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Author | Topic: The egg came first | |||||||||||||||||||||||
RAZD Member (Idle past 1435 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmerican.Zen[Deist
{{{Buddha walks off laughing with joy}}}
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John Inactive Member |
I honestly don't know what you mean. I don't know the notation.
No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1435 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
as you go back in time
from chicken to non-chicken from egg to non-egg the time (Chicken-->non-chicken) is much less than the time (Egg-->non-egg) ergo the egg came first. we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmerican.Zen[Deist
{{{Buddha walks off laughing with joy}}}
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John Inactive Member |
Creatures were laying eggs long before there was anything resembling a chicken. That is an interesting take. It denies the implicit, I think, assumption that the egg in the question is a chicken egg.
Your answer wouldn't work if the question were explicitly "Which came first, the chicken or the chicken egg?" No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com
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Chiroptera Inactive Member |
It depends. What is the definition of a "chicken egg"? Is a chicken egg an egg that is laid by a chicken, or an egg that produces a chicken? In the former case, the chicken came first; in the latter case, the egg came first.
Edited to add:Doh! Catholic Scientist beat me to this answer! Teach me to respond to a post without reading the thread first! This message has been edited by Chiroptera, 20-Aug-2005 06:54 PM
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Not really. There is never a point at which a non-chicken gives birth to a chicken egg, or visa-versa. For such to happen we'd have a 'hopeful monster' situation. That was the point I made in post #15.
EvC Forum: The egg came first No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1435 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
changing egg to chicken-egg begs the question.
There is never a point at which a non-chicken gives birth to a chicken egg, or visa-versa. But there is, in part because we make artificial deliniations between ancient species divisions: at some point the species that lays the egg is 99.999% chicken but the egg is 100% and the offspring can mate with the 99.999% and other 100% chickens. and the difference between the egg and one from a generation before is less than the difference between the chicken and one from a generation before. we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmerican.Zen[Deist
{{{Buddha walks off laughing with joy}}}
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John Inactive Member |
quote: No it doesn't. You could have a non-chicken lay a chicken egg and thus have the egg come first and the chicken second. Or you could have a non-chicken lay a non-chicken egg from which a chicken hatched, and thus you have the chicken first and the egg second. What my provision does is disqualify that non-chicken egg. Without that provision the egg quite clearly wins.
quote: There is no such thing as 100% pure chicken, or 100% pure any-other-species. There is always variation.
quote: Then all are the same species. If they are all the same species, you haven't solved the 'which came first' problem. To solve the problem you'd have to find a sharp delineation between chicken and non-chicken (or species-a and species-b), whether that line be at the egg or at the bird, within one generation. My point is that you will never find that sharp line. One generation will always be able to mate with the generation before and the one after it. No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com
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RAZD Member (Idle past 1435 days) Posts: 20714 From: the other end of the sidewalk Joined: |
No it doesn't. You could have a non-chicken lay a chicken egg um, that's exactly what I mean
Or you could have a non-chicken lay a non-chicken egg from which a chicken hatched how, other than the proverbial hopeful monster?
Then all are the same species. If they are all the same species, Of course. That is true of any species in transition, which happens to include all species that ever existed. Each generation to generation sequence in the same species by definition, unless you have a generation of hopeful monsters all in one whack. The distinctions are arbitrary and problematical, but they are useful to describe sufficient change over time to be noticeably different. Or do you think species should only be drawn when there is a clear branching? How fast does that happen? we are limited in our ability to understand by our ability to understand RebelAAmerican.Zen[Deist
{{{Buddha walks off laughing with joy}}}
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John Inactive Member |
quote: Exactly. You would have a hopeful monster. However, if it happened the other way-- a non-chicken laying a chicken egg-- you still have a hopeful monster. That is why I call the question unanswerable.
quote: Exactly.
quote: Exactly.
quote: Yes. These are all the reasons I find the question unanswerable.
