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Annoying creationists

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What medical breakthroughs depend on millions of years? Is it not really years or decades of evolutionary change for any such breakthroughs you might cite?

You and Kleinman ask inane questions that just reveal your ignorance and lack of understanding further. Moreover, you do not seem to have the basic mental abilities to comprehend the explanations offered. Moreover, you ignore all questions asked of you--while expected masses of data from science to convince you that reality really is true.

Let's see...you need no measurable evidence to convince you that an invisible entity designed the universe to bring forth humans (particularly you), but you need gobs of evidence you can't possibly understand anyhow (due to your lack of basic understandings of evolution) so you can ignore the answers, change the subject, and pretend that your lack of understanding means that your invisible immeasurable intelligent designer is real.

Does your intelligent designer like them dense, pedantic, and dishonest? Because I think you've just earned an extra halo and some heaven bonus points tonight.
 
Not a single one of these were ad hominem arguments, TA. Ad hom arguments link a personal feature about the arguer too why their argument was wrong. These are simply insults.

Sorry mate, insults are ad hominem attacks. Ad hominem usually has precisely nothing to do with the argument at all:

Dictionary.com agrees: 2. attacking an opponent's character rather than answering his argument.

So does Webster: 2 : marked by or being an attack on an opponent's character rather than by an answer to the contentions made.

And the final nail, so does OED: • adverb & adjective (of an argument) personal rather than objective.

— ORIGIN Latin, ‘to the person’.
 
Oh no....now you will get his inane wrath.... He despises me because I pointed out he made a similar logical fallacy upon Yahzi, and I even went into detail to show him what the fallacy actually entails--but he is the proverbial buffoon in my sig link-- most people have him on ignore.
:dl:

Classic!

No worries, sweetie, Taffer knows all about me.

In terms of logical fallacies - they've all been one way, which is exactly why you and your buddy aren't answering. You been carved up two or three times and you didn't like having your feeble bigotry thrown in your face.

You've tried to find a logical fallacy but you fell flat on your face. Have another go anytime. ;)

Harden up.
I don't think Atheist is actually an atheist.
Another classic! As I said to you before, sweetie, I have a million pieces of proof where my money is - how about you?

Remember my good friend Jesus and "let he who is without sin cast the first stone"? Ooops! That brown stuff you're wading in? Hate to tell you but you're resonsible for it all yourself. Man, does it STINK!

I learn a lot here.
Just such a pity that you don't bother to apply it. (In fact I'm surprised you have time to read other posts, given your... umm... prolific!.. output.)

Mind you, I bet your pupils LOVE you for your attitude!

:dl:

(You remind me so much of a teacher long ago whom we nicknamed "Crowbar", so humourless and boring was she.)
 
Not to worry. I don't think one has to know any of that stuff, in order to be a hired expert witness for workman's compensation lawsuits.
One presumes for the rich defense. Can't have those uppity workers upsetting our profits just because they got caught up in the machine we bribed the OSHA inspector to ignore and lost an arm and a leg, can we?

This sounds just about right for kleinman to me. I'm at least somewhat relieved that there's a good chance it doesn't generally actually have to treat any patients.
 
Although abiogenesis is not your field, I'm sure you can make more sense out of quote below about it. Compare that bit of understanding you can glean to anything said by Hewitt, Hammy, or Kleinman. These guys have convinced themselves that everyone is too stupid to understand them. But nobody is understanding them. Actual facts are pretty well understood by everybody--although creationists have a much harder time understanding them than those living in the reality based community.

These chains are proposed as the first, primitive forms of life. In an RNA world, different forms of RNA compete with each other for free nucleotides and are subject to natural selection. The most efficient molecules of RNA, the ones able to efficiently catalyze their own reproduction, survived and evolved, forming modern RNA.

Competition between RNA may have favored the emergence of cooperation between different RNA chains, opening the way for the formation of the first proto-cell. Eventually, RNA chains randomly developed with catalytic properties that help amino acids bind together (peptide-bonding). These amino acids could then assist with RNA synthesis, giving those RNA chains that could serve as ribozymes the selective advantage. Eventually DNA, lipids, carbohydrates, and all sorts of other chemicals were recruited into life. This led to the first prokaryotic cells, and eventually to life as we know it.

Cells are sort of like mini communities...and organisms are like communities of cells...it's all built from the bottom up via selection--just like actual communities and forum communities and ecosystems. Nobody needs to intend whatever it is communities become-- Creationists somehow see this selection process that anyone can understand as "chaos magically leading to complexity"--they just can't understand the ratcheting...the selection...no matter how many times or how many people explain it.
I have found no worthwhile evidence that an "RNA world" ever existed and, in my opinion, RNA would not have been a suitable material for a replicator - it is much too labile, the precursor nucleotides would not have formed and selective competition could not have arisen in the absence of bounding to define the evolving system. Robert Shapiro argues against any replicators being involved in the origin of life and I agree with him - excepting that the sun's daily cycle might be construed as a replicator.

