Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

ID Foundations, 14: “Islands” vs “Continents” of complex, specific function — a pivotal issue and debate

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In the current discussion on [Mis-]Representing Natural Selection, UD commenter Bruce David has posed a significant challenge:

A junkers Jumo 004 early Turbojet Engine (Courtesy, Wiki)

. . . it is not obvious that even with intelligence in the picture a major modification of a complex system is possible one small step at a time if there is a requirement that the system continue to function after each such step.

For example, consider a WWII fighter, say the P51 Mustang. Can you imagine any series of incremental changes that would transform it into a jet fighter, say the F80 and have the plane continue to function after each change? To transform a piston engine fighter in to a jet fighter requires multiple simultaneous changes for it to work–an entirely new type of engine, different engine placement, different location of the wings, different cockpit controls and dials, changes to the electrical system, different placement of the fuel tanks, new air intake systems, different materials to withstand the intense heat of the jet exhaust, etc., etc., etc. You can’t make these changes in a series of small steps and have a plane that works after each step, no matter how much intelligence is input into the process.

He then concludes:

Now both a P51 and an F80 are complex devices, but any living organism, from the simplest cell on up to a large multicellular plant or animal, is many orders of magnitude more complex than a fighter plane. If you believe that it is possible to transform a reptile with a bellows lung, solid bones and scales, say, into a bird with a circular flow lung, hollow bones, and feathers by a series of small incremental changes each of which not only results in a functioning organism, but a more “fit” one, then the burden of proof is squarely on your shoulders, because the idea is absurd on the face of it.

In responding, UD Contributor gpuccio clarifies:

consider that engineered modifications can be implemented in a complex organism while retaining the old functionality, and then the new plan can be activated when everything is ready. I am not saying that’s the way it was done, but that it is possible.

For instance, and just to stay simple, one or more new proteins could be implemented using duplicated, non translated genes as origin. Or segments of non coding DNA. That’s, indeed, very much part of some darwinian scenarios.

The difference with an ID scenario is that, once a gene is duplicated and inactivated, it becomes non visible to NS. So, intelligent causes can very well act on it without any problem, while pure randomness, mutations and drift, will be free to operate in neutral form, but will still have the whole wall of probabilistic barriers against them.

[U/d, Dec 30] He goes on to later add:

NS acts as negative selection to keep the already existing information. We see the results of that everywhere in the proteome: the same function is maintained in time and in different species, even if the primary sequence can vary in time because of neutral variation. So, negative NS conserves the existing function, and allow only neutral or quasi neutral variation. In that sense it works againstany emergence of completely new information from the existing one, even if it can tolerate some limites “tweaking” of what already exists (microevolution).

I suppose that darwinists, or at least some of them, are aware of that difficulty as soon as one tries to explain completely new information, such as a new basic protein domain. Not only the darwinian theory cannot explain it, it really works against it.

So, the duplicated gene mechanism is invoked.

The problem is that the duplicated gene, to be free to vary and to leave the original functional island, must be no more translated and no more functional. Indeed, that happens very early in the history of a duplicated gene, because many forma of variation will completely inactivate it as a functional ORF, as we can see all the time with pseudogenes.

So, one of the two:

a) either the duplicated gene remains functional and contributes to the reproduction, so that negative NS can preserve it. In that case, it cannot “move” to new unrelated forms of function.

b) or the duplicated gene immediately becomes non functional, and is free to vary.

The important point is that case a) is completely useless to the darwinian explanation.

Case b) allows free transitions, but they are no more visible to NS, at least not until a new functional ORF (with the necessary regulatory sites) is generated. IOWs, all variation from that point on becomes neutral by definition.

But neutral variation, while free of going anywhere, is indeed free of going anywhere. That means: feedom is accompanied by the huge rising of the probability barriers. As we know, finding a new protein domain by chance alone is exactly what ID has shown to be empirically impossible.

In her attempted rebuttal, contributor Dr Elizabeth Liddle remarks:

I don’t find Behe’s argument that each phylum has a radically different “kernel” very convincing. Sure, prokaryotic cells and eukaryotic cells are different, but, as I said, we have at least one theory (symbiosis) that might explain that. And in any case for non-sexually reproducing organisms, “speciation” is a poor term – what we must postulate is cloning populations that clone along with their symbiotic inclusions. Which is perfectly possible (indeed even we “inherit” parental gut flora).

I think you are making the mistake of assuming that because “phyla” is a term that refers not only to the earliest exemplars of each phylum but also to the entire lineage from each, that those earliest exemplars were as different from each other as we, for example, are from trees, or bacteria. It’s really important to be clear when we are talking longitudinally (adaptation over time) and when laterally (subdivisions of populations into separate lineages).

