Researchers Say Human Brain is Still Evolving
Oleg Alexandrov writes "Two genes involved in determining the size of the human brain have undergone substantial evolution in the last 60,000 years, researchers say, suggesting that the brain is still undergoing rapid evolution. The discovery adds further weight to the view that human evolution is still a work in progress, since previous instances of recent genetic change have come to light in genes that defend against disease and confer the ability to digest milk in adulthood."
First off, it's hard to see *any* species as being in anything other than a state of evolution. To suggest otherwise implies a superficial understand of what evolution is about.
That being said, it's conceivable that we're at the point where the human brain is the exception to the above. After all, what has been the driving force behind the evolution of the brain? Big-brained people surviving and succeeding in reproduction where little-brained people fail.
This isn't really happening anymore. Yes, smart people still trump over stupid people in most aspects of life, but stupid people still reproduce. Civilization has removed the engine through which drives the evolution of the species.
I can't believe how often highly educated people will pontificate on this subject, and get it wrong. Yes, usually the media is to blame -- science reporting is notoriously bad -- but that does not appear to be the case here.
Ironic that they should be so wrong on this of all subjects.
--
You didn't know.
I always knew my brain was never fully developed and I don't think it ever will be.
Evolution is not attempting to attain a certain "goal" at which it stops. Evolution is simply the result of certain genetic traits being selected based upon environmental pressures. It shouldn't be too surprising that evolution still occurs in humans so long as there is a situation where some genetic traits are more likely to be passed on through reproduction than others.
I guess this could be news to people who don't actually understand evolution -- which, given the popularity of pseudoscience like "Intelligent Design" and non-science like "Creation Science" -- probably is quite a bit. Unfortunately, experience shows that they don't really care to learn anything about evolution anyway, so chances are they'll do little but mock the findings without even trying to understand them.
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
I was pondering whether or not to totally theadjack this topic, but it seems you have made the decision for me.
This won't stop them. This is mircoevolution. What they're claiming is that we couldn't have possibly speciated from very simple cells and organisms to what we are today. They are disputing macroevolution.
And now, for a sig that's a complete copout.
Researchers Say Human Brain is Still Evolving
I guess these guys have never browsed Slashdot at -1 then... And how do they explain George Bush, Beanie Babies and the Crazy Frog? And where did they get a 60,000 year old brain from to find these genes - Joan Rivers' skull? No no no, none of this is adding up...
Code, Hardware, stuff like that.
Any chance of speeding up the process before the 2008 elections?
/in Kansas, so it might not even apply, anyhow
to this simpleton, what is significant about the ability to drink milk during adulthood? Could we not in the past?
...does it run OSX-86?
...now if only natural selection would remove those who type too fast to think or spell check.
Obviously
Every living thing is evolving. No creatures alive are genetically identical to ones living 60,000 years ago. At that time there were wooly mammoths, and saber-tooth tigers running around.
I suppose you could argue that this is useful ammo against the ID folks, but it's really only the Flying Spaghetti Monster acolytes and other True Believers who have the hubris to believe Homo Sapiens Sapiens is the pinnacle of creation, out of the box.
Cantankerous old coot since 1957.
is an organ for cooling the blood.
We actually think with our stomachs.
Obviously the cooling needs of the human body are still increasing over time. Probably linked to global warming.
In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
years ago
I both lost and regained the ability to digest milk as an adult.
When I was 25 I went for about 4 months withough ingesting any milk products. When I tried again, I couldn't digest them.
When I was 29 I began to occasionally consume milk products and after a few months I was able to digest it again.
I had no idea that there was anything genetic about the production of the lactase enzyme into adulthood.
LK
"Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
Every living thing is evolving.
Living things don't evolve. Populations of living things either evolve, remain stagnant (which is very , very rare) or die out.
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
Can you imagine what our future generations will be like in say 10,000 years? Will we appear barbaric compared to them or will we be little to no different?
For all we know, those supposed little green men in the sky could actually be the humans of the future studying their history.
$fortune
Tomorrow has been canceled due to lack of interest.
The world has changed a lot, and I mean a lot, in the past millenium (even 2-300 years). The selective pressures that were around previously, causing the stupid to die, are no longer present. In fact, there is very little selective pressure in today's society, where the number of offspring you have is rarely related to prosperity or the like. The death rate is so low that I can hardly imagine selective forces having a large effect on evolution. Random mutation still occurs, of course, and perhaps over the next millenium one society will evolve to be smarter and will destroy the other with superior technology, but I seriously doubt this. I'm one of those people that considers human evolution to be nearly frozen. Soon to be supplanted by willful manipulation, of course (ethics debate about this some other time).
webpage
IF evolution is so cracked up grand, where are the evolved responses to the digital age? extra appendages to work the mouse, or carry the ipod?
This may be unrelated but perhaps this continuing evolution shows itself in abilities that are picked up by each generation. For example, young adults are much more technologically savvy than older generations. Is this because they have been brought up in a technologically evolving world or is this the brain's evolution at work in being able to grasp new technological concepts? I am by no means an expert on any of this, but it seems this would be a classic case of Nature vs. Nurture.
This new data lends some weight to the genetic theory for explaining the differences in scores on mental aptitude tests between the various races. Various genes are responsible for differences in brain size and other mental characteristics, so it goes to reason that various isolated populations of humans that were undergoing evolution could have evolved differently.
e
Since East Asians score highest on mental aptitude tests on average, as the article suggests there are probably other genes that are responsible for that difference. Something that strengthens the math-center of the brain perhaps.
Anyway, very interesting stuff.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Race_and_intelligenc
Dr. Lahn said there may be a dozen or so genes that affect the size of the brain, each making a small difference yet one that can be acted on by natural selection. "It's likely that different populations would have a different make-up of these genes, so it may all come out in the wash," he said. In other words, East Asians and Africans probably have other brain enhancing alleles, not yet discovered, that have spread to high frequency in their populations.
Another geneticist, David Goldstein of Duke University, said the new results were interesting but that "it is a real stretch to argue for example that microcephalin is under selection and that that selection must be related to brain size or cognitive function."
Basically this study shows that the 2 genes they studied are distributed with different frequencies in different populations, but occur more often in these populations now then 60,000 years ago. Anything else is just theory and speculation.
The rock, the vulture, and the chain
In this society, the people who have the most chance to procreate are the jocks, the Hollywood stars, musicians, etc.. while on the opposite spectrum we have the intelligent nerds.
Does this mean that we will evolve into beings that are better at hand-eye co-ordination, faking emotions, and playing music, while ignoring pure intellect?
...oh crap! So much for the theory that our brains have evolved!
What this world is coming to - is for you and me to decide.
Of course our brains are evolving. Evolution doesn't just stop at the present. Eventually everyone writing on slashdot will be viewed as "monkeys" and religious fanatics of the future will proclaim that they did not evolve from these neanderthals.
