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
we observe that: Offspring inherit a combination of parents genes. Offspring can also have mutations no present in their genome. Different combinations of genes produce different individuals. Mutations can alter the way cells function and the way an organism appears and operates. Organisms with certain traits may be more or less likely to reproduce well in a given environment. A slight variation in a particular trait can give an advantage or disadvantage, resulting in more or less offspring. Mutations happen at a certain rate. Mutations and other changes accumulate. Different species will sometimes share similar genes. The rate of accumulation and the genetic similarities can be used to estimate when two species shared a common ancestor. Examples of these ancestors in the fossil record correlate with this. Taxonomic classifications also correlate with the above. ... Plus a whole load of other stuff that I'm less familiar with. Evolutionary theory is a framework for explaining those and other observations. It fits the data exceedingly well and allows biologists to make some very good predictions - but like any theory it has plenty of rough edges.GCUGreyArea
January 10, 2012
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Chas D:
Good job they are possible, then… as I say, one finds oneself arguing about selection one post, and common descent the next.
Well I can take the alleged evidence for universal common descent and use it to support a common design. And no, that does not mean all organisms were designed as they are today. That means all organisms of today are descended from the originals.Joe
January 10, 2012
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I guess repeating it about 2.5 times on average in each and every post didn't do the trick. For the last time, the simple and coherent point is that genetic variation and natural selection cannot be used to formulate an explanation of anything more extensive than the variations in finch beaks. Your participation consisted of numerous posts (indicating that you were not constrained by time from participating) while failing to refute it, even digging up examples that explicitly stated the direct opposite of the claim you were attempting to support. That Champignon refers to "a list" rather than any specific item demonstrates that even he is unwilling to take the risk of citing a specific example. (I commend his wise choice.) The term for most of your counterarguments is "special pleading." That is, you offer reasons why this theory should be exempted or excused from the accepted standards of scientific inquiry. The most meaningful response has been that the minor observed variations within species can be extrapolated to explain the species themselves. Why is that a valid extrapolation? More special pleading. You - or someone - even argued that because the very concept of extrapolation is logically valid that this particular extrapolation is also valid. (That was the water erosion comment.) Support for the logical concept of extrapolation does not constitute support for your specific attempt at extrapolation. Your collective inability to respond to such a simple, reasonable request is my point, stated repeatedly in coherent English. And now, despite my intentions, I've stated it again. Now I have real work to do.ScottAndrews2
January 10, 2012
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Time isn’t of any use if the changes required are not possible
Good job they are possible, then... as I say, one finds oneself arguing about selection one post, and common descent the next. On the evidence, accumulated genetic change within the cat and dog clades - accepted by KF and others as within the scope of non-interventionist evolution - is consistent with a particular time since their respective common ancestors. Accumulated change between the cat and dog clades is also consistent with a common ancestor, but with a greater time since divergence than that within them. There may, or may not, have been a barrier to the divergence of a common ancestor into all-cats and all-dogs. But that there was a common ancestor is inferred by exactly the same technique used to determine relationships within cats and within dogs. One can deny all common ancestry data - the Designer made every species exactly as we find it today. That is certainly not supported by fossil evidence. Or, one can accept all common ancestry data as indicative of a long non-interventionist history - no ID anywhere. But the current proposal is inconsistent in its treatment of the data. Common ancestry data within cats is agreed to indicate true common ancestry - evolution can work around "Cat Island" and "Dog Island", and the result is the diversity of cats and dogs. But the common ancestor of cats and dogs, indicated by the exact same techniques, is asserted to have lived on some other "Island". Or, alternatively, not to have lived at all. Either the first inhabitants of Cat Island and Dog Island were each separately created de novo, or an organism inhabiting "Catdog Island" was redesigned in order to form the raw materials for the current inhabitants of Cat Island and Dog Island. I know what your take is on it - Common Ancestry is actually Common Design - but if natural evolutionary processes are agreed to be responsible for a clade, however restricted, then the commonality in that clade is all common ancestry, and the difference all ('naturalistic')evolution.Chas D
January 10, 2012
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I’ve made my point, and I couldn’t have done it without your participation.
I see no coherent point being made Scott.GCUGreyArea
January 10, 2012
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Are you saying that there is an item on your list that can be explained through genetic variations and natural selection?
Yes, looks like it to me. I'm entirely baffled by your responses on this thread - what exactly are you looking for - what form of explanation would suffice, or are you just playing trolls?GCUGreyArea
January 10, 2012
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Do you even understand the evolutionary explanations for the phenomena on my list?
