Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

UB Strikes Again!

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UB takes down the “life is only fancy chemistry” shibboleth:

AVS:

The transcription and translation processes are entirely based on chemistry.  Can you explain why functional sequence specific DNA cannot be reduced to chemistry?

UB:

Because there is a chemical discontinuity between the nucleic medium and the amino acid effect that must be preserved in order for translation to be obtained.

AVS:

And what is this chemical discontinuity exactly, Upright?

UB:

There is nothing you can do to the nucleic pattern GCA to relate it to Alanine, except translate it. Which is what the cell does.

AVS:

It’s related by another nucleic pattern, bound to alanine, that has a specific sequence that associates with that GCA.

UB:

The base pairing that enables transcription between nucleotides does not establish a relationship to alanine. That relationship is established by the protein aaRS before the transfer RNA ever enters the ribosome.

UB:

AVS, is there an inexorable chemical relationship between pattern GCA and alanine, or is it a contingent relationship? [UD Editors: Instead of “contingent” one might say “arbitrary”]

AVS:

But there is a relationship. You just explained it. The amino acid is associated with the aaRS, which associates with tRNA, which associates with mRNA. This relationship is the product of the evolution of these molecules.

UB:

Correct. The relationship is established in spatial and temporal isolation by the protein aaRS.

So, there is a physical discontinuity between the nucleic pattern and the amino acid, which is contingent on the structure of the protein aaRS. Therefore, there is nothing about the pattern that determines the amino acid, and consequently, chemistry cannot explain the association. It can only explain the operation of the system with the association in place.

AVS:

The association of the tRNA with aaRS determines the amino acid as I said. The chemical evolution that occurred would explain the why these molecules associate in our cells now, an ultimately arbitrary decision, driven by chemical interactions that occurred in early cells.

UB:

The cells decided huh? cool

AVS, there is a chemical discontinuity between the nucleic medium and the amino acid effect, and that discontinuity must be preserved in order for translation to be obtained.

Do you know why?

(…think about it)

AVS:

That chemical discontinuity between nucleotide and protein is bridged by more chemical interactions though, UB, which as I said are the product of evolution. Yes the cells “decided” for lack of a better word. This is one of the problems with you guys, scientists try to put things in the simplest terms an you completely blow these terms out of proportion.

UB:

I’m glad you now recognize the discontinuity.

My question is: Do you know why it’s there, and why the system must preserve it during translation?

(hint: it’s not evolution)

AVS:

It is evolution UB. Early organisms evolved this translating system to carry out more diverse functions with better efficiency. The system we see today is the result of the chemical evolution that occurred in these early organisms and has been conserved to this day.

UB:

This is not an answer to the question. Do you know why it’s there, and why the system must preserve it during translation? There is an identifiable reason. What is it?

AVS:

UB, there obviously needs to be a connection to nucleotide and amino acid that is conserved. The system we have been talking about does this and it does this based on chemical interactions. And the evolution of this system was based on chemical interactions. That’s it. Make your point already.

UB:

AVS,

I was giving you the benefit of the doubt, hoping you could think for yourself. Why would a physical discontinuity be required in a chemo/mechanical system in order to get a particular amino acid presented at the peptide binding site? Why would such a system need to preserve that discontinuity in order to produce the effect?

The physical effect of having a particular amino acid presented at a binding site at a particular point in time is not something that can be derived from physical law – it’s not some innate property to be drawn from, or activated in, the atomic composition of matter. So a discontinuity will naturally exist in any system that produces such an effect. That discontinuity is required in order to allow the input of formal constraint (information) into the system, where it can produce an effect that operates under physical law, but is not determined by it. In other words, it’s an operational necessity to achieve the result.

And the system must preserve that discontinuity for much the same reason. From a purely mechanical standpoint, if the effect were derivable directly from the physical properties of the medium, then it would be so by the forces of inexorable law, and those inexorable forces would limit the system to what can be physically derived from that medium, thus making the input of form (not derived from that medium) impossible to achieve.

However, incorporating the discontinuity by preserving it allows the effect to be determined by a second arrangement of matter operating in the system. This second arrangement establishes a local relationship between the medium and its effect (bridging the discontinuity while preserving it). This relationship then becomes an identifiable regularity of the system, allowing the system the capacity to produce lawful effects not determined by physical law.

