#171052 - 05/24/08 12:39 AM
Re: New genetic information
[Re: Bravus]
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One who listens, then responds intricately
Registered: 09/22/07
Posts: 285
Loc: CT
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answer evolution gives to this question That is my point. Except for evolution there is no reason to believe in natural selection. Show me another manifistation of natural selection. In the real world it is survival of the luckiest. I will explain this as carefully as possible. In the real world it is survival of the luckiest, an argument that agrees with the Bible. "I returned, and saw under the sun, that the race [is] not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all" Just a warning the Bible does not believe in survival of the fittest only survival of the luckiest. I believe the Bible's claim is scientifically accurate; no form of strength guarantees success, it is all luck and chance. I will put this in science talk for you, instead of monsters I will say this. The Bible claims and the real world proves that it is survival of the luckiest, then to disprove the Bible you HAVE to explain why there aren't a large amount of vestigial limbs or parts. To explain the question plainly How does evolution prevent more vestigial limbs, like a finger eventually growing on your back or something. If you were to grow a finger on your back how would evolution prevent you from reproducing? You can't respond with a theoretical argument you have to give a factual mechanism. DNA is a mechanism, survival of the fittest is a theory. You have to respond with a mechanism for it to be a scientific response.
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#171109 - 05/24/08 06:41 AM
Re: New genetic information
[Re: Nan]
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Husband and Father
Registered: 09/05/04
Posts: 7049
Loc: Brisbane, Australia
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Nishaun, this is my last attempt at this.
A finger is an incredibly complex thing. It contains muscles, nerves, blood vessels and tendons, all arranged in particular very precise ways. Look at one of your fingers for a moment, and think about all the things you can do with it.
Now, for a finger to arise in an evolutionary context takes a long time and many, many steps. A finger does not just magically appear in a single individual in a single generation. If it did, as I said earlier, it would not have evolved, it would be a birth defect. It would not be encoded in the DNA. Therefore it would not be inheritable. Whether it stops the creature breeding or not is largely irrelevant, because it will not be carried on.
So again, are you talking about individual creatures with birth defects, or about genetic lines that breed true with a particular characteristic?
If it's the latter, then the finger (or ear) on the back would start as a small fleshy nodule. That would have to offer some kind of advantage that increased the survival/breeding chances of the individuals having it enough to make it more likely that the gene for the nodule was passed on than for the genes of creatures without the nodule. The nodule would then have to be refined through an *extremely* long sequence of random but favourable mutations (keeping in mind that the vast majority of mutations are unfavourable, as you said). This would literally take millions of years to occur.
I'm not 'proving evolution using evolution' as you've repeatedly claimed. Rather, I'm explaining the way in which evolutionary theory accounts for the world we see around us. It's all I can do, because I can't 'prove' evolution or natural selection in any other way than through inferences about the world around us. And I recognise that other sets of inferences are possible.
You've said you don't like the 'misunderstanding' statement, and I respect that. But I do think you may be confused about the probabilistic basis of natural selection. This occurs, not for an individual, but for a population. Agreed, a finger on your back will not stop an individual from surviving or reproducing. But across the whole population, will individuals with fingers on their backs be more likely or less likely than individuals without to successfully breed? That is the mechanism, so looking at the case of a single individual does not help.
One further note: "survival of the fittest" is an oxymoron, since "fittest" in this instance simply means "most likely to survive". And we found out which is most likely to survive through seeing which do survive. So the phrase is reduced to "survival of the survivors": oxymoron.
But the exact same analysis applies to your proposed alternative locution "survival of the luckiest". If you're lucky, you get to survive, so we're back to "survival of the survivors".
_________________________
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate
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#171124 - 05/24/08 03:40 PM
Re: New genetic information
[Re: D. Allan]
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One who listens, then responds intricately
Registered: 09/22/07
Posts: 285
Loc: CT
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is a by-product of the death of the poorly adapted Thanks D.Allen you have given me an actual response, Bravus has been ignoring my actual question. I will respond to you with this question, how does evolution guarantee the death of the weak and prevent more pointless mutations (like three eyed monsters)? That is the mechanism I am looking for.
Edited by nishaun (05/24/08 03:53 PM)
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#171127 - 05/24/08 03:50 PM
Re: New genetic information
[Re: Nan]
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One who listens, then responds intricately
Registered: 09/22/07
Posts: 285
Loc: CT
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I think it is very hard to argue that natural selection (of possibly random mutations) does not occur Thanks for your answer but I have made no such argument. Bravus was arguing against my 99 snafus principle (read back if you missed it). He used natural selection as a counter argument. The basis of the principle is that because of randomness in this world, many many deformities would also occur alongside the perfections. I believe the probability of the deformed surviving is far greater than a lucky positive change. So the mechanism I was searching for is a mechanism that ensures the death of the weak.
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