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
Champignon, This is why these debates become a waste of time. You can say something a thousand times and someone will pretend you didn't. Evolution is variation and natural selection.
Meanwhile, the nested hierarchy by itself confirms evolutionary theory to an astounding degree of precision
It is impossible to derive so much as a single case of variation and selection from a nested hierarchy. You cannot confirm variation and selection without variation and selection. If someone told you different, I hope you didn't pay them for it. Now that I've corrected you, why do you keep repeating it?ScottAndrews2
January 12, 2012
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CCU: Well you would want evidence of intervention. Your argument applies to everything of course – we could accept an intelligent creator of matter, then claim that models of planet formation are worthless because god could have done it, or anything else for that matter – the same for erosion, if god created matter and energy then why exclude god from the creation of the grand canyon? I think you have caught, even if in denial, the essence of ID here. ID is all about evidence of intervention. The same evidence that applies to OOL applies to further evolution. It's as simple as that. Look at the fundamental argument of the origin of protein domains: half of them were generated in the very first phases of life, being present in LUCA. As there is no evidence of any precursor of LUCA, those domains can well have been generated at OOL. But the other half was generated after. In the course of natural history of evolution. Up to very recent evolutionary times. So, if the same informational problem has to be solved for protein domains (and other functional information) at OOL, and after, then if a valid explanation is proposed (sich as ID), then it applies both to OOL and to further evolution. Again, it's a simple as that.gpuccio
January 12, 2012
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The nested hierarchy observed is not an expected outcome of accumulations of random mutations. Gradual modifications would produce a blending of defining characteristics and nested hierarchies cannot have that. The only nested hierarchy the ToE expects is one based on something called "all life"- see Eric B Knox, "The use of hierarchies as organizational models in systematics", Biological Journal of the Linnean Society (1998), 63: 1–49 Also front-loading does not require unexpressed genetic information.Joe
January 12, 2012
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Scott, The FAQ lists two "predictions" of ID, neither of which is actually entailed by ID, and neither of which falsifies evolutionary theory. Meanwhile, the nested hierarchy by itself confirms evolutionary theory to an astounding degree of precision, not to mention the other predictions made by the theory. ID is pretty thin gruel.champignon
January 12, 2012
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Genomicus, My reply is here.champignon
January 12, 2012
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Genomicus,
The front-loading hypothesis also explains the nested hierarchy observed in nucleic/amino acid sequences, thus it cannot be said that undirected evolution is the only framework that explains it.
Not true. Front-loading fails to explain the nested hierarchy, for two main reasons: 1. Unlike evolution, front-loading is not restricted to gradual changes. If massive changes occur (which is possible under front-loading), then the pattern of the nested hierarchy will be destroyed. The nested hierarchy is not merely an indicator of descent with modification; it's an indicator of descent with gradual modification. 2. Under front-loading, nothing prevents major identical changes from happening in unrelated species. This will also destroy the nested hierarchy. In a nutshell, front-loading has the same problem as common design: It is compatible with the nested hierarchy only if you make the additional ad hoc assumption that the designer acts in a way that is indistinguishable from evolution. Anyway, front-loading is a non-starter because it cannot explain how unexpressed genetic information is protected from mutation for eons until the moment comes when it is finally "turned on".champignon
January 12, 2012
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First things first: Intelligent Design is Not anti-evolution Ya see if living organisms were designed then the inference would be they were also designed to evolve. And taht means that stochastic processes would be only a very minor player relegated to breaking things.
Why? When we design artificial things to evolve we don’t relegate stochastic processes to the role of breaking things because that’s not what we observe happening in nature.
When we design artificial things to evolve they evolve by design, not via stochastic processes. And yes we observe stochastic processes breaking things in nature. Whe we design a car the car operates as it is designed to operate. OTOH if living organisms arose from non-living matter via stochastic processes then the inderence would be stochastic processes are the sole dominion of evolution.
Why? What if the universe was designed so that life could arise from non life and then evolve (with the aid of stochastic processes)?
That is not related to what I said.Joe
January 12, 2012
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Scott, if ID is not designed to explain anything, how can it be a theory?
