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Author Topic:   The Origin of Novelty
Dr Adequate
Member (Idle past 314 days)
Posts: 16113
Joined: 07-20-2006


Message 301 of 871 (691323)
02-22-2013 2:14 AM
Reply to: Message 298 by mindspawn
02-22-2013 2:05 AM


I agree that there needs to be a method of defining baramins. In sexual organisms I generally go by a 99.5 percent matching genome for fully genome sequenced organisms ...
So, if you could actually address my point, why draw the line anywhere? What would lead you to say that if two organisms have a 99.6% match, this establishes them as related, but if it's only a 99.4% match, this is no indication that they're slightly more distantly related?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 298 by mindspawn, posted 02-22-2013 2:05 AM mindspawn has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 304 by mindspawn, posted 02-22-2013 2:23 AM Dr Adequate has replied

  
Dr Adequate
Member (Idle past 314 days)
Posts: 16113
Joined: 07-20-2006


(1)
Message 302 of 871 (691324)
02-22-2013 2:15 AM
Reply to: Message 300 by Bolder-dash
02-22-2013 2:10 AM


Re: A agrees with Taq
Ok A, I am happy to include you in with Taq as believing that developmental diseases such as dwarfism are a gain in function.
Why would you do that, since I never said any such thing?
Oh, right, because you're you.
Still, you will be lying if you do so. Lying doesn't seem to bother you on a moral level, but it does kinda vitiate your arguments.
Edited by Dr Adequate, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 300 by Bolder-dash, posted 02-22-2013 2:10 AM Bolder-dash has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 305 by Bolder-dash, posted 02-22-2013 2:23 AM Dr Adequate has replied

  
Blue Jay
Member (Idle past 2728 days)
Posts: 2843
From: You couldn't pronounce it with your mouthparts
Joined: 02-04-2008


Message 303 of 871 (691325)
02-22-2013 2:22 AM
Reply to: Message 280 by Taq
02-21-2013 1:05 PM


Re: Natural selection
Hi, Taq.
Taq writes:
I think it is quite entertaining to see Bolder-dash arguing against this example because melanism evolved twice in different populations instead of once. I guess too much evidence is a bad thing.
It kind of makes me sad. I've made it my mission to learn how to be calm and patient and rational in the face of this, and to try to find and address the substance of a debate in a way that it would be useful to any readers, but there seems to be no means of interfacing between the two sides of the debate.
The "chimpanzee beards" thing has become my poster child. Dash and I literally looked at clear, non-blurry photographs of chimpanzee faces, and couldn't agree on whether or not there were beards on those faces. From my perspective, the only explanation I can think of is that he's just too obstinate to admit that he's ever said anything wrong, even when it's completely trivial.
Based on our interactions, I can only assume that I must seem just as irrational and incomprehensible to him as he seems to me.
Everybody can see that I've tried to be extremely patient and open about this. I've admitted the things about my own theory that still trouble me. And I've tried to explain why I still think evolution is the best explanation, even though I can't fill in all the holes yet. I guess it was all in the hope that it would somehow get Dash to open up a bit and be as reasonable in response.
But, if I come off as a crazy person to him, it's no wonder that that didn't work: why would he ever want to think like a crazy person? But, I don't understand why I come off as a crazy person to him, and he utterly refuses to post anything that might give me any insights.
I guess I must be crazy if I still think there's a way for him and I to interface meaningfully on this topic.

-Blue Jay (a.k.a. Mantis, Thylacosmilus)
Darwin loves you.

