Can we eliminate predation?

There is a low signal to noise ratio in this thread, so I haven't bothered to read the whole thing. So this question might have been asked before.

Can all carnivorous animals live on a veggie diet? I mean in a biological sense, could their digestive systems cope with it and could they satisfy their energy and protein rerquirements?

I know for a fact that a cow couldn't digest meat. It is the way their digestive system has evolved.
 
My post above is the practical persopective. What about the philosophical.


How could we unilaterally ban predation (assuming it was possible). How would we know that the prey would want that? They might consider a human act to prevent them being preyed upon as an inforingmenet of their rights.
 
Can all carnivorous animals live on a veggie diet? I mean in a biological sense, could their digestive systems cope with it and could they satisfy their energy and protein rerquirements?
No, not all carnivorous animals can live on a veggie diet. If you had read a bit more of the thread, you would have noticed that this fact is completely irrelevant for the discussion, because it is about ending predation by giving predators tissue engineered meat.
How would we know that the prey would want that?
Well, we don't know that for sure. But we can make an educated guess. If prey would prefer to be eaten by predators, why do they run away from them? Or why would they defend themselves?
 
Earthborn said:
No, not all carnivorous animals can live on a veggie diet. If you had read a bit more of the thread, you would have noticed that this fact is completely irrelevant for the discussion, because it is about ending predation by giving predators tissue engineered meat.

well, that's just dandy then.

Earthborn said:
Well, we don't know that for sure. But we can make an educated guess. If prey would prefer to be eaten by predators, why do they run away from them? Or why would they defend themselves?

Educated guess? Assume? I think that is a pretty ropey basis for a policy that infringe so heavily on "animal rights".

Maybe the prey run away because they love the thrill of the chase? Maybe they fight because, just like any red blooded male at closing time (and a good few of the ladies), they're looking for a good stoush?
 
Kevin_Lowe said:
It's not bias or lack of comprehension, AS, it's that you are posting wordy, empty claptrap. Your ongoing denial of the fact that the naturalistic fallacy is a fallacy is staggeringly dumb, but sad to say it fits right in with the rest of your attempts at argument. Stop making excuses for yourself and either find better arguments or desist entirely.

Noting that the earth as a biosphere, and all the life within it, is dependent on the sun and also on the moon, and that it is a complex system is not empty claptrap. Further noting that systems dynamics involving very large numbers of variables is extraordinarly complex isn't claptrap either.

Your failure to understand does not make my post nonsense.

If you don't understand, then perhaps you should refrain from posting a nasty response dismissing it all.



It's possible you have spent more time in your life watching Attenborough documentaries than I have. It's also possible you have spent more time studying biology, biochemistry and ecology than I have. I just think it's incredibly unlikely.

Your arrogance is noted once again.


Mocking you isn't a fallacy, as such, unless the mockery is a replacement for argument. If the mockery is merely a side dish, as it were, then I am merely rebutting you in a rude fashion.

Indeed you are. Have a good day.

AS
 
Origianly posted by Earthborn
No, I think each individual spider figures web weaving out on its own. They learn it by doing it. The fact that spiders of the same species make very similar webs in similar circumstances does not prove that they must have been programmed to do it. It just means they are very similar to other spiders of their own species and develop their web weaving skills in a very similar way.
I have to disagree with your assement here. The going consensus amoung entomologist and other biologist is that spiders are born with the "knowledge" of web making and that the "knowledge" is genetic. A young spider does not "learn" or figures out how to spin a web, it already knows how to and that that behaiviour or "knowledge" is encoded geneticaly.
(The test of course would be to splice out genetic sequences and see if they produce a spider from a web spinning species with the proper organs that does not spin a web. Experiments of this type are conducted with fruit flys)

There is a whole field of study of behaviourisim called etholgy which includes the study of geneticaly passed behaiviours.

Here's some links:
http://faculty.ed.uiuc.edu/g-cziko/wm/03.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethology


edited to correct spelling and delete a double link
 
I also want to add that predation serves a pourpose in nature. It weeds out the ill and the geneticaly defective ( by virtue of the ill and defective being slower and easier to catch) It keeps the prey species gene pool strong and healthy. It also keeps in check over population in the prey species, which generaly breed faster than predatory species. A whole bunch of starving animals is what I'd call suffering.

To end predaton would mean that we, humans, would have to take over the entier ecosystem. We would have to turn the earth into a global zoo. We would have to isolate all predatory species from prey species (all of which share the same environmental territory) untill we could develope a method of geneticaly engineering out the predatory instict. (Domestic canines will revert back to thier predatory instincts when introduced back into the wild)
We would have to control the population of prey species by culling the heard (killing) or controling the mating season either by genetic engineering or some sort of birth control method. And we would have to do this for every single species all over the world.