Also, I understand that if you wear an eyepatch, that strengthens the optic nerve on one side of your brain. It is proof of His Noodly Will.
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
"... since previous instances of recent genetic change have come to light in genes that defend against disease and confer the ability to digest milk in adulthood." i dont get it
-=Hinkey=-
60,000 years ago, yes we were evolving because people with very low IQ, or diabetes, or asthma, etc. did not live long enough to breed. But today due to advanced medical technology and the security of a orderly society, virtually *everyone* lives and breeds regardless of how unfit they are to survive in the pre-civilization world -- passing down their genes for autism, diabetes, etc. etc.
Excuse me for asking, but isn't this somewhat obvious? In certain regions, some alleles are much more advantages than in others (having exactly one sickle cell causing allele is extremely advantages in parts of Africa because it causes a very strong immunity to malaria), and it can be seen from the demographics in the article that certain regions tend to have more of a certain allele than others. True, sickle cell is for the entire body... but theres probably something similar that is specifically for the brain.
+1 funny, -2 overrated. Life isn't fair.
in other news,
scientists still know very very little about the brain.
Society has changed immensely over the past few thousand years. Evolutionary pressure has changed because the skills required to reproduce successfully are different. Being a good hunter is no longer a core skill. Being able to read and write is.
I wonder to what extent the difference in population growth for various countries will influence this. At the moment, first-world countries have much lower reproductive rates than third-world countries, but if the HIV epidemic continues, that situation could reverse itself.
Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
"But several experts strongly criticized this aspect of the finding, saying it was far from clear that the new alleles conferred any cognitive advantage or had spread for that reason"
Looks like we can evolve all we want...it's not necesarily going to make us smarter. Certainly not by 2008.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
I wonder how long it would take us to devolve via natural selection. Since there is an inverse relationship between education level and child rearing, then if one assumes more intelligent people tend to have higher educations and that higher intelligence when breeding contributes to intellectual evolution, then we may well be devolving because stupid people disproportionately reproduce. Of course, we'll probably genetically engineer our own brainpower up before too long, and solve that problem while opening up a whole new can of worms.
By having human societies based on sets of morals and ethics wherein the most well-adapted and most successful use their intelligence and abilities to protect the less and least well-adapted/successful from coming to harm/dying/being unable to reproduce, each generation further pollutes our gene pool with genes that natural selection would've selected out.
:-\
Natural selection is no longer working on the human population, and many deaths, from violence and catastrophe, have little or absolutely no regard for the genetic makeup of the individuals involved.
I know it sounds like something a Nietzsche-reading Nazi would say, but it's also something a Nietzsche-reading biology student would say, and I'm the second one. If it sounds like I'm saying something absolutely horrid when I say that charity and pity are weakening the species year by year by year, perhaps it's because of how attached you are to those morals and ethics? As Friedrich said, pity is practical nihilism... And so, by extension the Christian religion that holds pity as almost above all other virtues, is actively promoting a destructive and downward course, unravelling what nature has spent so long building into us.
Nearly everyone I know has some sort of natural inborn defect... in the wild, that is (in animals, and would be in us) immensely less common.
If this sounds like the type of thinking that leads to unpleasant conclusions, I'm just saying think about it objectively from a scientific standpoint. I've been wrestling with it for a while, because while it seems obviously true to me, it's also obviously at odds with everything that my upbringing and my capacity for empathy tells me about what constitutes good behaviour towards my fellow speciesmembers. It seems like I need to choose between loving individual human beings, or loving the human being as a whole species, because the process that strengthens and protects the species is the one that works by killing as many of the members as it can.
Yes, I think you *should* consult a real scientist, and ask them what "theory" means in a scentific context, and then get them to explain to you the difference between a theory and a hypothesis, as you clearly haven't the faintest idea what you're blathering about.
You're welcome.
You know they call 'em fingers but I've never seen 'em fing. Oh, there they go.
Meh.
A related and interesting article on "Smart Jews"
? story_id=4032638
http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm
It seems that discrimination in Europe may have led to higher intelligence.
Table-ized A.I.
The handouts increase as the number of children increase.
1. Environment changes
2. Animals adapts genetically
3. Goto 1
I thought Natural selection is the process of genes being passed on from parents to siblings. When there is a benefit, the genes start showing noticble traits. For example, Mendel's work, or any biologist or farmer that breeds for specific traits.
Evolution is the process in which things change into entirely new species. Is the article trying to say that some people's brains will become so complex that they'll no longer be able to breed with the lesser brained people of the world? And eventually these super brained people will form their own species of Homo Superior or create a band of Xmen?
God spoke to me.
And second opinions here and here
You appear to misunderstand the following concepts: Theory, fact, law, big bang, statistics, life.
Theory - something backed up with evidence, and has made successful predictions.
Intelligent Design - not a theory, but instead conjecture; a made up idea.
but right in the middle, my brain evolved and I lost it.
Now that is a loaded statement.
No, it isn't.
Evolution is nothing but a theory.
Creationists say this like it means that it's somehow on shaky ground. It isn't. "Theory" is the highest level that any explanation reaches in science. There is no higher label. The dismissing of evolution as "nothing but a theory" only demonstrates that the one making the dismissal is fundamentally ignorant of scientific terminology.
Ask any REAL biologist (like those with Ph.D.'s or those who work in colleges), and they will admit evolution is a theory.
And theories never get any higher in rank.
It is not fact.
"Facts" are simply statements about single observations, nothing more. "Facts" really don't mean anything in the long run in science.
It is not a scientific law.
And it never will be. Despite the ignorant rantings of creationists, theories do not ever become laws. Theories and laws are two different types of statements. Laws are general statements about collections of previous observations by which future observations are predicted. Theories are an attempt to explain the underlying causes of the observation. Example: the "Law of gravity" is a model of the resultant force caused by gravitational attraction between two masses. The theory of gravity -- more commonly known as "relativity theory" -- is an attempt to explain why that force occurs.
Laws are no more certain than theories. Theores do not "graduate" into laws. Laws can just as easily be falsified -- in fact, the "Law of Gravity" as we know it from Newton is false. Saying that "evolution is a theory, not a law" as if this casts some doubt on the validity of evolution again only demonstrates that you are fundamentally ignorant of how science works.
The cool thing Intelligent Design is we know God made us.
No, Intelligent Design postulates -- based upon faulty premises -- that certain features in biological systems are too "complex" to have come about through evolution, and therefore must have been "designed" by some unnamed designer. "God" doesn't enter into "Intelligent Design" as it is presented by the shysters who try to shove it into school cirriculums.
That you think that it directly refers to a god -- especially the God that you happen to worship -- only further demonstrates that ID is nothing but a sham to try to sneak religion into schools.
As for "know", I'm sorry but claiming that you "know" something isn't valid justification for scientific consideration. If you have no evidence, then you have no case.