Today, you have again presented the group with an extended screed of ad hominem abuse. Those who try to debate alongside you must find your behaviour an embarrassment.
 
This is a weird thread, people are seemingly calling names and spouting. Whoever said this is striking me as especially weird:

"It is not enough to observe similarities between genetic structures. You must demonstrate how these structures could have arisen initially and how they can transform from one to another. You have done neither"

I say: it is not enough to notice similarities between physics and astronomy. You must demonstrate how these structures could have arisen initially and how they can transform from one to another. You are a loser, Archimedes, Newton, Einstein, Feynman, and you always will be.
 
I have found no worthwhile evidence that an "RNA world" ever existed and, in my opinion, RNA would not have been a suitable material for a replicator - it is much too labile, the precursor nucleotides would not have formed and selective competition could not have arisen in the absence of bounding to define the evolving system. Robert Shapiro argues against any replicators being involved in the origin of life and I agree with him - excepting that the sun's daily cycle might be construed as a replicator.

Today, you have again presented the group with an extended screed of ad hominem abuse. Those who try to debate alongside you must find your behaviour an embarrassment.

It seems to me that this thread has somewhat devolved into an argument without any agreed upon subject matter. So, perhaps a little recap is in order:

1. The original premise was that Kleinman asserted to Paul Anagnostopoulos that ev showed an RMNS selection process which was too profoundly slow for any reasonable model of evolution.

2. After a great deal of fussing around, a poster with a wry enough humor to ID him/herself as "Unnamed," came up with a new selection mechanism which sped up ev to a satisfactory performance.

3. Kleinman's rebuttal was that the new mechanism ignored mutations in the non-binding site region (junk DNA), therefore it was invalid. However, Kleinman never actually explained why such a selection mechanism is invalid, nor did he ever propose a more valid mechanism.

4. Simultaneously, Kleinman asserted, that regardless of the selection mechanism chosen for ev, at some point in the life of every organism, a new gene must be formed, and that until that gene offers some selective benefit to the organism, its formation is subject to only the laws of probability, and is therefore profoundly unlikely.

5. Kleinman also adds to his argument, that the first self-replicating organism would have had to have been created without the benefit of a selection mechanism, and that such a feat is beyond the realm of mathematical possibility.

6. A reasonably objective reading of this thread suggests, that events #4-5 above, although arguably meritorious, are irrelevant, because at the point that event #3 occurred, the original argument of the thread was resolved: ev was made fast enough to evolve a genome from a state of total randomness to a perfect creature within the time available since the likely beginning of life on Earth.

We are now in an entirely different argument, or rather two arguments -- neither of which depend upon Schneider's ev program at all. As above-stated, the questions are:

1. How does a new gene arise?

2. How did the first self-replicating organism arise?

If I may offer a suggestion, I think it is a mistake to attempt to argue both of these questions simultaneously, because of the possibility that the answers may be quite different. And, as the thread is currently in a sea of storms, I think the evidence clearly demonstrates the gravity of the mistake.

So, Dr. Kleinman, do you think we could argue over just one of the above, rather than both? And, if so, then which one would you pick?
 
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I guess since the title of this thread is "annoying creationists" it's OK to just say that I'm not as curious about those questions. Not that I wouldn't be interested if someone else followed up, but just that I'm really very comfortable with the metaphysics of the secular. Stuff that we can explain happened (most of modern physics/biology suit) and some things also happened (big bangs, replicators). I still go to work and come home, play on the internet, mow my grass, that sort of thing. If that attitude irritates a creationist, then so be it.
 
you don’t have the selection mechanism to transform one gene to another.

Greater leniency is "shown" towards changing the base in the third position of the codon than the other two, as this generally does not change the amino acid coded for. However, occasionally the amino acid will be changed, which may or may not force a conformation change on the protein. If this occurs, I'd wager stabilisation of the protein in this new conformation could very well be considered a valid "selection mechanism" for changing one gene into another by using for example only random point mutation.
 
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Feel free to choose any base sequence for the gene you want and then explain the selection mechanism that would evolve that gene from the beginning. If you choose the insulin gene, then let it be the antecedent gene that you propose that gives rise to the insulin gene.

No, Kleinman, you are having some trouble understanding the concept.

You asked how "insulin" could have evolved from the "beginning".

In order to answer your question, I need to know what you mean by "insulin" and "beginning". Why is this so hard for you?


Let’s keep the definition for “gene” as general as possible and say that it is a sequence of bases that performs some useful function for the creature. It may be coding for a polypeptide but let it include other possible beneficial function for the creature.[/SIZE][/FONT]

For someone presumably interested in evolutionary debate, the work of Richard Dawkins seems to have strangely passed you by.

Try again for your definition of gene.



[The evolution of a gene from the beginning can not be subject to selection until it performs some useful function for the creature.

Wrong, see above
 
I’m currently reading The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins and have reached the section on morality. One bit that I didn’t find compelling was his description of human sexuality. The man is obsessed with tying all human behavior in with our genes!