So do we let nature go it's own way? (as much as we can) Or do we go in and completely take it over and control it and bend it to our anthropocentric ideals?

Now having said this; my wife likes to raise goats and eat some of them. I do not have cajones to bring myself to kill and butcher them. She does though. I prefere to hunt my food in the supermarket.
 
A young spider does not "learn" or figures out how to spin a web, it already knows how to and that that behaiviour or "knowledge" is encoded geneticaly.
How and where is this knowledge encoded? There are not even enough genes to encode all the proteins in an organism's body, so where does the programmed behaviour fit in?
The test of course would be to splice out genetic sequences and see if they produce a spider from a web spinning species with the proper organs that does not spin a web.
That's not enough to show that behaviour is programmed in the genome. For that you'll have to find the code, decypher it, and possibly manipulate it to make the animal do whatever you want. Showing that there are genes that have a strong influence on behaviour is not enough, because that's not something I am disputing. I am disputing that the genome contains anything that resembles a computer program.
Experiments of this type are conducted with fruit flys
Show me.
There is a whole field of study of behaviourisim called etholgy which includes the study of geneticaly passed behaiviours.

Here's some links:
http://faculty.ed.uiuc.edu/g-cziko/wm/03.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethology
The wikipedia article does not even mention genetics. The other article only mentions Konrad Lorenz who thought some very basic behaviours had a genetic component (he could be right) and he was criticised for it.
I also want to add that predation serves a pourpose in nature. It weeds out the ill and the geneticaly defective
We are talking about a situation where people think that 'purpose' is immoral, just like people today generally think it is immoral to weed out the weak members of society.
To end predaton (snip) over the world.
I have said all that before. Even used the term 'global zoo'.
Or do we go in and completely take it over and control it and bend it to our anthropocentric ideals?
That's the plan, yes. Do you think it is possible or impossible? Whether it is a good idea is not the issue. It is very likely not a good idea.
 
Earthborn said:
Showing that there are genes that have a strong influence on behaviour is not enough, because that's not something I am disputing. I am disputing that the genome contains anything that resembles a computer program.
Babies are draw to faces and breasts, I don't think that they learn that from older babies.


I have said all that before. Even used the term 'global zoo'.That's the plan, yes. Do you think it is possible or impossible? Whether it is a good idea is not the issue. It is very likely not a good idea.
Reminds me of the Matrix, only with animals.
 
Earthborn said:
How and where is this knowledge encoded? There are not even enough genes to encode all the proteins in an organism's body, so where does the programmed behaviour fit in?

OK, I've ducked out of this thread, but this statement intrigues me. How exactly are said proteins coming about, then? Also, would you accept that, while we may not yet understand WHERE the behavior is 'encoded', the fact that non-trained animals show hunting behavior suggests strongly that it is?

Earthborn said:
That's not enough to show that behaviour is programmed in the genome. For that you'll have to find the code, decypher it, and possibly manipulate it to make the animal do whatever you want.

Whoa now... we don't have a perfect grasp on how embryos develop, but I don't think we're doubting the whole sperm + egg + time = baby thing, are we? You're making up criteria that are intentionally impossible to meet, which is hardly fair.


Earthborn said:
We are talking about a situation where people think that 'purpose' is immoral, just like people today generally think it is immoral to weed out the weak members of society.I have said all that before. Even used the term 'global zoo'.That's the plan, yes. Do you think it is possible or impossible? Whether it is a good idea is not the issue. It is very likely not a good idea.

We are talking about a situation where a very, very small number of people are making an emotional appeal for something that is very likely dangerous and unnecessary. Meanwhile, everyone else (and the entire rest of the biosphere) is getting along with the business of competition and consuming the losers.

This is NOT to say that the minority is wrong just because they are the minority... but please don't portray an very extreme... philosophy as mainstream.
 
AmateurScientist said:
Noting that the earth as a biosphere, and all the life within it, is dependent on the sun and also on the moon, and that it is a complex system is not empty claptrap. Further noting that systems dynamics involving very large numbers of variables is extraordinarly complex isn't claptrap either.

Your failure to understand does not make my post nonsense.

Certainly. The problem is that the conclusion you drew from those facts, that disaster is inevitable if we tamper with an ecosystem, is not supported. We have been tampering with ecosystems since before recorded history, and somehow life has gone on.

Your arrogance is noted once again.