Think about how the world was made. Science has a theory called "Big Bang". It is a theory which states that in the start the mass was so dense, it exploded and everything flew away randomly, making stars and planets, and life.
The Big Bang doesn't cover abiogenesis. Please actually learn the science behind it before attempting to discuss it.
For any people who know statistics, what is the probability of that happening? How many times would I have to flip a quarter and get heads in a row? 100,000,000,000 times? 100,000,000,000,000 times?
You know the statistical likelyhood? Please present the math. Show all of your work. If you can't then you don't have a case. Please avoid the fallacy of pointing to the "likelyhood" of the universe appearing in its exact configuration as it is and pretending that the universe couldn't have just as easily supported life had it come about in a somewhat different configuration unless you can demonstrate that it is the case.
You would have a better chance at taking a watch, hitting it with a hammer until it was broken into 1000 peices, and then putting it in a bag, shaking the bag, and having the watch come back together out of the random movements.
False analogy, demonstrating a fundamental ignorance of cosmology. Try to understand why physicists say what they say about universal origins before thinking that
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
A hypothesis is any idiots guess. A theory is the guess of a person with many letters behind their name. :p
For example, the bartender thinks the Patriots will beat the Raiders by 4 points. That is a hypothesis. The bookie says the Pats are getting 6 points, that is a theory.
Now a law, that is if Danny the Butcher talks with Tom Brady and has an understanding.
That my friend, is how the world works.
That is the education at The University of Hard Knocks. Byatch!
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
With all this talk of natural selection vs. creationism... one thing I just don't understand is this:
If "God" is said to exist in all life having created it, I would have thought that creationism and natural selection is mutually inclusive, rather than exclusive.
If God is in all life, and I am alive (and therefore part of "God") then I too can create BY MEANS OF evolution. I can create and evolve myself with ideas and actions.
I think the Bible actually explains all this, but for some reason a lot of the religious people missed the point completely.
READY.
PRINT ""+-0
Not if my alcoholic genes have anything to do with it. Then again, it could be natural selection at work. Only the strongest brain cells survive.
A theory is the guess of a person with many letters behind their name. :p
Wrong. If you don't understand the definition of "theory" in a scientific context, including the criteria that a given explanation must meet in order to be labelled a "theory", then you have no credibility when discussing science.
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
no, natural selection is the pressures applied to the species that weed out those that are not suited for the environment.
microevolution is the process of small changes appearing within a species
macroevolution is the process of things changing into a different species entirely
visualize this. the big bang happens, everything goes randomly everywhere, then gravity starts bringing it together, making the universe 'chunky' as it currently is. try breaking apart a watch, shaking it in a bag, and having none of the bits stick together. and there's not even a force making watch-bits fall together in that analogy.
and the whole 'god created us' thing only works if you believe in god. I'm sure that works for you, but the majority of people aren't christian, so searching for other explanations is kinda neccesary.
p.s. - the pope believes in evolution. he has said so, in official papal newsletters. doesn't matter for you unless you're catholic, but just saying, believing in god doesn't mean you believe in intelligent design.
link the first link google provided me with on the pope subject.
idea of evolution, because they seem to get less intelligent every day!
Why yes. Take a look over there. Its the horseshoe crab, one of natures "living fossils". Even if you don't have a saltwater reef aquarium, you may notices roaches in your friends apartment...perhaps a sign that he doesn't clean up well enough or perhaps a sign that life will persist.
Evolution occurs as long as it is beneficial, to the organism in question or to its general environment. The oceans haven't presented enough of a change from way back when for the horseshoe crab and many other species to modify its design. Similarly, cockroaches are pretty good at finding corners and crevices to hide in and scavange, thus they have not needed change their modus operandi or physical design.
Humans are in an entirely different environment. In fact it is said that we are the only species which controls and modifies their environment. As such, it is a natural conclusion that as long as the environment and conditions are variable, evolution will continue to progress...always looking for that perfect design for life that maximizes its ability to persist.
...this is just changing the selection pressures. Ultimately, advances in medical technology alter the environment in such a way that it is less hostile to the reprodutive success to a given genetic range.
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
Evolution selects favorable traits and removes unfavorable ones from the gene pool. Modern medicine and science all people who would be weeded out by evolution to live fairly normal lives and remain a part of the gene pool.
Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
evolution is a theory. It is not fact. It is not a scientific law.
Theory and fact are not exclusive. Stating something is a theory and is not a fact implies that the theory is wrong. Scientific laws are just "convenience" wrappers for theories. The things we call "laws" are theories just the same. They are still subject to the same rigor as theory.
The cool thing Intelligent Design is we know God made us.
And that is why you are NOT a science. Because you "know." You've moved from theory to statement of fact.
For any people who know statistics, what is the probability of that happening?
The probability of the event cannot be determined because we lack understanding of the state space.
How many times would I have to flip a quarter and get heads in a row? 100,000,000,000 times? 100,000,000,000,000 times?
The probability of getting N heads in a row is 1/(2^N). But that is irrelevant to the discussion.
You would have a better chance at taking a watch, hitting it with a hammer until it was broken into 1000 peices, and then putting it in a bag, shaking the bag, and having the watch come back together out of the random movements.
And you've calculated the probability of this how?
God made life. It is called a soul.
That it is incorrect. Life was bestowed upon the earth when the Flying Spaghetti Monster extended His noodly appendage and brought forth a midget in full pirate regalia.
Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
Ever since the invention of agriculture, humans quit evolving like the rest of the creatures on earth. The question is now is "who reproduces?" instead of "who lives through the night?"
/. these days :/
"Survival of the fittest" doesn't apply to humans -- obesity kills a lot of people. You don't have to be fit (in any sense of the word) to survive. Who's reproducing more: smart people or idiots? I'd bet on the idiots (smart people think a little more about the implications of having [another] child). If the average intelligence of the human race is dropping (ever so slighly), how can we call that evolution?
Evolution seems to lead to diversity, and as a race humans are becoming (IMO) less and less diverse. The concept of evolution is intimately tied to diversity -- humans have quit evolving... we're done.
So a little variation here or there is natural... it's all statistics anyway. I guess any article that mentions evolution makes it on
given the popularity of pseudoscience like "Intelligent Design"
Now that is a loaded statement.
Yes it is.
It doesn't go nearly far enough.
"Pseudoscience" implies that its proponents, cranky or not, at least sincerely believes in it. That is too charitable for "intelligent design".
"intelligent design" is a meticulously planned, focus-group designed, carefully executed fraud.
It is created only to deceive. It's intended purpose is not to explain anything, but only to diminish the public credibility of any real scientific explanatory model of life or the origin of our world.
Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
So you say that for anyone to have a discussion of evolution they must use your conventions of naming? I say bullshit.
You will learn more about evolution in the Bible than any PH.D. granting institution can teach you. And you will live a better life.
You should read "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" by Edwards.
