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Irreducible complication

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Re: Irreducible complication
Post by Spacekiwi   » Fri Jan 20, 2017 5:16 am

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Heres one for you ddhv : https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3143066/.

and heres nat geo on it: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2016/02/evolution-of-eyes-text.


Furthermore, for testings sake, we can actually look at related species and trace back when they diverged using morphology, or the study of organs and body design. Its how pre genetics you could find ways to group animals most accurately after all: tracing back to common ancestor....


DDHv wrote:Please post at least one paper showing a full TESTABLE linkage between simple and complex with all links functioning.


This is called convergent evolution, and can actually be seen quite easily, by looking at how the wings of a bird, an insect and a bat all differ. Each has slowly changed and evolved from their ancient ancestors, who looked nothing like them, and through the pressure of natural selection, happened to evolve parts that worked well for a task, but since slightly different mutations and different pressures act on each species, you can see that their body has adapted in different ways to accomadate this. This also works for different selection pressures, with anterior limbs have become wings for birds, flipper for whales, arms for us, legs for quadrupeds etc, with the underlying design of bones staying similar, if distorted to fit shapes, whilke the morphology changes to the environment.



No, I just note that multiple independent occurrences increases the odds against chance plus selection being the answer.


But you dont need a particular enzyme to prove evolution, you just need the process, which allows for any enzyme, and miller urey proved that early planetary conditions could form a large amount of the needed amino acids in a few days, and then research into the pathways needed has been producing amzing results that improve our knolwedge of the evolution from chemicals towards modern life through experiments like this: http://www.nature.com/nchem/journal/v7/n4/full/nchem.2202.html


The calculations needed to find the probability of a one time formation of any enzyme of even a few hundred units having each unit with the same handedness, using only peptide bonds, and having a stable folded form in a 2x10^9 year universe of the size we can see with the orbital telescopes given one variation per plank time unit using all estimated matter by chance alone has been done several times that I know about. Odds of 1:10^X00 power, X depending on whose assumptions you accept are adequate proof for me. I haven't yet seen anything showing the odds for stable forms actually being useful. :arrow:
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Re: Irreducible complication
Post by DDHv   » Wed Jan 25, 2017 8:06 am

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Well worth reading: "The Scientific Approach to Evolution" by Rob Stadler

Stadler lists six criteria to provide at least a little objectivity to the question of where, on the gradient of confidence between a meta-analysis of multiple randomized controlled trials and pure speculation, a given piece of science should be placed. Four of these have been touched on in this thread: IIRC, the E noted that evidence that is only from observation provides less confidence than a controlled experiment. Some valid sciences must use lower confidence evidence: Supernova studies can use repeated observation from other galaxies, but consider the difficulties of setting up an experiment :!:

He shows some applications of this, primarily using the evolution controversy to produce examples. He notes, for example, that grand evolution proponents and ID people divide on the question of how far high confidence work, such as that of Richard Lenski (Michigan State University) should be extrapolated. Anyone with sense accepts micro evolution. The grand evolution theorists assume that given enough time, it will produce macro evolution. Other people think this is like measuring the growth rate of a babe and extrapolating it to determine the size of an ancient.

IMO, the book is worth getting just for appendix A, where his background in medical development shows through as he discusses the relations between the criteria of confidence and the hierarchy of scientific evidence. They are related, but not identical!

This book shows that it is possible to dig deeply while still mostly using layman level language
:D

Spacekiwi wrote:Heres one for you ddhv : https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3143066/.

and heres nat geo on it: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2016/ ... -eyes-text.

snip

Using Stadler's criteria: The origin of eyes is not repeatable; direct measurement of such origin isn't possible without a time machine; this is a retrospective, observational study; there are clear opportunities for bias; many assumptions are required (some are noted, some not); and the confidence level is overstated. For selective pressure to occur, it is not enough to have a light sensor. There must be a minimum system which includes connection to the efectors, and the efectors themselves must work
:|

Spacekiwi wrote:This is called convergent evolution, and can actually be seen quite easily, by looking at how the wings of a bird, an insect and a bat all differ.

