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Author | Topic: 'the evolutionary scapegoat' | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Andya Primanda Inactive Member |
The following is based from a discussion in The Book Nook, me & Philip,
Theologically, there is one feature of evolution which can be useful. It can be used as a scapegoat for flawed creations. For instance, many people die because of their appendix. So why blame God for putting it there? Blame evolution and God does not have to be guilty of putting things in the wrong place. Anyone with a particluar axe to grind can just point a flawed structure: wrongly-wired retina, lungs in a water mammal, etc. and say that God is evil/unjust because He puts handicaps in His creatures. However if evolution is held accountable for it, then we may retain the image of an all-merciful God.
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blitz77 Inactive Member |
Appendix isn't a very good example. It serves in an immune system role in your body, with many lymphoid follicles. It manufactures serveral kinds of antibodies, such as IgA, IgM and IgG immunoglobulins. Studies have shown that its presence reduces the occurence of ulcers and bowel cancers in humans (I recall a study in which in a sample of people who had cancer of the intestines, 84% of them had their appendix removed, and in a control sample, only 24% had their appendix removed).
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nator Member (Idle past 2493 days) Posts: 12961 From: Ann Arbor Joined: |
quote: OK, how about my favorite design flaw in humans; the crossover air/food pipes? Many thousands every year choke to death because it is very easy for our air to be cut off. God didn't do a very good job with this design at all. Since Evolution predicts only good enough adaptation, this explanation makes better sense. Complex speech is possible with the crossover design, and the adaptive advantages (and there would be many) to being able to produce complex speech is greater than the disadvantage of an increased choking risk. Thus, the adaptation proliferates throughout the population, despite the potential risk. If you must think of humans being specially created, and not having evolved, you are left with God being a poor designer. I'll also throw out the poor, weak construction of our backs and knees. They are far from ideal for upright locomotion, which is why so many millions suffer with back pain and herniated disks, and why even a light blow to the side of the knee can produce big injuries. Also, why do we have a sharp ridge on the inside of our skulls, which damages the brain if we hit our heads just so? If the skull is meant to protect our brains from injury, and God designed our skulls, then why did he put a sharp ridge in there? Makes no sense.
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John Inactive Member |
[QUOTE]Originally posted by schrafinator:
[b]I'll also throw out the poor, weak construction of our backs and knees. They are far from ideal for upright locomotion, which is why so many millions suffer with back pain and herniated disks, and why even a light blow to the side of the knee can produce big injuries.[/QUOTE] [/b] Yep.... because our backs and knees are still mostly built for walking on all fours like decent mammals. Our upright stance also makes us prone to hernia as standing stretches those tummy muscles and forces them to cover more area makng them weaker-- more prone to injury. Standing upright also forces a remodel of the pelvis-- center of gravity, balance that sort of thing. In females, this remodel results in the birth canal being only just big enough-- no room for error-- making childbirth painful and dangerous relative to other mammals. ------------------
www.hells-handmaiden.com
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Jonathan Inactive Member |
quote: That sharp ridge makes plenty of sense its for structrial reinforcement. A uniformly smooth curve with no reinforcement is very weak. Like an egg shell. If evolution and natural selection were responsable for creating us and relied on variations that were just "good enough" then why dont we still have all of the variations that are totally useless and non life threatning? Like an extra ear on our back that doesnt work. Its not life threatning so natural selection wouldnt eliminate it. But still our bodies only have the minimal necessities to allow us to function. [This message has been edited by Jonathan, 07-14-2002]
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4146 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
[QUOTE][b]Its not life threatning so natural selection wouldnt eliminate it. But still our bodies only have the minimal necessities to allow us to function.[/QUOTE]
[/b] Adaptations that serve no purpose tend to be removed from the population. This is why cavefish and similar organisms tend to lack pigments (and vision).
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Jonathan Inactive Member |
What determines what is necessary and what is not?
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Tranquility Base Inactive Member |
Christianity has no problem with literal creaiton and lack of perfection at the same time. The fall of man descibed in early Genesis documents the biological 'cursing' of both man and his land due to sin.
Christianity is a little yin/yang in that sense. Strength from weakenss via the cross of Christ is one of the most central, confounding and yet profound features of Christianity. I am unaware of the importance/existance of 'the fall' in Islam.
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Tranquility Base Inactive Member |
What is needed to work! Organisms are machines. Mutated organisms that still work can pass their genes on. Ones that don't can't. As simple as that.
[This message has been edited by Tranquility Base, 07-14-2002]
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Andya Primanda Inactive Member |
Islam has no concept of original sin or fall of mankind. Adam & Eve were banished out of paradise, but their sins are forgiven. And conscious humans are ordered to rule the Earth by God's laws. I think that is the main reason of human existence in Islam.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4146 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
If the absence of a feature does not reduce probability of survival and production of offspring, it is not needed.
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nator Member (Idle past 2493 days) Posts: 12961 From: Ann Arbor Joined: |
quote: You are missing the point. You said that the design of the human body was pretty much perfect. I am simply pointing out examples of where it is far from perfect, and in fact, the design is the cause of many injuries. The point is, God could have truly made a perfect being, with zero weaknesses, such as our propensities for choking. Our throats don't have to be designed that way, but they are. Why would God compromose like that?
quote: No, it isn't good design, because little children without teeth yet choke on small objects because God made them with a strong propensity to put things in their mouths. Why did God make so many of us poor chewers, then?
quote: Well, yes, by your logic, it does mean that God did a poor design job of some people's skin.