How do you explain miricles? How do you explain the works of Mother Theresa? How do you explain it when modern medicine says a person will die, that there is nothing else that can be done, but a priest comes and the person wakes up?
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
One of my friends thinks a good candidate for selection would be avoidance of cities, since these were cholera-ridden population sinks for most of history. Maybe so.
Really the reason to think that cognition is involved is that these same genes were selected repeatedly in primate and human evolution:
I suppose it's possible they make you dumber. But then further experiments should show one way or the other.
--JohnNice job. Not many people take pride in their trolling these days. Most just try to post something "shocking" or "obscene."
So you say that for anyone to have a discussion of evolution they must use your conventions of naming? I say bullshit.
And I say that if you're going to use the term "theory" to mean something other than what scientists mean and then claim that the theory of evolution is on shaky grounds because it is a "theory" by your definition then you're not arguing based upon facts, but upon dishonest semantics.
Which isn't surprising. I've observed that creationists are, in general, shameless liars. You're either one of them, or you're trolling. Your posts are more over the top than most creationists, but I do know that people have seriously expressed the insane and willfully ignorant sentiments that you preach in all seriousness, so it's hard to tell.
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
Evolution is nothing but a theory. Ask any REAL biologist (like those with Ph.D.'s or those who work in colleges), and they will admit evolution is a theory. It is not fact. It is not a scientific law.
Like gravity, you mean?
The cool thing Intelligent Design is we know God made us.
We know no such thing. Some people assume this is the case but they lack any evidence.
Think about how the world was made. Science has a theory called "Big Bang". It is a theory which states that in the start the mass was so dense, it exploded and everything flew away randomly, making stars and planets, and life.
That's a very 2nd grade way of describing it.
For any people who know statistics, what is the probability of that happening? How many times would I have to flip a quarter and get heads in a row? 100,000,000,000 times? 100,000,000,000,000 times?
You would have a better chance at taking a watch, hitting it with a hammer until it was broken into 1000 peices, and then putting it in a bag, shaking the bag, and having the watch come back together out of the random movements.
Except that nature is not random. There are physical processes (like gravity and electromagnetism) that effects the way matter and energy behave. Processes like natural selection are not random either.
God made life. It is called a soul.
And the tooth fairy and santa claus exist too. Except that we stop believing in them as we realise what a crock they are. Some don't do the sam with these god myths though.
Despite various environmental influences, the brain has been developing amazing capabilities as of the last century and a half.
3/4 of most common mental illnesses, for example, have had their mirror images of genious appear at the same time. Case in point, the misnamed "Idiot Savant".
While a majority of autistic people with aspergers syndrome, ADHD, ADD, stuttering, dyslexia, et al, have had difficulty adjusting to the modern world, another portion have adjusted brilliantly.
For example, ADD/ADHD could be an adaptation to rapidly changing perceptions and environments. To those who do not have this, it's a bunch of kids who jump around and seem to incoherantly spot a million different things at a rate well over what they could. Thus, they're a "problem child" to be fixed with meds.
Aspergers syndrome is a much more discrete phase, where one's mind is coherant (similar to obsessive compulsive disorder), but can focus enough to be somewhere close to genious. A good case example is "Rockin'" Bill Gates (who demonstrates this routinely in his meetings as you all know, but in his youth was a decent programmer, as long as he didn't have to work beyond 2K code). Another example is Howard Hughes.
Stuttering/Tourettes is a case where someone has brilliant communications skills, as long as you don't have to actually listen to them talk.
Most of this stuff didn't happen overnight, but on the other hand, it may have occurred at a time when we weren't eager to light a torch and pyre.
Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
Homosexuality. The homosexual revolution came upon us. A lifestyle that does not reproduce, yet it has become very prominant in the human race. Since scientists think that homosexuality is genetic, we have an increased population of people who will not continue the human race. Sounds more like entropy than evolution.
Now this is not an attack on homosexuals, but rather some food for thought on the whole humans are still evolving idea. We can't possibly be evolving when we kill our offspring, don't produce offspring, kill ourselves (drugs, etc...), etc... How are these people surviving? If we were evolving, wouldn't homosexuals, abortionists, and drug users fade from our species?
And that is why you are stupid.
Oh, Edmund, can it be true? that I hold here, in my mortal hand, a nugget of purest green?
As others mentioned, half of the evolution process is missing.. there is no selection of better traits. Everyone lives, thrives, and reproduces regardless of their genetic adaptations (or quality).
So, we still have the genetic randomization going on, resulting in differences in humans. But, then what happens? All the strains of humans just keep going.
Does this result in the spectrum of humans spreading increasingly wider, so eventually subjects at two extremes barely resemble the same species?
Will any noticeable branching happen? In previous evolution, one group survived and thrived, replacing members without an adaptation. Now, since the others still survive, and the difference between the weak and strong won't result in a dramatic difference in results for either group. Probably not anything recognizable outside the normal differences between tall & short, thin & fat, smart & dumb.
YOU'RE CRAZY!
Hacker Media
duurrrr hurrrrr
Julian Delphiki unavailable for comment.
Speaking of which (sorry to threadjack), anyone have any comments on the new Orson Scott Card "Bean" novel?
NO CARRIER
"So you say that for anyone to have a discussion of evolution they must use your conventions of naming? I say bullshit"
Cool. Because I define the word "bullshit" as simple shorthand for mean "You are absolutely correct, all creationists are idiots, me doubly so." Glad we agree.
To have a discussion of anything you must use commonly accepted conventions of naming. It's called language.
How long till the mutants attack.
Sigh.
See, science does not produce anything but theories. Saying that evolution is just a theory does not make sense, because it cannot be anything else. It cannot be a fact because facts are of a completely different nature. It cannot be a scientific law because there are no such things (phrases like "the law of universal gravitation" are simply traditional ways of referring to the newtonian theory of gravitation).
The brain may still be evolving, but the direction it's evolving in depends not on available mutations, but on selection.
Welcome to the future of the human race.
Evolution? Bah. This is clearly the work of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.
Religious apologetics without a shred of science, or even information theory (Dembski does not publish papers on information theory, or any research at all for that matter).
And it explains, among other things:- The recession of remote galaxies (the Hubble constant);
- The existence of the Cosmic Background Radiation;
- The fluctuations in the CBR (specifically, this is explained by a refinement of the Big Bang theory known as "inflation");
- The rather sharply-defined age limit of the oldest stars; and
- The elemental composition of the interstellar medium.
That's a lot of data to explain from a few fundamental physical constants and just one event 13 billion years ago. What does your brand of creationism explain about why things are the way they are, instead of some other way? Divine whim? (Creationists tend to be very ignorant about the subject of their certainties. I'll bet that half of the above phenomena are complete news to you.)Know what's funny? You aren't even smart enough to distinguish between high-energy physics (the field of science which studies phenomena of the character of the Big Bang) and evolution (which required the Big Bang, a couple rounds of stellar formation and supernovae to make heavy elements, then formation of the Earth, and then biogenesis before there was anything which could start to evolve). The whole thing is one undistinguished mish-mash in your mind, and you've been brainwashed into shoving it into a bin marked "WRONG". People like you crack me up.