Are you saying that there is an item on your list that can be explained through genetic variations and natural selection? I pointed out a week ago that none of them could be, and you didn't object. Apparently nothing jumped out at you either. I don't mean this in quite the bad way that it sounds, but I'm gotten bored with this. Post after post after post my question is questioned six ways from Sunday, but no one wants to offer an evolutionary explanation that includes the specific mechanics of evolution. I've made my point, and I couldn't have done it without your participation. But I have nothing to gain from continuing the discussion. I must restate my very simple point in every single post or it will get flushed away in the tide of irrelevant and often condescending comments. (I don't want to be a hypocrite - I'm above neither condescension nor rhetoric.) But I've taken the high road this time, and although the result is satisfying, it's also anticlimactic. So I'll just stop now.ScottAndrews2
January 10, 2012
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GCU:
You keep forgetting, as does KF and others, that there is an overwhelming amount of evidence supporting the general hypothesis of universal common descent.
I can take that same "evidence" and use it to overwhelming support a common design. And universal common descent does not have any genetic data to support it- as in there isn't any genetic evidence that demonstrates the transformation required (for UCD) are even possible. All universal common descent has are throwing time at observed changes. And that ain't science.Joe
January 10, 2012
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Chas D: 'There is nothing additional separating cats/dogs, as opposed to dogs/wolves, other than time.' At thet will be why we have so many transitional fossils to look at then. Who are you trying to kid?!PeterJ
January 9, 2012
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Chas D:
There is nothing additional separating cats/dogs, as opposed to dogs/wolves, other than time.
Talk about question-begging, not to mention the unscientific "time" element. Time isn't of any use if the changes required are not possible.Joe
January 9, 2012
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Scott,
I responded to your list by pointing out that it is devoid of genetic variation and natural selection.
Do you even understand the evolutionary explanations for the phenomena on my list? If you did, you wouldn't be claiming that they are "devoid of genetic variation and natural selection." GCUGreyArea had some excellent advice for you:
Can I suggest you take a look at some evolutionary biology textbooks to familiarise yourself with the actual theory, the evidence and the ways in which it supports the theory. It might help clear things up a bit.
And:
Which is why I suggested you read up on some of the research on the topic – that is where all the evidence is documented and analysed. Start with the textbooks, then you might be in a position to move on (and up) to the published research that the textbooks are based on.
champignon
January 9, 2012
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How many times – a dozen? I’ve lost count – have I pointed out the numerous examples of “evolution” that omit any explanation of the natural selection involved, leaving its role as an undefined assumption.
I'm not even sure what you are demanding? What would constitute an explanation of differential survival. Can you explain a bit better what you are after? Would a bacterias ability to survive normally fatal antibiotics do?GCUGreyArea
January 9, 2012
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Yes, how ‘misguided’ of me to bring up intelligent design on an intelligent design website, or to ask how ID compares to the theory it purports to supplant.
Some discussions are on one subject, some on another. I see that you'd rather change this one. I would too. Have at it. I responded to your list by pointing out that it is devoid of genetic variation and natural selection. I'm not here to stick my thumb in a dike. I can respond to it fifty times and you can post it fifty-one. Enjoy.ScottAndrews2
January 9, 2012
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Petrushka,
Many independent lines of evidence support diversification due to variation and selection.
We've been over this in the past dozen posts. This is accurate if you attach a very limited meaning to "diversification." I know, I know, you think it's all the same thing. But you can't seem to make a case for it beyond, 'why not?'
You are pitting vaporware against observable processes and claiming because we don’t know everything, we don’t know anything.
I'm sure we know quite a bit of stuff. So far we've got finch beaks, colored cichlid fishes, and an abundance of examples of trivial or contrived variation that explicitly exclude natural selection. Apparently you wish to take all that we do know and receive credit for what you're absolutely certain we will know one day. What if I don't know anything? No one knows everything. It's not like my brain is an empty vessel because I don't know how finches got their beaks. I've given you folks plenty of time to persuade me with your religion. The responses have alternated between gulls with grey or black wings, appeals to authority, evidence that either implicitly or explicitly does not relate to the claim, and changing the subject. What am I to conclude? Either the evidence to support this does not exist, or it exists and you don't know what it is but you believe it anyway, or it exists and you know it but you won't tell anyone until they spend $50,000 and advance to the inner circle. I'm sure I'll come back and try to squeeze blood from this turnip again later. But I'm done for now. Oddly, I don't entirely disagree with all of your challenges to ID. Not all of them. But I don't see how that helps you any.ScottAndrews2
January 9, 2012
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Scott,
Nice of you to chime in. You were the first to disappear when I asked whether the cornerstone of biology could explain something in biology.
