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Fossil and Evolution

Something like that seems to be happening.

There's a vast difference between saying the theory has been strong since Darwin and talking about when it came to be the accepted paradigm (as they say). The consensus of the scientific community is one thing, and the actual merits of the idea itself is something else.

I hate to be all sun-shiney, but I think you're both right! :)
I do too. I think we have a different perspective is all. And I'm interested in his since he knows different things than I know.
 
I'd disagree on the "reputable scientist" line. There are plenty of reputable scientists who believe in Creationism. In fact I think that I've heard that Gould had a PhD student who was a Creationist. I certainly knew a grad student in molecular and cell biology who was a Creationist. I have every reason to believe that she would get her PhD. And the father of a good friend was a chemist and a Creationist. (Said friend finished his PhD in math. However I do not count math as a science.)
Now you are getting into territory I would definitely dispute. You could say these people were intelligent but refused to examine their blind spot, but you can not say they were reputable scientists as if they had a scientific basis to ignore certain evidence. I don't care if they had a PhD and a Nobel Prize. They have a problem with cognitive dissonance. Would you consider a paper they wrote on why Creation was scientifically correct to be reputable science?

"No scientific controversy" is not the same as "all scientists agree". Nor does knowledge of one area of science translate into knowledge of another.
Which is why I consider understanding the mechanisms of evolution the defining moment, not mere clear cut observation evolution occurs, nor the very early discovery of the mechanisms before a thorough knowledge of it was accumulated.

Also it is my understanding that about 9% of the American public fully accepts evolution. About half believe that the Bible is inerrant. And the rest have beliefs somewhere in between. So your estimate that half of the American public believes in evolution is somewhat optimistic.
Sadly....

About picking a solid date, that is always hard. In the end paradigm shifts finish when all of the adherents of the previous paradigm die. To name a notable recent example, Fred Hoyle had not accepted the Big Bang right until his death in 2001. Yet the history of science will remember the discovery of cosmic microwave background radiation in 1964 as the defining fact that confirmed the Big Bang theory. For nearly 40 years Hoyle regularly published papers on this topic that were more and more irrelevant to mainstream astronomy.

Cheers,
Ben
And then your argument I don't go back far enough is based on what?
 
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Well to oversimplify things, because I'm not interested in a dissertation here, we started with Darwin's observations. It is my belief if you just observed life as one could have 175 years ago, especially considering by that time humans had bred domestic animals and food crops, there was clear evidence of evolution. But people at that time still had mythical ideas to overcome. Since I don't buy the myths and neither did all people then, from the point of scientific evidence the only competing theory was gods had a hand in it. So you could go with evolution as the most plausible theory even as far back as when Darwin proposed it. While there were problems with explaining everything, what do you consider competing theories of the day? And why would 100 million year old Earth even be considered a problem for evolution theory to overcome at that time since no one would have been calculating the rate of DNA mutations.

The only competing theory? I think that the good Chevalier de Lamarck might have something to say about that. Furthermore his theories did not involve God.

Secondly, what if they had? In the 1800s it was not yet firmly established that "God did it" was not an adequate scientific explanation. The principle was on its way towards being established, but was far from accepted.

As for the timeline, while it is true that nobody was calculating the rate of DNA mutations, they had a reasonable idea how much geology they had to squeeze into the Earth's history, and so they had an inkling how much change they had to squeeze in. While a short pre-history did not outright disprove Darwin's theories, they made his theories much less plausible. Particularly in the face of competing theories which suggested that change could be very fast. (Which is why Darwin and his proponents considered it important to try to establish that the Earth was very old.)

Next we added in a large amount of data from the fossil record. More weight toward the evolution theory. But one could argue that evidence was lacking as to what created new species. In my hypothetical travel back in time, I was already convinced there were no competing theories. But a lot of scientists would have been saying there was a suggestion one species evolved into another, but there wasn't enough evidence to say speciation occurred without a doubt.

The question at hand was not whether evolution happened, it was why it happened. Darwin's theory of evolution is far more specific than saying that animals change over time and become different species. His theory is that selection pressure is the only factor that drives this process. (Stated this strictly, his theory is wrong. But let's leave that point aside.)

Remember that Darwin was not arguing against modern creationists. He was arguing against scientists of his time, who had their own opposing theories. It was not sufficient to argue that evolution happened. He had to argue that it happened in a specific way for a specific reason.

So my science purist would be a scientist who would say your theory looks good, but until you have very specific evidence supporting speciation it remains speculative. I would still be saying there were no competing theories.

Again, I reiterate what I've said in other posts. I've been very careful to say Darwin's theory of evolution rather than the theory of evolution for good reason. There were multiple competing theories, and Darwin didn't have the only theory of evolution out there.

1930s and 1940s
This timeline of evolutionary thought shows the understanding of speciation to have advanced in the 60s-70s.

Scroll back through this thread and looked for the phrase "punctuated equilibrium". See how many times I mention it, see who I say were the authors, and see what time frame that I said it happened in.

The link that you've found is by one of the two authors of that theory, and it reiterates what I've already said. However, despite the disagreements about how exactly evolution progresses, neither side in that scientific debate disputed the truth of Darwin's theory of evolution.

According to this, in 1966, the genetic code was "cracked" when, "Marshall Nirenberg, Heinrich Mathaei, and Severo Ochoa demonstrated that a sequence of three nucleotide bases (a codon) determines each of 20 amino acids. And this site notes that 1977 was the dawn of "Biotech" which I would define as the beginning of today's genetic science field.

