think that cold fusion is possible. Exactly. No chemistry department would hire anyone today who thinks that cold fusion is possible. That is not proof that cold fusion advocates are on to something. It's proof that they are kooks.Larry Moran
October 24, 2015
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Andre asks, How did NS & RM and genetic drift slip past the multiple integrity checks, multiple repair mechanisms and the multiple Apoptosis mechanisms and Necrosis that are evolutionary conserved? In order to answer that question I need a little background. There's abundant evidence that the allele for lactose persistence has been recently selected in human populations. This is evidence of natural selection (NS) working today. Do you accept that evidence? There's lots of other examples of natural selection in action in modern populations. Do you reject all of them? Why? There's abundant evidence that each newborn human baby has about 100 new mutations not found in either parent. This is evidence of mutation. Do you accept that evidence? The distribution of those mutations shows no obvious bias so it looks very much like they are, to all intents and purposes, random mutations (RM). This is consistent with numerous experiments on phage and bacteria showing that mutations are essentially random. Do you accept that evidence? Do you understand it? Can you describe the fluctuation test that won Max Delbrück and Salvador Luria a Nobel Prize in 1969? The analysis of compete human genomes from the 1000 genomes project shows us that there is an incredible amount of variation in the human population. This correlates very well with our understanding of population genetics and the distribution of alleles due to random genetic drift if most of the alleles are neutral. The analysis of pseudogenes alleles confirms this as does the comparison between human and chimpanzee genomes. Do you understand modern population genetics, random genetic drift, and Neutral Theory? If so, how do YOU account for the data? Are you aware of the data? Given that NS & RM and drift are proven events in modern populations they must not be impeded by repair, apotosis, or neocosis so I don't really understand that part of the question. Can you please explain why you think this is relevant?Larry Moran
October 24, 2015
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Prof Moran is no defender of truth. He is just a defender of his own "truth". As I posed to Dr Torley I'll challenge Prof Moran How did NS & RM and genetic drift slip past the multiple integrity checks, multiple repair mechanisms and the multiple Apoptosis mechanisms and Necrosis that are evolutionary conserved? While we are at it how did unguided processes create guided processes as mentioned above to prevent unguided processes from happening in the first place? Over to you Prof Moran.Andre
October 24, 2015
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Or the Prof Hawkins who says "because laws like gravity exist proves that the universe can create itself from nothing". Or something along those lines. Or maybe I'm just too dumb to understand. After all, my physicist friends used to always jest that us biologists were the lower form of scientist (and judging by materialist's evolutionary widespread acceptance among biologists that is a fair point).Dr JDD
October 24, 2015
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Prof Moran
It’s a good thing that it does work that way because there are a lot of kooks out there in the real world.
You are right people like Jerry Coyne, Lawrence Kraus, Sean Carrol, and Larry Moran. You see the kooks are holding the fort at the expense of science.Andre
October 24, 2015
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Moran:
Universities don’t hire people with Ph.D.s who claim that homeopathy works or that there is valid scientific evidence of UFO abductions or that vaccinations don’t protect children against disease.
Yet they hire and celebrate crackpots (e.g. Stephen Hawking) who believe in the possibility of time travel even though every physicist worth his PhD knows that nothing can move in spacetime by definition. This is why Karl Popper called spacetime "Einstein's block universe in which nothing happens."Mapou
October 24, 2015
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Larry Moran (71) "Universities don’t hire people with Ph.D.s who claim that homeopathy works or that there is valid scientific evidence of UFO abductions or that vaccinations don’t protect children against disease." Or scientists that think that cold fusion is possible.bFast
October 24, 2015
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Moran:
Over on my blog we jump on scientists and evolution supporters who get their facts wrong or make unsubstantiated claims about evolution and biology. That’s how real scientists behave. They are constantly trying to improve their understanding by engaging in self-criticism and re-examining their views.
But everyone knows that criticising Darwinian evolution is committing career suicide. It's not easy doing good science in a Big Brother system. The fact is that Darwinists are extremely averse to any criticism of evolution. Evolutionary biology experiments are not designed to falsify DE but to buttress it. It should certainly be the other around if you people were honest. The very name "evolutionary biology" is an affront to good science because it assumes the truth of DE when it should be treating it as a hypothesis to be falsified. This is why I maintain that all Darwinists and evolutionary biologists are gutless liars and pseudoscientists.Mapou
October 24, 2015
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Moran:
Universities don’t just hire anyone who claims to be doing science. Instead, they make a judgement about whether it’s good science or not.
So then, how come Darwinian evolution is still considered good science? Don't tell me. I know. The ones making the judgements are the crackpots.Mapou
October 24, 2015
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An entire post from Larry with no typos!Mung
October 24, 2015
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Larry Moran:
The problem with explaining things to creationists is that I never know where to start. Sometimes their ignorance of science is so profound that I need to start way back at square one and that’s tedious.
:)Mung
October 24, 2015
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