As far as I see it, so long as a behavior does not impact a species’ reproductive success in the long term, I see no reason why that behavior could not evolve independently. An analogy would be computer hardware and software. What a particular program does is relatively independent of the hardware it is running on.

Our genes have provided us with brains that have memory and the ability to perform operations on that memory. Along with our language abilities, which allow otherwise lost information to be passed on after our death, the evolution of human behavior is best understood and analyzed as separate to genetic evolution. Sure, genes provide some of the drivers and limits, but to try and directly link all behavior with genes seems clumsy.

John, is this view in line with some of your ideas on how evolution can be analyzed?
 
I’m currently reading The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins and have reached the section on morality. One bit that I didn’t find compelling was his description of human sexuality. The man is obsessed with tying all human behavior in with our genes!

As far as I see it, so long as a behavior does not impact a species’ reproductive success in the long term, I see no reason why that behavior could not evolve independently. An analogy would be computer hardware and software. What a particular program does is relatively independent of the hardware it is running on.

Our genes have provided us with brains that have memory and the ability to perform operations on that memory. Along with our language abilities, which allow otherwise lost information to be passed on after our death, the evolution of human behavior is best understood and analyzed as separate to genetic evolution. Sure, genes provide some of the drivers and limits, but to try and directly link all behavior with genes seems clumsy.

John, is this view in line with some of your ideas on how evolution can be analyzed?

Yes Ivor, it is; I believe you are in serious danger of becoming a heretic.

I haven't read "The God Delusion" yet so I cannot say what approach to sexuality Dawkins takes. My approach is to give "sexuality" a biology meaning through the agency of sexual selection. Thus, in general, sexual selection targets a sexual preference at a phenotype. For example, one might, somewhat tongue in cheek, describe a peahen as a tailophile, given that bird's penchant for peacocks with long tails. My approach to sexuality targets human sexuality onto society as a social phenotype and sees human social relations, as in many ways, modified forms of the sexual relationship - with the adaptations serving to further the social relationship.

On this basis, one can understand why humans are so unusual in their heterosexual biology and behaviour and also why they exhibit the sexual behaviours that are often categorized as "deviant" - such things as homosexuality, sadomasochism and fetishism. It very is notable that those quite common sexual deviancies can be mapped onto major aspects of human social organization.
 
Ivor said:
I’m currently reading The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins and have reached the section on morality. One bit that I didn’t find compelling was his description of human sexuality. The man is obsessed with tying all human behavior in with our genes!
Are you saying he leaves no room for the co-evolution of social memes? That would seem rather one-sided. Or is he simply saying that our social behavior is ultimately a product of our genes, in that our brains are genetically determined?

~~ Paul
 
The simple point, in question, is that the primordial oceans, as conceived by most people, will have contained not a single molecule of q-beta replicase and virtually none of the substrates that enzyme requires.
If you have actual knowledge of the composition of the Earth's oceans just before abiogenesis took place, I strongly urge you to publish.

It seems to me unreasonable to post links to the kind of work innovated by Spiegelman as if they somehow explain the emergence of genes on the prebiotic earth.
It would seem unreasonable to me too. Please point out the person who has done so, and I'll have a word with him.

Much though I admire Dr Spiegelman, I am in no danger of mistaking him for the Creator.

Nobody sensible believes that they do and that point seems quite straightforward to me.
I don't know how you found out what sensible people believe, but for once you're right. Lucky guess?

I think you should either stop posting such links or explain their relevance.
I have explained their relevance, but, once more, for the hard of thinking, this is an example of the de novo origin of a genome.
 
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Certainly I do. You can start with the results from ev computer model, a peer reviewed and published model of random point mutations and natural selection which shows this mechanism of evolution is so profoundly slow when using realistic genome lengths and mutation rates that nothing can evolve by this mechanism. Then you can again consider the concept of natural selection which can only operate if there is a benefit or detriment to the creature. I have shown that natural selection can not evolve a gene from the beginning. I will repeat it again since so many evolutionarians are in denial about this issue.
So you haven't thought of any new lies?

You remember how I explained that telling the same lie over and over again won't make it true?

Come back when you've thought of a new lie.
 
It occurs to me that my behavior, in telling the same truth over and over to the same drooling lying halfwit is very nearly as pointless as kleinman's behavior in drivelling out his idiotic lies over and over to an audience of educated and truth-loving people who know that he's lying.

So instead, I've just put a link in my sig. Next time he drones out the same old lies, I'll just have to post "..." and he'll have been answered.
 
Dear The Atheist,

Would you please get religion. I don't care which one, except not Buddhism, 'cos there are atheist Buddhists. Something theistic.

Your choice, but I recommend fundamentalist Christianity, you appear to have all the the necessary mental equipment for it.

But please stop being an atheist. I feel no need of your company.

Thanking you in advance,

Dr A.

PS: Like other posters here, I too am beginning to wonder whether you can really be an atheist. But if you are, please stop.
 
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