Perhaps you should read the FAQ. I had simply assumed from your participation in so many discussions that you were better acquainted with it.ScottAndrews2
January 12, 2012
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GCU: Pardon, but again you are pummelling strawmen. The video in effect claimed that FSCO/I and thus complex specifically functional multi-part body plans, can arise by UNINTELLIGENT processes of chance variation and "natural" selection. We therefore showed how the video in fact -- inadvertently -- demonstrated processes of intelligent design and goal-directed intelligent selection, as an instance of an intelligently designed Genetic Algorithm. Over the years, we have seen many claimed cases of the one that in fact turn out to be the other. Instead of playing with imaginary software worlds, why not show us, on empirical evidence how the avian lung -- a good example of FSCO/I and arguably IC --came to be as a matter of fact, or at least with good empirically evidenced models to support it realistically. If not that case, why not propose and discuss something comparable, maybe origin of flight in bats or the echolocation system of bats and whales -- kindly include how there are such close genetic parallels involved -- or the like. You will see this is not OOL, and it is not minor adaptation of an existing body plan. it is a claimed case of an island of specific and complex functional organisation. Our point is that body plans, even if they originated by means of genetic variations and niche selection per superior reproductive success across generations, would enfold intelligent information injection, indeed sophisticated injection of information, whether at an initial stage or incrementally makes but little difference. If Darwinian macroevo on chance variations and blind natural selection is the best and best evidenced explanation of the origin of body plans, kindly provide cases in point. Not of finch beak length variation or cichlid colour schemes and body shapes, or moth colouration or variation across species borders similar to circumpolar gulls etc, but of origin of significant and unprecedented novel body structures. Incremental adaptation of an existing functional body plan is one thing, origin of a body plan de novo is another, once we look at the requisites of complex, integrated multipart functional structures. The video did show that [within limits and constraints on implied features that would have to be done in a real world case . . . ], but turned out to be a case of unrecognised intelligent design. Kindly, show us more than that. Surely, you did not intend to substantiate the point that he only empirically warranted source of such structures is intelligent design? Supposedly, that is our point, not yours. Or, did your side score an own goal, again? GEM of TKIkairosfocus
January 12, 2012
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F/N (as they say around here) the distinction between origins and evolution is absolutely vital. Evolution (the thing ID is not anti, remember) is about changes in populations of replicators. How replicators arose is irrelevant to evolution. The fact that these replicators are doing their business inside a designed computer is irrelevant, as is the fact that this is not biological material. The processes operating upon them are fair simulations of birth, death, mutation and selection. The scope of these processes in nature cannot be proven categorically, but the OP uses the metaphor of 'search space', and another analogy from 'hard engineering'. Yet my link is irrelevant because it addresses complexity in precisely such non-biological space?Chas D
January 12, 2012
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Interesting, if predictable, responses. "ID is not anti-evolution"; the video illustrates an aspect of said evolution, yet it is somehow strawmannish, or misdirection, or a response to a challenge that was not raised, or it's about smashed clocks and no-one-ever-said-smashed-clocks or otherwise Just Plain Wrong. Ho hum. It demonstrates an example of functional complexity arising by navigating a 'space' by random mutation and directional selection. That is directly pertinent to the 'islands of function' challenge. It addresses only the issue it addresses - not body plans or lungs or wings or abiogenesis or anything else. Anyone who doubts the random nature of the mutation process is free to download the code. If it turns out not to be random, they are free to amend it to be so. What is the 'FSCO/I' profile of this system - one we can examine and digitise - rather than the sequence of evolution of one we cannot - such as the avian lung? Why - preferably in a short response not peppered with irrelevancies about Plato and the horrors of materialism - is it not a valid example of incremental increase in both complexity and the appearance of purposeful design and IC, using only the ID-conceded functions of mutation and selection?Chas D
January 12, 2012
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Scott, if ID is not designed to explain anything, how can it be a theory?Elizabeth Liddle
January 12, 2012
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Attempting to poke holes in one theory by making it out to be a different theory, then pointing out that it doesn’t explain what it is not designed to explain is the epitome of a straw man argument.
Excellent. So you'll never ask how ID explains the formation of this that or the other thing again, right? And if someone else does I'll quote you.ScottAndrews2
January 12, 2012
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H'mm: could darwinist responders unbeg the questions in the context of say the origin of the avian lung (or if you insist on a reptilian ancestor, in that case), with empirical data in play. KF PS: As Joe repeatedly highlights, Design Theory does not reject evolution, common descent or even universal common descent, the question is where did the functional info and organisation come from, in light of what we know empirically and analytically about the source of such FSCO/I.kairosfocus
January 12, 2012
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F/N: Let us all remember that in the end, cellular machines and components are in the main built out of proteins, which are assembled step by step based on coded digital instructions as strings. These then fold and fit key-lock style to do the work of the cell. All of the gears, rods, backing plates, connectors, axles etc in the simulation would have to come through that process. That of course poses enormous challenges for the initialisation of a first self-replicating metabolic entity that can do that. But also -- I here answer yet another strawman, this challenge holds for novel structures and systems to move to more and more involved multi-part functionally specific complex entities, the problem of step by step building a string on algorithmic, prescriptive coded information that then folds and knots itself to make the right set of matching components that self assemble to give machinery, is a huge and unanswered question. More questions for those touting the video to un-beg for us. KFkairosfocus
January 12, 2012