UB:

…by the way.

This entire arrangement is a necessary precondition of the genotype-phenotype distinction. It must be in place prior to the onset of Darwinian evolution. To say this system is the product of Darwinian avolution, is to say that a thing that does not yet exist on a pre-biotic earth can cause something to happen.

Which is obviously false.

*crickets*

AVS, where are you? You’re letting down your side. Come on back and tell UB why he’s wrong!

Comments
gpuccio @96, All you said are horribly wrong as I’ve already explained to UB umpteen times. The word “table” has no connection to the actual object it represents because language is just a script. It’s a code to represent a real object. But codons are not a language-like code that represents amino acids without having any physical connection to them. Codons pair with anticodons on tRNAs which are charged with the amino acid by aaRs. This codon-anticodon pairing and amino acid-aaRS-tRNA bonding, as well as the assembly on the ribosome are all governed by the same chemical principles as any other chemical reaction - molecular 3D structure, conformations, affinities, bond formation, disruption, reaction kinetics etc. To say this has nothing to with chemical laws is laughable. If you change the conditions, the reactions get altered even if the codon sequence remains intact. That’s why TGA and TAG can produce a STOP signal in some cases and an amino acid in other cases. Nothing of this sort occurs in language. The word table is just that - a word. It’s not a molecule. “Table” will always read “table” as long as the sequence of alphabets t-a-b-l-e remains intact irrespective of the external environment. You guys are messing up this fundamental difference. And even writing big books based on this flawed analogy! Comparing DNA to language is bound to fail.Evolve
May 23, 2014
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The problem here is actually quite simple and sometimes it is best to go back to basics: There is a fundamental difference between using chemistry, and being chemistry. Let me put that another, simple way: Ordered systems using chemistry to produce transmit information are not inherently chemical systems. They utilise chemistry however they are not "just chemistry". Take for example a computer circuit board. It uses physics and chemistry in order to transmit information. You would not refer to that as "just chemistry" though - it is a designed module with the purpose of utilising chemistry and physics as its agent of information transmission. Why is this such a hard concept to grasp with biological systems for some? That is exactly what we see in the translation of DNA. We see a code which many here would argue is designed, utilising principles of chemistry and physical interactions in order to transmit information. That cannot be reduced to simple chemistry. That is a fallacy, and you are only fooling yourself if that is how you view such a system.Dr JDD
May 23, 2014
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Evolve @ 73:
We get an amino acid from a DNA codon due to the chemistry happening at ambient conditions that follows physical laws.
No. Amino acids are literally "assembled", mechanically in a biological assembly line in the cell. They are not created chemically from a codon. Amino acids are carried to a ribosome by tRNA and selected by the ribosome corresponding to the codon on the mRNA. The ribosome then assembles a protein chain (or peptide chain) from a sequence of amino acids, the sequence defined by the codon sequence on mRNA. The mRNA is like assembly instructions, the codon is like part number on a bill of materials list, the tRNA is a raw material carrier, and the ribosome is a assembly robot that attaches each amino acid to the protein chain. Nowhere is a codon chemically converted to an amino acid. In fact the codons remain as-is and attached to the mRNA and after they've been sampled they and the mRNA are ejected and disposed of. That mRNA codon sequence encoded in nucleotides is assembly instructions - it is information, not chemical reactants. Here is a video that shows the production of mRNA "DNA Transcription (Advanced)" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SMtWvDbfHLo And here is a video of a protein chain being assembled by a ribosome from amino acid "parts" according to the codon sequence on mRNA. Pay careful attention at 50 seconds in: mRNA Translation (Advanced) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TfYf_rPWUdY "The amino acid building blocks (that's the small glowing red molecules) are carried into the ribosome attached to specific transfer RNAs. That's the larger green molecules also referred to as tRNA. The small sub-unit of the ribosome positions the mRNA so that it can be read in groups of three letters known as a codon. Each codon on the mRNA matches a corresponding anti-codon on the base of a transfer RNA molecule. The larger sub-unit of the ribosome removes each amino acid and join it onto the growing protein chain. As the mRNA is ratcheted through the ribosome, the mRNA sequence is translated into an amino acid sequence." And here is another video, that better describes the mechanism. Pay attention at 13 seconds in: "Translation" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1PSwhTGFMxs That is not a chemical reaction. That is a manufacturing