A most scientific test.![]()
Remember, though, the results have to be repeatable.
The good thing evolution never being able to prove anything is that it is always fully repeatable.
A most scientific test.![]()
Remember, though, the results have to be repeatable.
Actually, I think I'll trust the ichthyologists on this one and they say you are wrong. Your original statement was that all fish are color blind. That statement was false. I think there is plenty of hope for me if I continue to research the findings of experts on given subjects before making statements, rather than relying on someone with no education in said subject.I am a bass fisherman. Trust me fish are colorblind. Some say not all, but that has yet to be demonstrated. If you don't believe that there is no hope for you.
You are attempting to move the goalpost. Evolution, as we know it, occurs on Earth, the solar system is irrelevant to your argument that evolution defies the laws of thermodynamics (even if there is life elsewhere in the solar system). Entropy is not a factor in said biological processes because there is a vast amount of energy being added to the Earth system from an outside source, the sun (as well as some energy from within the Earth that fuels ecosystems in the deep ocean). But if you don't believe me, ask Joobz. He's a university professor and teaches a course on thermodynamics. Ask him to evaluate your claims about thermodynamics.You haven't done anything with Thermodynamics but tap danced out of the room in a very shameful and cowardly fashion by claiming the universe is not a closed system. The Solar System is to a first approximation a closed system as far as the earth is concerned. Energy does not come from external sources. A simple tiny light beam from other galaxies is NOT influential energy on this planet what so ever. Nothing on earth has been seen to contradict this. Nothing. But your faith in evolution somehow completely defies this law and your "excuse" is to say that "the Solar System taken to the umpteenth degree is not entirely closed". This means you have faith in some kind of mythical regenerative force that comes along and changes evolution into a creative process.
What people say this?This is why people say evolutionists have no evidence whatsoever.
Please address the scientific and mathematical contradictions in detail.It is a commonsense, science and math contradiction...
Evolutionary theory is based on mountains (literally) of evidence. From the field to the laboratory it is based on, and has been refined by, a vast amount of observation. This is actually similar to your claim that Special Relativity is based on zero observation. I've provided numerous examples of observations consistent with the theory of Special Relativity in the link I earlier provided. Can you address any of them? Or were you pretending to understand SR in the same way that you pretended to be a scientist?...based entirely on a lack of observation.
Many theories are based on things unseen. Or did you mean to say "undetectable"? If so, then you are correct. But as I've already stated, evolutionary theory is based on a great many things seen.Any theory based completely on things unseen is no better than the theory of men from Mars and you get no more credibility for it than if you had conjectured the latter instead of the former.
Incorrect. Ever wondered why your doctor warns you not to stop taking your antibiotic early? Ever wonder why there are no rabbit fossils in the Cambrian deposites, or trilobites in the Tertiary?You can't demonstrate evolution.
Would you recognize science if you saw it? After all, you didn't even know what a scientific theory is defined as.There is no science in evolution. It is simply a religion of the faithful that believe it will someday be shown to disprove science.
I heard James Dodson say that back in the 70's. He claimed that it would only be a few short years before evolution was dead. Yet here we are, thirty some years later, watching as biologists decode the human genome and use phylogenetics to confirm the evolution of humans.For you evolutionists to keep saying "my faiths" and my philosophies are perfect scientific facts is constantly exposing how weak the position of evolution is and why it is beginning to crumble piece by peace.
Please elaborate.Heck you evolutionist can't even keep from fighting each other on which stupid philosophy to believe.
When you're done beating up on your straw man I'll be over here.Again, people are in no way as stupid as you demonstrate you believe them to be. They resent the snot out of your haughty inferences.
The good thing evolution never being able to prove anything is that it is always fully repeatable.
Random mutations are just that, random and are virtually always destructive.
I've seen you claim yourself to be a layman. For some reason, you seem to think you are receiving erudition from non-laymen? Not so. One is a high school teacher. If they claim to be experts, they lie -- no one is an expert on "origins" so don't expect that you are too far behind anyone else on this forum on this subject.Here's one, since you label "Show me God" as urneasonable, I suppose this question should be reasonable even by your standards, not to mention it's even relevant to this thread as well in a broad sense.
How does Intelligent Design account for Nylonase?
First of all, we would already suspect a message from outer space to be due to an intelligence. In the case of the enzyme, one person may think it is designed by an intelligence while another (you perhaps) would say it exists due to a sequence of natural happenings. But in the case of the SETI message, I would think that everyone would agree that the alien intelligence was really showing off, really showing us how capable they were that they could encode two very useful complex messages with the same string of symbols, one message merely shifted (frame-shifted) relative to the other. So you ask how does ID stand up in light of nylonase? I would wonder if nylonase is not an example of an incredible design, similar to if we received SETI message that had multiple uses, depending how you framed it.
