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Zachriel Goes Into Insane Denial Mode

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Zachriel says that “Darwin held that evolution would be frequently characterized by stasis.”  In support of this piece of blithering idiocy he quotes the following from Origin (4th ed):

the periods during which species have undergone modification, though long as measured in years, have probably been short in comparison with the periods during which they retain the same form.

I responded by placing Zach’s quote in context.  This is what Darwin actually said:

On this doctrine of the extermination of an infinitude of connecting links, between the living and extinct inhabitants of the world, and at each successive period between the extinct and still older species, why is not every geological formation charged with such links? Why does not every collection of fossil remains afford plain evidence of the gradation and mutation of the forms of life?  Although geological research has undoubtedly revealed the former existence of many links, bringing numerous forms of life much closer together, it does not yield the infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species required on the theory, and this is the most obvious of the many objections which may be urged against it. Why, again, do whole groups of allied species appear, though this appearance is often false, to have come in suddenly on the successive geological stages? I can answer these questions and objections only on the supposition that the geological record is far more imperfect than most geologists believe. The number of specimens in all our museums is absolutely as nothing compared with the countless generations of countless species which have certainly existed . . .Many species when once formed never undergo any further change but become extinct without leaving modified descendants; and the periods during which species have undergone modification, though long as measured by years, have probably been short in comparison with the periods during which they retained the same form

We can summarize what Darwin said in 3 steps:

Step 1:  What Darwin’s Theory Predicts

Darwin says that if his theory is correct there would have been an “extermination of an infinitude of connecting links, between the living and extinct inhabitants of the world, and at each successive period between the extinct and still older species.”

Further down he says his theory REQUIRES “infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species.”

In summary, Darwin predicted “rampant, albeit gradual, change affecting all lineages through time” just as Eldredge and Tatterall later said. See Niles Eldredge, Ian Tattersall, The Myths of Human Evolution

Earth to Zach.  Darwin held that evolution would be characterized generally by an “infinitude of connecting links,” and “infinitely many fine gradations.”  He most certainly did not say that the evolution would be characterized by stasis.  He said just exactly the opposite.  FAIL.

Step 2:  Darwin’s Problem.

Darwin candidly admitted that the fossil record does not reveal that “infinitude of connecting links” his theory predicts:

Why does not every collection of fossil remains afford plain evidence of the gradation and mutation of the forms of life? . . .it does not yield the infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species required on the theory, and this is the most obvious of the many objections which may be urged against it

Step 3:  Darwin Tries to Explain His Problem Away

After admitting his problem with the fossil record, Darwin immediately went on to try to explain the problem away.  And Zach’s little snippet comes from one of the arguments he makes about why the fossil record is incomplete at best and sometimes even deceptive, because it does not reveal what his theory – his word – “requires.”  With respect to bit clipped by Zach, Darwin says that the record might give a false impression of general stasis, not that his theory actually predicts general stasis.  This false impression is created, Darwin says, because some species that happened to leave fossils behind became extinct without leaving descendants.  Why does this leave a false impression?  Because an individual species that is not representative of the process of evolution as a whole as predicted by Darwin, by the sheer happenstance, became the one that left a fossil record.

In summary, Zach has used Darwin’s claim that certain fossils leave a FALSE impression of stasis to support Zach’s claim that Darwin actually predicted stasis generally.  FAIL

Zach is wrong and you don’t have to be an ID advocate to know it.  Eminent, world famous DARWINISTS disagree with Zach:

Darwin’s prediction of rampant, albeit gradual, change affecting all lineages through time is refuted. The record is there, and the record speaks for tremendous anatomical conservatism. Change in the manner Darwin expected is just not found in the fossil record.

Niles Eldredge, Ian Tattersall, The Myths of Human Evolution

You might think that would settle the matter.  But it did not.  After I laid all of this out Zach responded:

No. Darwin explains why the fossil record won’t encapsulate every transition. First, because fossilization is necessarily incomplete; second, because stasis is more typical than change, so change will be less likely to be preserved; and third, because new species will often form in small, isolated populations, and are therefore unlikely to leave fossils . . . Gould and Eldredge were often criticized for overstatement.

Good grief Zach do you have no shame?  Do you seriously believe you can get away with saying that Darwin believed stasis is more typical than change and not his own words when he wrote “infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species [are] required on the theory.”

You have descended into insane denial.