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mindspawn
Member (Idle past 2690 days)
Posts: 1015
Joined: 10-22-2012


Message 304 of 871 (691326)
02-22-2013 2:23 AM
Reply to: Message 301 by Dr Adequate
02-22-2013 2:14 AM


So, if you could actually address my point, why draw the line anywhere? What would lead you to say that if two organisms have a 99.6% match, this establishes them as related, but if it's only a 99.4% match, this is no indication that they're slightly more distantly related?
I'm not sure if these type of grey areas exist. If you could give me an example of this type of grey area I will look into it. But I have no problem admitting that it could be possible that there are some grey areas in determining baramins. An intelligent designer could have created two baramins extremely similar. This would confuse the issue, because they would look like they have recently evolved to us due to the fact that we normally expect slight differences to indicate a recent mutation event.
Edited by mindspawn, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 301 by Dr Adequate, posted 02-22-2013 2:14 AM Dr Adequate has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 307 by PaulK, posted 02-22-2013 2:27 AM mindspawn has replied
 Message 454 by Dr Adequate, posted 02-23-2013 3:53 AM mindspawn has replied

  
Bolder-dash
Member (Idle past 3660 days)
Posts: 983
From: China
Joined: 11-14-2009


Message 305 of 871 (691327)
02-22-2013 2:23 AM
Reply to: Message 302 by Dr Adequate
02-22-2013 2:15 AM


A calls out Taq for being wrong.
Oh, I misunderstood you did I? Ok, so you completely disagree with Taq, and feel that he has no idea what he is talking about when he suggests that dwarfism is a gain in function.
Ok duly noted, you think taq is completely wrong.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 302 by Dr Adequate, posted 02-22-2013 2:15 AM Dr Adequate has replied

Replies to this message:
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 Message 338 by Dr Adequate, posted 02-22-2013 9:24 AM Bolder-dash has replied
 Message 358 by Taq, posted 02-22-2013 10:50 AM Bolder-dash has not replied

  
PaulK
Member
Posts: 17828
Joined: 01-10-2003
Member Rating: 2.5


Message 306 of 871 (691328)
02-22-2013 2:25 AM
Reply to: Message 297 by Bolder-dash
02-22-2013 1:46 AM


Re: microevolution = reduction in genetic diversity?
quote:
Actually Faith is pretty much correct here. The differences between such extreme dog breeds arise through loss or functions or through diseases to development pathways, such as gigantic-ism, or other developmental disease. That is why these extreme dog breeds have such short life spans and are so prone to other illnesses. They are basically sick versions of wolves.
While that may apply to modern pure-breds to some extent I'd be cautious here. Many breeds originated as working dogs, bred for function. While they may be more specialised, or even less capable of surviving in a wild environment it seems unreasonable to insist that it's all "loss of function".

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 Message 297 by Bolder-dash, posted 02-22-2013 1:46 AM Bolder-dash has not replied

  
PaulK
Member
Posts: 17828
Joined: 01-10-2003
Member Rating: 2.5


Message 307 of 871 (691329)
02-22-2013 2:27 AM
Reply to: Message 304 by mindspawn
02-22-2013 2:23 AM


Don't you think that the lack of a clear boundary in nature - such that you have to come up with your own with no clear rationale - in itself cuts against the whole idea of baramins ?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 304 by mindspawn, posted 02-22-2013 2:23 AM mindspawn has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 315 by mindspawn, posted 02-22-2013 6:39 AM PaulK has replied

  
Bolder-dash
Member (Idle past 3660 days)
Posts: 983
From: China
Joined: 11-14-2009


Message 308 of 871 (691330)
02-22-2013 2:43 AM
Reply to: Message 303 by Blue Jay
02-22-2013 2:22 AM


Re: Natural selection
Yes you are right bluejay, we have both looked at photos of chimpanzees and compared them to photos of unshaven humans. And to you, the facial hair is similar. I think to virtually anyone who is objective that would be able to see that first, chimpanzees have nothing on their upper lip. Certainly nothing even close to what modern men get when they don't shave.
Because remember the whole point of this discussion was that Razd was claiming that rather than human males gaining facial hair compared with chimpanzees, it was simply a case of the female chimpanzees or humans gaining less hair. The men were not gaining, it was the females losing it. Because I said it is strange that human males have these very long beards that require grooming whereas other primates don't and you and he disagreed.
Razd claims that all human ape ancestors at one time had facial hair, just like men do now, but eventually the women who looked more childlike without facial hair were sexually selected. He is still unable to really clarify why men would sexually select child looking females, but nevermind.
Likewise for his theory to make sense, young chimpanzees facial hair should look much different from older chimpanzees that are more mature. You see big differences there too?
So if human men didn't gain facial hair compared to chimpanzees, yes you are right, we strongly disagree.
I guess we have to leave it up to the open minded readers to decide if male chimpanzees have facial hair that is similar to modern males.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 303 by Blue Jay, posted 02-22-2013 2:22 AM Blue Jay has seen this message but not replied