The probability of an event having happened after the event has happened is 1. Elementary Bayesian statistics. Sorry, but the chemical elements are much better at making life-stuff than watch-parts are at making watches. They form sugars and even amino acids spontaneously in the cold of space, in flasks with electric sparks or ultraviolet light, and probably in many places we have never been able to look yet. Google "Miller-Urey" and start from there - fuck that, here's a link, I've saved you the trouble. Then by that same principle God made your brain, but you're showing gross disrespect to Him by refusing to use it.Looks like you've been systematically disinformed and propagandized. If you want to do something about it, you could do much worse than to go here and start reading. You'll find every one of your talking points listed here, and refuted.
Argh. Wrong button... I left out the point of my post: so here it goes:
Please, O please: if you want to argue against evolution and for your favorite theory, by all means do so, but please, O please do not keep repeating this very sad mantra about evolution being "just a theory", because it not only detracts from the seriousness of your argument, makes you look ignorant about the matter under discussion, but, worse of all!, is already boring
There's no such thing as evolution. Evidently, those "researchers" haven't been touched by His Noodly Appendage.
The human brain's evolution is driven most strongly by social competition. It's actually a leading theory that social competition was one of the primary causes of the human brain as we know it.
Suggested reading:
"Ecological dominence, social competition, and coalitionary arms races: Why humans evolved extraordinary intelegence", Flin, Geary, Ward.
"Machiavellian Intelegence", Richard Byrne.
"How Did Humans Evolve?", Richard Alexander.
"The Social Brain Hypothesis", Robin Dunbar
I am a viral sig. Please help me spread.
>>God made life. It is called a soul. > >That it is incorrect. Life was bestowed upon the earth when the Flying Spaghetti Monster extended His noodly appendage and brought forth a midget in full pirate regalia. That is also incorrect. We are the armpit sweat of a dead giant. Hey, it was good enough for the Vikings. Besides, you FSM types are not interested in alternative theories. Teach the controversy, I say!
Of course the human brain is still evolving: Less intelligent people reproduce more offspring which means within only a couple hundreds of years humans will be significantly dumber then they are today. This is sad but true for many traits and actually a serious issue that needs to be addressed sooner or later from an ethical, biological, and social perspective.
The good news is that children conceived from gene banks are in average more intelligent because the genetic material is often being selected for intelligence and, hey, who doesn't want his child to be intelligent?!
It often seems like the people who are really changing ou society are the ones that are deciding not to have kids.
God made life. It is called a soul.
So life is a soul? So cows aren't alive? Plants aren't alive? You're claiming that some unproven supernatural invisible entity has created an unproven invisible "entity"? That stands for science for you people?
And your argument is "the odds are against one thing happening, so if this one thing happens, it proves there's a god!". The odds are seriously stacked against winning the lottery, but winning it doesn't prove the existance of god.
The cool thing Intelligent Design is we know God made us.
So you're not so much espousing any kind of scientific theory as just saying "intelligent design exists because god made us"?
Does your state not provide science text books to students or something? You really seem to be lacking a lot of basic knowledge and concepts. Your idea of science appears to be "I have a belief that is not, has not and can not be proven true - but if I apply a name to my belief, it becomes a scientific theory and gains sudden validity".
How is your belief that there's a god and he literally grabbed ten gazillion lumps of dirt and physically formed planets out of them like a two year old with playdough any more valid than someone who claims a giant spaghetti monster poofed into existence and created life, the universe and everything?!
People like you frustrate people with brains and common sense, because your "arguments" follow no logic and your only recourse is quoting shit out of a bible or saying "but I know it to be true!".
I can't state for a fact that there is no god or greater entity that created the universe, just like I can't state for a fact that there isn't life out there somewhere else in the universe on another planet. Likewise, you absolutely can not with certainty claim that there is a god, much less that he created the world and yadda yadda... and even much less that he wants specific commands followed, like not mixing various fibers in your wearable textiles.
So rather than being a stupid asshat, why not just be sensible and say "I have no consistant, tangible evidence of anything, so I reserve my judgement". Science is about discovery. Theology and religion is about making silly arguments to bolster your insistance on something that can absolutely not be proven.
"God made life. It's called a soul"... Holy shit, I'll be laughing at that one for years. That's your one great bit of proof. That and your belief that because things are "really complex", they couldn't possibly have occurred any other way than being directly made by the "hands of god". Because, of course, the entire point of evolution couldn't POSSIBLY be to do precisely that -- to pick and continue and advance things toward a more complex, adaptable, efficient nature -- right?
You're ignoring a million dominoes that fell, causing the final domino to fall over - and just claiming that the magical touch of santa clause tipped it over directly. Just silly.
Please, tell me you're a fifth grader who is still heavily influenced by his parents believe and that you're not an actual full-grown adult, presumably having received an actual education already?
Supreme Power is in Nature's Harmonic Simultaneous Perpetual 4X4 =16 Corner Rotating Principle 4-Day Time Cube - Ineffable Truth.
That's Bigboo TAY! TAY!
Wish I still had mod points for ya, but I'm out of 'em and reduced to posting AC in this thread.
You should read "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" by Edwards.
And you should just just return to your Oral Roberts university dorm and shoot yourself in the head before you reproduce. You have no grasp on anything other than as a perverted method of spreading your stupid jesus message.
Stop equivocating evolution with atheism. Evolution is not atheism. It is fundamentally dishonest to suggest as much.
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
And this is news to who? Creationists? Why would any species stop evolving?
I suppose it is interesting to have confirmed.
There can be no evolution without natural selection. We have tampered with natural selection.
;-)
Technology has given people with hereditary conditions like diabetes and nearsightedness the same chance to pass its genes to the next generation.
We are a weaker race because of it. Not that I am complaining
Cheers,
Adolfo
I'd say having cows or goats around during winter in Europe, and not much else to get sustainance from, would be a pretty clear driving evolution force.
You can read (and write) all about Lactase persistence at Wikipedia.
So you say that for anyone to have a discussion of evolution they must use your conventions of naming?
Just don't expect to persuade anybody to see your point of view if you refuse to base your conversation on a common usage of specific scientific terms. If you refuse to actually crack open a dictionary and get up to speed on what the word "theory" means (hey, click here for a definition - it's free!), then the first job you'll face is to get people who do use a functional, consistent vocabulary to abandon it and use a new, made-up definition that suits your agenda.
You will learn more about evolution in the Bible than any PH.D. granting institution can teach you
Huh. Well, that's just not even slightly true on the face of it, so you're going to have to work on that from another angle.