Which brings up an age old question.  If the evidence for modern evolutionary theory is so overwhelming, why do its advocates continue to lie and lie and lie when they argue for it?  If the truth were on their side one would think they would stick to it.  Or maybe the truth isn’t on their side and that is why Zach feels like he has to tell whoppers.  The problem is that while Zach is certainly a liar, he is not a very good one, because his lies, like this one, are so easily exposed.*

“What inclines me now to think you may be right in regarding it [evolution] as the central and radical lie in the whole web of falsehood that now governs our lives is not so much your arguments against it as the fanatical and twisted attitudes of its defenders.”  Lewis, C.S., Private letter (1951) to Captain Bernard Acworth

___________

*Maybe Zach is really a YEC fundamentalist agent provocateur shilling as a Darwinist?  If that is the case Zach, dial it back.  You are laying it on too thick, to the point where your act is no longer believable.

Comments
" but Darwin clearly posited that evolution included stasis." Nope, Darwin tried to pass the pattern off as that of an imperfect fossil record. "Paleontologists after Darwin had a lot of work to do, with many intermediate fossils to be found. Natural selection was difficult to observe, and phyletic gradualism became the predominant view. It was only after having filled in the big gaps that paleontologists started to look at smaller and smaller gaps. Some people forgot that Darwin had said that evolution would be characterized by stasis, and the fossil record would show granularity, and were therefore surprised by its rediscovery." Nope. Paleontologists were aware of what Darwin's view of what the fossil record should be and they didn't want to admit stasis because it contradicted Darwin's view. macroevolution.net “Eldredge (1995: 68) asserts paleontologists have hesitated to emphasize the observed pattern of stasis in the fossil record because it is inconsistent with neo-Darwinian theory:” “For the most part it has been paleontological reluctance to cross swords with Darwinian tradition that accounts for the failure to inject the empirical reality of stasis into the evolutionary picture.”Jack Jones
November 21, 2015
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Barry,
Sampling of the geological record does not show infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species REQUIRED on the theory.
What Darwin understood was that it was required that these species existed, not that they existed for a long time, or that they were fossilized.
The fossil record is an OBVIOUS objection to my theory,
If one assumes a uniform rate of morphological change.
because instead of showing the infinite fine gradations it shows sudden appearance and stasis.
Because the rate of morphological change is not constant.
Pete, it is clear to me that simple evidence and logic
Look, it's possible that you're correct - that Darwin did not think that the fossil record should indicate stasis (although I have no idea why you think that, since, you know... he clearly said it would if the rate of evolutionary change was variable), but - and this is important - none of the quotes from Darwin that you have provided support that claim in the least! You are consistently mis-reading this passage! Edit: Snipped cheap shotpeteFun
November 21, 2015
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Barry Arrington: I objected to your claim that Darwin believed that stasis was prevalent. He plainly did not. If stasis only rarely occurred, then there would be little or no visible anomaly in the fossil record to explain.Zachriel
November 21, 2015
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Pete
And as we have clarified many, many times, nothing in this or any other quoted passage has anything to do with what will be more typical in the fossil record
No, no, no. Not more typical in the fossil record. For the millionth time, everyone agrees that stasis is more typical in the fossil record. I've said that over and over. Can you not understand that the whole point of the passage is that Darwin is arguing that what is more typical in the fossil record is NOT a reflection of what is more typical with regard to the history of life. Sheesh.Barry Arrington
November 21, 2015
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Barry Arrington: Darwin Sampling of the geological record does not show infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species REQUIRED on the theory. The fossil record is an OBVIOUS objection to my theory, because instead of showing the infinite fine gradations it shows sudden appearance and stasis. Darwin: A simplistic, Barry Arrington-level view of my theory would indicate that species morphology should change continuously over time at a fairly constant rate. However, my theory actually presupposes that species tend to stay much the same for long periods time, and that speciation actually occurs in small sub-populations on geographic peripheries, which then overtake the parent population. The fossil record will, therefore, show granularity at the species level.Zachriel
November 21, 2015
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Pete,
Ah. Progress.
Yes, progress in your finally coming to understand what I've been saying all along. I had a feeling that if I worked with you long enough you would finally come around.Barry Arrington
November 21, 2015
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Zach @ 184: I have never stated that Darwin believed stasis never occurred. I objected to your claim that Darwin believed that stasis was prevalent. He plainly did not.Barry Arrington
November 21, 2015