I get that every now and then in situations like this. I have learned to live with it.
 
originally posted by Earthborn
How and where is this knowledge encoded? There are not even enough genes to encode all the proteins in an organism's body, so where does the programmed behaviour fit in?
Well, not being a geneticist (and from what I've been reading so far) I would gather that a behaiviour that is as complex as web building would a combination of smaller, simpler behaiviours or responses to stimuli.
Genes determine the structure of biological components of organisims. The study with the fruit fly genome proves this in rather eerie experimets where they produced flies with legs for antennae and missing or degenerate eyes. (see links below)
And of course the structure of one of those organs that genes are resposible for is the brain. Within the gene is the "information" or pattern or sequence of nucleotides which determin the physical structure of the brain. Within the structure of the brain is a set of responses to stimui or reflex actions. (such as removing your hand from a flame) These reflex actions have evolved as the structure of the organisim has evolved because the reflex actions are directly related to the physical structure of the organisim. Instincts are believed to be closely related to reflex actions. They are "reflex actions" of a more complex system.

In the case of spiders, web making may have evolved from a hunting instinct which involved a "dragline" strand to capture prey. A mutation in the brain of a spider may have caused the spider to anchor one end of the strand to something and trail the silk to another point. ( a change in the reflex action of just excreting silk in to the air to excreting silk on to an object) The mutated spider might have been more successful by having its prey blunder into the silk stretched across two points and get captured rather than getting captured by a dangling dragline. The spider lives on to reproduce and pass the successful mutation to its decendence. Soforth and onsuch.


http://www.sdbonline.org/fly/brain/ahome.htm
http://www.fruitfly.org/sequence/index.html
http://www.molbio.princeton.edu/courses/mb427/2001/projects/03/behavior.html

.
That's not enough to show that behaviour is programmed in the genome. For that you'll have to find the code, decypher it, and possibly manipulate it to make the animal do whatever you want. Showing that there are genes that have a strong influence on behaviour is not enough, because that's not something I am disputing. I am disputing that the genome contains anything that resembles a computer program
The "program" for behaviour is in the structure of the brain (neural connections and such). The structure of the brain is determined by the nucleotide sequences in the genes. There is work being done on mapping the entire human genome and finding out what each sequence is responsible for: http://www.genome.gov/

Below is an interesting link on the study of Behavioral genetics.
http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome/elsi/behavior.shtml

Here's a link to a PDF that describe how zoologist in Oxford wrote a computer progam which models the evolutionary development of web building. They used real spiders as control:
http://www.brics.dk/~krink/online_papers/JTB97_Analysing_Webs.pdf

Here's a link to a professor who is studing the link between environment, behaviour and evolutioanry biology.
http://eeb.bio.utk.edu/riechert.asp

The study of genetic behaiviourisim is a relativly new field of study so I would assume that there is much that is still unknown. But I still stand by my O.P


We are talking about a situation where people think that 'purpose' is immoral, just like people today generally think it is immoral to weed out the weak members of society.
Well I guess it comes down to wether you believe the forces of nature are moral or not. Morality only applies to humanity. Nature will happen wether we wish it or not. Do you think it is immoral for a tornado to destroy your house? Doesn't seem to apply. How can you apply morality to a lion? If you are talking about weeding out weaker members of society, then you are talking about people. There is a difference. We value our own lives and therefore needed to establish a framework of social behaviour to protect what we value.

I think we should be more concerned about dealing with our predatory instincts toward each other rather than appling morality to nature. Nature developed the way it did because it works. We developed morality because we place a value on ourselves. If I'm still missing the point then please ignore.

That's the plan, yes. Do you think it is possible or impossible? Whether it is a good idea is not the issue. It is very likely not a good idea.
Personaly I think it is not likely that we will be able to control such a complex system and still make it work. You would probaly lose whole species in the process of experimentation and alteration. In the end it would collapse or mutate into something we would not expect or want
Beside our morality would change through the intervening centuries.
 
Originally posted by Kevin_Lowe
We have been tampering with ecosystems since before recorded history, and somehow life has gone on.
True, but it hasn't always gone the way we wanted it to.
 
I would gather that a behaiviour that is as complex as web building would a combination of smaller, simpler behaiviours or responses to stimuli.
Exactly my point.
The study with the fruit fly genome proves this in rather eerie experimets where they produced flies with legs for antennae and missing or degenerate eyes.
In such experiments the genes are not manipulated, but instead the chemical environment in which they are expressed.
Within the gene is the "information" or pattern or sequence of nucleotides which determin the physical structure of the brain.
No, there isn't. The information about the physical structure of the brain exists only in the physical structure of the brain. It is far too complex to be coded in something much smaller such as DNA.
Please point to the pages I am supposed to be looking at.
I hope you have noticed that no where does it mention genes as being 'programs' for behaviour, and even largely deals with the effects of chemicals on behaviour and fruit fly learning.
The "program" for behaviour is in the structure of the brain (neural connections and such).
Ergo: it is not a program, as the brain is not a computer, and even if it was a program, it isn't encoded in genes.
The structure of the brain is determined by the nucleotide sequences in the genes.
No, the genes are only a part in the way the brain is structured. No doubt an important part, but still only a part in a complex interaction of the genome with its environment.
Below is an interesting link on the study of Behavioral genetics.
http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresourc.../behavior.shtml
Which is saying exactly the same thing I have been saying all along:
No single gene determines a particular behavior. Behaviors are complex traits involving multiple genes that are affected by a variety of other factors.

