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 08-13-2002, 10:23 PM   #11
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: WI
Posts: 4,357
Question

Quote:
Originally posted by Vanderzyden:
As I see them, here are the difficulties with the scigirl challenge:

scientists have speculated that perhaps

Yes, this is a problem that is rampant among Darwinists. Far too much guessing and very little supporting evidence.
Vanderzyden, how utterly disingenuous of you! First of all, the post doesn't read, "scientists have speculated that perhaps". It says: "... scientists speculated that perhaps ..." and goes on to point out that the "speculation" in question was made prior to the discovery of the hard data!

You go on to say:

Quote:
Often, such speculation often amounts to gross conjecture when a naturalistic worldview is in play.
But in this case, the "speculation" was confirmed by the observations! But you completely ignored that little fact didn't you?

<additional irrelevant objections snipped>

Quote:
Furthermore, the frequent emotional outbursts of Darwinists ("evolution is fact, fact, FACT!") ...
Oh great. Vanderzyden quoting <a href="http://www.asa3.org/ASA/dialogues/Faith-reason/CRS9-91Plantinga1.html" target="_blank">Alvin Plantinga</a> quoting Michael Ruse. We haven't all just fallen off the turnip truck, you know.

Quote:
Do you have a better challenge?
Why should you get another "challenge" when you've done nothing but completely sidestepped this one?
hezekiah jones is offline  
Old 08-13-2002, 10:34 PM   #12
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2001
Location: New Orleans
Posts: 172
Thumbs up

Congratulations, Vanderzyden! You have met the challenge with... with... admirably prolux, yet totally evasive trumpery!

By the way, what is your explanation for the apparent fusion of these chromosomes? And what would be the purpose for the two extra telomeres and the nonfunctional centromere in human chromosome 2?

(No need to reply immediately, anytime during the current lunar cycle will be fine.)
Richiyaado is offline  
Old 08-13-2002, 10:39 PM   #13
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Australia
Posts: 214
Post

I can't say i'm surprised at Vanderzyden's response
monkenstick is offline  
Old 08-13-2002, 10:41 PM   #14
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: WI
Posts: 4,357
Talking

Quote:
Originally posted by Richiyaado:
By the way, what is your explanation for the apparent fusion of these chromosomes? And what would be the purpose for the two extra telomeres and the nonfunctional centromere in human chromosome 2?
He already answered:

Quote:
Originally posted by Vanderzyden:
When an unsupportable theory is advanced, the proponents of the theory are not due to hear a "better idea," particularly when they only entertain a specific type of knowledge. Certainly, we may view such insistent people as overbearing if they demand an answer on their own naturalistic terms.
hezekiah jones is offline  
Old 08-13-2002, 10:47 PM   #15
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: US east coast. And www.theroyalforums.com
Posts: 2,829
Post

This just looks like someone trying to get an advanced degree in not answering questions and blaming the questioner. You only have to google on "chromosome fusion" to see that it's an observed mechanism. You only have to look at the description of the hypothesis to see that when the facts were observed, they agreed with the hypothesis without any need to redefine things like the number 2.

The digression about different forms of knowledge is irrelevant, whether you prefer talking philosophy or whether you don't. Of course science isn't the only means of finding out about things, and very few scientists would say otherwise, but it's the best way to find out about the material world. Chromosomes are part of the material world. The notion that science can't explain mind, consciousness, or beauty (yet, at any rate) is irrelevant. The question wasn't about mind, consciousness, or beauty, it was about chromosomes. You're creating irrelevancies, and it looks as if you're doing it to avoid answering a question whose answer you wouldn't like very much if you DID answer it.