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(1) Are the claims of stasis and infinitely many fine gradations mutually incompatible?
Barry:
No.
Ah. Progress.
The issue, as any charitable reader would have picked up on immediately, is what is “more typical.”
And as we have clarified many, many times, nothing in this or any other quoted passage has anything to do with what will be more typical in the fossil record, since as Darwin supposed, the rate of morphological change can be highly variable. If I have to get from NJ to CA, I have to get there in gradual and fine steps (an infinitude one might say) since there's no other way we know of to travel. But the speed at which I actually travel can drastically alter how that trip is perceived.
This is not hard to see, and it proves beyond the slightest doubt that your anti-ID bigotry
That's certainly one interpretation. The only reason an atheist lying Nazi mass-murdering insane denialists would disagree with me is because they are bigots! UDEditors: Edit, snipped cheap shot. peteFun
November 21, 2015
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Barry Arrington: Do you understand that we are not talking about whether Darwin believed stasis occurred? Of course he did. You vehemently objected to the statement “Darwin held that evolution would be frequently characterized by stasis." He clearly stated that it would @70. Your argument was that his theory required “infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species.” He explained the transitions wouldn't show in the fossil record because stasis was longer than periods of change, resulting in granularity. If stasis only rarely occurred, then there would be little or no visible anomaly to explain.Zachriel
November 21, 2015
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Darwin:
On this doctrine of the extermination of an infinitude of connecting links, between the living and extinct inhabitants of the world, and at each successive period between the extinct and still older species, why is not every geological formation charged with such links? Why does not every collection of fossil remains afford plain evidence of the gradation and mutation of the forms of life? . . . geological research . . . does not yield the infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species required on the theory, and this is the most obvious of the many objections which may be urged against it.
Pete
No, Darwin is saying that across all species, stasis may be much more common, since the rate of morphological change may be highly variable. If that is the case, random sampling (fossilization) will certainly show long periods of stasis.
Darwin: Sampling of the geological record does not show infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species REQUIRED on the theory. The fossil record is an OBVIOUS objection to my theory, because instead of showing the infinite fine gradations it shows sudden appearance and stasis. Pete: Darwin is saying that the fossil record shows exactly what his theory predicts it would show, sudden appearance and stasis. Pete, it is clear to me that simple evidence and logic cannot compete with your fundamentalist faith that your prophet (peace be upon him) must have been right about everything.Barry Arrington
November 21, 2015
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Pete:
This is getting bizarre.
Yes, it is. It really is a simple concept, but you don't seem to be able to get your head around it. I will try one more time. Do you understand that we are not talking about whether Darwin believed stasis occurred? Of course he did. The passage you and Zach keep quoting establishes that. We are talking about what he believed was GENERALLY occurring most of the time with respect to living things in general. Zach (and apparently you) are saying that Darwin believed that stasis is the prevailing condition among all living creatures generally. That is absurd. He most certainly did not, as I demonstrated above. You quote me:
Do you seriously believe you can get away with saying that Darwin believed stasis is more typical than change and not his own words when he wrote “infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species [are] required on the theory.”
And you ask:
(1) Are the claims of stasis and infinitely many fine gradations mutually incompatible?
No. The issue, as any charitable reader would have picked up on immediately, is what is "more typical." This is not hard to see, and it proves beyond the slightest doubt that your anti-ID bigotry forces you to read into the statement a contradiction that plainly is not there.
(2) what other charitable reading of what you wrote is possible?
The one of pointed out like 50 times.Barry Arrington
November 21, 2015
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Not that it matters to most Intelligent Design advocates, but Darwin clearly posited that evolution included stasis. Paleontologists after Darwin had a lot of work to do, with many intermediate fossils to be found. Natural selection was difficult to observe, and phyletic gradualism became the predominant view. It was only after having filled in the big gaps that paleontologists started to look at smaller and smaller gaps. Some people forgot that Darwin had said that evolution would be characterized by stasis, and the fossil record would show granularity, and were therefore surprised by its rediscovery. Science doesn't progress in a straight line. There's a lot that Darwin didn't understand, and a lot has been discovered since, but the fundamentals of his theory still form the foundation of modern biology.Zachriel
November 21, 2015