(snip)

With disorders, behaviors, or any physical trait, genes are just a part of the story, because a variety of genetic and environmental factors are involved in the development of any trait. Having a genetic variant doesn't necessarily mean that a particular trait will develop.

(snip)

Genetic factors also can influence the role of certain environmental factors in the development of a particular trait.
Here's a link to a PDF that describe how zoologist in Oxford wrote a computer progam which models the evolutionary development of web building. They used real spiders as control:
http://www.brics.dk/~krink/online_p...lysing_Webs.pdf
Just because a particular behaviour can be simulated with a computer program, does not prove that it is itself a program. It is for example possible to write a computer program that uses Newton's equations to calculate how a boulder rolls down a hill. That does not mean however that a real boulder is a complex calculating machine running a 'rolling down a hill' program.

Similarly a spider does not need a program to weave a web, and therefore it is wrong to claim that it uses a genetic program to weave a web.

The simulation seems to me more a simulation spiders figuring out webweaving as they go along, instead of spiders following a fixed program.
Here's a link to a professor who is studing the link between environment, behaviour and evolutioanry biology.
http://eeb.bio.utk.edu/riechert.asp
I doubt she would disagree with anything I said.
Morality only applies to humanity.
Only because humans only apply it to humans.
Do you think it is immoral for a tornado to destroy your house?
I think it is moral to try to prevent it from doing so.
How can you apply morality to a lion?
In a way somewhere between applying morality to a tornado and applying it to a human being.

It is moral to prevent a tornado from causing too much damage to things we consider valuable. But a tornado cannot be taught not to cause damage. A human being can be taught that something are valuable and should not be damaged.

You could argue that a lion is like a tornado in this sense, and it is moral to prevent it from damaging the things we consider valuable. But a lion also has some learning ability, and can therefore be taught not to damage things, for example by rewarding it for non-destructive behaviour or punishing it for destructive behaviour. A lion tamer applies human morality to a lion, by teaching the lion he is valuable and should not be eaten. So it is possible.
We value our own lives and therefore needed to establish a framework of social behaviour to protect what we value.
The hypothetical society we are talking about simply extends this framework and values the lives of other animals as well.
You would probaly lose whole species in the process of experimentation and alteration.
We are already losing whole species, and we lose many more as human society develops. As I pointed out previously, an ideology as this may develop from the attempts to conserve species that would otherwise go extinct from human intervention. Already many people who try to save animal species, also try to minimise the individual animals' suffering.
In the end it would collapse or mutate into something we would not expect or want
Beside our morality would change through the intervening centuries.
It may very well change into something that wasn't intended. But perhaps people's morality will change with it, and consider the result as most moral. For example, if the automation of the Global Zoo leads to a system where humanity is no longer in control, but is just one of the species that is being controlled, it is perfectly conceivable that humans will learn to accept this fact. The Global Zoo ensures all needs to all animals, so humans may not have to take care of themselves either and they might learn to appreciate that fact.
 
Originally posted by Earthborn
Exactly my point.
But it is my contention that some of those behaviours and reflexs are "hardwired" into the brain and that the "wiring" is encoded in the genes.


In such experiments the genes are not manipulated, but instead the chemical environment in which they are expressed.
The genes were and are being manipulated in experiments. The DNA was extracted broken up and segments through various techniques and are introduced or spliced into the nucleus of other fruit fly embryos. That's how they get pigs to produce human insulin for diabetics. They splice human genes into a pig embryo to get the pig's pancreas to produce human insulin.
See this site:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_engineering
Here's a quote:

"Daniel Nathans and Hamilton Smith received the 1978 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for their isolation of restriction endonucleases, which are able to cut DNA at specific sites. Together with ligase, which can join fragments of DNA together, restriction enzymes formed the initial basis of recombinant DNA technology."