We know how a bat's biochemistry produces the elongated phalanges. No one has produced any credible idea as to how this, with the other needed adaptions for usefulness, can be produced from time and chance. The lack of fossil evidence suggests this is not strongly supported
:|

research into the pathways needed has been producing amzing results that improve our knolwedge of the evolution from chemicals towards modern life through experiments like this: http://www.nature.com/nchem/journal/v7/ ... .2202.html

To mention only one thing: all the enzymes we know about are highly specific in their actions. Suites of enzymes work together to produce useful results. Much extrapolation and many assumptions are needed at this time to provide a bridge between the high confidence experiment and grand evolution theory
:!:
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Re: Irreducible complication
Post by DDHv   » Wed Jan 25, 2017 8:47 am

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The E wrote:
DDHv wrote:I don't accept that any theory can be confirmed as correct, since there is always the chance that something else, either not yet thought of, or not accepted, is correct. It is, however, possible to prove a theory to be incorrect, using experiments and logic.


Sure. But proving a theory to be false is only half the work, since you also need to provide a new theory that not only explains everything the old theory did but also the new observations that it didn't.

snip

Proving falsehood can be the first step, as it shows there is a need to generate other ideas, which then can be tested. Look at the effects Becquerel's accidental discovery of radioactivity had on atomic theory, or the effects of the accidental discovery of artificial vaccination had on disease prevention. From finding a need to change the ideas to current results took decades of work by many people
:!:

What I object to is the emphasis on current theories as being correct. There should be instead an emphasis on using good methods. Good methods are the filter needed to find where we are not correct. Results will take much work by many people. The basic axioms of science: there is a universe; it is reasonable. We accept these because of the results we are getting. The ID people assume a reasonable universe requires a reasoning source, the others assume time and chance can produce such a universe. The anthropic multiverse idea is the only one I've read that makes sense of time and chance, but unless someone comes up with a test for it, my confidence level for this idea is zero.
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Re: Irreducible complication
Post by The E   » Wed Jan 25, 2017 9:34 am

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DDHv wrote:What I object to is the emphasis on current theories as being correct. There should be instead an emphasis on using good methods. Good methods are the filter needed to find where we are not correct. Results will take much work by many people. The basic axioms of science: there is a universe; it is reasonable. We accept these because of the results we are getting.


Then why do you consider Creationists to be credible sources?

The ID people assume a reasonable universe requires a reasoning source, the others assume time and chance can produce such a universe. The anthropic multiverse idea is the only one I've read that makes sense of time and chance, but unless someone comes up with a test for it, my confidence level for this idea is zero.


But ID, an entire theoretical framework based on an untestable axiom, is okay with you, yes?

He shows some applications of this, primarily using the evolution controversy to produce examples. He notes, for example, that grand evolution proponents and ID people divide on the question of how far high confidence work, such as that of Richard Lenski (Michigan State University) should be extrapolated. Anyone with sense accepts micro evolution. The grand evolution theorists assume that given enough time, it will produce macro evolution. Other people think this is like measuring the growth rate of a babe and extrapolating it to determine the size of an ancient.


You do know that Micro- and Macroevolution are concepts that are inextricably linked to each other and that one cannot be valid without the other?

(TL;DR: Microevolution are the myriad of mutations and the resulting adaptations that occur as a result. Macroevolution is what happens when groups of the same species become isolated from each other in such a way as to make reproduction impossible; the most common mechanism for this is geographical isolation [See Darwin and his birds], but can also be the result of a mutation, Hyla versicolor and Hyla chrysocelis are examples of this. End result is that the two populations will, over the course of time, diverge ever further until they can be considered separate species.)

Using Stadler's criteria: The origin of eyes is not repeatable; direct measurement of such origin isn't possible without a time machine; this is a retrospective, observational study; there are clear opportunities for bias; many assumptions are required (some are noted, some not); and the confidence level is overstated. For selective pressure to occur, it is not enough to have a light sensor. There must be a minimum system which includes connection to the efectors, and the efectors themselves must work


For the umpteenth time: Your attempts at finding arguments against evolution are based on you not understanding the theory of evolution.
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Re: Irreducible complication
Post by Imaginos1892   » Wed Jan 25, 2017 12:55 pm

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I don't see how people can continue to argue that just because scientists can't explain absolutely everything today, the creationists must be right.
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Re: Irreducible complication
Post by Spacekiwi   » Thu Jan 26, 2017 3:43 am

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Something akin to the sensors and nervous systems in a planarian perhaps? WHich the royal society has studied as a precursor to normal eyes, and estiamtes the evolutionary period at about 370,000 years? (https://dx.doi.org/10.1098%2Frspb.1994.0048) and which has the precursor steps detailed on likely pathways of origin here (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 9208002454). Evolution of photoreceptors for the intitial start point is covered here (Evol Biol. 1977; 10: 207–263).