Even though microbes were first seen in the 1600s, I don't know that anyone in Darwin's time would have considered microbes preceding and evolving into insects, plants and animals. It wasn't until genetic mechanisms were understood that evolution theory was a complete theory. And regarding Mendel's work and other demonstrations of genetic mechanisms at work, knowing something occurs is not a complete theory until you know how it occurs.

I'm sorry, but back in the 1930s people knew very well what genes were and knew exactly how they were connected to chromosomes. They didn't understand how genes did what they did, nor could they measure them in detail, but they had more than a good enough understanding of them to understand evolutionary mechanisms. They didn't need to know the details of how chromosomes work to be able to explain, for instance, altruism.

When Watson and Crick unravelled the structure of DNA, they weren't just looking at something random. They walked into that project knowing very well that THIS was the stuff that encoded genetics. They knew from the start the importance of knowing how it worked. And they knew that the structure would be an important part of figuring out its exact function.

Furthermore I have to disagree with you on the importance of a theory being "complete". For instance it was not until the theory of continental drift was established in the late 1950s that a large number of anomalies in evolution theory could be explained.

What do you consider was the defining evidence between Darwin's work and when you consider the theory was supported by overwhelming evidence and what competing theories were there before it was clear one was correct? I consider the breakthroughs in genetic science which revealed the mechanisms of evolution to be the overwhelming evidence. I was convinced before that. A person who interpreted science in a more 'pure' form would have insisted on the genetic evidence explaining how evolution occurred not just that it was observed occurring and there were no competing theories.

And on the contrary I do not consider the breakthroughs in genetic science to be that critical. They are nice but if we had our current understanding of genetics but lacked all of the other lines of evidence for evolution as we understand it, then I'd not believe in evolution. Conversely all of the other lines of evidence that we had for evolution before we started to look at genetics are more than enough to convince me in the absence of evidence.

What did we have? Well here are some of the lines of evidence.
  1. We knew how heritability worked.
  2. We knew that mutations happened.
  3. We knew that these two facts, together with population statistics, provided a possible mechanism for evolution.
  4. We had concrete demonstrations that this mechanism actually happened in practice. (See peppered moths.)
  5. We had fossil evidence that evolution had happened.
  6. Despite much searching, we hadn't found any historic changes that evolution couldn't explain.
  7. We have a plethora of evidence from around the world that no species arose without reasonable precursors.
  8. Evolution theory gives detailed predictions of animal behaviour, and research confirms its predictions in great detail. (A classic success of "sociobiology" was E.O.Wilson's predictions of preferential behaviour towards male and female ant larvae in normal ants and slaver ants.)
I could go on, but the long and short of it is that we had a proposed mechanism, we had proof that the mechanism actually operated, we had theories about what this mechanism would predict, we had tremendous amounts of confirmation that this mechanism was sufficient to explain the world around us, and (despite much searching) we had no evidence of any competing mechanism around.

With all of that as evidence, it is hard to plausibly deny that evolution happens. It is hard to doubt that evolution has been a very significant factor. It is of course impossible to prove that it is the only factor, but the potential role of alternative mechanisms would seem to be limited. (In fact Darwin's theory is not, strictly speaking, the only factor. A detailed understanding of genetics has illustrated how, for instance, viruses can spread a gene through a population in a way that is unrelated to how evolution had been understood to operate. We do not, however, believe this to be the major mode of change over evolutionary timescales,)

Cheers,
Ben
 
Name one besides god beliefs. And the time line you think left doubt about Darwin's theory, is that the argument people gave at that time? It seems hard to believe they would have had anyway of knowing how fast evolution occurred when the theory was first proposed. I have never read Darwin's work. Does he suggest a timeframe for his theory?

Yes, Darwin suggested a timeline for his theory. And for an alternative theory , see Lamarckian evolution.

To the best of my knowledge, the arguments that I've been giving reflected actual historical arguments.

Also, I see nothing in the Wiki article that says: This was the clincher and here's the date. Nor do I see much in there which contradicts my post. Unless you consider the day genetic mechanisms were first identified as all that was needed. I would propose it took a lot closer examination of the new discovery to have a full understanding of it.

My understanding (based in part upon one of Gould's essays) was that the effective clincher was when population genetics progressed to the point that it could explain what had been taken as evidence that there were natural types. What was some of this evidence?

Well for a start, if you tried to breed for a characteristic, say height of plants, at first you had an easy time of it. But after a while your efforts would slow down. And then they came to a complete halt. After that if you took the population of tall plants, divided them into groups, and tried to breed for different characteristics (leafiness, shortness, etc), the one that was inevitably fastest to breed for was the opposite of whatever you'd bred for again (in this case shortness).

This was pretty strong evidence that while descent with modification happened, it would only explain a certain amount of change until it stopped for admittedly poorly understood reasons.

We now know that the reason it stopped is that the raw material for rapid evolution is to have potentially useful recessives in the population, which is known as genetic diversity. When you've bred to the limits of your genetic diversity, you have to wait for mutations before you can do more. Conversely once you've bred them one way, the bulk of the rarely expressed recessives that you now have to work with are back towards the initial state of the population.

Understanding the operation of population genetics well enough to understand this phenomena resolved the last serious scientific objection that I know of to Darwin's theories. Conversely before this phenomena was understood, it was a legitimate source of reasonable scientific doubt about whether Darwin's theories could explain evolution.