This was largely in response to Dr V J Torley’s listing of evidence:

What evidence [for the distinctness of main body plans and for abrupt origin of same in the fossil record], Elizabeth? Please have a look here:

http://www.darwinsdilemma.org/pdf/faq.pdf
http://www.darwinsdilemma.org/
http://www.nature.com/news/eni…..ria-1.9714
http://www.arn.org/blogs/index.php/literature

In “The Edge of Evolution”, Dr. Michael Behe argues that phyla were probably separately designed because each phylum has it own kernel that requires design. He also suggests that new orders (or families, or genera – he’s not yet sure which) are characterized by unique cell types, which he thinks must have been intelligently designed, because the number of protein factors in their gene regulatory network (about ten) well exceeds the number that might fall into place naturally (three).

This exchange pivots on the central issue: does complex, multi-part functionality come in easily accessible continents that can be spanned by an incrementally growing and branching tree, or does it normally come in isolated islands in beyond astronomical spaces dominated by seas of non-function, that the atomic level resources of our solar system (our effective universe) or of the observed cosmos as a whole cannot take more than a tiny sample of?

Let’s take the matter in steps of thought:

1 –> Complex, multi-part function depends on having several well-matched, correctly aligned and “wired together” parts that work together to carry out an overall task, i.e. we see apparently purposeful matching and organisation of multiple parts into a whole that carries out what seems to be a goal. The Junkers Jumo 004 Jet engine in the above image is a relevant case in point.

2 –> Ever since Wicken posed the following clip in 1979, this issue of wiring-diagram based complex functional organisation has been on the table as a characteristic feature of life forms that must be properly explained by any successful theory of the causal roots of life. Clip:

‘Organized’ systems are to be carefully distinguished from ‘ordered’ systems.  Neither kind of system is ‘random,’ but whereas ordered systems are generated according to simple algorithms [[i.e. “simple” force laws acting on objects starting from arbitrary and common- place initial conditions] and therefore lack complexity, organized systems must be assembled element by element according to an [[originally . . . ] external ‘wiring diagram’ with a high information content . . . Organization, then, is functional complexity and carries information. It is non-random by design or by selection, rather than by the a priori necessity of crystallographic ‘order.’ [[“The Generation of Complexity in Evolution: A Thermodynamic and Information-Theoretical Discussion,” Journal of Theoretical Biology, 77 (April 1979): p. 353, of pp. 349-65. (Emphases and notes added. Nb: “originally” is added to highlight that for self-replicating systems, the blue print can be built-in.)]

3 –> The question at stake in the thread excerpted from above, is whether there can be an effective, incremental culling-out based on competition for niches and thence reproductive success of sub-populations that will create ever more complex systems that will then appear to have been designed.

4 –> Of course, we must notice that the implication of this claim is that we are dealing with in effect a vast continent of possible functional forms that can be spanned by a gradually branching tree. That’s a big claim, and it needs to be warranted on observational evidence, or it becomes little more than wishful thinking and grand extrapolation in service to an a priori evolutionary materialistic scheme of thought.

5 –> I cases where the function in question has an irreducible core of necessary parts, it is often suggested that something that may have had another purpose may simply find itself duplicated or fall out of use, then fit in with a new use. “Simple.”

6 –> NOT. For, such a proposal faces a cluster of challenges highlighted earlier in this UD series as posed by Angus Menuge [oops!] for the case of the flagellum:

For a working [bacterial] flagellum to be built by exaptation, the five following conditions would all have to be met:

C1: Availability. Among the parts available for recruitment to form the flagellum, there would need to be ones capable of performing the highly specialized tasks of paddle, rotor, and motor, even though all of these items serve some other function or no function.

C2: Synchronization. The availability of these parts would have to be synchronized so that at some point, either individually or in combination, they are all available at the same time.

C3: Localization. The selected parts must all be made available at the same ‘construction site,’ perhaps not simultaneously but certainly at the time they are needed.

C4: Coordination. The parts must be coordinated in just the right way: even if all of the parts of a flagellum are available at the right time, it is clear that the majority of ways of assembling them will be non-functional or irrelevant.

C5: Interface compatibility. The parts must be mutually compatible, that is, ‘well-matched’ and capable of properly ‘interacting’: even if a paddle, rotor, and motor are put together in the right order, they also need to interface correctly.

( Agents Under Fire: Materialism and the Rationality of Science, pgs. 104-105 (Rowman & Littlefield, 2004). HT: ENV.)

8 –> The number of biologically relevant cases where C1 – 5 has been observed: ZERO.