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"PROBLEMS OF EVOLUTION": 10. FOSSIL RECORD 1. Not Darwinian 1. Not gradualistic The fossil record fails to reflect the gradual change one would expect if Darwinian evolution was true (Mayr, 2001, p.14). Two features of the fossil record that are particularly inconsistent with gradualism are sudden appearance fully formed, and stasis (Gould, 1977a, p.14). Yet for over a century and a half paleontologists had been "brain-washed, by the gradualistic uniformitarianism of Charles Lyell." (Ager, 1993, p.xi). Darwin himself had been greatly influenced by Lyell's gradualistic uniformitarianism (Davidheiser, 1969, pp.60-61) and based his theory of evolution by the "accumulation of successive slight favourable variations" on it (Ager, 1993, p.129). This caused paleontologists to publicly claim that the fossil record supports the Darwinian interpretation of the fossil record, while privately knowing all along that it does not (Eldredge, 1985, p.144)!" http://members.iinet.net.au/~sejones/PoE/pe10fsrc.htmlJack Jones
November 21, 2015
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asauber: Meteorology isn’t a theory. True. Substitute modern meteorological theory, that weather patterns are due to physical forces, such as pressure differentials, which predicts hot and cold, wet and dry. EugeneS: One may talk a lot without providing explanations to something you acknowledge as a problem. But he did provide an explanation for stasis. It also answers the claim in the original thread about whether Darwin said that "evolution would be frequently characterized by stasis". Zachriel: Darwin explains why the fossil record won’t encapsulate every transition. First, because fossilization is necessarily incomplete; second, (…) ; and third, because new species will often form in small, isolated populations, and are therefore unlikely to leave fossils . . . Box: It looks like that Darwin is all over the place, continually contradicting himself. There's no contradiction. It refers to large populations which have heterogeneous subpopulations. Barry Arrington: For the 50th time in this thread, I never said that Darwin believed he could not “deal” with stasis. What you claimed was that “Darwin held that evolution would be frequently characterized by stasis" was wrong. However, it's clear that Darwin thought that evolution would often result in stasis.Zachriel
November 21, 2015
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Pete "But who are you going to believe about what Darwin thought? The UoA? Or… Darwin?" Why do you think there is a dichotomy? I accept that Mr Arrington's interpretation of what Darwin said was right in the words he quoted. I have quoted Darwin's words myself and shown that he did not believe in saltation. I quoted the paper of Gould and Eldredge where they showed that they accepted evolution by leaps and Darwin adopting Natura non facit saltum that he was rejecting evolution by leaps. I believe that Mr Arrington's interpretation of what Darwin said was right. I only quoted others to show that Mr Arrington was correct in his interpretation of what Darwin said. Darwin got his idea of uniformity of rate of change (gradualism) from the geologist Lyell and he applied it to biology . If you look at everything that Darwin said and then look at what has been taught for what Darwin believed then it is not controversial what Mr Arrington is saying. If Darwin had believed in creatures in stasis for millions of years was part of his hypothesis then he would have to have believed that evolution happened in leaps, but he rejected saltationism. Furthermore he got his idea of uniformity of rate(gradualism) from the geologist Lyell and applied that idea to Biology. For some reason, some want to revise the past.Jack Jones
November 21, 2015
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It may be said that natural selection is daily and hourly scrutinizing, throughout the world, every variation, even the slightest; rejecting that which is bad, preserving and adding up all that is good; silently and insensibly working, wherever and whenever opportunity offers, at the improvement of each organic being in relation to its organic and inorganic conditions of life.
When Darwin is dealing with the fossil record he recognizes that if this is true we would predict that the fossil record would show an “infinitude”
Not if the rate of morphological change is highly varying. Consider the force a river exerts on a dam - the force is always present, but the rate of movement of the fluid changes drastically when the dam breaks. Do you think that the infinitude of gradations Darwin is talking about in the passage under consideration is in the fossils? It is not. Darwin's theory predicts that intermediate forms existed, but not that they were all fossilized, and one reason they may not be fossilized is if the rate of morphological change is highly variable. Is that why you are failing to comprehend this passage? Edit: Clarified post. SorrypeteFun
November 21, 2015
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Jack Jones
“Gradualism (UNIFORMITY OF RATE), EMBRACED BY DARWIN; later a key assumption of the Modern Synthesis.” Discovering Evolution: II. Before Darwin Biology Learning Center, University Of Arizona
Whether Darwin was an evolutionary gradualist (in the sense of constant rate) is exactly what is up for debate. Gould and Eldredge seem to think so (and whatever site you've found agrees with them; I personally think they were incorrect and trying to put distance between Punc Eq and 'classical thought') but Darwin's own words make it clear that he was not:
Species of different genera and classes have not changed at the same rate, or in the same degree.