Cheers,
Ben
 
Now you are getting into territory I would definitely dispute. You could say these people were intelligent but refused to examine their blind spot, but you can not say they were reputable scientists as if they had a scientific basis to ignore certain evidence. I don't care if they had a PhD and a Nobel Prize. They have a problem with cognitive dissonance. Would you consider a paper they wrote on why Creation was scientifically correct to be reputable science?

Now you're falling prey to the "no true Scotsman" fallacy. These people are practicing scientists who do research, publish papers, get tenure, etc. If you denied that all scientists who fall short of your ideal scientist were truly scientists, then you'd have a shortage of scientists.

As for having a problem with cognitive dissonance - most scientists have to encounter sources of cognitive dissonance. When you learn enough, there are always open controversies with evidence both ways that is sufficient to induce cognitive dissonance. They may be big controversies - the conflicting evidence for particles and waves in the early 1900s comes to mind, or they might be small controversies - say a dispute about which of two genetic pathways is right. In any case, learn enough and you'll encounter cases where our incomplete understanding of two things is in direct conflict. If you can't cope, you can't do science. Sorry.

Which is why I consider understanding the mechanisms of evolution the defining moment, not mere clear cut observation evolution occurs, nor the very early discovery of the mechanisms before a thorough knowledge of it was accumulated.

But at what point was the mechanism understood sufficiently to be a defining moment? I'd cite the work that established basic genetics and the role of the chromosome. You're insisting on us getting to the point that we can look directly at the genes and confirm what we already knew from other lines of evidence.

I'm saying that the evidence was already overwhelming before that confirmation was available.

Sadly....

I'm glad we agree on something...

And then your argument I don't go back far enough is based on what?

If I must be honest, it is based on the belief that the evidence both was overwhelming when I was learning about it in the late 80s/early 90s, and had been overwhelming for decades previous to that.

If you want to say that the evidence was not overwhelming 10 years ago, then I'd like you to point me at an open doubt about evolution that people could have reasonably pointed at 10 years ago. Because I'm not aware of any. And I spent a lot of time looking for one. (And please don't point me at Behe. First of all he actually accepts that Darwinian evolution happened and was important. Secondly most scientists felt that the case was overwhelmingly against him even back then.)

Cheers,
Ben
 
You seem to be claiming at some point "overwhelming evidence" accumulated. If you can't say what took the evidence over the line, then you are just drawing an arbitrary line and claiming I drew it in the wrong place. I think I supported my reasoning and I like my reasoning. The theory was only complete when we understood the how not just that it did occur. Some people may still argue the theory is not complete until we fill in the abiogenesis chapter. I see nothing in what you have posted that makes how I defined overwhelming evidence "wrong". We differ in how we view it is all.

Overwhelming evidence also depends upon to whom you apply it. Evolution deniers repeat their arguments ad nauseum. But if we didn't have the mechanism of evolution precisely understood you cannot as decisively tell them, "it is no longer a theory, evolution is a fact". Even now if I put it in those terms there will be some scientists (and skeptics) who will object to using the word, fact.

You mention Lamarckian theory as one competing theory. It hardly competes with Darwin's theory IMO since it merely offers a mechanism of inheritance. It is not my understanding that mechanism excludes Darwin's theory, it merely claims we can add to the genes in a way which the evidence when collected, did not support. But if you want to argue it offered a different version of inheritance as opposed to a different version of speciation, fine.

God has never been a scientific theory and I do not accept that claim at all. I'm not talking about beliefs. If you go that route, then Darwin certainly isn't 'overwhelmingly' accepted even today.

You refer two more times to competing theories, plural. You only note one alternate version of modified inheritance. You are exaggerating your case if you cannot present competing theories and you try to call god beliefs a theory.

If you think I have misrepresented selection pressures you need to reread my posts so I don't understand your complaint there.

Remember that Darwin was not arguing against modern creationists. He was arguing against scientists of his time, who had their own opposing theories. It was not sufficient to argue that evolution happened. He had to argue that it happened in a specific way for a specific reason.
Like I said, so far you have only mentioned one.

Scroll back through this thread and looked for the phrase "punctuated equilibrium". See how many times I mention it, see who I say were the authors, and see what time frame that I said it happened in.
And you think I don't understand this? I posted the mechanism for it. I don't get your point, unless you have simply underestimated what I know about evolution.

I'm sorry, but back in the 1930s people knew very well what genes were and knew exactly how they were connected to chromosomes. They didn't understand how genes did what they did, nor could they measure them in detail, but they had more than a good enough understanding of them to understand evolutionary mechanisms. They didn't need to know the details of how chromosomes work to be able to explain, for instance, altruism.
You are stating that at the very beginning of our learning about the mechanisms of inheritance, the whole picture had emerged. Clearly it hadn't. So I'll have to disagree with you there. I posted dates and events. Genetic mechanisms were more fully understood by the 70s. On the one hand you say when Darwin proposed the theory it wasn't yet good enough and on the other hand you say when the material in the nucleus of the cell was proposed as the material which passed on the information, then it was good enough. It wasn't well understood as soon as it was discovered.

Now you're falling prey to the "no true Scotsman" fallacy.
How about just using the definition of science, scientific evidence, supporting one's conclusions with evidence. You cannot tell me religious convictions are science. That is unsupportable. If God beliefs competed with Darwin's theory 175 years ago, then they still compete today. You can't have it both ways.