Those same techniques were used to experiment with the fruit flies. The purpose of the fruit fly and human genome studies are to find out what sequences of nucleotides are responsible for what functions in a developing embryo. some part of the embryo development is affected when you remove or replace a sequence in the genome.
No, there isn't. The information about the physical structure of the brain exists only in the physical structure of the brain. It is far too complex to be coded in something much smaller such as DNA.
Please present a source of information which supports this statement. Are you saying that it is the brain itself that determins it's structure? How did that brain knowhow to organize itself if it is not from the genetic information?

It is estimated that the human genome may contain as many as 3 billion base pairs.
Quoted from the following web site:
http://encarta.msn.com/text_761580681__1/Human_Genome_Project.html
A genome is the complete collection of an organism’s genetic material. The human genome is composed of about 20,000 to 25,000 genes located on the 23 pairs of chromosomes in a human cell. A single human chromosome may contain more than 250 million DNA base pairs, and scientists estimate that the entire human genome consists of about 3 billion base pairs.
it seems to me that 3 billion base pairs may encode quite a bit of genetic information. The human geneome project and the experiments with fruit flies are attempts at cracking the DNA code.

The study of what the protiens do and thier functions is called proteomics. Here's a quote from the this website:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proteomics
A surprising finding of the Human Genome Project is that there are far fewer protein-coding genes in the human genome than there are proteins in the human proteome (~22,000 genes vs. ~400,000 proteins). The large increase in protein diversity is thought to be due to alternative splicing and post-translational modification of proteins.
So you can get quite a bit of "information" from just a few protiens.

Further It is the "information" encoded in the gene which determins the structure of the organisim. Morphogenisis describes that process of how the genes bring about the structure of complex organs in the developing embryo.
Quoted form the following website:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morphogenesis

The study of morphogenesis involves an attempt to understand the processes that control the organized spatial distribution of cells that arises during the embryonic development of an organism and which give rise to the characteristic forms of tissues, organs and overall body anatomy. In the human embryo, the change from a cluster of nearly identical cells at the blastula stage to a post-gastrulation embryo with structured tissues and organs is controlled by the genetic "program" and can be modified by environmental factors.
It is the genes that determin the structure of our organs. That includes our brains. Our natural, inborn reflex actions are part of the physical structur of our brain (and some have been looking into the possibility that our insticts are also derived from that structure). And that physical structure is determined by our genes which is passed down to us from our ancestors and have been modified by the forces of evolution. (please read further down the page where it describes how certain protiens are repsponsible for the development of certain parts of the fruit fly)
Please point to the pages I am supposed to be looking at.
I apologise. I hope the links I am presenting here are more to the point.
No, the genes are only a part in the way the brain is structured. No doubt an important part, but still only a part in a complex interaction of the genome with its environment.
Environment does affect embryonic development But it is the genes that determins the structure. It is the genes that says that the embryo will have two legs, two arms, a brain, etc. and what structure that organisim will eventualy have. It is the enviroment that guides how that organisim will utilize those structures and what the shape will be through evolutionary forces.
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No single gene determines a particular behavior. Behaviors are complex traits involving multiple genes that are affected by a variety of other factors.

(snip)

With disorders, behaviors, or any physical trait, genes are just a part of the story,, because a variety of genetic and environmental factors are involved in the development of any trait. Having a genetic variant doesn't necessarily mean that a particular trait will develop.

(snip)

Genetic factors also can influence the role of certain environmental factors in the development of a particular trait.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
:
Note how she says that genes are involved in behaiviour. Environment does affect behaiviour But some of those behaviours are encoded in the genes.

The fact remains that DNA is an organised pattern or sequence. It is a fact that DNA sequences determin the physical characteristics of an organisim. It is being discovered that certain behaviours can be encoded in those sequences. The science is new and many discoveries will be made.

Similarly a spider does not need a program to weave a web, and therefore it is wrong to claim that it uses a genetic program to weave a web.

The simulation seems to me more a simulation spiders figuring out webweaving as they go along, instead of spiders following a fixed program.
I believe the experiment was to see how spider web making evolved rather than how an individual spider weaves a web. The reasearchers say that a spider's web weaving is an instictual behaviour.
Here's a quote from The above mentioned PDF:

"This tailoring (the shape and pattern of the web) is the outcome of two types of adaptation: long term genomic adaptation (evolution) over many generations of selection and shorterm behavioural adaptation (modification) in response to local conditions."

The web making behaiviour is encoded in the spiders genome. Somewhere in the spider's DNA strand is a sequence of nucleotides that are responsible for the pattern of the spiders web. Where is it? Well, they're looking. The individual shape and size of the web is determined by the surrounding environment. The fundamental pattern is specific to each species of spider, which is determined by it's genome. In other words there is no web weaving class for spiders. They are already born with the behaviour and the web pattern. What they have to do is to adapt the web to it's environment.