There is a known pathway by which eyes can be traced as an extension of the nervous system from slightly modified skin cells to what we know of them today, so the effectors bit doesnt actaully help argue against it.

DDHv wrote:Using Stadler's criteria: The origin of eyes is not repeatable; direct measurement of such origin isn't possible without a time machine; this is a retrospective, observational study; there are clear opportunities for bias; many assumptions are required (some are noted, some not); and the confidence level is overstated. For selective pressure to occur, it is not enough to have a light sensor. There must be a minimum system which includes connection to the efectors, and the efectors themselves must work
:|



Actually, yes we do, and we have the genetic and morphology research behind wings evolution pretty well covered too.... (http://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms1437, http://genesdev.cshlp.org/content/22/2/121.full, http://www.pnas.org/content/103/17/6581.full, http://science.sciencemag.org/content/299/5605/402 , http://www.pnas.org/content/103/17/6581.full#ref-10, http://www.pnas.org/content/103/17/6581.full#ref-11, amongst others). So from this, we can see the genetic and morphological changes that occured between the non flying ancestors and the current day bats and birds. And it only requires very few mutations to change too, mainly a skin gene, an easily mutated bone growth gene, and 1 to 2 million years, which is an extreme eyeblink to evolution. We dont need THE reason for change, especially when there might be multiple reasons, we only know that there was one becasue genetics nd morphology and cladistics show us that something happened that favoured the natural selectionary pressures that led to modern day bats. The main reason may have changed over the millenia, but the overall force of natural selection is sitill visible in the direction it favored.
Spacekiwi wrote:This is called convergent evolution, and can actually be seen quite easily, by looking at how the wings of a bird, an insect and a bat all differ.

We know how a bat's biochemistry produces the elongated phalanges. No one has produced any credible idea as to how this, with the other needed adaptions for usefulness, can be produced from time and chance. The lack of fossil evidence suggests this is not strongly supported
:|



modern ezymes may be, but the research into potential formations of life have shown that you dont need the enzymes to begin with, you eventually evolve the ones you need. Wachterhauser et al showed this in mulitple experiments: that you can form what could be considered the basis of life via normal chemical reactions that occur in nature, and given time, chemical pathways occur as concentrations rise, leading to new reactions taht can eventually form life.... ( starter material: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron%E2%8 ... hypothesis, http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/ ... 58/1429/59, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 1X06000641, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 1X01003971, http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/content/23/6/1286.short, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 1X04004704, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 3393E0043C, http://www.pnas.org/content/109/14/E821.full, amongst others).

SO we know the conditions required to form abiotic life, and we can prove the intermediate steps from simple chemcial pathways to basic cell forms, and we can prove that given other conditions, the balance of the chemistry in our cells would be different hd it not evolved this way. While we may not be able to say we saw it happen, each individual step has been seen to occur, and the first few steps are still occuring today in places under the ocean, so the starting point is definitely provable....




You've unforutnately fallen for the idea that if modern life uses these chemical reactions, ancient life must have as well.



research into the pathways needed has been producing amzing results that improve our knolwedge of the evolution from chemicals towards modern life through experiments like this: http://www.nature.com/nchem/journal/v7/ ... .2202.html

To mention only one thing: all the enzymes we know about are highly specific in their actions. Suites of enzymes work together to produce useful results. Much extrapolation and many assumptions are needed at this time to provide a bridge between the high confidence experiment and grand evolution theory
:!:
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Re: Irreducible complication
Post by WeirdlyWired   » Thu Jan 26, 2017 5:48 am