quote: We see "better" than dogs already, and we see with much better acuity than cats because they are adapted to night vision and therefore don't see much detail. We did adapt by becoming able to use technology, such as weapons, to hunt our prey, rather than big teeth. We also became more intelligent by being able to plan far into the future, so we were able to think about setting traps, or we figured out that if we ran a herd of some animal off a cliff, they would fall to their deaths and we could eat them.
quote: Wow, what a devastating counterargument.
quote: Some parts of it are far from optimal, yes. It is good-enough design.
quote: Nature made our bodies, and I also think it is amazing and beautiful, despite all of it's shorcomings.
quote: The point is not if I could do any better. The point is that you made the claim that the human body is clearly designed by God because it is do perfect. I am simply pointing out that the human body has many design flaws which are explained very well by the good-enough adaptation scenario put forth by the Theory of Evolution, and not so well by the "the human body is perfect and is therefore a sign of God's designing us" argument.
quote: A body doesn't "know" it needs extra protection. Variation exists within a population already, unless they are all clones. If an individual (or several) posesses a trait which makes it possible, in the current environment, to be more sucessful at reproducing itself than others in the population which do not have this trait, the trait will therefore be more likely to be present in the more numerous offspring of the individual that has the trait. In other words, natural selection resulted in greater reproductive success to those individuals in a population of early humans which had those protective ridges on their spinal columns.
quote: The back would be straighter, not curved, and the disks between them would be much more thick and provide for more shock absorption. The abdominal muscles and lower back muscles would be much larger to stabilize the back, and we wouldn't have to exercise them so much to keep them strong. No one would ever have to be taught good posture, because perfect posture would be natural to us. Poor posture and lack of fit back and abdominal muscles is the source of much back pain. The knee joints should be larger, and the system of tendons and ligaments are not adequate to prevent pretty severe injury even by a light blow or a slight twist. The whole thing should have been designed to be much more stable and strong.
quote: Actually, you can get this injury from whiplash, too, not just a blow to the head. And you don't have to hit your head all that hard to get a concussion or some injury to the brain.
quote: No, a thicker skull or even a smooth ridge might make sense, but why a sharp ridge?
quote: Well, it is unlikely that we ever had an extra ear on our backs that didn't work, so I am not sure why you use this as an example. The ToE doesn't predict that once a variation becomes obsolete it will immediately be selected against, it's true. If, like you say, it isn't life-threatening, then it might persist in a population for a very long time because the environment isn't selecting against those individuals which possess the trait. However, we still have the "goose bumps" response, which is a vestigial response to fluffing up our long-gone fur when we were cold. On the other hand, I was born with a variation to my wisdom teeth in that I only have the top ones. The bottom ones don't exist. If you understand this, then I am not sure why you are having a hard time accepting that the human body isn't designed perfectly.
quote: Right. This is what the ToE predicts. ------------------"We will still have perfect freedom to hold contrary views of our own, but to simply close our minds to the knowledge painstakingly accumulated by hundreds of thousands of scientists over long centuries is to deliberately decide to be ignorant and narrow- minded." -Steve Allen, from "Dumbth" [This message has been edited by schrafinator, 07-15-2002]
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Jonathan Inactive Member |
You interprit these "design flaws" as evidence of an imperfect design. I see them as misuse of their original intended purpose. God did not design us to sit at a computer all day and eat doughnuts. Therefore we have weak muscles which lead to unnecessary injuries.
If God were to make an infallible human then he would never choke, never get angry, make a mistake, trip, fall or bump our head. Is it Gods fault that I stubbed my toe? Was it because of his poor design that I miss calculated my foot step? No. I run my own life and make my own decisions. Its not Gods responsibility to babysit me and make sure I dont have an accident. God didnt make us poor chewers we did. Pointing out that the human body is accident prone as evidence for the non-existence of God is a weak arguement.
[quote]quote originally posted by shrafinator:A body doesn't "know" it needs extra protection. Variation exists within a population already, unless they are all clones. If an individual (or several) posesses a trait which makes it possible, in the current environment, to be more sucessful at reproducing itself than others in the population which do not have this trait, the trait will therefore be more likely to be present in the more numerous offspring of the individual that has the trait. In other words, natural selection resulted in greater reproductive success to those individuals in a population of early humans which had those protective ridges on their spinal columns. [quote]
This is where I have a BIG problem with the TOE and natural selection. Traits like the spinal ridges, eye brows, mens nipples all have little to no effect in increasing the possibility of reproduction yet every single human has them. Theses traits have zero influence on increasing our chances of reproduction, so why are they all here. And on every single human. Why arent there cultures in which some of these traits are absent? Every arguement in the creation vs evolution debate can be distorted to support both sides equally. . You see it as a "good enough" adaptation. I see it as misused from Gods intended purpose. Its all in how you look at it
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John Inactive Member |
quote: First, sitting at a desk is not the reason we have weak abdominal muscles. Those muscles are weak because they are stretched to twice the length they are in other mammals. This is do to our standing upright. Granted, sloth and donuts don't help. Secondly, God didn't have the forsight to design our bodies for sitting at a desk. Third, this seems to imply that we should still be nomadic herders.
quote: But this is not a design issue. It isn't Ford's fault if people drive poorly. It is Ford's fault if the brakes are substandard.
quote: Schraf just explained the spinal ridges to you. How exactly is it that you know that eyebrows serve no purpose? Actually they do. Look it up on Google. Male and female embryos are the same, the female develops functional breasts the male doesn't but still has the features that developed before the sexes diverge. ------------------
www.hells-handmaiden.com
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Jonathan Inactive Member |
Your missing my point. These traits have virtually no effect in increasing the probability of reproduction. I know they serve an important purpose but they dont increase the probability of reproduction so how can they increase reproductive success?
I think if you were to apply the body to a "garden of Eden" lifestyle it may me more than sufficient.
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