"The Darwinist" doesn't reject anything in the Bible other than statements that can be tested scientifically and have been tested scientifically and shown to be false. That's it. No rejection of the existence of God, the divinity of Jesus, the message of salvation - simply rejection of the six-day creation and the worldwide flood and teh young universe. In the context of this question, they're just a bunch of red herrings strewn across the path.
Albion is offline  
Old 08-13-2002, 10:50 PM   #16
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Lebanon, OR, USA
Posts: 16,829
Post

Quote:
Vanderzyden:
Science endeavor has its limitations, and therefore it will often have no alternative theory. This is becoming especially clear in recent years with the realization of irreducible complexity.
What is "irreducible complexity"?

Quote:
Vanderzyden:
For example, science cannot explain the presence of biological INFORMATION,
What do you mean by "biological information"?

Quote:
Vanderzyden:
it cannot explain the MIND,
True, our minds continue to have some riddles, like consciousness, but there exist artificial minds -- the operations of computers. And they could not have been constructed without some understanding of how minds work. And the really interesting thing about computers is that they need no special mind-stuff to work -- only appropriate organization.

Quote:
Vanderzyden:
it cannot explain why there is SOMETHING rather than nothing.
What do you expect, O Vanderzyden?

Quote:
Vanderzyden:
Furthermore, there are forms of authoritative knowledge (such as that found in the Bible) that are categorically rejected by the Darwinist.
It is NOT categorically rejected; it is given no special privileges. Genesis 30 tells us that one can make solid-colored cattle and sheep and goats have spotted and streaked offspring by showing them striped sticks. Vanderzyden, do you believe in Lamarckian inheritance?

Quote:
Vanderzyden:
The most crippling impediment to the work of a scientist is the refusal to admit these other means of obtaining truth about the world in which we live.
So if someone claims that some other way of knowing has demonstrated that you are really a turnip, would you accept that?

Quote:
Vanderzyden:
You see, Nightshade, I prefer to elevate the discussion to the non-physical, that is, the philosophical/religious. Why? The primary reason is that naturalistcally-biased science has not spoken authoritatively with regard to biological origins and development.
How is that supposed to be the case?

Quote:
Vanderzyden:
Alternatively, many creationists have a reasonable, testable, falsifiable, interesting theistic story to tell.
Testable and falsifiable in what way?
lpetrich is offline  
Old 08-13-2002, 10:50 PM   #17
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: East Coast. Australia.
Posts: 5,455
Post

Haha! look at this!

Quote:
posted by Vanderzyden

I prefer to elevate the discussion to the non-physical, that is, the philosophical/religious. The primary reason is that naturalistcally-biased science has not spoken authoritatively with regard to biological origins and development.
and...

Quote:
posted by Vanderzyden

When an unsupportable theory is advanced, the proponents of the theory are not due to hear a "better idea," particularly when they only entertain a specific type of knowledge.
Anyone get the joke?
Doubting Didymus is offline  
Old 08-13-2002, 11:00 PM   #18
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2001
Location: New Orleans
Posts: 172
Unhappy

Oh dear, hezekiah jones, I had no idea the question was insistent and overbearing.

Yet, I'd still like to hear Vanderzyden's answer using whatever terms he/she likes, naturalistic or otherwise. I mean, is there an invisible tinkering warrior army mischievously working to deceive foolish scientists on human chromosome two? Or what?

[ August 14, 2002: Message edited by: Richiyaado ]</p>
Richiyaado is offline  
Old 08-14-2002, 01:26 AM   #19
DMB
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Post

This is a very funny thread. <img src="graemlins/notworthy.gif" border="0" alt="[Not Worthy]" />
 
Old 08-14-2002, 02:52 AM   #20
Contributor
 
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Alibi: ego ipse hinc extermino
Posts: 12,591
Post

Vanderzyden, I direct your attention to the original post.

To make it easier (and to hopefully avoid further pseudophilosophical navel-gazing), let me spell it out for you.

Background Fact 1:

Of all other animals, humans are anatomically most similar to chimpanzees.

Background Fact 2:

Of all other animals, humans are physiologically most similar to chimpanzees.

Background Fact 3:

Of all other animals, humans are biochemically most similar to chimpanzees.