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GCU: Pardon but that is an ad hominem not a response on some rather specific and technical merits. Has it ever dawned on you that the GA stock darwinist talking point is inherently and deeply flawed for reasons as outlined above? So, to point out the fallacies involved will require a bit of listing of the same basic problems? Problems that you do not answer. I have given some rather specific reasons why the video erects strawmen and begs questions. Kindly, answer them on the merits, or stand exposed as simply trying to dismiss what you cannot answer. In particular, you need to account for the steps from one body plan to the next, for the reproduction issue, and for the imposition of targetting. Those aere easy to glide over and beg in a simulation, but these are real world constraints when you have to try the same or similar in reality not in make believe digital worlds. As well, the problem with the convenient exclusion of the first body plan from the discussion of evolution can be aptly shown by asking what happens when we cut a tree off from its root. So, can a tree grow without its root? In short, the whole theory of darwin-style macroevolution pivots on a major begged question. The same problem of accounting for information and organisation for specified complexity then comes out as we look at body plan after body plan. THE SAME QUESTION. I must now turn to a painful matter. You echo a slanderous misrepresentation that is now circulating in the penumbra of hostile sites, in the teeth of my very explicit statement -- there are several further onward links at the original page, in the F/N -- as follows:
*F/N, Jan 10: For those who need documentation on the key Social Darwinism roots of Hitler's thought, I suggest that such examine the Weikart lecture and a discussion of a key clip from Mein Kampf that demonstrated the Darwinist-Haeckelian frame of thought, that beyond reasonable doubt strongly shaped Hitler’s thinking, speech and behaviour. In addition, such may wish to look at a previous post in this blog, here, that ties in remarks by Darwin in his The Descent of man, chs 5 - 7 [yes, Darwin, too, was demonstrably a Social Darwinist . . . ], and highlights H G Wells' warnings in his popular novel, War of the Worlds, 1897. In short, the danger should have been recognised and averted generations before the Holocaust, and -- given known turnabout tactic New Atheist talking points here -- no, this does not constitute putting "all the world's ills" on Darwinist shoulders. A fairer understanding of the Christian gospel would recognise that the Christian Faith has always held that our ills largely stem from our common challenge that we are all finite, fallible, morally fallen and too often ill-willed, walking in rebellious alienation from our common Father, that then leads to alienation within our hearts and quarreling, abuse, oppression and worse between us and our brothers, sisters and cousins who were equally made in God's image with us. Hence the gospel highlights our common need for recognition of our moral plight, repentance, forgiveness and moral-spiritual transformation through the Christ of God; which, far too often, includes those of us who name the name of Jesus on our lips but fail to walk -- however stumblingly -- in his way of discipleship and loving service . . .
It should be clear that I have always pointed out that ALL of us face a common moral dilemma. But that problem gets compounded in some eras when there are dominant ideas that push people to think in terms of "might makes right," or the equivalent, i.e. ideas that imply, invite or even outright promote radical relativism and/or amoral nihilism. Let me speak for record -- I will not tolerate a hijacking of this thread on this matter -- as a matter of well documented historical fact, eugenics and social darwinism have been such ideas that have wreaked havoc well within living memory. Both of these ideas saw themselves -- and were widely accepted by leading scientists, medical men, lawyers and law makers, educators, statesmen and even clergymen -- as "scientific," which then led to acceptance of policies and practices that were horrendous. Not only did these ideas present themselves as scientific, they were beyond doubt rooted in darwinist, evolutionary thought. Darwin himself saw the way that Saxons [Englishmen], Irish [Celts} and Scots related historically as an expression of natural selection, he saw the conflict between the Ottomans and Europe in terms of natural selection, and he predicted that within centuries the more advanced races would wipe out the less advanced races of man, all in letters and/or in his Descent of Man chs 5 - 7. Galton, his cousin, explicitly built the eugenics movement on evolutionary foundations, and Darwin's family was associated with it for decades. You have doubtless seen the motto "Eugenics is the self-direction of human evolution." What happened is that in Germany, we had a perfect political and economic storm, that brought to power men who took these ideas to the "logical" conclusion, and set out to wipe out the Poles as the first inferiors to be removed, and the Jews as tending to pollute and dilute the strength of the Aryan race. So, Hitler set out as a political messiah to rescue his nation, as he saw it the hope for progress to a higher level of civilisation. And, on the premise that might indeed made right, and that subhumans as he saw it were life unworthy of living. All of these are directly traceable to the HISTORICAL influence of evolutionary materialism acting throughthe widespread acceptance of Darwinist theories of origins of life and man, which same philosophy/ideology is routinely imposed on origins science today. So, as others have seen ever since Plato in The Laws, Bk X 2350 years ago, I highlighted a key moral hazard that needs to be faced and addressed, not dismissed or ignored, lest it come back to bite us again. In highlighting the crucial amorality and cognitive incoherence of the worldview of evolutionary materialism, I have in particular pointed out how this philosophy -- which has quite plainly been imposed on origins science in our day -- is self referentially incoherent and has in it no foundational IS that can objectively ground OUGHT. Those are actually pretty well established and acknowledged points, as can be seen from Haldane and Provine:
HALDANE, 1927:"It seems to me immensely unlikely that mind is a mere by-product of matter. For if my mental processes are determined wholly by the motions of atoms in my brain I have no reason to suppose that my beliefs are true. They may be sound chemically, but that does not make them sound logically. And hence I have no reason for supposing my brain to be composed of atoms." [["When I am dead," in Possible Worlds: And Other Essays [1927], Chatto and Windus: London, 1932, reprint, p.209.] PROVINE, 1998: Naturalistic evolution has clear consequences that Charles Darwin understood perfectly. 1) No gods worth having exist; 2) no life after death exists; 3) no ultimate foundation for ethics exists; 4) no ultimate meaning in life exists; and 5) human free will is nonexistent . . . . [U Tenn Darwin Day address]
If you don't like the logical and moral consequences of evolutionary materialism as acknowledged by these two darwinists, then maybe you should reconsider its privileged status in today's world of thought. I think you need to go back to the slander and smear sites that are spreading a polarising and smearing misrepresentation and correct. If you have any regard to truth or fairness. But, all of this is tangential. The focus for this thread is the question of FSCO/I and islands or continents of function. A very specific challenge is on the table at 55 just above -- the origin of the avian lung as an illustration of how in the biological world we supposedly have continents of function that can be arrived at incrementally. Kindly answer it. Fair is fair, someone proposed a counter and I have promptly answered it. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
January 12, 2012
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If life was designed by intelligent agents it makes little sense to insist on excluding them from any further developments.