9 –> What is coming out ever more clearly is this:

when a set of matching components must be arranged so they can work together to carry out a task or function, this strongly constrains both the choice of individual parts and how they must be arranged to fit together

A jigsaw puzzle is a good case in point.

So is a car engine — as anyone who has had to hunt down a specific, hard to find part will know.

So are the statements in a computer program — there was once a NASA rocket that veered off course on launch and had to be destroyed by triggering the self-destruct because of — I think it was — a misplaced comma.

The letters and words in this paragraph are like that too.

That’s why (at first, simple level) we can usually quite easily tell the difference between:

A: An orderly, periodic, meaninglessly repetitive sequence: FFFFFFFFFF . . .

B: Aperiodic, evidently random, equally meaningless text: y8ivgdfdihgdftrs . . .

C: Aperiodic, but recognisably meaningfully organised sequences of characters: such as this sequence of letters . . .

In short, to be meaningful or functional, a correct set of core components have to match and must be properly arranged, and while there may be some room to vary, it is not true that just any part popped in in any number of ways can fit in.

As a direct result, in our general experience, and observation, if the functional result is complex enough, the most likely cause is intelligent choice, or design.  

This has a consequence. For, this need for choosing and correctly arranging then hooking up correct, matching parts in a specific pattern implicitly rules out the vast majority of possibilities and leads to the concept of islands of function in a vast sea of possible but meaningless and/or non-functional configurations.

10 –> Consequently, the normal expectation is that complex, multi-part functionality will come in isolated islands. So also, those who wish to assert an “exception” for biological functions like the avian flow-through lung, will need to  empirically warrant their claims. Show us, in short.

11 –> And, to do so will require addressing the difficulty posed by Gould in his last book, in 2002:

. . . long term stasis following geologically abrupt origin of most fossil morphospecies, has always been recognized by professional paleontologists. [The Structure of Evolutionary Theory (2002), p. 752.]

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

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

12 –> In that context, the point raised by GP above, that

. . .  once a gene is duplicated and inactivated, it becomes non visible to NS. So, intelligent causes can very well act on it without any problem, while pure randomness, mutations and drift, will be free to operate in neutral form, but will still have the whole wall of probabilistic barriers against them.

. . . takes on multiplied force.

___________

In short, the islands of function issue — rhetorical brush-asides notwithstanding — is real, and it counts.  Let us see how the evolutionary materialism advocates will answer to it. END

PS: I am facing a security headache, so this post was completed on a Linux partition. Linux is looking better than ever, just now. as a main OS . . .