Not only did I not disappear, I was still responding to your comments in this thread seven days later. And I answered your question with this list of biological phenomena explained by evolutionary theory:
Elizabeth, to Scott:
But I’m still not at all sure why you are rejecting the Galapagos finch beaks, which were actually observed evolving.
Or the 1:1 sex ratios I mentioned in comment 25. Or the congruence of the nested hierarchy to 1 part in 100 trillion trillion trillion trillion. Or the gradual transformation of reptilian jaw bones into mammalian inner ear bones through a series of functional intermediates, as mentioned by Petrushka. Or the bizarre hormonal warfare between mother and fetus in gestational diabetes. Scott, you asked for examples of “how the cornerstone of biology explains something in biology”. Evolutionary theory explains all of these. Intelligent design explains none of them.
Scott again:
The validity of ID is an entirely different subject. I’m clear on that because when push comes to shove folks like to turn the tables and ask how ID explains this or that. Not only is it a misguided question, but it distracts from the fact that evolutionary theory was vacuous long before anyone thought up ID.
Yes, how 'misguided' of me to bring up intelligent design on an intelligent design website, or to ask how ID compares to the theory it purports to supplant.champignon
January 9, 2012
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How does this support the premise of diversification through variation and selection?
Many independent lines of evidence support diversification due to variation and selection. Perhaps you are confused because selection is rather permissive, and populations can diverge through drift without one being "superior" to another. ID could explain everything if only you could point to the designer and identify his capabilities or mode of action or perhaps identify a specific instance of design intervention. You are pitting vaporware against observable processes and claiming because we don't know everything, we don't know anything. You have absolutely nothing. You have no designer, no process of design, no theory of how to design, no theory that would, in principle, make design possible. You simply have nothing.Petrushka
January 9, 2012
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Champignon,
Scott is quite risk-averse. That is why he is ‘neither defending nor championing ID' in this discussion.
Nice of you to chime in. You were the first to disappear when I asked whether the cornerstone of biology could explain something in biology. You stopped 'defending and championing' evolutionary theory right about then. Unless you have something to share that you didn't then. But yes, that's exactly what I said. The validity of ID is an entirely different subject. I'm clear on that because when push comes to shove folks like to turn the tables and ask how ID explains this or that. Not only is it a misguided question, but it distracts from the fact that evolutionary theory was vacuous long before anyone thought up ID. What if ID turns out to be creationism in a cheap tuxedo? What if Expelled is full of subliminal messages to turn rational people into snake-handling fundamentalists? What good does that do evolutionary theory?ScottAndrews2
January 9, 2012
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GCU, How many times - a dozen? I've lost count - have I pointed out the numerous examples of "evolution" that omit any explanation of the natural selection involved, leaving its role as an undefined assumption. Your example goes one step further, explicitly ruling out the involvement of natural selection.
The result challenges the assumption in biology that increased biological complexity evolves because it offers some kind of selective advantage. In this case, the more complex version doesn’t seem to work better or have any other obvious advantage compared with the simpler one;
Evolution is driven by variation and selection. I'll leave out all of the deliberate manipulation of the process to simulate random variation. How does this support the premise of diversification through variation and selection? It explicitly does not. It expressly separates itself from that premise, unless we're to believe that spiders over time developed the process of weaving orbital webs just for the sheer heck of it. In fact, it 'challenges that assumption.' Awesome. That makes two of us!ScottAndrews2
January 9, 2012
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Fixity of species is a strawman — if you want a reasonable body plan/ functional info challenge threshold, try the family as a more typical level. As in dogs vs cats, etc.
So you are saying that we can accept evolution within the dogs (jackals, dingoes, wolves, hyenas) and within the cats (domestic, lion, tiger, jaguar) but not in the lineages leading from the common ancestor of cats and dogs. I do find myself continually wondering whether we are arguing about selection or about common descent. Whatever selection can or cannot do (Scott's challenge to reconstruct an adaptive history), we appear to see common descent in lineages. The same techniques that allow cladistic analysis within family groups (and, indeed, relatedness in genuine relatives within each species) give the same signal when applied between the two clades, Cat and Dog. There is nothing additional separating cats/dogs, as opposed to dogs/wolves, other than time. Time for greater divergence. "Islands of function" implies that cats all sit in one neighbourhood, and dogs in another. I would suggest that, connecting them, is a sequence of real genomes representing their respective ancestors and converging on a point in the space representing their last common ancestor. Just the same historical convergence that we would observe between the housecat and the wildcat, except the modern organisms are a bit further apart in the cat/dog case.Chas D
January 9, 2012
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Pardon, but first of all, it does not seem to have dawned on you that the definition of “species” is fairly debatable and arbitrary; as the black tip sharks case recently discussed at UD illustrates.