Well you would want evidence of intervention. Your argument applies to everything of course - we could accept an intelligent creator of matter, then claim that models of planet formation are worthless because god could have done it, or anything else for that matter - the same for erosion, if god created matter and energy then why exclude god from the creation of the grand canyon? The fact is that God can do anything, the world could have been created yesterday, but made to appear ancient, in which case all science that relates to the formation of things is wrong. When we deal with scientific explanations we are dealing with a methodology that attempts to explain observations in terms of things that can be observed and measured. Saying 'but god could have done it just like that as well' add nothing - even if it is true!
But the origin of life points to intelligent design. That’s the very reason you wish to keep the discussions separate.
The fact is that, as I have said before, evolutionary theory is a framework for explaining what we observe about life over generations. It is not a framework for explaining processes by which matter can form self replicating entities. Atomic theory explains atoms, not where they came from. Plate tectonic theory explains continental drift, it doesn't explain how the planet formed, etc etc. Attempting to poke holes in one theory by making it out to be a different theory, then pointing out that it doesn't explain what it is not designed to explain is the epitome of a straw man argument.GCUGreyArea
January 12, 2012
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GCU- ID is not anti-evolution.
That seems to depend on who you ask.
Ya see if living organisms were designed then the inference would be they were also designed to evolve. And taht means that stochastic processes would be only a very minor player relegated to breaking things.
Why? When we design artificial things to evolve we don't relegate stochastic processes to the role of breaking things because that's not what we observe happening in nature.
OTOH if living organisms arose from non-living matter via stochastic processes then the inderence would be stochastic processes are the sole dominion of evolution.
Why? What if the universe was designed so that life could arise from non life and then evolve (with the aid of stochastic processes)?GCUGreyArea
January 12, 2012
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Abiogenesis and evolution are not the same thing. But the origin of life points to intelligent design. That's the very reason you wish to keep the discussions separate. If life was designed by intelligent agents it makes little sense to insist on excluding them from any further developments. You wouldn't allow an intelligent cause for bricks, beams, and nails and then insist on omitting that same cause from explanations of buildings made from those things. Even a die-hard believer in darwinian evolution cannot separate the process from the system required for the process to occur. It's like claiming that the existence of computers with processors and instruction sets and the abundance of software that runs on them are a coincidence, two unrelated phenomena.ScottAndrews2
January 12, 2012
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GCU- ID is not anti-evolution. And if the theory of evolution can't or doesn't say anuything abot the origin of life tehn it has nothing to say about any subsequent evolution because the two are directly linked. Ya see if living organisms were designed then the inference would be they were also designed to evolve. And taht means that stochastic processes would be only a very minor player relegated to breaking things. OTOH if living organisms arose from non-living matter via stochastic processes then the inderence would be stochastic processes are the sole dominion of evolution. The video is a strawman because it never identifies the IDist who says tha about a watch.Joe
January 12, 2012
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This seems to be your stock response to discussions over evolution - Any simulation, model or argument that demonstrates how the mechanisms of evolution can generate complexity is dismissed because it doesn't explain the origin of the replicator. This is a whopping strawman KF. Evolution is not a theory on the origin of life and it never has been, which is why it is compatible with the hypothesis of intelligently created life (and why plenty of evolutionary scientists are theists) The video is not a strawman because it addresses questions of evolution. Your response is a strawman because it switches evolution out and swaps it for bio-genesis, and then attacks what it has created before standing astride the straw corpse declaring victory and condemning all who do not accept the victory as abusers and amoral sources of evil in society.GCUGreyArea
January 12, 2012
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ChasD: Ah yes; yet another distractive, inadvertently question-begging strawman that will look like a proof to the eye of Darwinist faith. Sadly fallacious from beginning to end, with an emphasis on question-begging and distractors from pivotal gaps in the chain of reasoning: 1 --> Abiogenesis, responding to the dismissive prefatory remarks, is the basis for the tree of life, and needs to account for the origin of digital code based self-replication in cell based life, which requires a replicator joined to a source of energy and parts and an assembler, i.e. we have metabolism plus self-replication. So, without a solid, empirically warranted answer to this question, Darwinian macroevolution -- not just an extrapolation from microevo with minor changes to an already functional thing -- has no place to begin. First big begged lot of questions. (For just one instance, where did the required computer language and execution machinery used in the simulation come from: design.) 2 --> The presentation just rhetorically waves this away and appeals to the prejudices that design thinkers are ignorant, stupid, insane or wicked creationists in cheap tuxedos and enemies of science. 3 --> So, we must first account for a vNSR joined to a metabolic system that integrates with raw materials in the environment. The resulting specified complexity involves an irreducibly complex von Neumann self-replicator [known genome size of order 100,000 bits], and code that involves a metabolic entity that harvests energy and raw materials from the environment and uses it to generate components and carry out the processes of life. So, the scope of genome required, and the machines to carry out the instructions, are major begged questions. 