process according to parts numbers on a bill of materials and assembly instructions. The point repeated by Upright BiPed and others about the DNA codons being "representations" is because, as the videos show you, the codon itself is not converted chemically or physically into an amino acid. The codon "represents" (it is a part number) or corresponds to an amino acid that is carried in by the tRNA. The representation is "arbitrary" because any agreed upon correspondence will work because it is independent of chemistry. There is no chemical reaction formula that converts a CGC codon to Alanine, for example. In fact the codons are not even converted. They are read from the mRNA like a computer tape, and then discarded. It is the ribosome that processes the mRNA assembly instructions that corresponds GCG with Alanine. Here is the "agreed upon correspondence" implemented by the ribosome, the RNA codon table: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_code#RNA_codon_table Note that GCU, GCC, GCA also correspond to Alanine. Alanine can't be converted (or correspond) to GCG only, and the correspondence is one-way from codon to amino acid to protein chain, but not the reverse. Chemical reactions are reversible, codon/amino acid correspondence is not. Look at those videos again and observe there are no chemical/physical laws at work. Just like an assembly line operates on instructions (step, input, execute, output) and not chemical or physical laws, it isn't gravitational attraction or chemical bonds that assemble an automobile or machine a part. Likewise in the ribosome, it isn't physical or chemical laws that assemble a protein chain according to a sequence of codons. I bothered with this because I didn't see that anyone else offered you a visual explanation of why it is information at work and not chemistry to "get an amino acid from a DNA codon". Show us I didn't waste my time. This is a test to see if you are intellectually honest enough to admit the difference, after having been shown irrefutable video evidence.Charles
May 22, 2014
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Not to be outdone, Alan Fox over on TSZ is lying about already refuting Upright Biped because some nonsense about early cells not requiring the current transcription and translation protocol. Of course Alan and the TSZ ilk NEVER produce any evidence for such a thing. And they deny the genetic code is a real code despite all the evidence demonstrating that it is. If the (alleged) metaphor is inescapable then it isn't a metaphor. Cry-baby losers...Joe
May 22, 2014
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Dr JDD @ 93 & 94 Thank you for explaining the aa numbers. I'll read more about this, as per your suggestion. Yes, all this is fascinating indeed.Dionisio
May 22, 2014
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Not sure if this OT?
An mRNA-Derived Noncoding RNA Targets and Regulates the Ribosome Andreas Pircher, Kamilla Bakowska-Zywicka, Lukas Schneider, Marek Zywicki, Norbert Polacek DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2014.02.024 Highlights •This study reveals the yeast ribosome as direct target for small regulatory ncRNAs •An 18-nt-long exon-derived RNA fragment from the TRM10 locus binds to ribosomes •This 18-mer ncRNA inhibits global protein biosynthesis in vivo and in vitro •This translation attenuation is crucial for adaption under hyperosmotic stress Summary The structural and functional repertoire of small non-protein-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) is central for establishing gene regulation networks in cells and organisms. Here, we show that an mRNA-derived 18-nucleotide-long ncRNA is capable of downregulating translation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by targeting the ribosome. This 18-mer ncRNA binds to polysomes upon salt stress and is crucial for efficient growth under hyperosmotic conditions. Although the 18-mer RNA originates from the TRM10 locus, which encodes a tRNA methyltransferase, genetic analyses revealed the 18-mer RNA nucleotide sequence, rather than the mRNA-encoded enzyme, as the translation regulator. Our data reveal the ribosome as a target for a small regulatory ncRNA and demonstrate the existence of a yet unkown mechanism of translation regulation. Ribosome-targeted small ncRNAs are found in all domains of life and represent a prevalent but so far largely unexplored class of regulatory molecules.
Dionisio
May 22, 2014
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Evolve,
What does the codon TAG represent?
The important question is what the pattern thymine-adenine-guanine represents to the system in which it operates. We are merely observers of the regulartities within the system. They cannot be measured, only demonstrated. - - - - - - - - - I read through the remainder of your post and all I can think is how conceptually debilitated (quite dead in that regard) you are. I think of the history of thought concerning strong determinism, and how history's famous thinkers in physics pondered over the variation in the cosmos, and most certainly in living systems. If I remember correctly, I once encouraged you to stop pissing on UD and go find a materialist physicists - someone who you can "trust" - someone who has researched semiotic systems and informational control, and READ UP and educate yourself. But I can now see that all you will do is excercise your confirmation bias. You actually went and found an article that talks about a local change in a system that you argue is reducible to inexorable law, and you do this with exuberance. As GP notes above, you are simply beyond hope.Upright BiPed