Sorry KF, but it 'dawned on me' many years ago which definitions of species are arbitrary human constructs for classification purposes and which have a genuine biological basis. Like many non-biologists, you insist that the discrete categories that satisfy us on the basis of apparent discreteness impose some kind of discrete category upon the natural world. It is only biological species that have relevance to evolution. They are discrete at a moment in time thanks to the specific biological mechanism of breeding - the means by which genes flow. Two diverging lines that can hybridise are not discrete biological species - genes can flow between them. They may be different enough for us to categorise them so, but the organisms themselves do not care a fig for our categories. Species are delimited by gene flow. Genes cannot physically flow from one biological species to another. But genes can flow within such a species, for however long as hybridisation remains a biological possibility. And this is absolutely key to the concept of species mutability. We are not saying that one reproductively isolated species can turn into another species existing at the same time - they are discrete. But the succession of populations that holds the genetic consensus of the species - the only place where such a 'reference' is kept - is continuous and can, does, and indeed, must change. It must change because each time a gene is fixed, all history is wiped out, and it is readily demonstrated mathematically and empirically that population reproduction tends inexorably to reduce variation - ie to fix alleles. The source of replacement alleles - mutation - does not regenerate the lost ones, but new ones. If the population only samples the genes in existence in its immediate predecessor, there is no internal anchor, restraint or lookup within the succession of populations, and no apparent barrier to indefinite fixation of novel alleles. Asserting that there must be is to make an unsubstantiated claim about the distribution of functionality within this unknown space that is simply not warranted. The viability of moves through a conceptual space is entirely dependent on the means by which viable locations are assessed, and the degree to which viable locations are connected. You cannot simply divine the structure of this space from its most basic parameters - the base system (4) and the number of digits (up to 3,000,000,000 and more) and some sideways glances at natural languages.Chas D
January 9, 2012
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Research into protein evolution is a Thornton in the side of ID.Petrushka
January 9, 2012
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GCUGreyArea,
Rather than waving their arms and making grand claims, these people are actually doing research! Perhaps the ID community should follow their example, or would that be too risky?
Scott is quite risk-averse. That is why he is 'neither defending nor championing ID in this discussion.' LOL.champignon
January 9, 2012
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Whilst I have a few moments
The question is whether random genetic variation and natural selection is a means by which entirely new species and features can form.
Which is why I suggested you read up on some of the research on the topic - that is where all the evidence is documented and analysed. Start with the textbooks, then you might be in a position to move on (and up) to the published research that the textbooks are based on. On the topic of research, a new paper out in PLoS Biology explores the evolution of molecular machinery: Protein Evolution by Molecular Tinkering: Diversification of the Nuclear Receptor Superfamily from a Ligand-Dependent Ancestor With a write up on natures blog here: And an excerpt from the end of the blog writeup:
And to intelligent-design proponents, Thornton adds, the results say that “complexity can appear through a very simple stepwise process — there is no supernatural process required to create them.” Still, evolution of a three-protein machine is unlikely to silence those proponents — there are many far more complicated biological machines with far more protein parts and intricate internal mechanisms. Thornton says that his and other groups will now probably use the same tools to dissect the evolution of more complex molecular machines.
Rather than waving their arms and making grand claims, these people are actually doing research! Perhaps the ID community should follow their example, or would that be too risky? ;)GCUGreyArea
January 9, 2012
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LYO, Who mentioned a creation event? If you can't answer, don't. But please don't trifle over my choice of words.ScottAndrews2
January 9, 2012
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Scott, There are no creation events in evolutionary theory. That's what ID is for. For people that want to believe in creation events.lastyearon
January 9, 2012
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Scott,
The question is whether random genetic variation and natural selection is a means by which entirely new species and features can form.
If that's the question, then the answer is no. I would also suggest you "take a look at some evolutionary biology textbooks to familiarise yourself with the actual theory" as CGU mentioned.lastyearon
January 9, 2012
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GCU, Might I ask why you have an interest in discussing the matter at all, if when confronted with a challenging request for specific information you simply refer me to the textbooks? The textbooks contain phylogenetic trees, fossils, and variations on the finch beak theme.
All it implies is that it is possible to get from one fossil to another by a process of gradual change.
Surely you realize that you can get from absolutely anything to absolutely anything else by changing it gradually if you have the means. The question is whether random genetic variation and natural selection is a means by which entirely new species and features can form. And you don't seem able to answer it. ("Yes" does not count.)
enough to begin to understand how gradual changes to a genome can cause gradual changes to a phenotype and which when viewed over a long time period add up to a large transition.
