VonNeumann
Muse
- Joined
- Jan 25, 2006
- Messages
- 914
Of course I must be presumptuous... the conclusion I am countering is presumptuous. Where there exists a gap, for instance between a few naturally forming amino acids and the structure of DNA, it is presumptuous to presume the gap can be crossed by intermediate steps. I'm not saying it can't be done - I say that there needs to be a means for this to happen, because the arithmetic to show the leap is too large is simple to do. The conclusion is that you need near infinite time for something like DNA to pop into existence. So we try to find something intermediate like autocatylitic sets of molecules a la Kauffman. Still: gaps. So it is because we DON'T KNOW any mechanism that bridges the gap, going on that amount of structure change, just about any model you use results in vanishingly small probability of spontaneous appearance in the 14BY space presumed.I would be interested to know how you could play with the mathematical probablities when i don't think we know all the mechanisms by which genetic change occur.
You said this and gave more interesting examples that I snipped out for brevity. Some of what I've read about this subject of "new information" emanating from genetic mutation of various kinds, is so specialized it is difficult for me with my background to understand the detail.... I don't think a human-like mind is necessary for creative potential. The very obvious counter regarding the creation of new information is gene duplication with mutation. That process leaves the native gene product in place, but creates a new gene product with new potentials with no loss of function and a clear gain of function (new information).
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I'll have to resort to analogy if I am to respond at all. Let's say that you can take Microsoft XP and tear it apart, put it back together, and splice it in random ways and retry the operating system until you get something that isn't so crippled, that atleast it comes up and runs. In the older days of Fortran etc, this would probably be less probable than with object oriented programming ... reason being there is more robustness to the OOP method. By definition, you get new information... the question is whether or not you get a new program that helps in its function (in the context of it's use) relative to it's previous function. I think this is vanishingly small and do not even hope to be able to calculate a quantity of probability. But those Microsoft dudes would be super clever if they programmed so that the likelihood was better than vanishingly small.
Someone presented to me the example of nylonase as evidence of "new information" produced by a frame shift mutation. Without going into the details of what is "frame shift" and the nylonase argument, assuming anyone can look it up, I'll sequey to my response...
Again with analogy... think of Sagan's story "Contact". Through SETI, we receive a message that turns out to be a blueprint of a special machine that seemingly allows you to travel through a wormhole or something like that. What if you did a right-shift on all the Ones and Zeros of this information received via SETI and find that you get another blueprint? The second blueprint is a frame shift of the first, yet it is a design of something else. Let's say, a fusion energy machine.
First of all, none would doubt that the SETI message was not from a pulsar but rather from an intelligence, because of the highly organized complexity of the message particularly that it is of a machine that has useful function. That would be Paley's argument for intelligent design. But nylonase goes further than that. It shows that the blueprint of one enzyme can be frameshifted to get the blueprint for yet another useful design. If this had come from SETI we'd say, "SHeeeeeeez! How incredibly intelligent are these aliens!" But since we assume biological systems are created from chance, and from non-teleological machinations, when we see a frame-shift giving another useful solution that allows the bacteria to survive, we go, "Sheeeeez! Look: proof that random mutation can EASILY produce new design, new information."
That's what I still see in this - to the extent that I can understand it.
That folding produces multiple useful functions out of ONE protein, is incredible - very cool. Again my argument is from incredulity: it would be hard enough for a very clever human to write a program that did the tantamount thing to "folding" such that different forms made the program do different things. We do this very directly with "calling parameters" to a program function. I can't even think, off hand, of an analogy between this and protein folding. I'd have to believe that randomness is so clever that it must have already been thinking about this when the physical forces of the universe were frozen - because all the mechanism of protein folding would depend, in a reductionist way, all the way back to the fundamental objects, such as physical laws and components....
We have also recently learned that supposedly silent mutations (mutations in which the nucleotide change results in a slightly different codon, but one that codes for the same amino acid) can actually produce slightly different proteins -- not different in terms of the amino acid content, but different in terms of protein folding. The change depends on the speed with which the protein folds -- the way I envision it is that the less common transfer RNA needs more time to be recruited by its local ribosome for incorporation into the nascent peptide strand. That extra time can result in more folding of the peptide such that the protein has a slightly different function -- which could be either a loss or gain of function.
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So I see this folding ambiguity thing as similar to the frame-shift ambiguity thing. Looks too damn clever. Way too damn clever. Why do design doubters always say evolution is dumb. Cripe! Evolution is clever as hell! It thinks way ahead! (Okay..... 'seemingly' ???)
...over my head. My son used to play that... but otherwise I dunno whadaya mean.sonic hedgehog.
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...or on our respective biases.I can understand the "argument from incredulity" but I think it largely rests on a lack of information. .
If in Sagan's "Contact", the blueprint could be frameshifted to produce new information, you'd have to conclude it was intended to do so by the ONEs who designed the first blueprint. Clear to me, in that analogy. Therefore, splices, folding, and frameshifts do not compel me so much.It is very clear to me that we cannot simply say that information cannot be created by natural processes. We have far too many examples of new information creation to deny it..
Yes, well I can understand this if you find the examples you gave sufficient to make evident mechanistic creation of new information.Well, we part company there. Minds can create, but it does not follow that creation, especially of new information, is restricted to minds.
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Einstein said "everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler."Well, it could, but it isn't necessary for us to postulate a "mind" behind natural selection, so I don't. There are natural processes that can account for it that I have no reason to associate with mind. If you wish to see it as being directed by a mind, then that is fine. I doubt you could convince many others of that fact, though, especially if they wish to be parsimonious in their explanations.
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I think random mutation and natural selection is "simpler than possible."
Being able to convince others or lack of being able to, is irrelevant. Most everyone believed the earth was flat at one time, etc etc. Besides, I like to provoke and like to stay in contrarian territory. It's fun.
Yes, you are correct. But it seems like a Goedelian question how an incompetent super-complex mechanism can spontaneously bring about an intelligent much-lesser-complex brain. Seems backwards. Seems out of sequence. Evolution may be over-bloated with complexity, and may even have it's own seizures...
Kids with hemimegancephaly have far too many neurons in one hemisphere, but all that hemisphere can normally do is produce seizures. Complexity is important, but it can never be the complete story.
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My analogy of evolution being as a neural network probably fails pretty quickly when you try to identify subsystems and heirarchical structure in terms of comparison to brains.A cognitive entity without a limbic system would more closely resemble a CPU than a human.
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We could carry the analogy too far.Because the underlying structure of the nervous system of that self-aware machine allows it to survive and pass on its genes. I know that is not a satisfactory answer for you and essentially amounts to "well, because", but that seems to be the way that the world works..
But... our brains constantly re-wire synaptical connections. Learning in the brain seems somewhat parallel to evolution "learning" how to adapt the whole biosphere to changing conditions.
To be clear, I don't try to sell a self-aware universe here. I brought up a non-self-aware universe, at least the evolution part of the universe, as ironic. The prevailing theory is that it's not self-aware but it can make self-awareness in little isolated places, and those little isolated self-awarenesses argue about whether any self-awareness exists in the universe besides in ourselves.