A lion tamer applies human morality to a lion, by teaching the lion he is valuable and should not be eaten. So it is possible.
But not always successful. See Sigfried and Roy.
A lion tamer does not so much "teach" a lion as he does conditioning lion behaiviour. The lion's instinct is to hunt or scavenge and its physical form is built for it. The key would be to breed out that insticnt or modify it geneticaly. Breeding out behaivour is not yet completly successful. Domesticated dogs will revert back to wolf behaiviour when left in the wild.

Like I said, isolating species from one another would probably be necessary. But how would that affect the bio-system? and would you have the neccessary space to do it. Predators and prey tend occupy the same ecosystem would there be enough room for everyone?How far would have to manipulate the earth's environmental systems? What would be the consequences?
think it is moral to try to prevent it from doing so.
But isn't more sensible to protect the house (and more importantly, the occupants) rather than porposefully altering the weather system?
In a way somewhere between applying morality to a tornado and applying it to a human being.
A lion does what it does by evolutionary design. It is "meant" to hunt by nature. Is it moral to disrupt a natural system? By what standard do we say that this disrupted system has improved?

The hypothetical society we are talking about simply extends this framework and values the lives of other animals as well.
Unfortunatly the benefitial conditions of one group adversly affects the well being of another. The preservation of the habitat of one group means that another group may not have the resources necessary to flourish. Species displace other species all the time in nature. That's why some species go extinct. (and this happen without our influence).
We are already losing whole species, and we lose many more as human society develops. As I pointed out previously, an ideology as this may develop from the attempts to conserve species that would otherwise go extinct from human intervention. Already many people who try to save animal species, also try to minimise the individual animals' suffering.
But we would certainly lose even more species as we make mistakes while trying to understand and experiment with the extremely complex system. Is that moral? Have you ever heard the saying "The road to hell is paved with good intentions"?
It may very well change into something that wasn't intended. But perhaps people's morality will change with it, and consider the result as most moral. For example, if the automation of the Global Zoo leads to a system where humanity is no longer in control, but is just one of the species that is being controlled, it is perfectly conceivable that humans will learn to accept this fact. The Global Zoo ensures all needs to all animals, so humans may not have to take care of themselves either and they might learn to appreciate that fact.
Well, with predation elminated it certainly will be different from the way it was developing. And would ending predation really end suffering? There are many other sources of suffering in the animal world than just predation.

We would still be responsible for the automated system. We designed it and someone still has to take care of and monitor the machines. I love technology, but I would never leave it to itself.

Have you read Isaac Asimov's I robot series? The book ends with just that scenario. The AI take over mankind without man ever realizing it.
 
Just to add to what Uruk has already said:

Earthborn said:
And you may have noticed that I have never said otherwise.
Yes, in fact, you did. Several times. You've said that the web styles (and all behaviour) is learned from the environment. This means that if you take an orb-web spider, and put it in a ground-dwelling environment instead of a low-arboreal one, it's offspring would weave funnel-webs instead of orb webs.
Because they are physically incapable of weaving another type of web.
No, they're not. The mechanism is essentially identical in all web-dependent spiders. There is no physical reason why an orb spider couldn't weave a cob web. Exactly the same mechanism is used for both. A funnel web may be a bit of a stretch for smaller orb spiders; but certainly not for the larger ones.

Just like I am incapable of flying by flapping my forelimbs. It is not that I am missing a 'genetic flying program' that I cannot do this, I couldn't do it even if I had one.
Actually, it is exactly because you're missing that "genetic flying program". You're missing all the genes that program your development for the necessary physical mechanisms and instinctual behaviours. Where do you think the development instructions come from?
 
uruk said:
True, but it hasn't always gone the way we wanted it to.

Absolutely, but as I have said before you can get bad results if you do anything in a sufficiently stupid fashion.
 
Earthborn,

Forgive me but I'm confused, do you take believe that all behavior is purely based on environment?

Nature vs. Nurture

What is Nature vs Nurture?
It has been reported that the use of the terms "nature" and "nurture" as a convenient catch-phrase for the roles of heredity and environment in human development can be traced back to 13th century France. Some scientists think that people behave as they do according to genetic predispositions or even "animal instincts." This is known as the "nature" theory of human behavior. Other scientists believe that people think and behave in certain ways because they are taught to do so. This is known as the "nurture" theory of human behavior.

Fast-growing understanding of the human genome has recently made it clear that both sides are partly right. Nature endows us with inborn abilities and traits; nurture takes these genetic tendencies and molds them as we learn and mature. End of story, right? Nope. The "nature vs nurture" debate still rages on, as scientist fight over how much of who we are is shaped by genes and how much by the environment.