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Actually, yes we do, and we have the genetic and morphology research behind wings evolution pretty well covered too.... (http://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms1437, http://genesdev.cshlp.org/content/22/2/121.full, http://www.pnas.org/content/103/17/6581.full, http://science.sciencemag.org/content/299/5605/402 , http://www.pnas.org/content/103/17/6581.full#ref-10, http://www.pnas.org/content/103/17/6581.full#ref-11, amongst others). So from this, we can see the genetic and morphological changes that occured between the non flying ancestors and the current day bats and birds. And it only requires very few mutations to change too, mainly a skin gene, an easily mutated bone growth gene, and 1 to 2 million years, which is an extreme eyeblink to evolution. We dont need THE reason for change, especially when there might be multiple reasons, we only know that there was one becasue genetics nd morphology and cladistics show us that something happened that favoured the natural selectionary pressures that led to modern day bats. The main reason may have changed over the millenia, but the overall force of natural selection is sitill visible in the direction it favored.
Spacekiwi wrote:This is called convergent evolution, and can actually be seen quite easily, by looking at how the wings of a bird, an insect and a bat all differ.

We know how a bat's biochemistry produces the elongated phalanges. No one has produced any credible idea as to how this, with the other needed adaptions for usefulness, can be produced from time and chance. The lack of fossil evidence suggests this is not strongly supported
:|



modern ezymes may be, but the research into potential formations of life have shown that you dont need the enzymes to begin with, you eventually evolve the ones you need. Wachterhauser et al showed this in mulitple experiments: that you can form what could be considered the basis of life via normal chemical reactions that occur in nature, and given time, chemical pathways occur as concentrations rise, leading to new reactions taht can eventually form life.... ( starter material: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron%E2%8 ... hypothesis, http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/ ... 58/1429/59, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 1X06000641, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 1X01003971, http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/content/23/6/1286.short, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 1X04004704, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 3393E0043C, http://www.pnas.org/content/109/14/E821.full, amongst others).

SO we know the conditions required to form abiotic life, and we can prove the intermediate steps from simple chemcial pathways to basic cell forms, and we can prove that given other conditions, the balance of the chemistry in our cells would be different hd it not evolved this way. While we may not be able to say we saw it happen, each individual step has been seen to occur, and the first few steps are still occuring today in places under the ocean, so the starting point is definitely provable....




You've unforutnately fallen for the idea that if modern life uses these chemical reactions, ancient life must have as well.



research into the pathways needed has been producing amzing results that improve our knolwedge of the evolution from chemicals towards modern life through experiments like this: http://www.nature.com/nchem/journal/v7/ ... .2202.html

To mention only one thing: all the enzymes we know about are highly specific in their actions. Suites of enzymes work together to produce useful results. Much extrapolation and many assumptions are needed at this time to provide a bridge between the high confidence experiment and grand evolution theory
:!:
[/quote]

Eyes?! Box Jellyfish have functional eyes, NO CNS, NO brain. 4 types of eyes, 24 total and 2 have lids, form images and resemble human eyes. Pretty basic animal to develop eyes and use them for terrestrial navigation.
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Re: Irreducible complication
Post by DDHv   » Mon Feb 06, 2017 10:01 am

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The E wrote:
DDHv wrote:The closest I know at present to hard economics is the Austrian school of economics. Does anyone know another school that is doing better at predicting :?:


I just have to pick this particular thing up again just because it's so funny.

So, DDHv, all throughout this thread, you are absolutely adamant that the only true science is science confirmed through experimentation and observation.

Here's what Ludwig von Mises, one of the austrian school's most influential figures has to say on that subject:
The subject matter of all historical sciences is the past. They cannot teach us anything which would be valid for all human actions, that is, for the future too ... No laboratory experiments can be performed with regard to human action ... Its statements and propositions are not derived from experience. They are, like those of logic and mathematics, a priori. They are not subject to verification or falsification on the ground of experience and facts.


(The above being a paraphrasation of his arguments here)

And then we come to the austrian school's predictive power: It is nil, or at the very least, not significantly better than competing theories. It seems to me that they're not much better than a stopped clock is when it comes to telling time.

To improve clarity: the basic axioms of science are; there is a universe; the universe is reasonable. I add one: all of us are going to get some things wrong.

Idea beginnings don't matter. IIRC, Singer is reported to have produced the idea of a needle with the hole at the tip instead of the other end from a dream. Theory testing must be empirical, although it might be filtered through several layers of theories. Humans have a strong tendency to get into thinking ruts. It is important to study the ideas and tests of people with different biases than ourselves, as they are more likely to locate bad assumptions in our theories. Assumptions tend to come from some bias.