quote: I am not using any odd definition of species or of branching. What I am saying is that to decisively answer the 'which came first' question you'd have to have a hopeful monster type of event, which I do not think has ever happened nor will ever happen. Therefore, the question cannot be answered (unless one allows that 'the egg' mean 'the first appearance of an egg of any sort anywhere on Earth'). The question asks for an answer in a format that doesn't apply-- like 'Which is better, red or blue?'. There really isn't an answer. No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com
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bkelly Inactive Member |
The egg came first. The answer is valid and creditable. First, a caveat:
An unfertilized female egg inside the body of a chicken is an egg, but the English language is not precise. Let’s keep the discussion in the context of the question. This egg means this spheroid shaped entity from which some animal will hatch. In the sense of the question, it is what has been laid. Continue with the definition of evolution as applied at the simplest level. Evolution applies to all living things but I use animal for simplicity here. An animal has evolved, to some degree, when it has acquired an inheritable trait not possessed by its immediate ancestors. The only know point that we know of where this can be specifically observed is at the union of female egg and male sperm. Once the two have joined to form the egg, the traits of this descendant have been set. Assume some arbitrary dividing line where by one animal is not quite chicken, and its descendant is a chicken. The transition occurs during the fertilization of the egg. The egg is not truly viable until after this fertilization process is complete (there is a name for it, but I don’t know what it is right now). Until this point, it really should not be called an egg in the sense of the question of which came first.Therefore, the egg is the first entity that carries the inheritable characteristics of the chicken.
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John Inactive Member |
quote: This is where the argument goes wrong. The dividing line is entirely arbitrary and basically meaningless. A not-quite-chicken can't birth a chicken. Sure, the two vary genetically just a bit but the offspring of an animal is so close genetically to its parents that it must be considered the same species by any rational definition of species. Say animal-A lays an egg. This egg is animal-B. Now, animal-B is perfectly capable of mating with animal-A and with countless other animals in animal-A's (and in its own) generation. Not to mention that it could mate with animals from many many previous generations. This means that by a pretty standard definition of species-- marked by a population's ability to mate producing viable offspring-- animal-B is the SAME species as animal-A. That being the case, animal-B cannot be the first of the species and if it isn't the first of the species then there must be some other animal, of the same species, which hatched from some other egg, before it in time. So you step back in time-- same problem. You'll never find more than an arbitrary place to draw the line and if we are going for arbitrary, all bets are off. In other words, to find out which came first you'd have to find THE first in order to find out which came first and there isn't ever really a first. No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com
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bkelly Inactive Member |
quote: Who says so, and why not? A donkey can mate with a horse and the result is a mule. The mule is not of the species donkey or horse. A lion and tiger can mate and produce a liger or a tion (Not positive about the exact name of the latter but you can google liger) depending on which one is male and female. Proof that an offspring does not have to be the same species as the parent. When any of the above noted unions occurs, the genetic traits of the offspring are created when sperm and egg join together to make the new species. In these two examples, the new animal, in the egg state, exists before the infant. It really doesn't matter if the egg is laid and hatched, or incubated within the parent then delivered. That is rather positive proof that the egg comes first.
quote: See above, each mule or liger is a "first" in that they are completely independant of all other occurances of the same. Two birds,neither of which was chicken, could have mated to produce a chicken. The egg came first.
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John Inactive Member |
quote: You have my argument. It is a pretty simple argument based in basic genetics.
quote: Mules and ligers are also infertile. Should our chicken have begun this way, it would have been both the first and the last of its kind. This is clearly not what happened. Forgive me for asking you to keep the argument in the real world.
quote: This is terrible genetics. How many species of multi-cellular animal can you name that actually began this way? Now if the question involved bacteria, you might have a case. Two apes hooked up and out came a human? No. It doesn't work that way. The only way this works is if your non-chicken birds were so genetically close to being chickens that they are indistinguishable from chickens and at that point my previous argument applies. They would be the same species, and hence the offspring would not be the first. No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com
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bkelly Inactive Member |
I have read your post, but my opinion is that you have not invalidated my position at all. I disagree with your premise and your conclusion. However, since I have no new content to add at this time, I will not further the argument. I am not certain where to look, but I will suspend my responses until I find something new.
Just to be clear, I intend this to be one method of respectful conclusion when people disagree.
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