4 --> Observe next, the implicit intelligent control and goal-directedness of the genetic algorithm being used, and how the issues of availability of matching and appropriate parts, as well as how they are to fuse together in correct ways and not block themselves by fusing in improper ways, is begged -- not to mention the issue of isolation from interference from the environment -- a key reason for encapsulation of cells. (Have you ever had to deal with the question of matching gears to one another, or screw and nut threads? Or of what happens if the proverbial monkey wrench gets dropped or thrown into the works? Where do the gears -- inherently 3-d objects get their central axes and concentric, precise and accurate matching gearing cut? How are they pinned to axles that are accurately parallel and just the right spacing for meshing? How do pendulums get pinned and have just the right length to oscillate to the right time? How do gears get pinned to pendulums without interference and changing timing? How is the variation of period of a pendulum with scope of swing adjusted for? What about compensating for alignment relative to gravity, and for temperature variation -- thermal coefficient of linear, area and bulk expansion, and questions of internal alignment of crystals etc? Etc Etc? All of this precision engineering, manufacture, placing and alignment, spontaneously? Horology requires a LOT of precision engineering to work!) 5 --> So, the questions in Mengue's C1 - 5 from the OP are being comprehensively begged. 6 --> Next, as usual ever since the original ChasD, we have artificial selection standing in for real world differential reproduction, i.e. we have intelligent not blind selection on existing function, AND we have in fact ducked the huge question Paley highlights in Ch II of his Natural Theology -- the provision of mechanisms and organisation for self-replication. 7 --> It is worth contrasting the real Paley, Ch II, to the strawman Paley that is attacked in the video:
Suppose, in the next place, that the person who found the watch should after some time discover that, in addition to all the properties which he had hitherto observed in it, it possessed the unexpected property of producing in the course of its movement another watch like itself -- the thing is conceivable; that it contained within it a mechanism, a system of parts -- a mold, for instance, or a complex adjustment of lathes, baffles, and other tools -- evidently and separately calculated for this purpose . . . . The first effect would be to increase his admiration of the contrivance, and his conviction of the consummate skill of the contriver. Whether he regarded the object of the contrivance, the distinct apparatus, the intricate, yet in many parts intelligible mechanism by which it was carried on, he would perceive in this new observation nothing but an additional reason for doing what he had already done -- for referring the construction of the watch to design and to supreme art . . . . He would reflect, that though the watch before him were, in some sense, the maker of the watch, which, was fabricated in the course of its movements, yet it was in a very different sense from that in which a carpenter, for instance, is the maker of a chair -- the author of its contrivance, the cause of the relation of its parts to their use . . .
8 --> In short, the vNSR is being assumed into place by the writer of the GA, not evolving out of the provided parts. 9 --> But, without having the function of genetic self-replication in place, evolution by variation of a genetic code is impossible. 10 --> So, the whole simulation -- an imagination world exercise not subject tot the real constraints of reality, so apt to be misleading unless empirically validated -- rests on a cluster of begged questions, compounded by strawman arguments and scapegoating. ______________ FAIL. Now, kindly answer to the challenge in the original post and as summed up again with a bit of expansion just above at 55. Let's get concrete: account for the avian lung, not on just so stories and interpolations on fossils, but on empirical observation with step by step evidence. Or, failing that, provide a similar case in point. No more strawman arguments, thank you. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
January 12, 2012
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Nice strawman with a load of question-begging thown in. 1- I would like a reference to the IDists who says if we smash a watch, put in a box and shake, if it does not reform into a watch that proves ID 2- Reproduction- that needs to be explained before you can use it 3- Mutation- still waiting on how it was determined that all mutations are random in any sense of the word.Joe
January 12, 2012
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Readers of an engineering-based persuasion may be interested in this. It may indeed have already been discussed and dismissed in these very pages. But I think it provides an excellent counter-argument to the assertive position as to what mutation and selection can and cannot do vis a vis complexity and function. It is not biological evolution, but the use of (some of) the principles of biological evolution to take a 'box of parts' (the junkyard) and generate, by directional selection ("a-bit-better" being more likely to survive than "a-bit-worse") a complex arrangement (the '747') that, if one were presented with the end result, one would consider to be both designed and IC. The role of selection is not to achieve a distant goal, but to filter the current pool. Survivors from that filter get to pass on the characteristics that favoured their survival. There is a real path of incremental improvement, but sampling any particular state, one would be at a loss to explain how it got there, absent a full audit. In biological evolution. of course, a detail of the process (death) precludes the retention of that audit.Chas D
January 12, 2012
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doesn’t not mean
Nnnnggghhh. Read: "Does not mean".Chas D
January 11, 2012
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At the same time, to reason that what men have believed for 150 years cannot be wrong because that would mean they were deluded or deceived seems off.