The Nature Theory - Heredity
Scientists have known for years that traits such as eye color and hair color are determined by specific genes encoded in each human cell. The Nature Theory takes things a step further to say that more abstract traits such as intelligence, personality, aggression, and sexual orientation are also encoded in an individual's DNA.
  • The search for "behavioral" genes is the source of constant debate. Many fear that genetic arguments might be used to excuse criminal acts or justify divorce.
  • The most debated issue pertaining to the nature theory is the exsistence of a "gay gene," pointing to a genetic component to sexual orientation.
  • An April, 1998 article in LIFE Magazine, "Were You Born That Way" by George Howe Colt, claimed that "new studies show it's mostly in your genes."
  • If genetics didn't play a part, then fraternal twins, reared under the same conditions, would be alike, regardless of differences in their genes. But, while studies show they do more closely resemble each other than do non-twin brothers and sisters, they also show these same striking similarities when reared apart - as in similar studies done with identical twins.

Also,

Why This Boy Was Raised As A Girl

Bruce (now David) became Brenda at a very early age. From day one, Brenda wasn't the least bit feminine. She was an outcast. His mother recalls the first time she put a dress on David, "He tried to pull it off." As Brenda, David went through surgeries, hormone therapy, and counseling - trying to brainwash him in to becoming a girl. The parents and doctors kept pushing the femininity. "I never quite fit in." Brenda was forced to wear dresses and was encouraged to play with dolls, but that didn't make her a girl.
The evidence has been so convincing from both sides that it seems very unlikely that behavior can be attributed to simply either.

But maybe I'm going off in the wrong direction. Do you simply believe that there is no such thing as "instinct"? Meat eaters don't experience cue's to eat or horses can walk at birth and humans can't just because they are different physiologically and has nothing to do with encoded information?

You don't think the brain is capable of performing calculations with out "learning" how to first?

Hey, I could be wrong. It wouldn't be the first time. I can't find any support for this idea. Perhaps I don't know how to search. Googling Nature vs Nurture doesn't help since the links I find almost all support the idea that all humans are a combination of both and our reptilian brain is nature as are reptiles and lower animals.

I would love to see any data on the subject. It's been 20 years since I was at university.

Thanks,

RandFan
 
But it is my contention that some of those behaviours and reflexs are "hardwired" into the brain and that the "wiring" is encoded in the genes.
Then you say something very strange, because the stimuli that cause the responses cannot be 'hardwired'.
The genes were and are being manipulated in experiments.
I've refreshed my memory of these experiments, and you seem to be right. The experiments where fruitflies were made with legs on their heads were manipulations of so called 'Hox genes'.

But it still is not a good example of genes programmatically directing development. Just because genes have a strong effect does not show that they are in any way similar to programs.
Please present a source of information which supports this statement.
I don't think I have to. I think it is quite obvious. There are some 100 000 million neurons in the brain, far more than those 3 000 million base pairs, most of them junk DNA. Far more than the 30 000 genes. And then there is the huge number of interconnections between all those neurons, which must be somewhere in the gazillions. There is simply no way to describe the complexity of the brain in something that is as small as DNA.
Are you saying that it is the brain itself that determins it's structure?
Yes, I am.
How did that brain knowhow to organize itself if it is not from the genetic information?
It doesn't need to know how. It just develops from the many influences that work on it. And yes, that includes genetic influences.
it seems to me that 3 billion base pairs may encode quite a bit of genetic information.
It doesn't seem so much if you realise that most of those base pairs do not carry any genetic information at all. And you should also realise that you need an awful lot of base pairs to encode some ordinary proteins.
So you can get quite a bit of "information" from just a few protiens.
You should realise that since some genes result in many different proteins, the structure of many proteins is not encoded in the genes, but instead a cell uses those genes to produce the proteins it needs as a reaction to inside or outside stimuli. It nicely shows that genes do not play a leading role in protein production, but are instead just one of the many factors that make it possible.
It is the genes that determin the structure of our organs.
No, it isn't. The thing you quoted specifically says that it can be modified by environmental factors. And it also puts "program" between quotes. Probably because the person who wrote it knows what a misleading term it can be.
And that physical structure is determined by our genes
Strongly influenced, not determined. There is a difference.
Environment does affect embryonic development But it is the genes that determins the structure.
You contradict yourself. If the environment affects the development of the structure of an embryo, then it can't be that genes determine that structure. For your statement to make logical sense, you'll have to chose whether you think the environment determines the structure, or the genes do, or that both have an effect on it, but neither one ultimately determines the structure.
It is the genes that says that the embryo will have two legs, two arms, a brain, etc. and what structure that organisim will eventualy have.
In some cases, an embryo develops differently without having a different genome.
Note how she says that genes are involved in behaiviour.
Note also that she doesn't say that behaviours are programmatically determined by genes.
But some of those behaviours are encoded in the genes.
Which ones?
The fact remains that DNA is an organised pattern or sequence.
That says nothing about behaviours being encoded in it.
It is a fact that DNA sequences determin the physical characteristics of an organisim.
"Strongly influence", not "determine". There is still a difference.
It is being discovered that certain behaviours can be encoded in those sequences.
No, it isn't. What is being discovered that some genes have a strong influence on behaviour. But so do environmental factors such as nutrition.
They are already born with the behaviour and the web pattern. What they have to do is to adapt the web to it's environment.
I don't believe that they are born with that web pattern. I don't even think they have any notion of a pattern of their web, even if they already made it. I think they developed some reflexive behaviours when they grew in their egg, and when they are outside it, adapt those behaviours to their environment. And that's exactly what I meant when I said that they figure out web weaving all by themselves in interaction with their environment.