May 22, 2014
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Talking of language: linguistic signs range from arbitrary to iconic (like cuckoo or buzz). In some cases in which we are able trace the history of a word sufficiently far back in time, we discover that what is now a completely arbitrary pairing between form and meaning has evolved from an imitative relationship (an "acoustic affinity"). One of my favourite examples is described in detail here: http://langevo.blogspot.com/2013/05/morphemes-are-forever.htmlPiotr
May 22, 2014
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Evolve: You are beyond hope. The fact that there are different codifications in some different organisms is indeed a demonstration that this is a code, a representation, which has nothing to do with chemical laws. Code can change, because they are symbolic. Chemical laws cannot change. I can say the same thing in english or in italian. The word "table" represents a table, exactly like the word "tavolo". It's a code, a representation, The real object is a different thing. There is no law of acoustic that links the word "table" to the object table. In Danish, it would be "bord". And so on. The code is implemented exactly by the different affinities. But the affinity is not between the aminoacid and the codon. As you should know, the affinity is generated by a connection in the aaRs and therefore, in the end, in the tRNA. But the connection is symbolic, it has nothing to do with any particular affinity between the codon and its coded AA at the biochemical level. And, if in some cases there is a different use of a symbol, it is not because of different biochemical laws or environment. It is because a different code has been created in that line. Even the article you link says: "A large proportion of bacteria and viruses have reassigned at least one stop codon—a signal marking the end of protein-coding sequences—to instead encode for an amino acid." Emphasis mine. You seem to be the only one who cannot understand these simple concepts.gpuccio
May 22, 2014
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///And you were challenged to support your claim by pointing out the physical distinction between a “genuine” representation and something that “just appears” to be a representation./// UB keeps on ignoring the central tenet of my argument - that this whole "representation" business is not right. And then he throws the gauntlet based on flawed premises, again & again. What, according to you, does the codon TGA represent? What does the codon TAG represent? If you're going to say that of course they're stop codons representing STOP, think again. Here's a brand new study where they discovered extensive stop codon reassignments in microbes from a variety of habitats across the globe: http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/40048/title/When-Stop-Means-Go/ Apparently, this codon recoding is much more widespread that previously thought. So there you go. No codon is actually representing anything (although that's how we tend to talk about it because it's easier to grasp it that way). As I explained in post #56, all anticodon-bearing tRNAs will bind with a given codon - albeit with varying affinities. The one with the highest binding affinity displaces others. Thus one amino acid gets "selected" from the crowd. This is how a codon "codes" for an amino acid. The codon does not represent that amino acid in actuality. Importantly, this process is not physicochemically arbitrary as you state. Rather, it depends on the physical and chemical contraints within the system. So the same codon can produce a STOP signal in some cases and code for an amino acid in other cases when the physicochemical conditions change.Evolve
May 22, 2014
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As said the are 100s of amino acids but here we are focusing on coding amino acids.Dr JDD
May 22, 2014
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Dionisio, Depends what organisms you are referring to. I've discussed this before here but not many pick up on it. There are perhaps 23 coding amino acids, not in all organisms though. The 21st aa is selenocysteine, crucial in selenoproteins. It is encoded by a STOP codon that is alternatively translated to selenocysteine. Google it, it is fascinating. There is also pyrolysine and a variant of methionine I think. Am on phone so can't type much more about selenocysteine now but I think you would find it fascinating. JDDr JDD
May 22, 2014
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Actually I’ve read that now the number of amino acids is 21. A new one was discovered relatively recently, but apparently it hasn’t been registered in all sci literature.
Go to Wikipedia. There are hundreds of amino acids. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amino_acid