  
mindspawn
Member (Idle past 2690 days)
Posts: 1015
Joined: 10-22-2012


Message 309 of 871 (691331)
02-22-2013 2:51 AM
Reply to: Message 214 by Taq
02-20-2013 1:02 PM


Re: Novel protein coding gene in an Antarctic fish
Already given to you. The cit+ mutation in E. coli is a perfect example. We could also cite lac+ revertants:
I admit there are rare cases of novel features from mutations, however these novel features tend to only add fitness in isolated environments, but would cause damage and loss of fitness in natural environments. In the E.Coli example this involved a re-activating of an inactive gene, not any additional coding genes.
In this case, the bacteria are starved in the presence of lactose. Duplication of the leaky lac gene and subsequent mutation of those duplications results in a bacteria that is adapted to growth on lactose containing media.
The article acknowledges that the duplication was already in the original population, it is therefore assuming a duplication, despite the fact that deletions are common in genetics. Its entirely possible that population of bacteria had two leaky lac genes originally, and this would then be an example of a general de-selection of the leaky lac gene in that bacteria until exposed to a lactose environment, in which case the rare cases of bacteria with the additional leaky lac gene were re-selected and became dominant in the population.
I'm open any logic that would support the duplication claim if you have any.
Edited by mindspawn, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 214 by Taq, posted 02-20-2013 1:02 PM Taq has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 310 by Pressie, posted 02-22-2013 4:09 AM mindspawn has replied
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Pressie
Member
Posts: 2103
From: Pretoria, SA
Joined: 06-18-2010


(1)
Message 310 of 871 (691332)
02-22-2013 4:09 AM
Reply to: Message 309 by mindspawn
02-22-2013 2:51 AM


Re: Novel protein coding gene in an Antarctic fish
mindspawn writes:
....however these novel features tend to only add fitness in isolated environments,...
So, "can't be in isolated environments" is now a new qualifier? Moving the goalposts as we go along, I see.
mindspawn writes:
In the E.Coli example this involved a re-activating of an inactive gene, not any additional coding genes.
Nonsense. Did you miss your own debate where it was shown that it was not just re-activation of an inactive gene?
People are not as stupid as you think they are, mindspawn.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 309 by mindspawn, posted 02-22-2013 2:51 AM mindspawn has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 312 by mindspawn, posted 02-22-2013 5:19 AM Pressie has not replied

  
mindspawn
Member (Idle past 2690 days)
Posts: 1015
Joined: 10-22-2012


Message 311 of 871 (691333)
02-22-2013 5:05 AM
Reply to: Message 218 by Blue Jay
02-20-2013 2:39 PM