If you think I would use Behe's work as an argument for anything, you haven't read my pages and pages and pages of evolution posts. I have never been convinced by any argument supporting irreducible complexity. And if you can find a post where I said the mechanisms of evolution were only understood 10 years ago, I misspoke or you misread what I said. I believe I have consistently said, "a couple decades" since that is when the revolution in genetic research took place, and perhaps I should have said 3 decades. Time flies faster the older you get.

So you haven't made your case for what made the evidence overwhelming that contradicts what I have posted. If I understated the timing by a decade, I'll grant you that. I'll go with 3 decades and try to keep to that correction. I hadn't really ever looked up when the genetic science research began in earnest. The 70s sounds about right. Seems like only 2 decades ago.......
 
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I'm sorry that I passed over this post earlier. If no one else has done so from your previous or this post, let me be the first to say Bravo. It takes a lot of guts to do this. I respect that.

Well, it's nice to see someone recognize me as something other than a creation.

*crosses arms*
*stamps foot*
*pretends to be grievously offended at the oversight*

:p :p :p :p :p :p :p
 
I'm going to have to agree with Ben here. The theory of evolution was a done deal as a result of the first great epoch in genetics, and has been so regarded by scientists ever since.

Now, I take skeptigirl's point about knowing the mechanism. If you don't then you might be looking at an absence of oxygen and calling it phlogiston. However, back in the 20s they knew enough about the mechanism of genetics to verify that Darwin was right. You don't have to know all the finer details, because (speaking as a maths/computer science guy) the process of variation and selection is extremely robust. It wouldn't break down if there were five nucleotides, or three, or if there were four bases to a codon: variation and selection works with 'most any sort of data.
 
You seem to be claiming at some point "overwhelming evidence" accumulated. If you can't say what took the evidence over the line, then you are just drawing an arbitrary line and claiming I drew it in the wrong place. I think I supported my reasoning and I like my reasoning. The theory was only complete when we understood the how not just that it did occur. Some people may still argue the theory is not complete until we fill in the abiogenesis chapter. I see nothing in what you have posted that makes how I defined overwhelming evidence "wrong". We differ in how we view it is all.

I really don't think that I am being arbitrary. In the 30s and 40s the Modern Synthesis became the accepted consensus on evolution. To a large extent that Synthesis was not new, it just combined the pieces that lots of people had into a coherent picture. From that point to this there has been no serious scientific objection to Darwin's theory of evolution.

While it is always hard to point to a specific date at which a theory became definitively accepted (see my previous example of the Big Bang and Fred Hoyle), I think I'm on safe ground to say that Darwin's theory was solidly demonstrated by the time the Modern Synthesis came around and became accepted.

Overwhelming evidence also depends upon to whom you apply it. Evolution deniers repeat their arguments ad nauseum. But if we didn't have the mechanism of evolution precisely understood you cannot as decisively tell them, "it is no longer a theory, evolution is a fact". Even now if I put it in those terms there will be some scientists (and skeptics) who will object to using the word, fact.

The Modern Synthesis had a precise enough understanding of the mechanism to be able to make that assertion. And if you look at Gould's early essays (circa early 70s, which would be 40 years ago) you'll find clear and carefully reasoned assertions that evolution is a proven fact.

You mention Lamarckian theory as one competing theory. It hardly competes with Darwin's theory IMO since it merely offers a mechanism of inheritance. It is not my understanding that mechanism excludes Darwin's theory, it merely claims we can add to the genes in a way which the evidence when collected, did not support. But if you want to argue it offered a different version of inheritance as opposed to a different version of speciation, fine.

Hardly competes? A great many people would disagree with you, starting with one Charles Darwin. The key part of Darwin's theory is that the driver of change over time is that less successful individuals die rather than pass their traits on. Lamarck's theory provides a completely different mechanism which could drive change over time. If Lamarck's theory was true, then the importance of natural selection would play a distant second fiddle to teleologically driven change.

God has never been a scientific theory and I do not accept that claim at all. I'm not talking about beliefs. If you go that route, then Darwin certainly isn't 'overwhelmingly' accepted even today.

Then you're being a-historical.

If you read scientific papers from the 1800s, the possibility of Divine Intervention was seriously considered and discussed. This fact is acknowledged in the preface to The Origin of the Species. (While Darwin gives a list of precursors to his theory, he acknowledges that "...the great majority of naturalists believed that species were immutable productions, and had been separately created." People of that time simply did not draw the line between religion and science as we now draw it, and to ignore this fact is to make it impossible to understand people of that day.

You refer two more times to competing theories, plural. You only note one alternate version of modified inheritance. You are exaggerating your case if you cannot present competing theories and you try to call god beliefs a theory.

I note Lamarck's theory because it was the main one. I am hardly an expert in this subject, and so would have to do research to be able to enumerate others. (Part of the difficulty in enumeration is that there were many people with vague and vaguely different notions of how change over time could happen, so dividing them into clear groups is very difficult.)

Secondly you continue to question calling god beliefs a theory, but the fact is that it was! To say otherwise is to misrepresent the historical record. There were many prominent naturalists, whose contributions we respect to this day, who believed on variations of "God did it." I've already named the geologist John Phillips who corrected Darwin's miscalculation of the age of the Weald of Kent. A far better-known example is Louis Agassiz. Who to this day is recognized for his contributions to biology. You may read about him at http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/agassiz.html. His accomplishments included gathering copious evidence that an Ice Age had happened, fundamental discoveries in embryology, the founding of Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology, and the discovery of significant parallels between ontogeny, paleontology and morphology.