How do you explain miricles?
Well, I don't know. Perhaps you mean "miracles." Luckily, though, I don't need to explain them, since they don't actually happen. On the other hand, there's the more common daily usage of that term, which equates roughly to "amazingly lucky" or "rare" or "long odds," etc. As in "It's a miracle that I won the lottery. Of course, it's simple probability, really."
How do you explain the works of Mother Theresa?
Well, she got up each morning and did things for people. And she was persuasive enough to get people to give her money so she could do more of it the next day. Are you saying that she did magic? That when she scrambled eggs for poor people, there were more plates served than could be accounted for by the eggs she bought? You don't need any magical thinking or mysticism to explain the day to day behavior of someone who decided that the only way to find meaning in her personal life was to be a servant. That was her call, and she worked the celebrity status she earned to raise more cash to do more of it. Miracle? No.
How do you explain it when modern medicine says a person will die, that there is nothing else that can be done, but a priest comes and the person wakes up?
A mistake. A prediction based on incomplete information. How do you explain it when a million people pray for Mother Theresa not to die, and she dies anyway? How do you explain it when someone survives a bus crash that kills a bunch of other people, and they say that Jesus was looking out for them? Did Jesus hate the other people on the bus? How do you explain it when churches get struck by lightning and burn down? How do you explain it when innocent little children are born into an agony of birth defects? Is God trying to teach those kids a lesson? Nice guy! For someone who is All Powerful and Loves His Children, he sure has a cruel sense of humor!
Or, how about this notion: it's all made up! It's a semi-comforting myth that's caught on with a lot of people for a variety of cultural reasons, and preys upon the intellectual cowardice that's built into most of us (mostly, the denial of death that we all hang onto, at least most of the time, because it would be hard to function day-to-day if we really stopped to think about how pointless the whole thing might seem, what with the fact that we're all going to die). Priests are just people in a uniform that shows they've made a career out of perpetuating the myth. It's actually pretty embarasssing - a lot of them are smart, and good communicators. They've just bought into the fantasy because it makes people temporarily feel good, and they've lost the will to make meaning in their lives, deferring instead to a canned religious product that's easier to serve up and sell.
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
That's all the religious extremists need to hear about this story. You can't sensibly talk about evolution if you believe the earth is only 5000 years old.
How we know is more important than what we know.
Besides, you FSM types are not interested in alternative theories. Teach the controversy, I say!
There is no controversy. Pastafarianism is a fact, supported by the vast numbers of True Believers. A false creator could never hope to sway such a large audience. False religions, such as the cult of the Invisible Pink Unicorn, simply cannot stand against the light of the truth as shown to us by Him and His noodly appendage.
Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
What exactly the role of modern medicine and civilization will eventually have on the overall evolution humans. Others have speculated about aspects of this, but my curiosity revolves around whether or not we (as a species) are preventing our own evolution by treating genetic diseases. Evolution is always triggered by a genetic change - with changes which make the species stronger carrying on and those which weaken the species eventually being eliminated. So what happens when a child is born with a genetic "defect" which, for lack of a better term, we simply don't understand. Do we treat that child, do we actively affect his/her ability to develop and thus prevent the eventual forking of the human species? This is somewhat thought provoking because I don't think any of us are smart enough to know the answer. The flip side of this argument, of course, is what to do when we are able to purposely engineer a superior branch of the human species. I'm not talking about changing eye or hair color, but rather our ability to create a "super human". Lastly, many folks believe that while human evolution may have slowed, it will likely make its presence known in a more significant way once we establish colonies in space. Imagine not the 1st or 2nd generations conceived and born in zero or reduced gravity (such as that in a space station, deep space craft, or even on Mars), but rather the 100th or even 1000th generation. Surely at some point these "humans" will have evovled traits which enhance their ability to survive and thrive in this new environment. Interesting stuff for sure.
Because it just means a change in the genes represented in the population over time, not that the genes have to be "better" or something. In most cases it is hard to say what is better or worse... it depends on the environment. That's why it's called natural selection... genes are selected because they were more likey to produce offspring. It's not about producing some super-race of god-like beings.
It is highly likely that what you actually experienced was missing "friendly bacteria" or pro-biotics that help humans digest milk. Milk products usually contain a these in small amounts; this explains why you were able to digest milk again after consuming it for a while, you had built up good colonies in your digestive tract.
Lots of people have stomach, mouth, and fungus problems of various natures which they try to treat with symptoms with pepto-bismal and other over the counter drugs when they would do much better to go out an eat yogurt every day for a week. Yogurt is high in friendly bacteria and will fix many symptoms you may have had for years.
One big cause of losing your friendly bacteria is taking anti-biotics. Some people take anti-biotics and struggle with intestinal and fungus problems for years because their friendlies have been wiped out by the anti-biotics. Doctors rarely prescribe yogurt with anti-biotic, but next time ask your doctor if taking pro-biotics is a good idea, and he will probably say yes. Why they don't bring it up on thier own has always been a mystery to me.
So you say that for anyone to have a discussion of evolution they must use your conventions of naming? I say bullshit.
:)
If you decide to make up your own definition for a word and then claim that scientists must also using your definition when they use the same word... I can think of a better place to put your "bullshit" label.
Theory already has a specific meaning when used by scientists. In this case, the various theories of evolution provide our current best explanations for the many-times-over observed fact of evolution (the fact that the frequency of alleles in a population changes over time).
You will learn more about evolution in the Bible than any PH.D. granting institution can teach you. And you will live a better life.
The first statement is patently false. Charitably, the Bible discusses the who and why of creation, but is woefully lacking any substantive discussion of how or when (which is what the theories and facts of evolution are all about). The second statement is irrelevant, since most graduate institutions don't explicitly attempt to improve how people live their lives (there is hope that by improving the quality/quantity of what people know, lives will improve, but it's implicit).
You should read "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" by Edwards.
Not a month ago, another Christian was yelling at me for saying that Christianity still use fear-based arguments to spread the word (and Christian morality). He said that I was ignorant and that those type of people were just a part of the ugly history of Christianity. Where were you to defend my assertion then?
I always get a chuckle when I think that according to the worldview of people like you, all us godless heathens must be just wallowing in sin and misery because we don't have a man in the sky to tell us what's right and what's wrong. A really useful ethics will be a lot more useful than any "list of rules" morality like you're going to find in your books. Some Christians will understand and agree with what I'm saying, but I don't expect it to make any sense to you (you may also say they weren't really Christians anyway
How do you explain miricles?
Which miracles?
How do you explain the works of Mother Theresa?
As the personal effort of a well-intentioned but poorly informed woman. (perhaps not so poorly informed, since she came to the West for her own medical treatments rather than be treated in the hospitals that she created... hmmm...).
How do you explain it when modern medicine says a person will die, that there is nothing else that can be done, but a priest comes and the person wakes up?
