FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > IIDB ARCHIVE: 200X-2003, PD 2007 > IIDB Philosophical Forums (PRIOR TO JUN-2003)
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 05:55 AM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 01-07-2002, 10:03 AM   #41
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: WI
Posts: 4,357
Post

Quote:
Originally posted by ex-robot:
How would they determine the genetic relationship between a living and extinct organism??
From <a href="http://www.google.com/search?q=%22Ancient+DNA%22" target="_blank">ancient DNA</a>. I doubt that they do their own research though. Legitimate scientists probably have a hard enough time obtaining specimens from natural history museums.
hezekiah jones is offline  
Old 01-07-2002, 10:21 AM   #42
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Denver, CO, USA
Posts: 9,747
Post

Hey ex-robot. I appologize if my reply last night sounded sarcastic; I was tired and grumpy.

Quote:
Thanks for pointing that out. It doesn't indicate who did the studies. I would think they would have to do some themselves sooner or later if they haven't already. I'll have look for it again, but I believe the subject of mutations causing the inability to hybridize between kinds has been discussed. I'll look at the peanute gallery. ??? Thanks
[Quick note: make sure to look in peanut gallery #1 and not #2. There are other good threads around that same time.]

Notice though that the problem with hybridization that I brought up is acknowledged by them in the article that you linked to:

"However, we realize today that the lack of known hybridization between two members from different populations of organisms does not necessarily by itself mean that they are unrelated."

So this isn't a very useful criteria. I think that with most animals, the ability to hybridize shows a close relationship, but it's probably not the case with plants.

Quote:
yes, I knew he was a moonie. That is what I meant by an infidel in the mind of a yec. I was just surprised at all the oec, yec, and a moonie coming together when I thought they hated each other.
Oh they do hate each other. But there is one "kind" of people that they hate even more. And that is your average biologist that readily accepts Darwinian evolution. And of course, this is not an age of the Earth conference we're talking about, or there would be some serious animosity going on. YECs will often aim far more hateful rhetoric at OECs than they will at atheists.

Quote:
that is the problem. I belive the kinds is at the family level.
It is often claimed that "kinds" rougly correlates to the family level; that claim was made in the Baraminology article that you linked to. But here's the real problem. All taxonomic categories above the level of species are completely arbitrary. There are no clear criteria for placing a group of organisms within a family, any more so than there is for placing them in an order, a class, or a phylum. This is clearly spelled out by systematicists -- the only thing required for a natural group is that it's monophyletic, meaning that it's comprised of an ancestor and all of its descendants. However, there are as many potential natural groups as there are species. Therefore, there is no clear-cut definition of "family", except for something that contains some number of genera each of which contains some number of species. Thus, if the creationists are relying on the Linnaean designation of "family", then they are using an arbitrary criterion for defining "kinds", and we're right back to square one.

Quote:
I understand that. All I'm saying is that if you are arguing for kinds, initial speciation is not going to that big of a deal. Not having the ability to interbreed anymore, increase or decrease in size, length of fur/hair, etc. is not going to do it.
Yes, but understand that all evolutionary divergences start out as speciation events. dogs and bears share a common ancestor (probably Cynodictis or something similar). That ancestral species split into some number of other species, and they were similar to begin with. However, once two lineages have diverged from one another, they will become more and more different over time, not more and more similar. Thus, after great enough time, one lineage has given rise to dogs, and another to bears. Within the dogs, one lineage has given rise to foxes, and another to wolves. Given enough time, foxes and wolves could each give rise to lineages that will one day seem as different as dogs and bears. At what point is it a new "kind"? As far as mainstream science is concerned, it is a meaningless question. "Kind" is an invention by creationism and is not descriptive of anything in biology.

Quote:
The amount of change needed to be observed would never appear in their lifetime. You would have to show observable, dramatic change on the scale of reptile to bird, reptile to mammal, and so forth.
These sorts of changes are far above the creation of new families. You could of course, at least potentially, trace the divergence of mammals and reptiles in terms of sucessive speciation events, with each new species becoming more divergent from the sister clade than the last. In fact, such a divergence is very well documented in the fossil record. Look for a recent thread on "mammal-like reptiles" or something similar started by Jesse.

Quote:
I don't believe it is evasive at all in regards to the ones who actually know what they are talking about. They definitely don't have it all together. If they believe in a limited common descent and actually do original research whether hybridization or other studies, it could prove to be useful minus the new terms.
Don't hold your breath waiting for them to do their own studies. They are not interested in science, they're interested in appologetics. All they want to do is "defeat evolution" and then go home, satisfied that the Bible is true word for word. They're not interested in learning about nature, they're interested in winning converts by convincing the public that evolution is wrong. I hate to sound cynical here, but it's pretty much the truth. So "knowing what they're talking about" doesn't really apply, because they already have all the answers they need. "Baraminology" is just a way to try to legitimize what they have already decided must be true based on what's written in the Bible; it is not intended to gain knowledge of or to give useful classifications to living things. There is already a system that does that just fine, and they want to replace it.

As for the rest of your post, I think we're pretty much in agreement.

Quote:
"extinct and living understood to share genetic relationship"? How would they determine the genetic relationship between a living and extinct organism??
You can't of course . What scientists do is to infer the relationship of extinct organisms by using morphology, biogeography, and the time in which the organism lived. Creationists vehemently deny the time scale, completely ignore biogeography, and have yet to tell us which morphological characteristics would apply. Like I said, right back to square one.

theyeti
theyeti is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 04:14 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.