That wasn't my reasoning. Of course they could be wrong. I was defending them as people of integrity with genuine reasons to reach the consensus conclusions that they do. I understand those reasons, in some depth, and I do not think there is something they are not telling you. This consensus includes people of faith as well as atheists, right and left-wingers, fools and knaves and geniuses and ...
Scientists being led to group-think and cling to ideologically motivated conclusions extrapolated from other instances of scientists being led to group-think and clinging to ideologically motivated conclusions? That’s a stretch.
I think you misunderstand the scientific mindset. There is no glory or intellectual interest in propping up old theories IF a better fit to data comes along. Scientists are curious about what is. They are as skeptical as hell, of any and every claim. But gradually, through that filter, a body of theory is lashed together. It can be overturned by inconvenient facts. Scientists can be wrong - take the many who believed in special creation pre-Darwin for example. But that doesn't not mean that all scientists are always wrong, and all consensus ripe for overturning. This Cornelius Hunter-style tripe - "Science is a religion and it matters" or "ideologically motivated" - are just desperate attempts to find a rationalisation as to why a large group of pretty smart people who study these phenomena day in day out don't have a problem with it, while 50% of average joes think it's bullshit. That might sound arrogant, but it is a subject that needs to be studied before you can have a meaningful critique. That doesn't mean you will automatically become "one of us". I disagree on numerous aspects of biology with others. But I know why they think what they think, and I credit them as rational, not deluded. It is as likely that I am wrong as that they are, and I learn from the exchange. Fitting in with the consensus is not the reason papers get published. Darwin overthrew a consensus, so did Kimura, so did Peter Mitchell, so did any number of scientists. They did not do so by moaning about ideological entrenchment. They provided cogent arguments backed up by data.Chas D
January 11, 2012
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Onlookers (and participants): This thread of discussion has now been going on for almost two weeks. Running through it to see the highlights, it is again quite clear that the advocates of the idea that small, incremental chance changes rewarded by reproductive success in ecological niches can, do, and did cumulatively account for body plans from the simple to the complex have yet to show a concrete, step by step observed case in point that the proposed mechanism to account for such vast biodiversity does occur. What we find instead, is a consistent pattern of extrapolation and dismissal of something we do routinely observe: when a complex functional whole depends on a properly arranged, organised and wired together set of components parts, that very information-rich functional dependence sharply constrains the number of acceptable parts and how they can be fitted together, relative to the raw number of ways that these or similar parts could be arranged without such constraints. In short, the phenomenon of cases in point E within "islands of function," T, in much larger spaces of possible -- but overwhelmingly non-functional arrangements, W, is a real-world, commonplace (and even dominant) observation once we deal with complex, multi-part, functionally organised systems. As a direct consequence of this pattern of isolated constraint, it is generally not the case that chance selection and/or arrangement or rearrangement of many parts will yield a functional whole. the reason for this can be seen from Mengue's criteria C1 - 5, made with respect to the bacterial flagellum (a biological case), which appears in the OP at point 6, and which does not ever seem to have been seriously considered by objectors to the OP, above:
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.)
Point 9 of the OP then adds the onward issue:
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.
Point 10 then concludes:
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.
You will note the invited case study of a significant body plan innovation, which was simply not seriously addressed. Here is Wiki, speaking against interest:
Avian lungs do not have alveoli as mammalian lungs do, they have Faveolar lungs. They contain millions of tiny passages known as para-bronchi, connected at both ends by the dorsobronchi. The airflow through the avian lung always travels in the same direction – posterior to anterior. This is in contrast to the mammalian system, in which the direction of airflow in the lung is tidal, reversing between inhalation and exhalation. By utilizing a unidirectional flow of air, avian lungs are able to extract a greater concentration of oxygen from inhaled air. Birds are thus equipped to fly at altitudes at which mammals would succumb to hypoxia. This also allows them to sustain a higher metabolic rate than an equivalent weight mammal.[15] The lungs of birds are relatively small, but are connected to 8-9 air sacs that extend through much of the body, and are in turn connected to air spaces within the bones. The air sacs are smooth-walled, and do not themselves contribute much to respiration, but they do help to maintain the airflow through the lungs as air is forced through them by the movement of the ribs and flight muscles.[16] Because of the complexity of the system, misunderstanding is common and it is incorrectly believed that it takes two breathing cycles for air to pass entirely through a bird's respiratory system. Air is not stored in either the posterior or anterior sacs between respiration cycles, air moves continuously from the posterior to the anterior of the lungs throughout respiration. This type of lung construction is called a circulatory lung, as distinct from the bellows lung possessed by other animals . . .
