The Atheist
The Grammar Tyrant
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2006
- Messages
- 36,408
Thanks for that!You usually make sense, hence my comment.![]()
I blame Douglas Adams for the other.
Thanks for that!You usually make sense, hence my comment.![]()
I'll tell Dr. Susskind you don't approve of his theory. I'm sure he'll be amused!It’s also a worthless argument for the theory of evolution.
(kjkent1 raises his hand and jumps up out of his chair)
Me! Me! I know the answer, Dr. Alan! It's string theory. Given 10^500 alternative universes, at least one of them is certain to evolve gene(s) de novo by random chance, as necessary to produce the wide diversity of life exhibited on Earth. It just happens that we humans live in one of those universes.
Let's drink to the uncertainty principle, shall we?
So which is it, you care not one iota what Dr Schneider may think or not think or do you think it is “large environmentally diverse worldwide populations, sexual recombination and interspecies genetic transfer” that will rescue your theory? Perhaps you are willing to describe the mechanism for natural selection that would evolve a gene de novo so we can include this in the model as well?
Feel free to include all the different forms of genetic mutation in your model since ev only includes point substitutions and it is far too slow a process to evolve anything. Don’t forget to include a realistic selection process which all of us would be interested seeing.
What I have said is that the theory of evolution is mathematically impossible (at least by random point mutations and natural selection as shown by Dr Schneider’s ev computer model).
(kjkent1 raises his hand and jumps up out of his chair)
Me! Me! I know the answer, Dr. Alan! It's string theory. Given 10^500 alternative universes, at least one of them is certain to evolve gene(s) de novo by random chance, as necessary to produce the wide diversity of life exhibited on Earth. It just happens that we humans live in one of those universes.
Let's drink to the uncertainty principle, shall we?
Why tongue-in-cheek? At minimum this universe meets the criteria for Weak anthropic principle. I'd suggest Strong anthropic principle offers support for your ideas, and perhaps for Kleinman too.I'm glad this appears to be tongue-in-cheek. String theory and selection from alternative universes is well beyond what I would regard as a reasonable set of premises on which to build theories for the origin of life.
I can only suppose one of two things: either you have not, in fact, read the links, or you are using the phrase "functioning as a replicator" according to some bizarre definition of your own. I suspect the latter, since, as you yourself admit, the DNA and RNA strands do indeed catalyze their own synthesis.I have looked at some of your links. Non of them described DNA or RNA functioning as a replicator. Some such studies describe autocatalytic reactions but you do not need the complexity of biochemistry to achieve that.
Don't you ever tell the truth?
Scatequate can’t put together a coherent argument so he has taken to googling a couple terms and copying the links to this forum without reading the links himself.
Yes, your description of bioepistemic evolution is fair, though not detailed. I did not realise that another theory for how genes had come about and could replicated had been proposed on this thread, though it may have been referenced without my noticing. The theories I have seen generally presume, among other things, the prior existence of preexisting pools of energetically activated nucleotides. That presumption is, in itself, reason to reject the theory in question - unless someone, somewhere has explained how they could arise. There are similar issues with the boundary problem.John – you do not think the explanations presented here of how genes came to exist or can replicate are viable or as good as your own. You also disagree with using specifics of gene evolution to explain human behavior. The core of Bioepistemic evolution is that data exists and evolves at different levels rather than a particular data storage device, e.g. a gene.
I can only suppose one of two things: either you have not, in fact, read the links, or you are using the phrase "functioning as a replicator" according to some bizarre definition of your own. I suspect the latter, since, as you yourself admit, the DNA and RNA strands do indeed catalyze their own synthesis.
John Hewitt said:I consider cells to be replicators because, given suitable and reasonably plausible, earthly, inputs of energy and small molecular mass compounds, they can replicate themselves. I consider DNA/RNA not to be replicators because there are no reasonably plausible, earthly, inputs of energy and small molecular mass compounds that enable DNA/RNA to replicate itself.
I consider cells to be replicators because, given suitable and reasonably plausible, earthly, inputs of energy and small molecular mass compounds, they can replicate themselves. I consider DNA/RNA not to be replicators because there are no reasonably plausible, earthly, inputs of energy and small molecular mass compounds that enable DNA/RNA to replicate itself.
I can only suppose one of two things: either you have not, in fact, read the links, or you are using the phrase "functioning as a replicator" according to some bizarre definition of your own. I suspect the latter, since, as you yourself admit, the DNA and RNA strands do indeed catalyze their own synthesis.
If in Hewittese this does not qualify as "functioning as a replicator", then I never claimed that they did --- in fact, I don't speak a word of Hewittese. I do, however, claim that, in plain English, they self-replicate.
As in:
Evidence for de novo production of self-replicating and environmentally adapted RNA structures by bacteriophage Qbeta replicase.
"[T]he template-free synthesis of RNA by Q-beta replicase described in this paper leads to truly self-replicating RNA molecules with defined and non-repetitive structures."
How much more black-and-white could it be?
I consider grass a plausible earthly input into a cow's stomach. You, presumably, don't.He's already provided the answer to this, he has his own bizarre definition.
Thus DNA isn't a replicator, cells are, animals aren't, (non-carnivorous) plants are, carnivorous plants aren't.
You have indeed said that. You've recited it over and over. But it's not got any truer, has it?What I have said is that the theory of evolution is mathematically impossible (at least by random point mutations and natural selection as shown by Dr Schneider’s ev computer model).
In what sense is this an "affirmative case for creation"? It doesn't take a magic invisible sky pixie to produce irreducible complexity.I have presented an affirmative case for creation. I have given the example of the DNA replicase system to support irreducible complexity.
Or, to put it another way: "I have presented an afirmative case for pigs having wings. I have made the analogy of ornithologists and aviation engineers being able to recognize wings in their observations, something which pig farmers refuse to do in their observations."I have made the analogy of SETI scientists and archeologists being able to recognize intelligence in their observations, something which evolutionarians refuse to do in their observations.
Hello, earth to mad person. Reciting these lies over and over won't make them true. It won't even make them convincing. It surely can't even make them convincing to you. We've shown you the clumsy mistakes in your math, we've shown you evidence for de novo production of genes, we've shown you entire genomes arising de novo in a test-tube, and reciting your gibble of windy nonsense won't make the facts go away.However, I prefer to concentrate on the mathematics of mutation and natural selection since it reveals the main flaw in the theory of evolution.
The difference between you and I Paul is that you try to pass off your belief system as science and refuse to acknowledge that your own computer model refutes your theory. Well, you have a choice, either fix your computer model or live in denial about the mathematical impossibility of your own theory. Since there is no selection process that would evolve a gene de novo, you will probably choose the later.
I consider grass a plausible earthly input into a cow's stomach. You, presumably, don't.
As I have not claimed that such an event has happened, I am under no obligation to explain how it happened.It could be rendered more black and white by you explaining, in black and white, how q-beta replicase and energetically activated nucleotides could get into a test-tube without the intelligent intervention of Spiegelman and his colleagues.
Please state clearly whatever it is that you are saying.As I have not claimed that such an event has happened, I am under no obligation to explain how it happened.
Do you have any objections to any claim I've actually made?
I don't regard your comments as relevant. You presumably do.I estimate that a blade of grass is approximately 10^22 amu. I don't regard that as small, you presumably do.
Certainly. I am saying that as I have not claimed that such an event has happened, I am under no obligation to explain how it happened.Please state clearly whatever it is that you are saying.