In the real world, we should often discuss probabilities instead of certainties, but if, based on a doctor's experience, a patient has a vanishingly small chance of survival, he'll conclude the patient is a goner and move on to the next guy. But vanishingly small probabilities are still non-zero and some people will pull through by sheer force of will (a.k.a. placebo effect, which is not a brush-off, but a really important set of biophysical effects that your body can do to itself).
Have a great day!
Ross
Yes, but what if the Flying Spaghetti Monster created both the Time Cube's Simultaneous 4-Day Rotation, 4-corner Earth Sphere, and the idiots professing singularity.
His noodly appendage makes the 4-day rotation and the 1-day singularity both exist depending on who measures it... Simultaneously simultaneous!
/my head asplode
Surely they have enough trouble as it is without the need to see their party relegated to obscurity by an onslaught of smarter individuals/voters!
/* yes this is a +5 Funny post - everyone should be able to laugh at this one no matter which political affiliation they have */
this comment is provided "as is" and without any express or implied legibility or congruity [...]
Did anyone stop to consider the mere possibility that the human brain's understanding of evolution is evolving?
Think about how the world was made. Science has a theory called "Big Bang". It is a theory which states that in the start the mass was so dense, it exploded and everything flew away randomly, making stars and planets, and life.
For any people who know statistics, what is the probability of that happening? How many times would I have to flip a quarter and get heads in a row? 100,000,000,000 times? 100,000,000,000,000 times?
Sure, that's easy. It doesn't matter how improbable it is. Given infinite time, all probabilities approach 1. So you could say that it was inevitable that it would happen.
Of course that's an entirely pointless argument based on false assumptions -- namely that time can exist independently of space. You can't talk about "before" the big bang, because there was no before. After thinking about that for a while, it's real easy to go off into the woods of philosophy (why does the universe even exist, is it simply a figment of our imaginations, and so forth). We know that it did happen. The best science can do is look at the pieces and try to figure out what the watch may have looked like the instant after it was shattered.
I have some time to kill and an already low karma, so I'll chime in too.
So you say that for anyone to have a discussion of evolution they must use your conventions of naming?
I'm afraid so. This is one of the first things one should have learned about debate in high school: everyone has to agree on the terms, otherwise nothing will make any sense. So you do have to learn the conventions--they didn't become conventions for nothing, after all. In the scientific sense, a "theory" as we generally know it is called a "hypothesis". Facts, based on observation, lead to hypotheses, which are proposed and tested--that's basically the scientific method. A hypothesis that survives tests to falsify it can become a theory. (If anybody can correct any errors here, please do.)
A theory describes how something works, based on the facts. It is not a suggestion (layman's theory), but our explanation, and as someone else pointed out, it's the best it gets. Since Einstein showed that Newton's Law of Gravity doesn't always work (gravity acts differently around large masses), nobody has had the hubris to propose anymore "laws". Thus: gravity is a fact (you can verify its existence yourself if you wish, and observe it working with common household items); how it works is described in the Theory of Gravity. The Theory of Gravity is not a suggestion or view of how it might work, it's how we describe it to the best of our knowledge.
So it is with the Theory of Evolution. Evolution itself is a fact. There are mountains of evidence, and you can even observe it yourself--if we're recommending books, I think you would learn a lot from "The Beak of the Finch" by Jonathan Weiner, a short, highly readable and personable explanation of evolution, with numerous examples of its occurence everywhere and at all times (even your backyard). Now the Theory of Evolution explains how it works to the best of our knowledge, and accounting for all of the facts.
Intelligent Design is not, I'm afraid, a theory. In fact, it is not a theory in even the popular sense--or if it is, it is an amazingly weak one. Initially, ID's speculative explanation (there must be a designer) does not compare to evolution's compelling evidence that shows it's not inconceivable that everything could have evolved from a single source, given enough time (and 3.5 billion years is that). But on closer examination, that becomes irrelevant. ID cannot be argued in a scientific arena because it is anything but. At its core is a glaring lack of logic: even if there must be a designer, why the Christian God? There is a leap made there in ID that reveals the movememt for what it is: Creationism, wrapped in pseudo-scientific language. (This was addressed in the New York Times a couple of weeks ago in a three-day special.)
So we have two problems: the minor one of your refusal to argue with shared terminonology, using "dubious semantics", as someone said above; and the major one of not arguing against evolution with anything suitable. The Theory of Evolution is incredibly robust is at the core of modern biology. Intelligent Design is no kind of opposition, but deception and wishful thinking. Where facts are concerned, Intelligent Design is off-topic.
Well, you probably didn't even read this. That's fine. But maybe someone else did, and maybe I helped someone else out. Or maybe I'll get a mod point. I could use a mod point.
I read Slashdot for the articles.
The Daily Probe had a story about this a while ago. (Read the first headline.)
If you can read this sig, you're too close.
Many politicians seem to be going the other way!
"Two genes involved in determining the size of the human brain have undergone substantial evolution in the last 60,000 years...."
:)
Whenever I read claims like this, I always wonder, "how do they know?". I'd have to question even if the claim were only 100 years. I have doubts that we have records of the genes in question for the last 100 years, and I'm fairly sure we haven't been watching these genes for the last 60,000 years.
I would assumed that any specific genetic data (aside from that which can be inferred from physical observations) would have been long lost to us. In this case, it seems one must be willing to make the somewhat undesirable claim that we can know that these two genes are the only two genes that control the size of the brain, and have always been the only two genes that control the size of the brain. I could accept that assumption were the claim 100 years, but 60,000 seems a bit much to take on faith.
It seems to me that this article boils down to "Change happened somewhere somehow!" and that doesn't seem particularly insightful. Anyone have more knowledge about how their claim can be observed and verified?
How do you explain it when modern medicine says a person will die, that there is nothing else that can be done, but a priest comes and the person wakes up?
Oh this straw man again... Okay, tell you what: have a priest bring a brain dead individual back to full function and I'll bite. There has never been a documented case of a brain dead person coming back to any mental function. So you get that done then come back.
If you really want to know, it goes something like this: Doctors generally predict based on their experience, and very simple statistics will show that their sample set is not very good. Further investigation will show that if a doctor expects a person with a particular condition to die, then those who do die will be remembered as reaffirming his hypothesis and those who do not will be forgotten as being non-events.
This has been researched many times. Doctors are skilled artisans of medicine and surgery but, with very rare exception, they do not practice science and subject all their diagnoses and prognoses to scientific rigor. They use personal experience and anecdote, and those are quite fallible.
Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
Average IQ is indeed rising world wide but it's not at all clear that it's due to the world being "so complicated now it selects against those who can't cope." There are multiple competing theories explaining the Flynn Effect of which by far the most credible, IMO, is that the largest cause has been improved early childhood nutrition due to the spread of modern farming techniques.
a priest comes and the person wakes up?