Amino acids are biologically important organic compounds composed of amine (-NH2) and carboxylic acid (-COOH) functional groups, along with a side-chain specific to each amino acid. The key elements of an amino acid are carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen, though other elements are found in the side-chains of certain amino acids. About 500 amino acids are known and can be classified in many ways. They can be classified according to the core structural functional groups' locations as alpha- (?-), beta- (?-), gamma- (?-) or delta- (?-) amino acids; other categories relate to polarity, pH level, and side-chain group type (aliphatic, acyclic, aromatic, containing hydroxyl or sulfur, etc.). In the form of proteins, amino acids comprise the second-largest component (water is the largest) of human muscles, cells and other tissues. Outside proteins, amino acids perform critical roles in processes such as neurotransmitter transport and biosynthesis. Amino acids having both the amine and the carboxylic acid groups attached to the first (alpha-) carbon atom have particular importance in biochemistry. They are known as 2-, alpha-, or ?-amino acids (generic formula H2NCHRCOOH in most cases where R is an organic substituent known as a "side-chain"); often the term "amino acid" is used to refer specifically to these. They include the 23 proteinogenic ("protein-building") amino acids, which combine into peptide chains ("polypeptides") to form the building-blocks of a vast array of proteins. These are all L-stereoisomers ("left-handed" isomers), although a few D-amino acids ("right-handed") occur in bacterial envelopes and some antibiotics. Twenty of the proteinogenic amino acids are encoded directly by triplet codons in the genetic code and are known as "standard" amino acids. The other two ("non-standard" or "non-canonical") are pyrrolysine (found in methanogenic organisms and other eukaryotes) and selenocysteine (present in many noneukaryotes as well as most eukaryotes). For example, 25 human proteins include selenocysteine (Sec) in their primary structure, and the structurally characterized enzymes (selenoenzymes) employ Sec as the catalytic moiety in their active sites. Pyrrolysine and selenocysteine are encoded via variant codons; for example, selenocysteine is encoded by stop codon and SECIS element. Codon–tRNA combinations not found in nature can also be used to "expand" the genetic code and create novel proteins known as alloproteins incorporating non-proteinogenic amino acids
jerry
May 22, 2014
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Joe, Actually I've read that now the number of amino acids is 21. A new one was discovered relatively recently, but apparently it hasn't been registered in all sci literature. Can someone confirm this? Thanks.Dionisio
May 22, 2014
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Dionisio @ 85
These may sound like stupid questions that reveal my ignorance: Can tRNA with attached amino acid molecules floating around get closer together and have their attached amino acids connect with other amino acids outside the translational mechanism? Has this been observed and documented?
Well, apparently the answers to my questions are: no and no. There's some information about that here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRNADionisio
May 22, 2014
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Evolve- The Nobel Prize website refutes you: DNA-RNA-Protein:
In the genetic code each of the 20 amino acids is represented by at least one codon. Most of the amino acids are coded for by more than one codon. This is referred to as the degeneracy of the code.
The following is an Oakland University website: Genetic Code Chapter 7- the second slide refutes you. And another- The Genetic Code: 61 triplet codons represent 20 amino acids; 3 triplet codons signify stop Stop being such an ignorant arse.Joe
May 22, 2014
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Evolve:
A DNA codon is not a representation of anything
So you deny the existence of representations? Or you deny the existence of representations in biological systems? If you admit the existence or representations in some contexts but also deny the existence of representations in other contexts, how do you decide? Scientifically.Mung
May 21, 2014
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The resurrection of Reciprocating Bill. Maybe there is a God.Mung
May 21, 2014
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Saying the DNA replication system and intra-cellular processes are "only chemistry" is akin to saying human thought is "only chemistry." The source of sonnets, symphonies, rockets, computers, skyscapers, and spaceships is "only chemistry." Uh OK. Evolve obviously does not understand what a coded system is and why that is germane to the topic at hand. Evolve is proof that you can’t fix stupid. Yawn.CentralScrutinizer
May 21, 2014
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These may sound like stupid questions that reveal my ignorance: Can tRNA with attached amino acid molecules floating around get closer together and have their attached amino acids connect with other amino acids outside the translational mechanism? Has this been observed and documented?Dionisio
May 21, 2014
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Does translation use mRNA, ribosomes, tRNA, amino acids, in order to connect amino acids into chains that become proteins? Input: mRNA, ribosomes, tRNA, amino acids Output: chained (connected) amino acids Can we say that translation is an interesting process? Does this process count as a chemical reaction? Is the origin of this process described in scientific literature? Where? Is that description accurate, complete, detailed?Dionisio