and the periods during which species have undergone modification, though long as measured by years, have probably been short in comparison with the periods during which they retained the same form
But who are you going to believe about what Darwin thought? The UoA? Or... Darwin?peteFun
November 21, 2015
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Perhaps if you had read me charitably
This is getting bizzarre. You wrote:
Good grief Zach do you have no shame? Do you seriously believe you can get away with saying that Darwin believed stasis is more typical than change and not his own words when he wrote “infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species [are] required on the theory.”
So here's two straightforward questions - 1) Are the claims of stasis and infinitely many fine gradations mutually incompatible? and 2) what other charitable reading of what you wrote is possible? I'm genuinely curious. Because it's not like that's the only time you've harped on this point:
Further down he says his theory REQUIRES “infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species.”
Earth to Zach. Darwin held that evolution would be characterized generally by an “infinitude of connecting links,” and “infinitely many fine gradations.” He most certainly did not say that the evolution would be characterized by stasis. He said just exactly the opposite. FAIL.
(1) It is correct that Darwin held that evolution would be characterized generally by an “infinitude of connecting links,” and “infinitely many fine gradations.” And (2) Darwin believed “stasis is more typical than change.”
When Darwin is dealing with the fossil record he recognizes that if this is true we would predict that the fossil record would show an “infinitude” of intermediate species that would allow us to track the progression of evolution in exquisite detail. Darwin, like everyone else who has ever studied the fossil record, knew that this is exactly the opposite of what the record reveals, which is sudden appearance and stasis.
But as Zach pointed out in post 9(!) and I pointed out in 82 and 157, a curvy line has as many gradations as a straight line. Which you admit in 159. Nothing about the language you are quoting indicates that Darwin thought morphological change occurred at a constant rate, though you seem intent on insisting it does.
Read the lengthy passage I quoted from Origins again and tell me which part of “though this appearance is often false,” you do not understand.
I believe Darwin is referring to the fact that in actuality many gradations have occured, but they occur quickly in geological time-frames, as the rest of the paragraph makes clear. Which: A) makes sense given the remainder of the passage, and B) is clearly what he meant. What do you think he meant? And is my interpretation of the passage INSANE DENIALISM? Does it make me a NAZI? Or, you know, could you possibly admit that alternative readings (to your tortured, frankly bizarre reading) are possible?
IOW, Darwin is saying that capturing a given species in stasis does not falsify his prediction that *generally* everything is changing all the time.
No, Darwin is saying that across all species, stasis may be much more common, since the rate of morphological change may be highly variable. If that is the case, random sampling (fossilization) will certainly show long periods of stasis. For the same reason that if I drive at a constant velocity across the country for 6 days, random sampling of my position will indicate a continuous line, but if I hang out at one end for 3 days then fly to the other end, random sampling over those 6 days will shos two distinct clusters. That is clearly the intent of the passage. A simple google search for that particular passage will turn up many experts who agree with that interpretation. Though you seem to have dropped that part of your interrogation.
you would not have been confused. Instead, you assumed that one of those “intelligent design creationists” cannot possibly be right about anything and finding the error is the only possible response. And when you found no error you invented one I did not make.
It's certainly possible that I prejudged you. Perhaps that fits into a nice narrative that you tell yourself? It must go something like "Those evil lying insane denialist Darwinist Nazi's are so... BIASED AGAINST ME!" Alternatively it could be that you are mistaken, and lack the self-awareness to understand that. I leave it up to your readers to decide.peteFun
November 21, 2015
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Daniel King:
Why are you here?
A number of reasons. A few, in no particular order: 1. I like exposing anti-ID "critics" who claim to have science and reason on their side for the self-deluded frauds they are. 2. I like to see what others are doing to develop arguments for intelligent design or to defend against the so-called critics. 3. I want to be there in case someone ever manages to address the issues raised by the supporters of ID.Mung
November 20, 2015
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Mung:
Off as usual Zachriel. But I’m not here to feed the trolls.
Why are you here?Daniel King
November 20, 2015
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"evolutionary stasis" Put evolutionary before stasis and then the stasis is meant to become evidence for their faith. Orwellian indeed, Like claiming "War is Peace"Jack Jones
November 20, 2015
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Zachriel: Meteorology, a theory that both predicts hot and cold, wet and dry. Off as usual Zachriel. But I'm not here to feed the trolls.Mung
November 20, 2015