If you wish to claim he was not a scientist, I will have to laugh. If you try to divide his religious beliefs from his scientific work, then you have guaranteed that you'll never understand his work.

If you think I have misrepresented selection pressures you need to reread my posts so I don't understand your complaint there.

I don't think you've misrepresented selection pressures. I think that you've missed the fact that alternatives to selection pressures as a mechanism of change are a direct challenge to Darwin's theory.

Ben Tilly said:
Remember that Darwin was not arguing against modern creationists. He was arguing against scientists of his time, who had their own opposing theories. It was not sufficient to argue that evolution happened. He had to argue that it happened in a specific way for a specific reason.
Like I said, so far you have only mentioned one.

See my above responses to this point. I've mentioned he main alternative. And your continuing refusal to not accept God as a competing theory notwithstanding, it was a major competing theory within the scientific community.

Ben Tilly said:
Scroll back through this thread and looked for the phrase "punctuated equilibrium". See how many times I mention it, see who I say were the authors, and see what time frame that I said it happened in.
And you think I don't understand this? I posted the mechanism for it. I don't get your point, unless you have simply underestimated what I know about evolution.

Then perhaps I misunderstood the point of your reference to punctuated equilibrium. Back in your original post at http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2478396#post2478396 you said that, "...the bulk of arguments evolution deniers put forth are based on 40 year old science." But I've seen those arguments, and the "40 year old science" that those arguments are based on are actually misrepresentations of the punctuated equilibrium debate. In fact that was the point which this side discussion started at, see http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2502976#post2502976 for proof.

So when in http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2505709#post2505709 you brought up advances in our understanding of speciation in the 60s and 70s, I thought that you were bringing it up to demonstrate that our evidence for evolution was weak at that time. Hence my response.

If I misunderstood your point in bringing that up, then I apologize.

Ben Tilly said:
I'm sorry, but back in the 1930s people knew very well what genes were and knew exactly how they were connected to chromosomes. They didn't understand how genes did what they did, nor could they measure them in detail, but they had more than a good enough understanding of them to understand evolutionary mechanisms. They didn't need to know the details of how chromosomes work to be able to explain, for instance, altruism.
You are stating that at the very beginning of our learning about the mechanisms of inheritance, the whole picture had emerged. Clearly it hadn't. So I'll have to disagree with you there. I posted dates and events. Genetic mechanisms were more fully understood by the 70s. On the one hand you say when Darwin proposed the theory it wasn't yet good enough and on the other hand you say when the material in the nucleus of the cell was proposed as the material which passed on the information, then it was good enough. It wasn't well understood as soon as it was discovered.

Excuse me?

"...the very beginning of our learning about the mechanisms of inheritance..."?

Let's see. Research was going on in how inheritance happened back around 1800. They didn't get very far, but they had lots of competing theories. You start to get real progress in the 1880s with Dalton's demonstration of regression to the mean. Mendel's work was rediscovered around 1900. Fisher managed to reconcile the two in 1918. And research continued from there. I do not know who demonstrated the connections betweeen genes and chromosomes, but when http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_evolutionary_synthesis claims that this connection was understood by the 30s and 40s, that fits with my understanding of what kind of research preceeded that (work on population genetics) and postdated it (Watson and Crick).

So in the 1930s they had been researching inheritance for over a century, and had been on the right general track for over 30 years. I would not call this "the very beginning".

Then you go on to claim that I was saying, "...the whole picture had emerged." In fact I'd said no such thing, nor did I mean to imply it. I said that they had certain pieces of the picture, and those pieces are sufficient for evolutionary theory. This is true. But, for instance, some of Barbara McClintock's groundbreaking work on jumping genes was marginalized for many years because the theoretical framework that had been developed could not handle that concept.

(Incidentally if you read http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_McClintock you'll find that in the 20s and 30s she not only knew about the connection between chromosomes and genes, but she was actually studying where on the chromosome specific genes were located! Yet further confirmation of the timeline that I gave above.)

Ben Tilly said:
Now you're falling prey to the "no true Scotsman" fallacy.
How about just using the definition of science, scientific evidence, supporting one's conclusions with evidence. You cannot tell me religious convictions are science. That is unsupportable. If God beliefs competed with Darwin's theory 175 years ago, then they still compete today. You can't have it both ways.

Let's apply your argument to a different example and see how well it holds up.

Back in the 1700s the theory of phlostigon was clearly science. It was an accepted part of chemistry and appeared in all of the textbooks. Then oxygen was discovered. Anyone who has been talking about phlostigon in, say, the last 200 years has not been doing science. Everyone can recognize that.

But by your theory, the fact that phlostigon was once part of serious scientific discourse means that it has to be considered part of serious scientific discourse forever. Clearly your theory isn't measuring up very well with the facts.

Now let's return to the God hypothesis. I've already quoted several examples of people who demonstrate that serious scientists, in serious scientific discourse, thought about and discussed the idea that God created species in various ways over various times. It is impossible to produce a coherent history of scientific thought that, for instance, includes the discussions that lead to the discovery of Ice Ages and excludes discussions of God. When I say that God was a part of serious scientific discourse at that time, there is a lot of history that backs me up.