Comments
In other words, you will see: creatures with synapsid skulls; creatures with synasid skulls and mammalian jaws; creatures with synapsid heads, mammalian jaws and mammary glands; creatures with synapsid skulls, mammalian jaws, mammary glands and placentas. You will not see: Creatures with dynapsid skulls and mammary glands.
Please point to the passage in the theory of evolution that states evolution does not predict a population of organisms with dynapsid skulls and mammary glands. What is the genetic basis for such a claim?Joe
December 31, 2011
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“Smooth overlap” down a lineage does indeed lead to blending, but only longitudinally. What you will not see, if common descent is true, is overlap between lineages.
Yet only Creation predicted reproductive isolation. There isn't anything in the theory of evolution that prevents once diverged lines from converging. As for your list- yes I could make a nested hierarchy out of vehicles- it all depends on what characteristics I choose and how I choose to lay it out. For example we would classify it as "Transportation" There would be a set for vehicles with no engines. One for vehicles with engines and then ypu just keep adding as you go.Joe
December 31, 2011
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As such, if you now claim that its “search space” is qualitatively and quantitatively different (e.g. extremely sparse yet still connected) than human languages, the onus is on you to show how that is possible.
I think the onus has always been on science to demonstrate that evolution is possible, and I believe that's what science is doing. From the early days the focus was on missing links in the fossil record. There's a lot of blather about whales and bats and punctuation, but the simple fact is that most lineages have fossil sequences with smaller gaps than between dog breeds. We are now int genomics, where there are no fossils, but there is the opportunity to look at the actual carriers of variation, and the opportunity to map out the history of sequences. So the onus is accepted. It's the present and future of evolutionary biology.Petrushka
December 31, 2011
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The analogy fails because you can't predict the utility of a sequence independently from selection. There's been a whole lot of arguments regarding protein folding, but no one has addressed any of my arguments. First, design advocates haven't demonstrated that there is a better or faster way than chemistry to determine folds. Without that, design is about as practical as putting an airplane on a truck and moving it from one airport to the destination airport. It can be done, but why? Second, most of the evolution that Darwin wrote about and that people argue about takes place in regulatory networks, not in inventing new proteins. I haven't seen anyone even attempt to address the design of regulation any theory that is independent of selection.Petrushka
December 31, 2011
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The point is that a smooth blending leads to an overlap, which is indicative of a Venn diagram and not allowed by a nested hierarchy.
"Smooth overlap" down a lineage does indeed lead to blending, but only longitudinally. What you will not see, if common descent is true, is overlap between lineages. In other words, you will see: creatures with synapsid skulls; creatures with synasid skulls and mammalian jaws; creatures with synapsid heads, mammalian jaws and mammary glands; creatures with synapsid skulls, mammalian jaws, mammary glands and placentas. You will not see: Creatures with dynapsid skulls and mammary glands. There are no non-nested sets of characteristics. On the other hand, among vehicles you will see: Vehicles with wheels and no engines. Vehicles with engines and skis. Vehicles with skis and no engines. Vehicles with wings and wheels and engins. Vehicles with wings and skis and engines. Vehicles with wings and floats and engines Vehicles with wings and floats and no engines. Vehicles with wings and skis and no engines. Vehicles with floats and engines but no wings. See? Nothing is nested, everything overlaps.Elizabeth Liddle
December 31, 2011
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Petrushka:
Analogies are actually pretty useless, because there is nothing really analogous to chemistry.
Really? What do you call the following terms: genetic code, translation, transcription, messenger, error-correction, stop-frame. "Chemistry" has actually about as much to do with what is stored in DNA as silicon and electrons have to do with computer code. DNA is designed specifically to ensure that chemistry has as little to do with ordering as is physically possible. A crystal is all about chemistry. That's why there is virtually no information stored there, beyond the unit cell. DNA is coded information. It IS a language. It is harder to find attributes which it does NOT share with human languages than it is to find those it does share. Maybe you can come up with some. As such, if you now claim that its "search space" is qualitatively and quantitatively different (e.g. extremely sparse yet still connected) than human languages, the onus is on you to show how that is possible. In fact to show it is true of any language encoding lengthy instructions.SCheesman
December 31, 2011
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The problem with using jet engines etc, they are designed and built. Which is ID and creation. If I thought a Harley would just show up in my driveway, I wouldn't go out and buy one. After all, its been billions of years. The other problem with this is the hypothesis of 'evolution' is that it needs life to already be there. Even though many scientists do not how that could happen naturally. So the hypothesis is the evidence. You have a hypothesis 'evolution' that needs the start to life be from non creation.That is so , because that is the 'evolution'some scientists are promoting. No ID involved at all. That really is circular thinking and not scientific. The 'evolutionary' scientists have designed a method of research that, does not have away of detecting ID. So for even a loaf of bread, they would not be able to say, it was designed. But would try to figure out how it could happen naturally. And of course would end up saying they may never be able to prove it. ( just like they say about the origins of life) that is why 1 life comes from life 2 a human comes from humans 3 there is design in life Is there any scientific evidence, that does not support these 3 facts? Are there any almost humans, or ex-humans? These are facts just like Gravity is a fact. Even though the scientists do not know everything about it. So what is the point of debating, jet engines etc.? http://patternsofcreation.weebly.com/MrDunsapy