Asserting that it can happen and understanding how it 'does' are not the same. How can one understand how something happens and not even be able to offer a hypothetical account if it happening? Does it or does it not explain something? Anything less than an example amounts to an implicit concession that it explains nothing. I have explained why phylogenetic trees and fossils are not evidence of change by genetic variation and selection. (You actually agreed on that one.) I have explained that a beak that grows longer and then shorter and then longer again over generations cannot be extrapolated to determine the origin of beaks or of birds. What have I omitted? If you're fresh out and wish to refer me to the textbooks, I'll take that as indicating that we've exhausted whatever evidence you're personally acquainted with while you remain convinced that there must be more that neither one of us is aware of. If you're going to remember several lines of evidence from the textbooks to share in discussion while forgetting others, why not remember the ones that actually support the theory and forget the phylogenetic trees, fossils, and finch beaks? Perhaps the ones you can't call to mind are better. Oh, I almost forgot: :)ScottAndrews2
January 9, 2012
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I’m beginning to think you don’t see it. How does the fossil record imply that the transitions between fossils are the result of genetic variations and natural selection? It implies no such thing. Why do you think it does?
It doesn't - not on its own. All it implies is that it is possible to get from one fossil to another by a process of gradual change. Darwin proposed natural selection as a mechanism that could drive and constrain those changes but he knew nothing of genetics. We do know lots about genetics - enough to begin to understand how gradual changes to a genome can cause gradual changes to a phenotype and which when viewed over a long time period add up to a large transition.
How is it my job to formulate a hypothesis for what you propose?
I'm beginning to thing this is not just a failure to comprehend what I wrote but actually deliberate obfuscation. You claimed:
you cannot have evidence of evolution by genetic variation and natural selection that omits the individual genetic variations and their selection?
I asked:
Do you mean that there is no evidence for evolution unless each mutation, and the reasons for it persisting and spreading, have been documented for all life?
You respond:
.. How is it my job to formulate a hypothesis for what you propose? Isn’t that what you’re asking me to do?
?
You see, you can’t just toss these things out there and cite them as evidence. It is necessary to explain why they think they are evidence.
Can I suggest you take a look at some evolutionary biology textbooks to familiarise yourself with the actual theory, the evidence and the ways in which it supports the theory. It might help clear things up a bit ;)GCUGreyArea
January 9, 2012
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GCU,
What question? – we have a fossil record that implies that these changes are possible, and an understanding of genetics to back it up. Multiple overlapping lines of evidence all implying the same thing, hence the reason and reasonableness of the extrapolation.
I'm beginning to think you don't see it. How does the fossil record imply that the transitions between fossils are the result of genetic variations and natural selection? It implies no such thing. Why do you think it does? What in our understanding of genetic implies that such a thing is possible? You see, you can't just toss these things out there and cite them as evidence. It is necessary to explain why they think they are evidence. Where have your 'multiple overlapping lines of evidence' gone? Apparently they were never evidence to start with.
Do you mean that there is no evidence for evolution unless each mutation, and the reasons for it persisting and spreading, have been documented for all life?
By "evolution" do you mean the origin of species? How is it my job to formulate a hypothesis for what you propose? Isn't that what you're asking me to do? You're suggesting that formulating a hypothesis would be very difficult, and so I should either do it for you or just let it slide. How about neither?ScottAndrews2
January 9, 2012
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GCU: I have just a moment. Will you kindly look at the original post, which does summarise relevant evidence that is also quite evident to common good sense and experience, not to mention logic (think of how the parts of a motor -- cf here biological motors in the cell [flagellum and ATP synthase will do for starters] -- must be properly put together for it to work . . .): when we have function that depends on multiple specific, integrated organised parts, the function is going to come from a rather narrow zone relative to the many ways the same parts -- or their constituent molecules or atoms -- could be arranged. What is astonishing is how stoutly this is denied and dismissed by those who wish to force us to accept as default what they cannot show at all: that, somehow -- with no observed cases in point -- we must take it that biological systems are somehow so different that Mengue's C1 - 5 are irrelevant as constraints on possible configs. I can only conclude that we are here up against the usual evolutionary materialist a priori and yet another of its imperious demands for our blind acknowledgement of its suzerainty. Sorry, I have never been in thralldom to such tyranny of the mind as Lewontin et al have so openly admitted. As to the theme for the thread, that, too is obvious from the original post, where I set it. And so, I repeat, it cannot be out of order or a hijacking -- Imagine, I stand accused of hijacking my own thread, by calling attention to the focus of the OP! -- to call attention back to the highly relevant material from the same original post. G'day, GEM of TKIkairosfocus
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