You yourself claimed that Behe is "probably the world's foremost microbiologist". Are you asinine for doing so? Does your esteem for Behe's status as the "world's foremost microbiologist" show that you are more about name dropping and degree dropping than any ideas that are palatable. You can't be that shallow. You just can't.What are far greater credentials? That is so asinine. Credentials you esteem show that you are more about name dropping and degree dropping than any ideas that are palatable. You can't be that shallow. You just can't.
You seemed to give a crap when you tried to tell us that Behe is the world's foremost microbiologist (biochemist). Now that we've shown that he is very far from the world's foremost microbiologist (biochemist) and that the world's foremost microbiologists (and biochemists) have roundly criticized his work on irreducible complexity as sloppy, biased and flawed you turn around and declare that their scientific achievement and influence is meaningless.I don't give a crap what degrees someone has.
I don't understand your question (why would the alien's message be characterized by "descent with modification"?).In the case of your metaphorical description of nylonase, what would you call the "frame-shift"? Something along the lines of "descent with modification" or something else?
Would you please address Wings' question regarding the ability of a new strain of bacteria to metabolize Nylon?
I said "one of the the most". Please quit misquoting me you deceiver, or is deceiver redundant when referring to an evolutionist?You yourself claimed that Behe is "probably the world's foremost microbiologist". Are you asinine for doing so? Does your esteem for Behe's status as the "world's foremost microbiologist" show that you are more about name dropping and degree dropping than any ideas that are palatable. You can't be that shallow. You just can't.![]()
Actually, far greater credentials refers to the contribution made by said scientist to a field on knowledge. Remember those Nobel laureates I mentioned in response to your statement that Behe was the worlds foremost microbiologist (He's a biochemist, actually)? They are what I would consider as having far greater credentials than Behe.
You seemed to give a crap when you tried to tell us that Behe is the world's foremost microbiologist (biochemist). Now that we've shown that he is very far from the world's foremost microbiologist (biochemist) and that the world's foremost microbiologists (and biochemists) have roundly criticized his work on irreducible complexity as sloppy, biased and flawed you turn around and declare that their scientific achievement and influence is meaningless.
I find your attitude rather disheartening, I assure you I have no motives other than to understand the Intelligent Design model and how it relates to our knowledge of Science. I'm trying to practice good faith with you, can you not do the same for me?
At the moment, I probably won't be involved for a while. I'm trying to take in all points of view, so I'll stick back as an observer and see what I can pick up from the discussion.
I've seen you claim yourself to be a layman. For some reason, you seem to think you are receiving erudition from non-laymen? Not so. One is a high school teacher. If they claim to be experts, they lie -- no one is an expert on "origins" so don't expect that you are too far behind anyone else on this forum on this subject.
This forum is supposed to be about skepticism but I don't see enough skepticism when it comes to expectations that random mutation and natural selection are sufficient to create self-aware brains from uni-cellular life. If that fsimple formula were complete, HAL9000 would already be here.
About nylonase. Let me try a metaphor. What if SETI received a message from an alien culture (like in the story Contact by Carl Sagan). What if the message was a blueprint to make a machine that had function X. What then if we discover that if we shift the message by one symbol, we get another blueprint that describes how to make a machine that has function Y. Now suppose that function X is something like a, let's say, a vehicle. And let's say function Y is some entirely different function.
First of all, we would already suspect a message from outer space to be due to an intelligence. In the case of the enzyme, one person may think it is designed by an intelligence while another (you perhaps) would say it exists due to a sequence of natural happenings. But in the case of the SETI message, I would think that everyone would agree that the alien intelligence was really showing off, really showing us how capable they were that they could encode two very useful complex messages with the same string of symbols, one message merely shifted (frame-shifted) relative to the other. So you ask how does ID stand up in light of nylonase? I would wonder if nylonase is not an example of an incredible design, similar to if we received SETI message that had multiple uses, depending how you framed it.
I don't understand your question (why would the alien's message be characterized by "descent with modification"?).
My metaphor was not a description of nylonase, it was an example of a frame of information that had more than one "meaning" or more than one "expression that is useful", where a shift of the information frame is what yields two different information strings.
Whether the information is communicated via modulated radio signals, or whether it is a sentence in a book, or whether a string of DNA that expresses into an enzyme, here is my point: to encode two different useful messages by the same string, one being frame shifted from the other, is non-trivial. If you saw it in a radio message would you not be impressed by the cleverness of the sender? Same for a sentence in a book? If you don't think it is difficult, try it.