December 31, 2011
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It seems your post is going to be fairly popular for responses. So it's probably best if you address a contradiction in your arguments earlier rather than later. If we accept your argument #7 then it means that evolution can and will 'devolve' to get where ever it needs to be for the purpose of a benefit. But if we accept that then we are required to accept that cytochrome-c and other genetic clocks are entirely unreliable and can tell us nothing. In which case the argument to the strength of the phylogeny matches fails as it is either a mere fluke, or there's something a bit less than scientific going on. If you give up #7 you admit the validity of the "islands of function" argument. If you don't give up #7 you admit the invalidity of molecular clocks. As you've cast your arguments the two cannot stand together and you may want to clear that up before it becomes a thorn for you.Maus
December 31, 2011
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Why evolution does not expect a nested hierarchy based on characteristics- Evolution is said to be a gradual process without any direction except the direction of the surviving reproducers. A gradual process would lead to a nice smooth blending of characteristics as would be observed if all the alleged transitional populations were still alive- or with today's tech we should be able to animate what they should have been- The point is that a smooth blending leads to an overlap, which is indicative of a Venn diagram and not allowed by a nested hierarchy.Joe
December 31, 2011
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1. We know that natural selection happens.
We also know it happens not to do anything.
2. We know of no barrier that prevents microevolutionary changes due to NS and drift from accumulating over time, thereby becoming macroevolutionary change. (I’ll address the “islands of function” argument below).
There rare at least two- one is that two new protein-to-protein sites is te limit of stochastic processes and the other is no one knows what makes an organism what it is- and genetics does not say that an organism is the sum of its genome.
3. Evolutionary theory predicts that life should form a nested hierarchy. When biologists construct trees based on independent characters, they match to a stunning degree. In fact, the standard tree of life is known to an accuracy of 38 decimal places! See Theobald’s excellent analysis for details.
What is this alleged nested hierarchy based on? If you are using charactrers then it ain't based on descent, which means evolution wouldn't predict one. Also with evolution we would expect a Venn diagram with overlapping of characteristics during the transition phase. IOW you evos are totally clueless. As for theobald I can and have taken his "evidence" for common descent and used it to support a common design. Just admit it that you do not know what a nested hierachy is nor what it entails.Joe
December 31, 2011
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The whole purpose of a GA is to fing a solution. And the tweaks are defined/ constrained by the resources provided. And whoever is calling mutations a genetic algorithm doesn't know squat about algorithms.Joe
December 31, 2011
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Elizabeth:
Based on inheritance. A family tree is a tree, yes? A nested hierarchy.
Except a family tree is not a nested hierarchy. Any memebr of a family tree can belong to several different family trees. Can't have that in a nested hierarchy.
Sure, and “gained” means replicated down the lineage, and “lost” means ceases to be replicated down that lineage. So you get a nested hierarchy.
Do you even know what a nested hierarchy is? Linnean taxonomy is a nested hierarchy as the top set consists of and contains all lower sets. If you lose a characteristic then you lose containment. Dr Denton goes over all this in "Evolution: A Theory in Crisis"Joe
December 31, 2011
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No, the tweaks are not "trying to find a solution to a problem". The person who wrote the GA is trying to find a solution to a problem, but instead of making informed intelligent tweaks to a solution, she gets the GA to make uninformed, random ("blind") tweaks. Exactly like mutations in genetics. Which is why they are called Genetic Algorithms.Elizabeth Liddle
December 31, 2011
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Elizabeth:
The best analogue of course is a GA, in which the tweaks are random, and the best resulting performers are retained for further random tweaking.
In a GA all tweaks are trying to find a solution to a problem.Joe
December 31, 2011
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Yes Peter, I have a magic hammer and a magic ratchet. Ya see Pete mutations are the magic hammer and natural selection is a magic ratchet. And no I am not being serious but if I was an evolutionists you gall dang better believe I am serious, seriously.Joe
December 31, 2011
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The point of my comment was that new human technologies appear suddenly for the same reason major new features appear suddenly in the fossil record: because a gradual transition in most cases would make no sense, involving useless incipient features. You had to know that was my point, since that's the point of this whole post. The fact that VWs don't reproduce, or that we don't find the designer's tools lying around the fossils IS completely "periferal". And since you seem to be questioning the claim that new features generally do appear suddenly, here's a quote from George Gaylord Simpson in "The History of Life": "It is a feature of the known fossil record that most taxa appear abruptly...This phenomenon becomes more universal and more intense as the hierarchy of categories is ascended. Gaps among known species are sporadic and often small. Gaps among known orders, classes and phyla are systematic and almost always large." Finally, "I'm sorry I said I was amazed you could publish such garbage, but I still am" is not really an apology.Granville Sewell
December 31, 2011
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And a happy new year to you, kairosfocus! Good to see you again :)