Now, how do we move, in incremental, chance-driven mutational, non-purposeful steps that are all functional and advantageous in some ecological niche or other, from a bellows to a circulatory lung with one way flow? (In parallel with all the other "adaptations" to make a functional, flying bird?) Let's see what evolution pages (per the magic of Google) has to say on the matter; as a typical example of how the arguments are actually typically made on the evidence we do see:
The hypothesis that modern birds are the descendants of a group of small dinosaurs, called dromaeosaurs, part of a bipedal group called theropods, has become increasingly accepted by the scientific community, to the point where it is very close to being a scientific consensus . . . . There is, however, one aspect of bird physiology that has been a puzzle since the theory of dinosaur origins of birds was proposed. The fact is that birds have a respiratory (breathing) system unlike that of almost all other tetrapods (tetrapods include all mammals, reptiles, amphibians and birds). The puzzle centres on the fact that birds seem to have a breathing system different from all other living tetrapods without any antecedent - this is a situation that creationists have, unsurprisingly, attempted to exploit. Now, however, there is strong evidence that theropod dinosaurs that predated the emergence of birds in the record had pulmonary systems like modern bird breathing systems. This means that the flow-through lung is not unique to birds, but was present in theropod dinosaurs before the evolution and emergence of birds . . . . All tetrapods (mammals, reptiles, amphibians, crocodilians) apart from birds have a pair of lungs that operate on the bellows principle . . . . A recent paper in Nature (11), shows that theropod dinosaurs have vertebrae pneumatized in a way that is very similar to modern birds. The authors have investigated the well preserved fossil of a theropod dinosaur called Majungatholus atopus and have found that the vertebrae possess very close similaritiies in pneumaticity compared with an extant bird (the sarus crane) . . . . this recent study has shown that non-avian theropod dinosaurs had the necessary anatomy for flow-through ventilation similar to extant birds and, that in the evolution of the flow-through system, the tail end air sacs likely developed before those at the head end of the trunk . . . . Carl Wieland of 'Answers in Genesis' has written a response to this paper (13), that is generally reasonably restrained, but utterly fallacious. He correctly points out that this analysis does not, in itself, resolve the issue of the steps by which a bellows type lung evolved into the avian flow-through system. His discussion is, however fundamentally flawed in one important respect: his main objection to the evolution of an avian system from a bellows system is that he cannot see how it could happen. This of course is the old canard (a term that is peculiarly well suited to this subject!) of the argument from personal incredulity. Carl cannot conceive of a pathway by which the avian lung could evolve from a bellows arrangement, so of course, in his mind, it cannot have happened. This was the original design argument used by William Paley. It was intellectual gruel then, and it is intellectual gruel now . . . . The fact is that not only is the evidence very strong that birds evolved from theropod dinosaurs, but there is no objection 'in principle' to development of the avian respiratory system.
You can't make this up. Here, you have an evolutionary materialism apologist, attempting to address the origin of the avian lung system, and all he can do is point out that well, there is another set of animals that seem to have a similar lung, and those nasty Creationists are simply too skeptical, even though we have not shown the required steps. After, all, we can add, the only properly "scientific" way to look at the origin, is to assume that it MUST somehow have come about by "natural causes," not "supernatural" ones. So, if we can point out another animal that maybe had a similar lung and which we can argue is ancestral, the problem can be set aside. Now, let us assume for a moment that the relevant dinosaurs did have flow-through lungs. Has that answered, how such lungs came to be, step by step? Nope. It has just displaced the unanswered question, and the hope is that by polarising the atmosphere by setting up and knocking over "supernaturalist" and "creationist" strawmen, and pointing to how maybe birds evolved from the dinosaurs the question that the source of complex functionally specific organisation of body plan components and of associated information can be shelved. But, the obvious question is whether such FSCO/I -- on actual observational evidence -- can most reasonably be explained on blind chance and necessity. Or, is intelligence the most plausible explanation for such FSCO/I, for many reasons as can be seen from here on. No wonder, the Darwinism Refuted site underscores, citing Denton:
The important thing is that the reptile lung, with its bidirectional air flow, could not have evolved into the bird lung with its unidirectional flow, because it is not possible for there to have been an intermediate model between them. In order for a creature to live, it has to keep breathing, and a reversal of the structure of its lungs with a change of design would inevitably end in death. According to evolution, this change must happen gradually over millions of years, whereas a creature whose lungs do not work will die within a few minutes. Molecular biologist Michael Denton, from the University of Otago in New Zealand, states that it is impossible to give an evolutionary account of the avian lung:
Just how such an utterly different respiratory system could have evolved gradually from the standard vertebrate design is fantastically difficult to envisage, especially bearing in mind that the maintenance of respiratory function is absolutely vital to the life of an organism to the extent that the slightest malfunction leads to death within minutes. Just as the feather cannot function as an organ of flight until the hooks and barbules are coadapted to fit together perfectly, so the avian lung cannot function as an organ of respiration until the parabronchi system which permeates it and the air sac system which guarantees the parabronchi their air supply are both highly developed and able to function together in a perfectly integrated manner.112
In brief, the passage from a terrestrial lung to an avian lung is impossible, because an intermediate form would serve no purpose . . . . reptiles have a diaphragm-type respiratory system, whereas birds have an abdominal air sac system instead of a diaphragm. These different structures also make any evolution between the two lung types impossible, as John Ruben, an acknowledged authority in the field of respiratory physiology, observes in the following passage:
The earliest stages in the derivation of the avian abdominal air sac system from a diaphragm-ventilating ancestor would have necessitated selection for a diaphragmatic hernia in taxa transitional between theropods and birds. Such a debilitating condition would have immediately compromised the entire pulmonary ventilatory apparatus and seems unlikely to have been of any selective advantage.113
Another interesting structural design of the avian lung which defies evolution is the fact that it is never empty of air, and thus never in danger of collapse. Michael Denton explains the position:
Just how such a different respiratory system could have evolved gradually from the standard vertebrate design without some sort of direction is, again, very difficult to envisage, especially bearing in mind that the maintenance of respiratory function is absolutely vital to the life of the organism. Moreover, the unique function and form of the avian lung necessitates a number of additional unique adaptations during avian development. As H. R. Dunker, one of the world's authorities in this field, explains, because first, the avian lung is fixed rigidly to the body wall and cannot therefore expand in volume and, second, because of the small diameter of the lung capillaries and the resulting high surface tension of any liquid within them, the avian lung cannot be inflated out of a collapsed state as happens in all other vertebrates after birth. The air capillaries are never collapsed as are the alveoli of other vertebrate species; rather, as they grow into the lung tissue, the parabronchi are from the beginning open tubes filled with either air or fluid.114
Parabronchial tubes, which enable air to circulate in the right direction in birds' lungs. Each of these tubes is just 0.5 mm. in diameter. In other words, the passages in birds' lungs are so narrow that the air sacs inside their lungs cannot fill with air and empty again, as with land-dwelling creatures.