Why not also, then, for a string of DNA? Seems to me nylonase leans towards design-like characteristics, not random mutation, for the reason that the DNA seems to have been designed in an astounding way same as my metaphorical alien message would obviously have been.
There you go. Because someone is an ichthyologist he can jump into the fish and come back and tell us if he saw color through the eyes of the fish. Again, with the man worship. No one, not even ichthyologists are able to demonstrate color in the fish. I don't care what their philosophies are. They don't mean squat. Science is about proving. Why can't you Evos get that through your heads? Claims and degrees prove nothing! But you put your faith in the unseen and philosophies of men. Why should the subject of ichthyology be any exception?Actually, I think I'll trust the ichthyologists on this one and they say you are wrong. Your original statement was that all fish are color blind. That statement was false. I think there is plenty of hope for me if I continue to research the findings of experts on given subjects before making statements, rather than relying on someone with no education in said subject.
You are attempting to move the goalpost. Evolution, as we know it, occurs on Earth, the solar system is irrelevant to your argument that evolution defies the laws of thermodynamics (even if there is life elsewhere in the solar system). Entropy is not a factor in said biological processes because there is a vast amount of energy being added to the Earth system from an outside source, the sun (as well as some energy from within the Earth that fuels ecosystems in the deep ocean). But if you don't believe me, ask Joobz. He's a university professor and teaches a course on thermodynamics. Ask him to evaluate your claims about thermodynamics.
Those that don't worship at the altar of evolution.What people say this?
Please address the scientific and mathematical contradictions in detail.
Evolutionary theory is based on mountains (literally) of evidence. From the field to the laboratory it is based on, and has been refined by, a vast amount of observation. This is actually similar to your claim that Special Relativity is based on zero observation. I've provided numerous examples of observations consistent with the theory of Special Relativity in the link I earlier provided. Can you address any of them? Or were you pretending to understand SR in the same way that you pretended to be a scientist?
Yes, and they are based on blind faith and relegated as religion. But evolution goes beyond and contradicts science an this is why it stands alone as a "special type" of religion.Many theories are based on things unseen. Or did you mean to say "undetectable"? If so, then you are correct. But as I've already stated, evolutionary theory is based on a great many things seen.
I never have had a doctor tell me to stop early. So much for that argument.Incorrect. Ever wondered why your doctor warns you not to stop taking your antibiotic early? Ever wonder why there are no rabbit fossils in the Cambrian deposites, or trilobites in the Tertiary?
Would you recognize science if you saw it? After all, you didn't even know what a scientific theory is defined as.
I heard James Dodson say that back in the 70's. He claimed that it would only be a few short years before evolution was dead. Yet here we are, thirty some years later, watching as biologists decode the human genome and use phylogenetics to confirm the evolution of humans.
There you go. Because someone is an ichthyologist he can jump into the fish and come back and tell us if he saw color through the eyes of the fish. Again, with the man worship. No one, not even ichthyologists are able to demonstrate color in the fish. I don't care what their philosophies are. They don't mean squat. Science is about proving. Why can't you Evos get that through your heads? Claims and degrees prove nothing! But you put your faith in the unseen and philosophies of men. Why should the subject of ichthyology be any exception?
That's pretty much like, I dunno, "pull my finger," or "click this link," or whatnot, eh?Hey Schneibster, if you want some truly spectacular fireworks, ask rittjc what he thinks about Special Relativity. Go ahead, ask him.![]()
That's pretty much like, I dunno, "pull my finger," or "click this link," or whatnot, eh?
My first guess would be that we shuoldnt be lanching spice shuttles because we might breke teh glass and let teh atmusfear out. My second guess would break Rule 8. My third would probably get me indicted in at least thirty states.
Bold mine. I was right; I don't want to know.Evolutionary theory is based on mountains (literally) of evidence. From the field to the laboratory it is based on, and has been refined by, a vast amount of observation. This is actually similar to your claim that Special Relativity is based on zero observation. I've provided numerous examples of observations consistent with the theory of Special Relativity in the link I earlier provided. Can you address any of them?
LOLOLOL Unbelievable, I HAVE to see that. What thread was it in, Foster? I'll even take it off ignore- I bet I get a quote at least as good as the one at the end of my sig.Or were you pretending to understand SR in the same way that you pretended to be a scientist?
I ain't holdin' my breath- my assessment is, it wouldn't know a science if it walked up and bit it on the... nether regions.Would you recognize science if you saw it? After all, you didn't even know what a scientific theory is defined as.