On the just above, by overwhelming odds, sufficiently large random [non-purposive] changes to complex digit strings that have been duplicated will . . . damage them, reducing them to gibberish. (And encrypted codes — which only look like nonsense [which is actually part of their FUNCTION!] — require something else somewhere with the decoding algorithm and keys, to work.)
ONce you have a functional DNA sequence, i.e. a sequence that results in benefit to the organism that bears it, you are correct that most non-purposive changes will tend to damage them. As a result, offspring bearing such damaged sequences will leave few, if any, of their own offspring. Only those bearing undamaged versions will leave offspring. That is the basic principle of Natural Selection. This means that only the very rarer mutations that result in function that is approximately as efficient, or slightly better than the function conferred by the original sequence will be retained in the population. And those that perform the function slightly better will, by definition, become most prevalent. However, if we start with a non-functional sequence ("gibberish") if you like, one that does nothing to effect the organism's chances of reproduction, then a considerably greater proportion of possible mutations are likely to perform rather better than the original. All others will be retained, unless they actually do damage, in which case they will be lost. So Natural Selection also refers to filtering out of damaging mutations as well as the propagation of more beneficial ones. And any that turn out to have even a minor beneficial effect on the organism will tend to be retained in the population and become more prevalent. Would you agree that that is the principle of what people here tend to call "neo-Darwinism"? You then suggest a choice:
You have a choice, on the alternatives that have been suggested: a: incremental functional changes within an island of function, that can only reasonably explain microevo. b: duplication and taking off-line that then can vary but faces the full scope of the relevant config space, which is overwhelmingly non-functional.
I disagree that this is the "choice". I don't even think your choices reflect actuality. "Microevolution" is indeed "incremental functional changes" but I see no "islands" of function. I do see constraints, but no islands. And if a gene is duplicated and one of the copies becomes non-functional, it does not "face...the full scope of the relevant config space" if by that you mean every possible sequence. It faces a highly constrained "config space" where it is close (to continue the spatial imagery) to an "archipeligo" if you like of functional sequences. For instance, in a coding gene, many point mutations, which are common, will tend to give rise to a closely related protein, and minor changes to regulatory sequences may simply alter the expression pattern. So once you have a functional sequence, there are a great many ways for evolution to go - fine-tuning the sequence, so that a more efficient protein is produced; fine tuning of the regulatory sequences so that it is produced in more optimal contexts; duplication so that a vital function remains able to be performed by one copy, enabling the other to undergo possibly disabling mutations that stand between it and some other useful function. As for body plans 9if by that we mean multicellular organisms with cellular differentiation) the key seems to be hox genes. What evidence makes you think that the earliest hox genes would have required "10 – 100+ mn bits of novel, co-ordinated, functional information"?Elizabeth Liddle
December 31, 2011
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F/N: Please, it is a routine matter in multidimensional situations to use 2 or 3 d toy models for illustration. The real deal requires matrices and vectors of large size, maybe in some cases matrices with Laplace transform elements to get us into operations.kairosfocus
December 31, 2011
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C: The problem with fitness landscape type arguments is that -- as the OP highlights -- they implicitly imply that we are within an island of function. When we look at he overall configuration space for all the involved components, it is overwhelmingly obvious that the non-functional states absolutely dominate, so the issue is not to move around within an island of function, but to get to the beach of such an island. That is what the body plan origin challenge is about. When we see a switcheroo that begs the question of getting to the beach first before hill-climbing, that tells us that the real issue is being distracted from. Your evidence that chance variation plus natural selection in plausible initial conditions can account for novel body plans is _______________________, and this is backed up by the following observations of the relevant process in action at that level of body plan origination: ____________________ . (If you cannot readily and cogently fill in those blanks, you have not got a first level answer. And BTW, computer simulations that work within islands of function are not a good answer.) KFkairosfocus
December 31, 2011
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kairosfocus, even in the light of recent evolutionary literature, champignon's claims boil down to outdated propaganda found only in low level textbooks.inunison
December 31, 2011
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C: And your observational -- not inferred, and not censored by a priori evolutionary materialism -- case that NS can and does account for a novel body plan is ___________ ? KFkairosfocus
December 31, 2011
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Dr Liddle: First, happy new year when it comes. On the just above, by overwhelming odds, sufficiently large random [non-purposive] changes to complex digit strings that have been duplicated will . . . damage them, reducing them to gibberish. (And encrypted codes -- which only look like nonsense [which is actually part of their FUNCTION!] -- require something else somewhere with the decoding algorithm and keys, to work.) You have a choice, on the alternatives that have been suggested:
a: incremental functional changes within an island of function, that can only reasonably explain microevo. b: duplication and taking off-line that then can vary but faces the full scope of the relevant config space, which is overwhelmingly non-functional.
Neither of these seems a credible source for the sort of systematic, organised large scale functionally specific changes required to explain novel body plans. Starting of course with the first -- the functional organisation of the living self replicating cell needs to be explained on observational evidence. But also proceeding tot he range of body plans, which on evidence will require 10 - 100+ mn bits of novel, co-ordinated, functional information. Your explanation for such is __________, and your observational cases in support are _______________ . All best for the new year GEM of TKIkairosfocus
