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02-11-2002, 01:31 PM | #11 |
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Exaggeration acknowledged! I take it back...
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02-11-2002, 02:11 PM | #12 |
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Thanks guys for all your help and useful information.
Oolon, great summary I appreciate the effort! Could you expound upon Ethology and palaeontology? I generally assumed that palaeontology was never on a microscopic or smaller level, but only like Indiana Jones or what have you. Is this correct? And does Ethology examine only living things, including microscopic? I would just appreciate more elaboration on those topics if possible. Liquid, could you also elaborate on the straw-man fallacy you spoke of? Is that really even effective? I am just unfamiliar and curious about it. Also, these two schools of thought seem pretty different to me. Can you also refine your point on how they are non-contradictory? I understand that you said they happen at different times, is there an explanation about this? Could you provide a link perhaps to this debate between which is more important? I know these are probably huge subjects to discuss but I would really enjoy that, I am looking to soak up as much information as possible. Thanks! |
02-11-2002, 02:49 PM | #13 | ||
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A few corrections and some comments.
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However, by “sudden” Gould (and Eldridge) mean a process that is nearly instantaneous in terms of the geological time scale, which means that it takes only a few thousand years. A process of such a “short” duration cannot be distinguished from a truly instantaneous event in the fossil record. Not only does the fossil record show a degree of stability within species that seems incompatible with “classical” Darwinism, but there are very good reasons why such stability should be expected, which had been worked out by Mayr and others. It can be shown statistically that there is a very strong tendency for any significant change in the genome of species with a large number of interbreeding individuals to be suppressed; i.e., new mutations have very little chance of establishing themselves, even if they’re beneficial. To get significant change, a relatively small group has to become reproductively isolated from the larger group (or the number of surviving individuals has to become very small for some reason). At that point the chances that a favorable mutation can establish itself in the population become significant, and evolution can proceed in just the way Darwin envisioned, through random mutation and natural selection. None of this is all that revolutionary, and it certainly doesn’t involve any “new laws of nature”. It also should be emphasized that, even with PE, evolutionary change still looks pretty gradual on a larger scale. Most new species are very similar to the species they evolved from. the only “jumps” in the PE theory are from one species to an immediate successor, and even these “jumps” take quite a while in human terms. |
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02-12-2002, 12:03 AM | #14 | ||||
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It's wrong for all sorts of reasons, but basically it is perfectly possible for both to happen. Some grad, then some punkeek might happen in chronological succession, or some grad might happen in one area and punkeek in another simultaneously, geographic seperation being key. Of course, one is bound to be a dominant trend, but the argument is over which one and by how much. Then of course, just because there is disagreement, and not even considering the fact that the disagreement is not really fundamental, it doesn't invalidate the whole field of evolution as creationists would hope. The fact is that scientists DO disagree, and resolve the disagreements on the basis of evidence, something creationists don't do. Quote:
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To give an analogy, the argument is whether the accelerator pedal gets pushed hard and jerkily, or gradually and held. Quote:
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02-12-2002, 12:59 AM | #15 | |
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bd from kg:
Have you read the chapter "puncturing punctuationism" in Dawkins' book The Blind Watchmaker? I lack the expertise to have my own opinion in this matter but I will parrot the point Dawkins makes in that chapter, which is that there is nothing in Punk Eek that is truly incompatible with "classical" Darwinism, unless you start with a caricature of gradualism that assumes a constant rate of change -- which, according to Dawkins, few if any Darwinists ever actually suggested was the case. The Punk Eek model suggests longer periods of stasis and shorter periods of change, but, unless it is a theory of saltationism (i.e. large, complex morphological changes coming about as a result of a single mutation, or a very few mutations), it must still be essentially "gradualist." It's just that the gradual change does not occur at a constant rate -- which, again, it is not clear that classical Darwinists ever claimed was the case anyway. Personally I am a bit unclear on Gould's own views toward saltationism (Dawkins takes a dim view of it, arguing that it is too improbable for large mutations to be anything but lethal). In the essay "Return of the Hopeful Monster" in The Panda's Thumb, Gould says: Quote:
I sometimes wonder whether this whole debate just comes down to semantics, to an inability of people to agree on precisely what they mean by "gradual." [ February 12, 2002: Message edited by: IesusDomini ]</p> |
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02-12-2002, 01:42 AM | #16 | |
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bd-fromkg: To the best of my knowledge, Gould is a paleontologist. He is currently Curator in the Department of Invertebrate Paleontology at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at <a href="http://www.mcz.harvard.edu/Departments/InvertPaleo/personnel_2.htm" target="_blank">Harvard</a>. Have a look at this brief <a href="http://prelectur.stanford.edu/lecturers/gould/" target="_blank">biography</a>. Now, I defy you to show me anything that says he studies "real live snails."