Since Euclid, geometry has a strong theory basis - the non euclidean geometries don't change that, they just extend the straight metrics of Euclid into closing curved and spreading curved geometries. My bias from an engineering training notes that the Euclidean form is useful for local extents, while the closing version (great circles, crossing, if you've read "Babel 17") is needed for describing a whole earth geometry. IIUC, the general theory of relativity states that mass tends to cause spatial metrics to shift toward the closing form: One observation suggesting that it is correct was the shifting of apparent position of a star during an eclipse of the sun. In cosmology, one suggestion is that the universe as a whole has a spreading metric.

The whole point is that what counts is not whether a conclusion agrees with a given theory, but whether high confidence methods can be used in testing it. If not, the influence of bias will probably overcome the influence of evidence. All humans have some bias.

One point often neglected in the irreducible complication discussion is that of instincts. If a poisonous life form doesn't have the correct instinct to use a given mechanism, it becomes a negative factor, not a positive one. Without an instinct to defend the hive, a bee's stinger, poison production, storage sacks, and the muscles to move the poison through the sting just absorb metabolic energy in producing them. Ditto for any other poisonous life form.

Examine the pacific golden plover, which summers in Alaska, and after a several day flight, winters in the Hawaiian islands. If it stays in Alaska, it dies. If it leaves before storing enough fat, it dies. If it flies alone instead of the V formations, it dies. It arrives with roughly a 10% reserve, so if the navigation is poor, it dies. Doesn't selection require at least some survivors? These things suggest that if grand evolutionary theory is correct, the pacific golden plover doesn't exist as described ;)

Richard Lenski's high confidence experimentation with e. coli, produced a solid example of micro-evolution, a novel citrate metabolic pathway. Dawkins, a salesman for grand evolution, trumpeted that new genes had been produced.

Bount, ZD et al. Genomic analysis of a key innovation in an experimental Eschericha coli population, Nature. 2012:489:513>20
and
Quandt,EM et al.Recursive genomewide recombination and sequencing reveals a key refinement step in the evolution of a metabolic innovation in Escherichia coli, PNAS. 2014:111:2217>22

show the actual action at roughly generations 31500 and 33000 respectively to be a transposition of one gene and a mutation of a promoter region. These were in 1 out of roughly 10^13 total organisms.

Early stage comparison of chimp and human genomes was hampered by human DNA contamination and other problems. Even so, the estimated 1.2% of difference suggested would come to roughly 36 million DNA base pair differences. Given the evidence from micro-evolution experiments and observations, it is quite unlikely that enough individuals existed in the suggested time span to make this difference probable. Later results suggest differences in the 10>20% range.

There are more basic problems: at present belief in abiogenesis and eukaryogenesis are both based on faith in grand evolution, not empirical science. Those who have this faith should work on experiments and observations, but should not describe as proven what has many empirical problems. My current bias in this is: variation within kinds, and wide moats between kinds. This is a faith position as is grand evolution. The ID people at least have a reasonable reason to believe in a reasonable universe, instead accepting that science axiom by faith alone.

My bias is an engineering one: to return to economics, there are many feed backs. One problem is that many unexpected consequences have generational time spans. Oscillation occurs when feedback has amplification and a time span longer than the natural resonance period. You may recall that Nikolai Kondratiev was executed because his wave theory suggested that socialist economies were subject to cycles - the soviet big shots didn't like that idea at all. Talk about shooting the messenger
:!:

The currently accepted Keynesian economic theories make assumptions. Examination of places which used these over five decades or more suggests something is wrong with the basics. One probable reason is that running the control loop through a centralized decision point in these economies lengthens the control time span, increasing oscillations. Local decisions in a decentralized economy are faster. Engineering theory says this will make for more stability.

The Austrian school of economics is unlikely to be totally correct: we haven't had a Hari Seldon yet! Like geometry, it has several formally worked out theoretical patterns. Comparison of these with real world results just may move us toward a better set of theories. My current prediction is: a near correction in US stocks, followed by a big rise for one>three years without a solid economy, then a major crash similar to the 1930s. Some people think that manipulation by big shots wanting control is the current problem, rather than their economic ignorance.