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Barry To the onlooker it's clear what these Darwin dudes are doing we are right back to the contention about the meaning of things... stasis in evolutionary terms don't really means stasis. We have been here before. The only take home you can get from this is that WD400 is a liar. Not so much to you but to himself. That is the worst kind of liar you can get. Gradualism aka Darwinism is NOT stasis....Andre
November 20, 2015
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Will have to add emphasis because of the denialism of those arguing against Mr Arrington, Me and others. "Gradualism (UNIFORMITY OF RATE), EMBRACED BY DARWIN; later a key assumption of the Modern Synthesis." Discovering Evolution: II. Before Darwin Biology Learning Center, University Of Arizona _____________________________________________________ "PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM– QUESTIONS EVOLUTIONARY UNIFORMITY OF RATE. " Darwinism and Wallace Lecture - 3 Biology Learning Center, University Of ArizonaJack Jones
November 20, 2015
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WD400, what is your point with this? Is this your way of arguing that Barry is wrong and that Darwin's theory predicts stasis to be the rule?Box
November 20, 2015
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That may be the definition used in literature, but it's not what is mean by evolutionary stasis -- it means periods of time in which lineages don't change much. Mutation and finite population sizes mean the default setting for any lineage is change. Evolutionary stasis can only be achieved through the action of natural selection.wd400
November 20, 2015
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WD, Get a dictionary: Stasis: " a state or condition in which there is no action." Substitute the definition for the word in what you wrote and you get: "a state or condition in which there is no action requires constant action." And then you act surprised when I point out the contradiction.Barry Arrington
November 20, 2015
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Perhaps if no one understands your argument, you should try phrasing your claims more carefully.
Look in the mirror Pete. Perhaps if you had read me charitably you would not have been confused. Instead, you assumed that one of those “intelligent design creationists” cannot possibly be right about anything and finding the error is the only possible response. And when you found no error you invented one I did not make.
I can find absolutely no evidence in anything quoted in the OP that suggests that Darwin thought “apparent stasis” is an artifact of the record
Good grief. Read the lengthy passage I quoted from Origins again and tell me which part of “though this appearance is often false,” you do not understand.
This is so clearly, emphatically not a statement about the fossil record, but about actual real-living species, that I can’t imagine how it could be read any other way.
Again, for the 5,687th time, Darwin understood that stasis occurs with respect to individual species. And what he is saying here is that – with respect to any given species – when it is caught in the fossil record it is very likely it will be caught at a time when the species is in stasis. And therefore his "prediction of rampant, albeit gradual, change affecting all lineages through time" is not falsified when that happens. IOW, Darwin is saying that capturing a given species in stasis does not falsify his prediction that *generally* everything is changing all the time. Again, this is not the least bit controversial. The reading I am advancing has been the standard reading for 157 years. Pete, you’ve succumbed to the same error that Zach succumbed to. Try to read the whole passage and see if you can come back with an interpretation that synthesizes it. Avoid the temptation to pull out snippets and rest your conclusion on them.Barry Arrington
November 20, 2015
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And standing still requires constant movement.
H'uh? Did you even read the comment? I'm not sure I could have made it clearer.wd400
November 20, 2015
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Barry,
Good grief Zach do you have no shame? Do you seriously believe you can get away with saying that Darwin believed stasis is more typical than change and not his own words when he wrote “infinitely many fine gradations between past and present species [are] required on the theory.”
So... According to your most recent post, NOTHING is incompatible between these two claims? It isn't the case that "infinitely many fine gradations" is incompatible with long periods of stasis? This is extremely befuddling, since the above sentence certainly gives the impression that you believe those two claims are incoherent. Perhaps if no one understands your argument, you should try phrasing your claims more carefully.
Zach says Darwin believed (1). He is wrong. There can be little doubt that Darwin believed (2), and in fact explaining why the appearance of sudden appearance and stasis is an artifact of the record rather than what generally happens, is the whole point of the passage we are discussing.
I can find absolutely no evidence in anything quoted in the OP that suggests that Darwin thought "apparent stasis" is an artifact of the record. In fact, he clearly states
and the periods during which species have undergone modification, though long as measured by years, have probably been short in comparison with the periods during which they retained the same form
This is so clearly, emphatically not a statement about the fossil record, but about actual real-living species, that I can't imagine how it could be read any other way. - Forgive my absence for the remainder of the weekend. Sick kid.peteFun
November 20, 2015
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