December 31, 2011
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And common descent does imply a nested hierarchy.
Based on what, exactly?
Based on inheritance. A family tree is a tree, yes? A nested hierarchy.
With evolution characteristics can be gained or lost-> it all depends on what works.
Sure, and "gained" means replicated down the lineage, and "lost" means ceases to be replicated down that lineage. So you get a nested hierarchy.
OTOH Linnean taxonomy is based on characteristics, has no regard for descent and was once used by Creationsits as evidence for a common design.
Sure. As I said, the nested hierarchy is an observation, and demands explanation. It's consistent with common design, but it wouldn't be evidence for common design, as common design could result in non-nested hierarchies, as human designs do. Common design is consistent with anything. However, common descent requires nested hierarchies.
IDs tend to produce artefacts that violate into nested hierarchies.
They can but don’t have. but again it all depends on what you are basing your nested hierarchy on.
To a limited extent, yes. But what is striking, as Linnaeus discovered, is how readily the characteristics of living things can be used to arrange organisms in a nested hierarchy - much more than would be expected by chance, say, or by human design. You get weakly nested hierarchies in human design, but far more violations because human designers are capable of transferring innovations from one design lineage into another. Evolution can't do that, so we are stuck with inefficient lungs even though far more efficient lungs exist in a parallel lineage. A human designer would be able to install bird lungs into mammals, just as they install car engines into aeroplanes, or lasers into barcode readers.
The point being is one can construct a nested hierarchy out of just about anything. It all depends on the criteria used.
Only to a limited extent before you encounter violations overlaps, unless the set of things you are arranging was in fact created by some system that tends to generate deeply nested hierarchies. Try constructing a phylogeny of vehicles and compare it with a phylogeny of, say, mammals, and you will see what I mean.Elizabeth Liddle
December 31, 2011
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PJ: Joe is being sarcastic. He is implying that the proposals of duplicate and then modify then bring back on line are as outlandish as hammering away at random at a Rolls Royce Merlin or Daimler-Benz DB 601 under the impression that by hammering and testing successively, you will get a Junkers Jumo 004 jet as a result, not simply a broken engine. KF
That doesn't really help. It's still silly. Variants of living things aren't made by damaging them. They are made by changes to the DNA sequence that governs their development. There isn't really a parallel with human manufacturing, unless it's the sequential tweaking of designs and testing prototypes, and retaining the ones that perform best, then tweaking those. Clearly that process of tweaking is planned though. The best analogue of course is a GA, in which the tweaks are random, and the best resulting performers are retained for further random tweaking. And of course it works, which is why people use them.Elizabeth Liddle
December 31, 2011
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Correction to third-from-last paragraph: The reason this is so misleading is that the actual fitness landscape has many, many dimensions. In order for evolution to get stuck on a fitness peak, it would have to be true that incremental movement in every one of those dimensions, and every possible combination of those dimensions, would lead to a decrease in fitness. This is much less likely than the simple 3-dimensional visualization would suggest.champignon
December 31, 2011
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In all this it once again is apparent to me its all just lines of reasoning. To assert small steps can be seen reasonably to explain macro results in biology and to assert that its unreasonable to see small steps can bring macro results in biology is still a exercise in a line of reasoning. There is no actual investigation demonstrating these steps took place. Id people by debunking certain plane types evolving innately from other plane types are engaged in the evolutionist reasoning claim as evidence or proof of evolution. if evolution is not true then its impossible there was ever good or close to good evidence from scientific investigation. therefore it could only be that confidence in evolution as always been from a line of reasoning and other lines of reasoning based on minor data. Creationists should aggressively demand if evolution is no further along then a untested hypothesis. A clue is this whole, steps can or cannot, lead from a mouse to a moose. Whether its reasonable or possible is unrelated to scientific investigation that it did occur. Its also not from scientific investigation that steps after steps can lead to macro results. Its all just bringing lines of reasoning to great conclusions of rejecting the bible and explaining biology origins. A great humbug of human knowledge.Robert Byers
December 31, 2011
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Bruce, There are some very good reasons to favor evolutionary theory over intelligent design: 1. We know that natural selection happens. 2. We know of no barrier that prevents microevolutionary changes due to NS and drift from accumulating over time, thereby becoming macroevolutionary change. (I'll address the "islands of function" argument below). 3. Evolutionary theory predicts that life should form a nested hierarchy. When biologists construct trees based on independent characters, they match to a stunning degree. In fact, the standard tree of life is known to an accuracy of 38 decimal places! See Theobald's excellent analysis for details. 