Hard science is a series of successive approximations of our models (theories) to reality. This is only possible by comparing results to reality, even indirectly. Ignoring evidence and logic by people whose assumptions come from different biases is an excellent way to not see any weaknesses in your own theories
:|

PS. "Captain Empirical" by Sam Nicholson is a good SF read
:)
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Re: Irreducible complication
Post by The E   » Mon Feb 06, 2017 11:49 am

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DDHv wrote:Richard Lenski's high confidence experimentation with e. coli, produced a solid example of micro-evolution, a novel citrate metabolic pathway. Dawkins, a salesman for grand evolution, trumpeted that new genes had been produced.


Dawkins is not wrong. The genetic code of the e. coli at the end of the experiment is materially different from the starting code, therefore new genes have appeared that were not present in the bacteria's genome before. It wasn't a case of a previously dormant pathway being activated, but a comprehensive demonstration of evolutionary mechanisms.

show the actual action at roughly generations 31500 and 33000 respectively to be a transposition of one gene and a mutation of a promoter region. These were in 1 out of roughly 10^13 total organisms.


That's how new genes come into being.

Which you would be aware of if you knew anything about genetics, but it's pretty clear that you don't.

Early stage comparison of chimp and human genomes was hampered by human DNA contamination and other problems. Even so, the estimated 1.2% of difference suggested would come to roughly 36 million DNA base pair differences. Given the evidence from micro-evolution experiments and observations, it is quite unlikely that enough individuals existed in the suggested time span to make this difference probable. Later results suggest differences in the 10>20% range.


And again you are showing that you do not have a good working concept of what probability means, or the timespans involved, or the mechanisms involved.

I think I'm starting to get why creationism is so appealing to you: It's because it's easier to accept an unprovable, unseen, unobservable force and intellect at work than it is to grasp the concept of randomness, isn't it?

There are more basic problems: at present belief in abiogenesis and eukaryogenesis are both based on faith in grand evolution, not empirical science.


We have experimental evidence for abiogenesis, but don't let that stop you.

Those who have this faith should work on experiments and observations, but should not describe as proven what has many empirical problems.


The experiments have been done. Creationists and other morons choose to ignore them.

Speaking of, where are the experiments confirming creationist beliefs? Or at the very least, the experiments that show results incompatible with the theory of evolution? You have so far failed to find any. All you've put forward are faulty thought experiments.

My current bias in this is: variation within kinds, and wide moats between kinds. This is a faith position as is grand evolution. The ID people at least have a reasonable reason to believe in a reasonable universe, instead accepting that science axiom by faith alone.


What is that "reasonable reason" you speak of? Has there been a definitive record of divine intervention?

My bias is an engineering one: to return to economics, there are many feed backs.


I like how you completely gloss over the unscientific nature of your favourite economic theory. Must be those patented creationist blinkers at work.

One problem is that many unexpected consequences have generational time spans. Oscillation occurs when feedback has amplification and a time span longer than the natural resonance period. You may recall that Nikolai Kondratiev was executed because his wave theory suggested that socialist economies were subject to cycles - the soviet big shots didn't like that idea at all. Talk about shooting the messenger


You know what I am going to talk about instead? Non sequiturs, and how they make a debater look stupid.

The currently accepted Keynesian economic theories make assumptions. Examination of places which used these over five decades or more suggests something is wrong with the basics. One probable reason is that running the control loop through a centralized decision point in these economies lengthens the control time span, increasing oscillations. Local decisions in a decentralized economy are faster. Engineering theory says this will make for more stability.


Whenever engineers step out of their comfort zone, they are grand masters at being wrong with confidence (There's reams of papers in Physics and Mathematics written by engineers to document this).

Also, decentralized systems are really bad at dealing with large-scale problems.

The Austrian school of economics is unlikely to be totally correct: we haven't had a Hari Seldon yet!


No, it's unlikely to be totally correct because it's made up bullshit. Psychohistory, in contrast, was a rigorously defined mathematical construct that had its predictive power proven over and over again. The austrian school actively rejects that approach; If something like Psychohistory is possible, the austrian school are unlikely to bring it forth.

Like geometry, it has several formally worked out theoretical patterns. Comparison of these with real world results just may move us toward a better set of theories. My current prediction is: a near correction in US stocks, followed by a big rise for one>three years without a solid economy, then a major crash similar to the 1930s. Some people think that manipulation by big shots wanting control is the current problem, rather than their economic ignorance.