Anyway, Talk.Origins has a few things to say about <a href="http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/punc-eq.html" target="_blank">Punctuated Equilibrium</a>. From The Origin of Species (by way of Darwins Dangerous Idea): Quote:
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02-12-2002, 01:46 AM | #17 |
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Deddogg: I’d like to add a bit more information to the differences of opinion between Gould, Eldridge (who’s the paleontologist in this scenario), Lewontin et al on the one hand and Dawkins, Maynard-Smith, Dennett et al on the other. I mean besides the obvious personality conflicts .
In the first place, as has been pointed out, both sets firmly agree that natural selection operating on phenotypes of individual organisms is the main cause of evolution. However, Gould is a proponent of the idea that there are phenomena that occur at higher levels of complexity. F’rinstance, Gould has proposed a theory of species sorting whereby, just as some individual organisms are more likely to survive, some species are more likely to survive than others. He claims that certain evolutionary lines give rise to more new species than others. More than PE, this idea drives neo-Darwinian “purists” like Dawkins nutso. Another area of contention is Gould’s complexity theories, especially his anti-reductionist stance (aka evolutionary pluralism). An example would be an ant colony. Your individual ant is a pretty simple critter. It doesn’t have a really huge repertoire of behaviors, and ants can only signal each other in about a half dozen ways. However, an ant colony exhibits extremely complex behaviors taken as a whole. Some species enslave other insects, some farm fungus, some maintain “domesticated” aphid colonies. These behaviors only come about when large numbers of ants interact. In other words, Gould uses this type of “emergent property” as evidence for his claim that evolving species also exhibit such emergent properties. Gould postulates that there are complex patterns in nature that natural selection alone can’t explain. He’s basically looking for the “why’s” such as: why are there 500 species of beetles, but only 50 species of priapulid worms? Why doesn’t most DNA do anything (and hence could not be the result of natural selection)? Why did the dinosaurs die out at the end of the Cretaceous, but the mammals survived? Gould claims that natural selection can only explain individual adaptations, not long-term evolutionary trends. A final, and probably most important area of contention, is Gould’s idea of “spandrels” or exaptations (a term he coined to identify non-adaptive structures or changes in an organism) in biology. Gould points out that many organisms have traits that were not the result of natural selection. These traits exist because they are sort of a by-product of something else. The presence or absence of these exaptations have absolutely no bearing on the fitness or survival of an organism. One example is the human ability to read and write. Natural selection caused human brains to become big (in relation to body mass) for reasons to do with survival. Once they became big, they enabled us to do lots of things that had nothing at all to do with the reason natural selection created them in the first place, e.g., read and write. This doesn’t, of course, mean that these exaptations are useless – they are very likely the things that would increase the fitness of an organism for other environments or conditions, or that would allow the organism to take advantage of a new opportunity. In this case, the exaptations will be acted upon by natural selection, and change into adaptations in their own right. Does that confuse the issue enough? |
02-12-2002, 01:47 AM | #18 |
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While totally unrelated, <a href="http://www.cancerguide.org/median_not_msg.html" target="_blank">this</a> is a very interesting essay by Gould on statistics and cancer.
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02-12-2002, 02:18 AM | #19 | ||
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Ref sources, the best place I know of to start is the Gould Files I linked above. Cheers, Oolon PS I love the way Gould writes, but I find the side issues he uses to make his points are often more interesting than the points themselves. |
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02-12-2002, 02:19 AM | #20 | |
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Cheers, Oolon |
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