May 21, 2014
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Does translation (mRNA + ribosomes + tRNA) produce amino acid chains that later become proteins?Dionisio
May 21, 2014
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How do amino acids get synthesized? Here's just one example:
Casein synthesis is independently and additively related to individual essential amino acid supply. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24582441
Dionisio
May 21, 2014
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Evolve is proof that you can't fix stupid.CentralScrutinizer
May 21, 2014
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Evolve @ 73:
We get an amino acid from a DNA codon due to the chemistry happening at ambient conditions that follows physical laws.
And what, exactly, is the physical/chemical reaction equation by which a DNA codon is converted to an amino acid? Say for example the conversion of GCG to Alanine? And since chemical reactions are reversible, show how Alanine can be converted to GCG. For example, you could show the equation for combining 2 moles of Hydrogen and 1 mole of Oxygen to get 1 mole of water, the bonds formed, and whether heat is absorbed or given off and also show it is reversible. That is all described by physical and chemical laws, even to being reduced to a reaction equation. What is the chemical/physical reaction that converts GCG to Alanine and how does it reverse?Charles
May 21, 2014
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Information becomes functional when it is interpreted by any receiving party in accordance with a protocol previously established with the emitting party. Otherwise, the same material object that carries the immaterial information is just irrelevant matter, and the information it represents is completely unrecognized. Tchaikovsky's music for the classic 'Swan Lake' ballet is completely ignored by the swans swimming in any lake, no matter how loud you play it for them. What a shame!Dionisio
May 21, 2014
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[OT] RE: APPLE and semiotics In the following text (in Polish language) the word 'Apple' represents a technology brand name, not a fruit, in the mind of most readers, but specially in the mind of those who are familiar with the popular brand name, but may not know any English (unlikely among the younger population). Actually, probable the majority of the readers of this comment here in this blog now only understand the highlighted words (bold text) that correspond to product names ;-)
Podobne wpisy: 1.Apple prezentuje dwie nowe reklamy iPhone’a 5 Czasy, w których reklamy produktów firmy Apple zachwyca?y, niestety min??y.... 2.Nowe reklamy Apple – odpowied? na reklamy Microsoftu Apple przedstawi?o dzi? nowe reklamy ze swojej ju? kilkuletniej... 3.? Nowe reklamy Apple promuj?ce Siri W sieci pojawi?y si? dwie nowe reklamy promuj?ce Siri --... 4.Je?li nie masz iPhona, to nie masz iPhona – nowe reklamy Apple Apple opublikowa?o trzy nowe reklamy, które ??czy jedno stwierdzenie: Je?li... 5.Dwie nowe reklamy iPada – „Alive” i „Together” Apple opublikowa?o dwie nowe reklamy, na których demonstruj? przede wszystkim...
Dionisio
May 21, 2014
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Evolve, what is the physicochemical law that says a codon must be 3 nucleotides and not 2 or 4 or 7?RexTugwell
May 21, 2014
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For any onlookers who wishe to know what this is about: A representation is an arrangment of matter that can evoke a functional effect within a system, where the arrangement of the medium and the effect it evokes are physicochemically arbirtrary. Evolve claims that DNA codons are not representations. I challenged him to justify his claim in the only meaningful way he can. He was asked to point out the physical distinction between a codon and any other object he would agree is a genuine representation. He refused to do so, and has opted to dig in instead. Hell will now freeze over before he actually enagages any evidence.Upright BiPed
May 21, 2014
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A DNA codon is not a representation of anything but just a sequence of nucleotides.
Yes I am aware of of your claim. And you were challenged to support your claim by pointing out the physical distinction between a "genuine" representation and something that "just appears" to be a representation. You refused to do so. Instead, you chose to contrive various scenarios where a representation is taken out of its normal system of operation, or othwerwise destroyed, and then compare that non-functional representation to its still-functional counterpart. In short, you've tried to bullshit your way through it because you have no real conceptualization of the issues at hand. You will continue to do so, stepping up your defense along the way, because you have no interest in understanding the empirical evidence against your worldview.Upright BiPed
May 21, 2014
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May
21
21
2014
02:51 PM
2
02
51
PM
PDT
1 2 3 4 5

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