The "amount" of complexity (whatever it is) is just an observation. For example, if we decide on a definition for "complexity," we might be able to rank a set of species, A-Z, by their complexity. Some are "more complex," and some are "less complex."
We can then come up with hypotheses to explain the differences in complexity. For simplicity, let's call them two possible mechanisms: evolution and creation.
My hypothesis is that, if two species differ in complexity, the differences are due to evolution. In other words, evolution can explain any differences in complexity between species.
Your hypothesis is that, if two species differ in complexity, the difference might be due to either evolution or creation, depending on the exact situation. In other words, evolution can only explain some differences in complexity between species, and creation explains the others.
I enjoyed following your deductive reasoning in your post. However I feel its just wordplay, when both theories have a similar set of steps:
a) Abiogenesis (natures creates a complex organism)
b) Then Evolution - most organisms get even more complex through rare (sometimes unproven?) processes over long time frames.
a) Creation (God creates many complex organisms)
b) Then Evolution (most organisms stay the same or get slightly less complex over a short period) (brief summary, I acknowledge some beneficial duplication processes of non-coding regions etc that could be seen as adding complexity)
I would say that regarding Creationism as having less parsimony is incorrect because evolution quite simply is the more complex process.
Now, if you could show that your hypothesis explains the evidence better than mine does, then parsimony won't matter, because explanatory power trumps parsimony.
In an effort to determine this, I tried to come up with ways in which your hypothesis could make some unique predictions, and thereby demonstrate its superiority, but you mostly dismissed them because the models I mentioned were too specific for your tastes.
The rest of your post is irrelevant to me, because I do not agree on your premise of evolution having more parsimony. You say I have focused on undermining your parsimony argument, well that is true, I've done this because its been your main point.
Due to the fact that the "theory" of creationism was there before the the hypothesis (I'm stirring - lol) of evolution, and creationism has more parsimony, I feel that its up to evolutionists to demonstrate why any aspect of genome sequencing would favor evolving from a common ancestor over millions of years instead of evolving from baramins over 6500 years.
Even if you feel the ball is in the creationists court, even then, have you got ANYTHING in your arsenal to demonstrate from DNA that it "looks" more evolved over millions of years rather than 6500 years?
Edited by mindspawn, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 218 by Blue Jay, posted 02-20-2013 2:39 PM Blue Jay has replied

Replies to this message:
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mindspawn
Member (Idle past 2690 days)
Posts: 1015
Joined: 10-22-2012


Message 312 of 871 (691334)
02-22-2013 5:19 AM
Reply to: Message 310 by Pressie
02-22-2013 4:09 AM


Re: Novel protein coding gene in an Antarctic fish
So, "can't be in isolated environments" is now a new qualifier? Moving the goalposts as we go along, I see.
You only partly quoted me, I referred to natural environments. You see nature does not isolate itself like the laboratory, my emphasis on this particular point is on nature because evolution apparently occurred in nature and not in a laboratory. And I have no goalposts in this thread, I'm just chatting, and feel that expecting evolution to work in nature is a reasonable requirement.
Nonsense. Did you miss your own debate where it was shown that it was not just re-activation of an inactive gene?
People are not as stupid as you think they are, mindspawn
I dealt with everything in that debate. There was a duplicate of a silent gene (one plus one = two silent genes). But due to a new promoter the one gene was no longer silent. It was coding.
This means that the net result was that upon duplication, the one gene remained silent, the other gene was activated.
This means that a gene that used to be silent was activated, the other copy was silent.
Hoping you get it. Activating of old silent genes isn't a complexity producing process, its a re-activating process. If both these genes were protein coding at the same time , well then we would have a reasonable point regarding complexity, but I did acknowledge the novel function.
Edited by mindspawn, : No reason given.
Edited by mindspawn, : No reason given.

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Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1474 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


Message 313 of 871 (691335)
02-22-2013 5:51 AM
Reply to: Message 263 by Blue Jay
02-21-2013 10:56 AM