But the practice of science has moved on. Today when you try to seriously advance the theory that God created different species, you're no more doing real science than you are if you're trying to measure phlostigon. But if you try to apply this standard back to scientists in the 1800s, you're being as a-historical as you are if you try to claim that Lavosier was not doing chemistry when he was trying to produce air without phlostigon.

The long and short of it is, of course, that our notion of science had to develop over time. Today you talk about a "definition of science". However the definitions that you'd use came about after the period that we're discussing. The standards that you'd apply developed in large part as a result of the debate over evolution. And therefore trying to apply your definitions and standards to people in the 1800s simply guarantees that you can't understand the historical debate that happened.

If you think I would use Behe's work as an argument for anything, you haven't read my pages and pages and pages of evolution posts. I have never been convinced by any argument supporting irreducible complexity. And if you can find a post where I said the mechanisms of evolution were only understood 10 years ago, I misspoke or you misread what I said. I believe I have consistently said, "a couple decades" since that is when the revolution in genetic research took place, and perhaps I should have said 3 decades. Time flies faster the older you get.

Well you'd said that we'd passed the point of overwhelming evidence "at least a decade ago". You're right that I'd misread that. I misread that as "about a decade ago". My apologies.

The cause of my misreading is that I was annoyed that you gave Creationists enough credit to say that their arguments are based on 40 year old science. They aren't. They are based on misrepresentations of 40 year old science.

So you haven't made your case for what made the evidence overwhelming that contradicts what I have posted. If I understated the timing by a decade, I'll grant you that. I'll go with 3 decades and try to keep to that correction. I hadn't really ever looked up when the genetic science research began in earnest. The 70s sounds about right. Seems like only 2 decades ago.......

I haven't made a case that the evidence was overwhelming in the 30s and 40s? And here I thought I had.

When you're at the point of being able to identify where on specific chromosomes specific genes are encoded, you know enough about inheritance to give evolution theory solid underpinnings. Whether or not you know how chromosomes work or are able to directly read those genetic sequences off of the chromosomes. Barbara McClintock was getting us to that point back in the late 1920s. And evolutionary theorists realized, understood and accepted the consequences in the 30s and 40s.

When you're working at a detailed level, it is tempting to think that knowledge comes "bottom up". That is, you discover the mechanisms, figure out the consequences, and the move up the scale. But historically our knowledge of biology has proceeded "top down". Over time as techniques get better, we're able to examine biological processes on more and more detailed levels. But facts at higher levels that today one would present as being consequences of more detailed theories were historically discovered in the earlier order. Thus, for instance, we'd demonstrated what genes work, that they were encoded on chromosomes, and that the key substance was DNA before we had any idea what the structure of DNA was or how it could possibly do that encoding.

And, of course, evolution theory is a very high level theory. Which is why it was able to be put on a very solid basis long before the advances in genetics that you cite as fundamental.

Regards,
Ben
 
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Let's see. Research was going on in how inheritance happened back around 1800. They didn't get very far, but they had lots of competing theories. You start to get real progress in the 1880s with Dalton's demonstration of regression to the mean. Mendel's work was rediscovered around 1900. [...]

Gah. What I get for not double-checking my assertions before making them.

Regression to the mean was first demonstrated by Galton, not Dalton.

Mea culpa,
Ben
 
[...]In fact I think that I've heard that Gould had a PhD student who was a Creationist[...]

He would be Kurt Wise (oh, the delicious irony).

I think that it is important to point out, that while he is a scientist, he also represents the supreme and unassailable recalcitrance of some creationists.

Wikipedia says this about his views:

Wise has been called the "most honest" creationist by Richard Dawkins, as opposed to others who purposely deceive their audiences (according to Dawkins). Yet, he is criticized for his predetermined conclusions in that Wise wrote "if all the evidence in the universe turns against creationism, I would be the first to admit it, but I would still be a creationist because that is what the Word of God seems to indicate." Thereby, Wise openly admits that, no matter how much evidence proves evolution and disproves creationism, he would still be a creationist. Dawkins responded that "this leaves me, as a scientist, speechless. I cannot imagine what it must be like to have a mind capable of such doublethink." This is because "we have it on the authority of a man who may well be creationism’s most highly qualified and most intelligent scientist that no evidence, no matter how overwhelming, no matter how all-embracing, no matter how devastatingly convincing, can ever make any difference."

However, Wise suggests this is not "doublethink" because he does not think the evidence is going to "prove" evolution in any way. Wise contends "evidence" is merely data with an interpretation, and thus Wise begins with "the Word of God" whereas evolutionists begin with the assumption that there is no such revelation. It is from those assumptions of worldview, Wise contends, that determine what one then sees as evidence "for" or "against" one view or the other. Wise is here considering the issues of theory-ladenness, although he is adopting a specific position on this - that evidence may arbitrarily fit any worldview equally well - that is, at the very least, an extremely controversial one in the philosophies of both science and religion.

I think this represents the fundamental dishonesty of the creationist position, in so far as, time and again, sociological studies have shown the people who engage in rigid religious thought such as creationism are highly predisposed to other types of absolutist thinking. Thus, it seems that the only time they embrace anything that in the least resembles relativism (whether it be metaphysical, epistemic, ethical, religious, or cultural) is when they are trying to defend their own beliefs. Pleading relativism in reference to evolution and creationism, in so far as on believe that they are based on equally valid world views, only gets one so far when one claims that one's religion is the Absolute Truth. I guess that the other way you could look at Wise is that, even though he is highly intelligent and educated, he is intellectually bankrupt, if he believes that his religion is the One True Faith, which puts him far from "reputable" in my book. That doesn't that he isn't of great impact in his field; it just means I question his character.