No, manipulation by the people at the top is definitely the biggest problem.

Hard science is a series of successive approximations of our models (theories) to reality. This is only possible by comparing results to reality, even indirectly. Ignoring evidence and logic by people whose assumptions come from different biases is an excellent way to not see any weaknesses in your own theories


Why don't you apply that sort of thinking to creationist ideas?
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Re: Irreducible complication
Post by DDHv   » Mon Feb 06, 2017 2:49 pm

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The E wrote:
snip

You do know that Micro- and Macroevolution are concepts that are inextricably linked to each other and that one cannot be valid without the other?

DDHv wrote:A bias toward grand evolution assumes they are linked.


(TL;DR: Microevolution are the myriad of mutations and the resulting adaptations that occur as a result. Macroevolution is what happens when groups of the same species become isolated from each other in such a way as to make reproduction impossible; the most common mechanism for this is geographical isolation [See Darwin and his birds], but can also be the result of a mutation, Hyla versicolor and Hyla chrysocelis are examples of this. End result is that the two populations will, over the course of time, diverge ever further until they can be considered separate species.)
Divergence of species is not the formation of new organs or traits. Darwin's finches remained finches, and frogs remained frogs. These are micro evolution.


snip

For the umpteenth time: Your attempts at finding arguments against evolution are based on you not understanding the theory of evolution.

Your attempts at finding arguments against ID are based on you not understanding the difference between micro evolution and grand evolution theories. Grand evolution is like measuring the take off of a jet and extrapolating when it will reach orbital velocity at that acceleration. In theory, the SCRAM jet, if it is ever reduced to practice, can come close to orbital velocity, but our current jets run into limitations well before that.

The assumption that time and chance account for all was accepted in Babylonia. It does not account for a reasonable universe.
Weirdly Wired wrote:Eyes?! Box Jellyfish have functional eyes, NO CNS, NO brain. 4 types of eyes, 24 total and 2 have lids, form images and resemble human eyes. Pretty basic animal to develop eyes and use them for terrestrial navigation.
Very much yes! Is a central, or even complicated nervous system needed to have a connection between an efector and its sensor? Tell that to the Venus Fly Trap.
Wikipedia wrote:The mechanism by which the trap snaps shut involves a complex interaction between elasticity, turgor and growth. The trap only shuts when there have been two stimulations of the trigger hairs; this is to avoid inadvertent triggering of the mechanism by dust and other wind-borne debris. In the open, untripped state, the lobes are convex (bent outwards), but in the closed state, the lobes are concave (forming a cavity). It is the rapid flipping of this bistable state that closes the trap,[6] but the mechanism by which this occurs is still poorly understood. When the trigger hairs are stimulated, an action potential (mostly involving calcium ions—see calcium in biology) is generated, which propagates across the lobes and stimulates cells in the lobes and in the midrib between them.[12] It is hypothesized that there is a threshold of ion buildup for the Venus flytrap to react to stimulation.[13] After closing, the flytrap counts additional stimulations of the trigger hairs, to five total, to start the production of digesting enzymes.[14] The acid growth theory states that individual cells in the outer layers of the lobes and midrib rapidly move 1H+ (hydrogen ions) into their cell walls, lowering the pH and loosening the extracellular components, which allows them to swell rapidly by osmosis, thus elongating and changing the shape of the trap lobe. Alternatively, cells in the inner layers of the lobes and midrib may rapidly secrete other ions, allowing water to follow by osmosis, and the cells to collapse. Both of these mechanisms may play a role and have some experimental evidence to support them.[15][16]

Note that the VFT gets zero advantage before a working mechanism exists. The Box jellyfish had a good article also, thank you for mentioning it - I didn't read more than Wikipedia. Interesting interacting irreducible intricacies involving bioware like these don't let me accept the time and chance assumptions. There is no prize for partial results. Grand evolution requires that there be an advantage at every stage, or there will be a metabolic drag on the organism's resources and thus a disadvantage
:|
Douglas Hvistendahl
Retired technical nerd

Dumb mistakes are very irritating.
Smart mistakes go on forever
Unless you test your assumptions!
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