The pattern of the web does not need to be encoded anywhere, because the spider does not need to know it.
But not always successful.
It's not always successful with humans either. I'd even say it hardly ever was.
See Sigfried and Roy.
Are you related to Shanek? He always drags them into every discussion about animals as well.
A lion tamer does not so much "teach" a lion as he does conditioning lion behaiviour.
That's the same thing.
Domesticated dogs will revert back to wolf behaiviour when left in the wild.
I doubt that. There may be some behaviours still similar in some breeds, but overall wolf and dog behaviours in the wild are quite distinct.
and would you have the neccessary space to do it.
Of course we would have enough space. Zoos around the world show that you can house animals in much smaller habitats than in the wild, even if you give them enough space for them to be comfortable in. Predators often have large territories, but the size of these is mostly determined by how many prey animals are in it. If you have some highly efficient meat factories, you can make sure the predators never have to worry about food again and they will likely feel comfortable in territories that are much smaller than the space they need now.
Predators and prey tend occupy the same ecosystem would there be enough room for everyone?
I see no reason why there shouldn't be.
How far would have to manipulate the earth's environmental systems?
As far as people are willing to go.
What would be the consequences?
Whatever people are willing to accept.
But isn't more sensible to protect the house (and more importantly, the occupants) rather than porposefully altering the weather system?
Yes, with present day technology. But when it becomes possible to change the weather, many people will think it is preferable to change it then to try to protect all those houses.
Is it moral to disrupt a natural system?
A lot of people think it is moral to disrupt a whole lot of natural systems. That's all that matters.
By what standard do we say that this disrupted system has improved?
By whatever standards people might chose to use.
Species displace other species all the time in nature.
The species that by far displaces the most other species is homo sapiens. It also has the peculiar characteristic that it doesn't want to displace other species and wants to prevent other species from going extinct. Maybe it is silly for caring about other animals, and it shouldn't worry about driving them to extinction. But that's just its 'nature' I guess.
But we would certainly lose even more species as we make mistakes while trying to understand and experiment with the extremely complex system.
So you are saying that conservation leads to more extinction than not caring about the effects humans have on the environment?
Have you ever heard the saying "The road to hell is paved with good intentions"?
Yes, I have. I think it hardly means that every possible road paved with good intentions necessarily leads to hell.
And would ending predation really end suffering?
It would end one specific kind of suffering.
There are many other sources of suffering in the animal world than just predation.
Could you name a few that could not solve in a very similar way?
Have you read Isaac Asimov's I robot series?
No, I haven't.
The AI take over mankind without man ever realizing it.
I'd say that might be inevitable, whatever we do. I think it can even be argued that machines are in many ways already our masters, and they aren't even particularly AI.
 
Yes, in fact, you did. Several times.
Then it should not be hard to quote me saying that it is possible to make a spider weave a completely different type of web by placing it in a different environment.
You've said that the web styles (and all behaviour) is learned from the environment.
I said something subtly different: that spiders learn their web weaving as a reaction to their environment. As such, not only is the environment relevant, but also the properties of the thing that reacts. The spider develops its web weaving skills as a reaction to its environment, but it can only react in ways it is capable of reacting.
No, they're not. The mechanism is essentially identical in all web-dependent spiders. There is no physical reason why an orb spider couldn't weave a cob web.
So all spider species are identical? They all produce the exact same sort of spider silk? All their nervous systems are exactly the same?

It seems also that you contradict yourself. If there was such a thing as a 'genetic program' then there would be a physical reason why orb spiders don't weave cobwebs.
Where do you think the development instructions come from?
I'm not convinced that there are 'development instructions'.
 

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