Feel free to question mine, if you feel I am being too harsh or quick to judgment.
 
The cause of my misreading is that I was annoyed that you gave Creationists enough credit to say that their arguments are based on 40 year old science. They aren't. They are based on misrepresentations of 40 year old science.
This is the crux of the matter.

I have no issue with your time line of when the experts in the field concluded there was overwhelming evidence. But just as with your example of the theory of plate tectonics, one expert in the field likely concluded there was overwhelming evidence long before other geologists let alone other scientists did. If some scientists were not ready to accept the evidence for the theory of evolution as overwhelming 40 years ago but some experts were, you still have a wide variance in how to define when the theory reached unquestioning acceptance.

I don't think the fact there are a few scientists dedicated to their religion, who today continue to claim evolution theory is in doubt makes the theory in doubt. On the other end of the spectrum you have a point where the theory began to be beyond question among a few scientists, (sounds like it coincided with the era of the Scopes trial to put a different perspective on it), and gradually gained acceptance among the rest.

So, I'll summarize, you would be correct if referring to mainstream scientists most involved in evolution research who didn't have religious blind spots, and I'm correct when viewing overwhelming evidence from the perspective of the majority of mainstream scientists with the exception of a few religiously blindspotted holdouts. Because, misinterpreting the evidence or not, there were plenty of scientists in the 60s and 70s who would have said we haven't proved speciation. You are the one claiming god is historically a scientific theory, whether correct or not, so by the same token, mainstream science historically wasn't so fast to accept evolution theory as the evidence (I will agree) probably overwhelmingly supported.

I don't agree that the mechanisms of natural selection were "understood" as early as work at the molecular level began. And I didn't mean one had to understand codons and protein folding when I referred to understanding the genetics of evolution. Rather, and why I say at least a decade ago, I consider the time of overwhelming evidence for everyone with a brain :rolleyes: was when we could look at the genome of widely different lifeforms and see that the genetic patterns confirm we are related without a doubt.

I thank you for your perspective, BTW. I learned a bit more about the early work in the field of genetics.
 
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Re Mr Wise, I wonder how many Bible stories he accepts and how many he rejects? Seems rather arbitrary to pick and choose and I don't see how you could have such a disjointed view of the scientific evidence as a Bible literalist would need to have. I think the BA may have had a blog entry on this guy or one like him who earned a PhD despite not believing the science in the field his degree was granted in.
 
[...]Mr Wise[...]

Was that intentional, leaving off his honorific (i.e., "Doctor")?

Is it a way of saying that the he doesn't deserve his title if he doesn't accept well-established facts in his field?

I'm not saying that is what you intended (far be it for me to maliciously defame anyone here), but it would be a clever way of showing disdain or displeasure if it was intentional.
 
He would be Kurt Wise (oh, the delicious irony).

I think that it is important to point out, that while he is a scientist, he also represents the supreme and unassailable recalcitrance of some creationists.

Thank you for remembering who that was.

I think this represents the fundamental dishonesty of the creationist position, in so far as, time and again, sociological studies have shown the people who engage in rigid religious thought such as creationism are highly predisposed to other types of absolutist thinking. Thus, it seems that the only time they embrace anything that in the least resembles relativism (whether it be metaphysical, epistemic, ethical, religious, or cultural) is when they are trying to defend their own beliefs. Pleading relativism in reference to evolution and creationism, in so far as on believe that they are based on equally valid world views, only gets one so far when one claims that one's religion is the Absolute Truth. I guess that the other way you could look at Wise is that, even though he is highly intelligent and educated, he is intellectually bankrupt, if he believes that his religion is the One True Faith, which puts him far from "reputable" in my book. That doesn't that he isn't of great impact in his field; it just means I question his character.

Feel free to question mine, if you feel I am being too harsh or quick to judgment.

Well "reputable" does have multiple meanings. By reputable I meant one's reputation within your own field. I did not mean your general reputation.

For example consider the case of James Watson. On a personal level I think he's slime. (Just read between the lines of his autobiographical account of discovering the structure of DNA for how he treated Rosalind Franklin.) As a scientist, he's clearly top-notch. (After all he did manage to figure out what her data meant faster than she did. But that was partly luck - his graduate thesis had been on a molecule with the same symmetry that DNA had so he had a lot more experience with that particular symmetry than Rosalind did.)

But I agree with you about the fundamental dishonesty of the creationist position among people who know enough to know better. I'd say that most Americans aren't dishonest on this topic - they're just uneducated. But the people you see arguing it day in and day out, I agree that they are intellectually dishonest.

Cheers,
Ben
 
Was that intentional, leaving off his honorific (i.e., "Doctor")?

Is it a way of saying that the he doesn't deserve his title if he doesn't accept well-established facts in his field?

I'm not saying that is what you intended (far be it for me to maliciously defame anyone here), but it would be a clever way of showing disdain or displeasure if it was intentional.
Unintentional. Sorry.
 