So, the precise core challenge is to find exactly the functional intermediate steps accessible to incremental chance based changes that are the very stuff of the Darwinian tree of life. And, recall, the claimed link between birds and reptiles, Archaeopteryx, was the very first headlined "found" link, in 1861. One thing is certain, what we are seeing here is a consistent pattern of question-begging ducking and diversion of the central issue. So, we need to put the point where the IOSE discussion begins [I have updated slightly to account for an observed, ridicule based dismissal attempt at Catholic Forums], up front, centre:
In recent decades, some educators, public policy advocates -- and, most importantly, some scientists -- through adopting methodological naturalism, have thought and taught that science can only work properly if it is understood and defined in terms of a search for “natural causes” or "material causes." In the words of Harvard Biology professor Richard Lewontin (to be further discussed below):
. . . It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated . . . [["Billions and billions of demons," NYRB, Jan 1997.]
That is, before facts are allowed to speak for themselves, such evolutionary materialist thinkers hold that the only acceptable origins science theories are those that by design “must” fit in with the view that undirected blindly mechanical forces of nature and chance circumstances acting on matter and energy in one form or another, triggered purposeless changes and developments across time and are adequate to explain the world of life. In many cases, they may even assert that anything that questions such a view or its assumptions "is not science." Which, to such minds, is close to saying: nonsense. But, it should be clear that some very big assumptions are being made; assumptions that -- on their face -- could easily bias or even warp attempts to sincerely find out what really happened in the deep past of origins. And, is it not reasonable that science should seek to discover and provide good observational evidence and objectively unbiased explanations about what really happens in our world -- and (so far as that is possible) about what really happened in the remote past of origins, without a priori ideological blinkers? . . .
Failing a serious addressing of such matters, on empirical evidence, the evolutionary materialist paradigm boils down to systematically institutionalised question-begging and censorship of otherwise quite reasonable alternative candidate explanations. It should be obvious to all, that FSCO/I, in our common observation and experience, is a generally recognised empirically reliable sign of design. Those who wish to draw a different conclusion for cases like origin of life or body plans need a better answer than Lewontinian a priori materialism, on whatever convenient excuse. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
January 11, 2012
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Response to champignon: As for the other possibility — a mechanism other than undirected evolution that explains the nested hierarchy — I am unaware of any. ID does not qualify, since it does not predict the nested hierarchy. Well, actually, undirected evolution isn't the only framework that predicts a nested hierarchy. The front-loading hypothesis, an inherently teleological hypothesis, does predict a nested hierarchy. Furthermore, you state that "a mechanism other than undirected evolution that explains the nested hierarchy — I am unaware of any." If genetic variation was constrained by the cellular complexity of organisms, then a nested hierarchical pattern, at the DNA level, would also result, 'cause if the amount of genetic variability a unicellular species could undergo was much more than the amount of genetic variability a multi-cellular species like homo sapiens, we would expect organisms with similar number of cell types to be less distant to each other, at the genetic level, than to organisms with a significantly different number of cell types. The main points: a. The front-loading hypothesis also explains the nested hierarchy observed in nucleic/amino acid sequences, thus it cannot be said that undirected evolution is the only framework that explains it. b. If cellular complexity constrains genetic variability of a species, a nested hierarchy will also result.Genomicus
January 11, 2012
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Reading your stuff is not always illuminating. One wonders why you don't learn something about a hundred and fifty years of argument and evidence before posting. There's really nothing in your argument that wasn't hashed out seventy five years ago.Petrushka
January 10, 2012
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The experiment was Intelligently Designed. Yet more evidence of ID!lastyearon
January 10, 2012
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