(Supplementary question if you deny any of these three: please name a single bone, protein or enzyme not present in both. Name one feature of one species that could not be a modified version of something in the other.)

Evolutionary conclusion: Humans are chimpanzees’ nearest living relatives. If it works for species of finch or vole, why is it wrong here?

Background Fact 4:

Genes, and patterns of chromosomal DNA, are copied down generations, even into split populations. Repeated for emphasis: patterns -- sequences -- of DNA are copied down lineages from parent to offspring to offspring to offspring... even if the lineages are separated and do not interbreed. Or become separated.

(Supplementary demand if you deny BF4: go read even a very simple book on genetics. To deny this is to deny that you have ancestry.)

Non-evolutionary prediction based on BF4: DNA [patterns], by having been copied down generations from ancestors, indicate relatedness directly, not by inference from anatomical similarity.You may have your father’s nose; you certainly have his DNA. So the more closely related people (or any organisms) are, the more similar should be their chromosome patterns and genes. Example of confirmation: DNA fingerprinting works.

Background Fact 5:

Of all other animals, humans are genetically most similar to chimpanzees. Not just in genes, but in patterns of the DNA on their chromosomes.

Evolutionary comment: genetics -- which was a near-total unknown in Darwin’s time -- confirms the anatomical, physiological and biochemical conclusion of close relatedness between these species. It could have refuted it. But instead it fitted very nicely with what was expected.

Background Fact 6:

There is a discrepency in the actual number of chromosomes between the two species -- chimpanzees (and, note, other apes) have 24 pairs while humans have 23 pairs.

Hypothesis to explain BF5 and 6: two of the chromosomes have fused since the lineages separated.

Prediction from the hypothesis: There should be evidence of this fusion.

Test: Look for evidence of the fusion in the DNA sequences.

Background Fact 7:

Chromosomes have distinctive parts that are used when they are copied: telomeres and centromeres.

Sub-prediction: the evidence of fusion should be in the right places on the right chromosome. The human chromosome which is most similar to the two separate ape ones should contain telomere and centromere sequences, and these should be in the places they ought to be if the ape ones were ‘stuck together’.

Observation from nature: Human chromosome 2 has, along its length and in the places predicted by comparison to chimpanzee chromosomes 2p and 2q, telomere and centromere sequences.

Analogical mental image: If chromosomes were pieces of nylon string that have melted ends to prevent fraying, the human chromosome 2 has an anti-fraying melted bit in its middle. And if centromeres were a characteristic knot, usually halfway down each string, the human chromosome 2 also has two extra of these knots, in the same place as the knots on the separate chimp ones.

*******

Now. Vander. No more fannying around. Answer this, or quit the troll act.

Why is this not strong evidence for evolution?


Quote:
I will ask it again: What is THE theory of evolution, in the neo-Darwinian sense? No one here has provided a scientific definition.
You have had several, and it has been explained why to put it in a soundbite makes the definition near useless. But if you insist, the most catch-all Theory of evolution would be that random mutation plus natural selection, genetic drift, and long-term factors such as continental drift, asteroid impacts and climate changes (eg ice ages) have combined to produce the myriad of life-forms on this planet. (I’ve probably missed bits even so.)

That’s the theory of evolution, which like any scientific theory is the bundled set of hypotheses which together explain something fundamental about the world.

Remember that evolution is also a fact. A scientific fact is something that is so well evinced that it is perverse to withold agreement.

(Such agreement is always provisional, because the whole point is that we’re trying to find out how things are, not defining it at the outset. Something might turn up to make us reconsider. But provisional does not mean uncertain, just not absolutely certain beyond all possibility of error. Since we are not omniscient, we have to make do without absolutes, but simply that in which we can have great confidence in because all the evidence points to it.)

The scientific fact of evolution is that: All living things are related by descent with modification from a common ancestor.

Clear enough?

TTFN, Oolon
Oolon Colluphid is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 10:46 PM.

Top

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