Not to derail the thread, Ben but is cognitive dissonance "dishonest"? Is a religious blindspot, "dishonest"? I have a growing pet peeve with the way the word "dishonest" is over and inappropriately used around skeptic forums, especially after having it applied to me on a number of occasions. I am not dishonest because I have a different interpretation of something I've read. So I'm not sure how an indoctrinated theist is dishonest. I would think their theist distorted reality was on a much more subconscious level while dishonesty requires conscious motive.
 
Unintentional. Sorry.

I wasn't offended.

I think I've seen you refer to Dembski as "Dumbski" before. I though the "Mr."/"Dr." thing might have been a similar thing to show disdain for Wise's willful ignorance. However, it is a minor point on which I did not intend to cause contention or offense, and I apologize if I did.
 
Not to derail the thread, Ben but is cognitive dissonance "dishonest"? Is a religious blindspot, "dishonest"? I have a growing pet peeve with the way the word "dishonest" is over and inappropriately used around skeptic forums, especially after having it applied to me on a number of occasions. I am not dishonest because I have a different interpretation of something I've read. So I'm not sure how an indoctrinated theist is dishonest. I would think their theist distorted reality was on a much more subconscious level while dishonesty requires conscious motive.

Impressive. I almost believe you.
 
This is the crux of the matter.

I have no issue with your time line of when the experts in the field concluded there was overwhelming evidence. But just as with your example of the theory of plate tectonics, one expert in the field likely concluded there was overwhelming evidence long before other geologists let alone other scientists did. If some scientists were not ready to accept the evidence for the theory of evolution as overwhelming 40 years ago but some experts were, you still have a wide variance in how to define when the theory reached unquestioning acceptance.

Example of plate tectonics? Are you thinking of my example of Fred Hoyle and the Big Bang? Though if you want to talk about plate tectonics, see the case of Sir Harold Jeffreys. After Harry Hess demonstrated plate tectonics in the 1960s to the satisfaction of the vast majority of geologists (he was armed with rather convincing data, including direct measurements of the rate of movement of the plates), Sir Harold refused to accept it. He'd been strongly against continental drift since the 1920s, and wasn't about to accept it. Sir Harold died in 1989, still having never accepted plate tectonics. (The geology journals published his papers "disproving" it for a few years, and eventually stopped.)

It is amazing how often major scientific revolutions leave some prominent scientist denying the new world order to their deathbeds.

I don't think the fact there are a few scientists dedicated to their religion, who today continue to claim evolution theory is in doubt makes the theory in doubt. On the other end of the spectrum you have a point where the theory began to be beyond question among a few scientists, (sounds like it coincided with the era of the Scopes trial to put a different perspective on it), and gradually gained acceptance among the rest.

I agree that the existence of a few scientists who believe in Creationism does not make the theory be in doubt. I brought up those examples to respond to your claim that all scientists accept the theory. Unfortunately, some don't.

As for where the theory began to be beyond question among a few scientists, well that happened when Darwin published The Origin of the Species. :D

The more interesting point is when the theory could be considered part of the solid scientific consensus. And I'd cite that point as being in the early 20th century when the population genetics arguments fell apart. I'd say that we'd clearly passed that point when the Modern Synthesis became widely accepted.

So, I'll summarize, you would be correct if referring to mainstream scientists most involved in evolution research who didn't have religious blind spots, and I'm correct when viewing overwhelming evidence from the perspective of the majority of mainstream scientists with the exception of a few religiously blindspotted holdouts. Because, misinterpreting the evidence or not, there were plenty of scientists in the 60s and 70s who would have said we haven't proved speciation. You are the one claiming god is historically a scientific theory, whether correct or not, so by the same token, mainstream science historically wasn't so fast to accept evolution theory as the evidence (I will agree) probably overwhelmingly supported.

Please back that up. If you claim that plenty of scientists in the 60s and 70s said that we hadn't proven speciation, then I want to see quotes. And if you give me quotes that are used by Creationists, then I want to see the quote from the original source with, say, a full paragraph to either side included for comparison. (Because the Creationists came up with lots of juicy looking quotes that completely fall apart when you see the full paragraph.)

I ask this because I'm not aware of any prominent examples from the 60s and 70s. And if there was a widespread disbelief in evolution at that point, I think I'd be aware of it.

I don't agree that the mechanisms of natural selection were "understood" as early as work at the molecular level began. And I didn't mean one had to understand codons and protein folding when I referred to understanding the genetics of evolution. Rather, and why I say at least a decade ago, I consider the time of overwhelming evidence for everyone with a brain :rolleyes: was when we could look at the genome of widely different lifeforms and see that the genetic patterns confirm we are related without a doubt.

I thank you for your perspective, BTW. I learned a bit more about the early work in the field of genetics.

Well I'll call it progress. At least you're no longer saying that Creationist claims are based on 40 year old science. And you're no longer denying that they could have understood the basic connection between genes and chromosomes in the 30s and 40s.

You may not believe that at that time the Modern Synthesis was widely accepted, You may not believe that Mendel's laws of genetics combined with the knowledge that mutations could happen really is a sufficient understanding of genetics for evolution theory. You'd probably still be surprised to discover that the first serious attempt at trying to establish a molecular clock for when species diverged was in 1962. (See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molecular_clock for confirmation of that one.) And you still think that there was widespread scientific disbelief of evolution 40 years ago.

But it isn't worth my while to try much harder to convince you on those points. I've spent a lot more energy than I intended on this tangential point. And I'm willing to let our disagreements sit roughly where they are.

Cheers,
Ben
 
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