Mutation versus Normally Occurring Alleles
Hello Blue Jay:
It's been awhile.
Having three creationists on one thread also kind of brings back the "good ol' days" again!
I don't remember that myself, I more remember being one against a half dozen or so evolutionists, and the last encounter I remember with you was on this same topic and I don't remember any other creationists joining in.
Unfortunately we creationists are always pursuing different arguments. I now have a notion of what Bolder is trying to argue but it's not my argument, and it's clear to me that he can't get into my argument either. And the evolutionists also all have their own individual emphases and styles which makes the whole thing seem utterly impossible.
Faith writes:
Again, the ToE in actual fact has nothing but similarity, homology, the ability to classify living organisms according to structural similarities, which of course includes fossils, from which you ASSUME genetic relatedness but have never proved it and cannot prove it.
Not at all hard to understand, really, it's just a mental trick that you pull on yourselves as well as the rest of us and everybody has fallen for it.
I know it can be hard to accept evolution: it wasn't so long ago that I thought the same way you did about it. As religious people, we're so used to seeing everything in black-and-white. For example, your language here suggests that you think "assume" and "prove" are the only two possible ways to develop a conclusion.
I STARTED OUT believing in evolution, Blue Jay, and although I didn't get deeply into the scientific issues involved I did make an effort to understand how it worked, and even back then I found that it was almost impossible to trace out a convincing path of evidence. I read Darwin, I thought him brilliant (I still do, and even now I think he rightly answered some really insane "creationist" notions of his day), I read Stephen Jay Gould here and there, found him extremely entertaining, I subscribed to Skeptical Inquirer, which I assumed would give me the solid evidence I wanted but instead often left me again with a sense that the evidence didn't lead where it should. I kept being driven back to accepting evolution, but only "on faith" that it must be true. This of course proves nothing, but I do want to show you that I am not coming at evolution from a previous creationist point of view but the other way around. I did not become a Christian until my mid forties -- in the late 80s, and it was a few years later that I began to read up on Christian creationism.
But, the whole point of science is to allow us to deal with information and draw conclusions when things aren't strictly black-and-white, using principles of trial-and-error and inductive reasoning.
Blue Jay, I was a teenager during the "Sputnick era" when there was such an emphasis on science you were hardly permitted to consider any other career. As a Biblical Young Earth Creationist I'm used to being called stupid and unscientific and ridiculed for my supposed lack of appreciation of science but back in those days I was considered quite bright and quite savvy about what science is about. This also is neither here nor there with respect to this argument but please don't try to lecture me on what science is. My opinions NOW are not against science at all although that is the prevailing assumption because of the false idea that evolution is science. I really do believe that evolution itself, the theory, is NOT supported by real science and that you all are laboring under a delusion. Oh I can see how convincing that delusion is but it is still a delusion.
The two together are very powerful. For example, my two-year-old daughter can draw good conclusions using trial-and-error and inductive reasoning. If she gets punished for jumping off the couch, and she gets punished from jumping off the chair, she is able to infer that she will also get punished from jumping off the bed, and adjust her behavior accordingly.
And, that's really all we do with science. It's not perfect, and it doesn't prove anything, but it lets us draw reasonable conclusions from incomplete information.
Please do not talk to me as if I were a two year old.
For me, I see lots of reason to attribute all the differences in genotypes and phenotypes among animals to a process of "genetic accumulation," that is, each organism's attributes can be described as additions to, subtractions from, or modifications of some other organism's attributes. But, it's hard to transform my reasoning into a little blurb or sound byte that creationists won't interpret as an incomplete (and therefore dishonest) logical argument.
Well, you think like an evolutionist.
All three creationists on this thread have argued that the apparent "additions" are not actual "additions," but simply evidence of common design principles. And, that's a fair enough hypothesis, but it needs some support.
I believe it has a ton of support but the argument keeps getting dragged in so many different directions with so many different styles of thinking and so many different objections it is hard to keep the focus where it would have to stay for a while to make the case. And the three creationists here do NOT all agree on the basics of the argument which makes the whole thing just about impossible.
We are talking mega paradigm conflict here at the very least. (Yes I read Kuhn's book back in the day as well, I was really trying to grapple with all this stuff long before I was a Christian).
What I see is this:
In one population of chickens, eggshells are blue.
No other chicken population has blue eggshells, and the trait has never been seen in any population is likely to be ancestral to the blue-egged chickens.
The allele that makes blue eggshells differs from the one that makes white eggshells in two locations: one is an A where the white-egg allele has a T, and the other is a T where the white-egg allele has an A.
Random replication errors can make an A change to a T, or a T change to an A.
Also, blue eggshell pigment seems to be an "added" function, rather than a modification of an existing function, because it can co-exist with other, similar functions (e.g., brown eggshells)
When I pool all these observations together, I see no reason to think mutations couldn't have added this new pigment function to chicken eggshells. I can't prove that mutations actually did create this new pigment function, but I do know that mutation is a possible explanation, because all the evidence I am aware of is consistent with that hypothesis.
I can't say mutation isn't the explanation in this particular case, but I'd also argue that it's more likely that it is a very rare combination of built-in genetic factors, alleles at different gene loci or whatever, that basically follow Mendelian principles even though other factors may be involved.
Then, I combine that with lots of other examples of very similar things, like the beneficially-mutated gyrase that I presented to you in our Great Debate all those many moons ago, and the black-pigmented field mice Taq mentioned. All of these are consistent with the mutation explanation.
Again in some cases mutation COULD be the explanation, although I'm basically committed to the view of mutations as so preponderantly deleterious that it's highly unlikely. And also I stick pretty much to the population-genetics level of this and don't venture too far into the genetic side of it, because I think the argument is ultimately to be won at the population-genetics level. At least my own argument, maybe not Bolder's or mindspawn's who seem to get much further into the genetics than I can or want to go.
I'm seeing a pattern: every time I see differences between two organisms, some error that DNA-replication machinery is known to make is always a possible explanation. There are other hypothetically possible explanations in every case, but most of them have ever been observed before, and none of them has the ubiquity of the mutation explanation. A pattern like this tells me that mutations are a very powerful explanation, even though I can't necessarily prove directly that mutations actually caused every single one of these differences between organisms.
What's wrong with the idea that new combinations of normally occurring alleles in the gene pool that get passed on in new populations that become reproductively isolated are sufficient explanation?
Does this reasoning at least make sense to you, even if you don't agree with it?
It's not implausible, of course, but I'm committed to my own way of looking at it.
Although this IS on topic here it does go in a different direction from Bolder's argument and I'm not sure I want to get any further into it.