4. Intelligent design does not predict a nested hierarchy at all. And contrary to what many ID proponents believe, "common design" does not lead to such a hierarchy. A designer could produce a single nested hierarchy only if he deliberately chose to make evolution appear true, or if he was somehow forced to do so. 5. The "islands of function" argument against natural selection assumes that there are unbridgeable gaps between most of the "islands". However, no ID proponent has been able to demonstrate this. 6. The extraordinary, many-decimal-place congruence between phylogenetic trees is evidence that the gaps aren't there. If they were actually there, then evolutionary theory's prediction of a single nested hierarchy wouldn't have panned out. 7. The "islands of function" metaphor and the very similar "peaks of a fitness landscape" metaphor are quite misleading. For one thing, they bring to mind a three-dimensional space where the x and y coordinates represent genetic changes and the z coordinate represents fitness. The idea is that evolution can get stuck on a peak, even if there is a higher peak in the vicinity, because incremental movement in the x-direction, or the y-direction, or any combination of the two, will result in a decrease of fitness. The reason this is so misleading is that the actual fitness landscape has many, many dimensions. In order for evolution to get stuck on a fitness peak, it would have to be true that incremental movement in every one of those dimensions, and every possible combination of those dimensions. This is much less likely than the simple 3-dimensional visualization would suggest. Also, the "fitness peak" metaphor invites us to imagine an unchanging landscape. In reality the landscape will change over time due to changes in the environment, evolutionary changes in other organisms, and even intra-species evolutionary changes. A population that's stuck on a fitness peak may no longer be stuck in a thousand years as the landscape changes underneath it. The take-home message is that evolutionary theory, including the idea that natural selection is responsible for macroevolutionary change, makes a prediction that is confirmed to dozens of decimal digits of accuracy. Intelligent design makes no such prediction. Evolutionary theory is the superior explanation of biological diversity.champignon
December 31, 2011
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PJ: Joe is being sarcastic. He is implying that the proposals of duplicate and then modify then bring back on line are as outlandish as hammering away at random at a Rolls Royce Merlin or Daimler-Benz DB 601 under the impression that by hammering and testing successively, you will get a Junkers Jumo 004 jet as a result, not simply a broken engine. KFkairosfocus
December 31, 2011
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BD: You make an excellent point. However, as a general point, the burden of warrant issue is not up for debate. EVERY scientific theory worth its salt must provide adequate empirical support: a base of solid empirical observations joined to explanations that are as far as possible factually adequate [and all the relevant facts should be on the table], coherent and elegantly simple -- neither ad hoc nor simplistic. Where, a priori ideological materialism or philosophical impositions that censor out otherwise reasonable explanations, do not constitute such adequate warrant. Where also claiming that science "must" explain naturalistically, is a case in point of ideological impositions. And, pretending that such ideological captivity of science is justifiable, even seeking to redefine science under that imposition, is obviously unjustifiable. As has been pointed out here at UD over and over and over, and as has been brushed aside, too often with personal attacks added (especially in the penumbra of hate -- beyond a certain point, that is the only apt word, as can easily be seen -- sites). And so we come back to the point raised by Philip Johnson in reply to Lewontin, in 1997:
For scientific materialists the materialism comes first; the science comes thereafter. [[Emphasis original] We might more accurately term them "materialists employing science." And if materialism is true, then some materialistic theory of evolution has to be true simply as a matter of logical deduction, regardless of the evidence. That theory will necessarily be at least roughly like neo-Darwinism, in that it will have to involve some combination of random changes and law-like processes capable of producing complicated organisms that (in Dawkins’ words) "give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose." . . . . The debate about creation and evolution is not deadlocked . . . Biblical literalism is not the issue. The issue is whether materialism and rationality are the same thing. Darwinism is based on an a priori commitment to materialism, not on a philosophically neutral assessment of the evidence. Separate the philosophy from the science, and the proud tower collapses. [[Emphasis added.] [[The Unraveling of Scientific Materialism, First Things, 77 (Nov. 1997), pp. 22 – 25.]
So, now, will we face this issue squarely? Is truth-seeking a serious objective of science, and of science education? And if so, then how can one justify imposition of ideological a priori materialism and putting it into the definition of science you want to teach, a la NSTA and NAS? If not, then will you frankly acknowledge this, and face the fact that science and science education then become simply another ideological turf war? One thing is sure, playing ideological games with science, the definition of science, and science education, then pretending to objectivity, is indefensible. If you are going to propose a materialistic school of thought, then say so, and move up one level, to comparative difficulties analysis at worldview levels. Then, give a balanced view of the different major views. If you fail to do that, you are being at minimum in gross neglect of a major duty of care, and are arguably indulging in false packaging and misleading labelling, of materialist ideology hiding in a box labelled "science." (That was in effect what we used to tell the rabid marxists of my youth, who often thought they were presenting a "scientific" analysis of society, its ills and the logical solution. When you dressed it up with matrix analysis, and did not bring out the issue of the over-determined set of equations, it could look very impressive indeed.) I think we need to do some serious reflection on that concern. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
December 31, 2011
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Joe, "Then you bang away on the duplicated engine until you have a functioning jet engine" Are you being serious? You just bang away at a piston engine until it becomes a jet engine? Or, do you leave the piston engine alone, as it of new use to a jet, and go off into another shed where with other materials - and a whole new design plan - create a jet engine?PeterJ
December 31, 2011
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