He who surrenders the first page of his Bible surrenders all. --John William Burgon, Inspiration and Interpretation, Sermon II.

This message is a reply to:
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Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1474 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


(1)
Message 314 of 871 (691336)
02-22-2013 6:25 AM
Reply to: Message 267 by Taq
02-21-2013 11:47 AM


Re: Natural selection
Faith writes:
Of course neither fact proves that there's a genetic relatedness, only a design similarity, which is all the ToE has for ANYTHING it claims -- the appearance of similarity that is turned by word magic into genetic relatedness which is then called "fact" just because you BELIEVE that's what it means. Biggest fraud ever perpetrated on the human race.
If evolution were true, what type of similarities would you expect to see? Are you saying that if humans and chimps did share a common ancestor that they would not share any DNA?
You must be reading me in some way I can't even figure out, Taq. All I can say is that it's not a matter of different types of similarities but that the similarities that exist lead you to assume a genetic relatedness between species that is not actually provable.

He who surrenders the first page of his Bible surrenders all. --John William Burgon, Inspiration and Interpretation, Sermon II.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 267 by Taq, posted 02-21-2013 11:47 AM Taq has not replied

  
mindspawn
Member (Idle past 2690 days)
Posts: 1015
Joined: 10-22-2012


Message 315 of 871 (691337)
02-22-2013 6:39 AM
Reply to: Message 307 by PaulK
02-22-2013 2:27 AM


Don't you think that the lack of a clear boundary in nature - such that you have to come up with your own with no clear rationale - in itself cuts against the whole idea of baramins ?
I don't see any logic in that line of reasoning. If there was an intelligent designer, and He did create all life-forms 6500 years ago, there is nothing in the observance of phenotypes or genotypes that contradicts this view.
It only makes sense that a baramin and subsequent evolution would show groups of species very closely related genetically (eg dogs/wolves) with minimal mutations separating them. This is generally observed, this points to the baramin concept.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 307 by PaulK, posted 02-22-2013 2:27 AM PaulK has replied

Replies to this message:
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