This sounds like a really bad fraternity joke.
If we are constantly evolving, which we are, to suit what we need to, that means we are getting more complicated. So the more complicated we get the more we try to learn, and that circle spends around and around. We already know the human brain is far more capable than anything else known on the planet. From Hitler's ability to get a country of logical people to side with such extremest views, to einstein who bent all the information we knew as science. We will always be ahead of where we seem to be.
ModLife.Net - If it ain't modded, what's the point?
AC has it mostly right. Natural selection is the mechanism of evolution. Micro/macroevolution and "speciation" is mostly a red herring promoted by creationists. Evolution is evolution, and it's very difficult to draw discrete lines between species.
LOAD "SIG",8,1
the surface of the Earth is still apparently being eroded by wind and rain. Scientists have found that 2-3 hills in their study are not as elevated as they were 60,000 years ago. News at eleven...
If nature wouldn't have allowed certain individuals to reproduce, and yet modern medicine/technology/whatever have, their "faulty" genes are allowed to continue past their naturally selected "use by date", so to speak. How in the hell is this not a bad thing for the population as a whole? By definition, natural selection has been removed and therefore evolution has ceased. Sure, the population is "evolving" (read: reproducing) but with a near 100% reproduction rate amongst those individuals who *choose* to reproduce (again, no evolution here), it is not "evolving" in the Darwinian sense. Only those with severe medical or physical problems are no longer "able" to reproduce, but again this does not evolution make (IMHO).
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
A hypothesis is any idiots guess.
A hypothesis isn't a guess, it's a prediction. A theory is an explanation for all of the results of those predictions.
For example, our current topic is about human genes which have changed over time. The biologists who found those changes didn't accidentally stumble over those altered genes, they predicted that if evolution was occurring, the genes would have changed (a hypothesis, in other words). Then they checked to see if their prediction was correct, which it was (hypothesis confirmed). That knowledge is now part of the theory of evolution, along with the thousands of confirmed or rejected hypotheses over the past century and a half of biological science.
Conversely, some posters here have claimed that since stupidity is not a survival trait, creationists will die out in a few generations. That does not appear to be happening, so others will offer hypotheses why it is not happening, see if the new hypotheses match our observations, and add the results to the body of knowledge we call the evolutionary theory.
Interestingly, our explanations for the origin of life started with a creation hypothesis, but since it failed to match so much of our observations, it was added to the list of failed hypotheses more than a century ago. So intelligent design is still part of the theory of evolution, but it's a part we know doesn't work.
"I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
The time frame isn't quite right for that. Nurture, in a somewhat unintended, but true sense. Nature takes more time. The Nature vs. Nurture argument is one of generationally redundant traits, usually. I may be wrong, but I think that with creatures of our generational rates we need more time to evolve [nature] superior conceptual capacities. There wasn't enough time for it to effect breeding and so not enough time to effect evolutionary paths.
So you say that for anyone to have a discussion of evolution they must use your conventions of naming? I say bullshit.
You will learn more about evolution in the Bible than any PH.D. granting institution can teach you. And you will live a better life.
You should read "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" by Edwards.
How do you explain miricles? How do you explain the works of Mother Theresa? How do you explain it when modern medicine says a person will die, that there is nothing else that can be done, but a priest comes and the person wakes up?
Thus spack the uninformed. If I was to walk into a bible study and say "well, thats nice but what the hell is a crucifix and who do we worship someone for dying on one?" It is tantamount to what your doing. In fact most Christians dont' exactly know why Jesus was important, they dont' realize that "lamb of the new covienent" has any other meanign then a neat religious catch phrase. Most people areguing about evolution don't know jack shit about it on either side. With one side having a slight edge on ignorance. You fail to grasp what evolution is, so your are against it. It is the mechanism where by god creates.
"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
There are only three things evolution needs to happen: [1] information which is copied from one generation to the next (genes), [2] different numbers of offspring that survive to reproduce (1 child vs 10) and [3] some level of causation between the information and that difference in numbers of offspring.
Thus, there is strong selective pressure in favour of brains succeptable to philosophies that avoid birth control.
(I'm not sure if I write that as a joke or a sincere prediction)
I think that the evolution of the human brain is clearly a Miserable Failure.
Well, we definitely need a gene to reject peer pressure and slackness regarding important decisions (i.e. voting). Because the stupid are causing MANY, MANY people to die today. Just look at New Orleans.
> Evolution is nothing but a theory. Ask any REAL biologist (like those with Ph.D.'s or those who work in colleges), and they will admit evolution is a theory. It is not fact. It is not a scientific law.
Evolution is a fact.
The theory of evolution is a theory; it explains the fact.
Laws are observed regularities of nature; the idea is orthogonal to the notion of a theory. And though I don't know of any laws of nature that are associated with evolution, I suspect a properly educated person could easily come up with one. For my part, I'm confident in saying that "imperfect self-duplicators will evolve" is a law of nature, even though no guru has stated it formally and given it a name or a number.
> The cool thing Intelligent Design is we know God made us.
Hopefully you're trolling, because that's nonsense. (It's semantic nonsense even if you insert the missing "about" to fix the grammatical nonsense.)
> Think about how the world was made. Science has a theory called "Big Bang". It is a theory which states that in the start the mass was so dense, it exploded and everything flew away randomly, making stars and planets, and life. For any people who know statistics, what is the probability of that happening?
What is the probability that a god would exist and do the exact same thing? Why do you think invoking "goddidit" makes something more probable? Wouldn't it actually be less probable, since you have added one more constraint that has to be satisfied?
> God made life. It is called a soul.
"Life" and "soul" aren't synonymous even among theists.
Your score:
- if trolling, 2/10
- if serious, 0/10
Thanks for playing.Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Evolution in the traditional sense has stopped for humans. Before, the environment had a huge impact in what genes got selected to propagate and which failed. We are the first species to be able to directly manipulate the environment, and each other, in order to prolong survival. Genetic traits, like blindness, are allowed to flourish to an extent where before, they would have died out. We can change the environment, by building ramps and audible street lights, so blind people can lead productive lives.
Please help the human race persist by committing suicide. NOW.
> Theory - something backed up with evidence, and has made successful predictions.
I would add that a theory is a model for some phenomenon. I think that's implicit in your "has made successful predictions" part, but it's probably useful to spell it out when trying to help clear up people's misunderstandings about what theories are.
> Intelligent Design - not a theory, but instead conjecture; a made up idea.
I wouldn't even call it a conjecture. It's apologetics, almost certainly conceived and propagated dishonestly.
It's possible that someone could offer "intelligent design" as a conjectural explanation for some poorly understood phenomenon, but that's not what these people are doing. They're trying to convince the courts that creationists have sound scientific reasons for their beliefs.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
These stupid scientists are still trying to sell that evolution "science" to the public?!? It's amazing how they just can't accept the TRUTH! Ask any REAL scientist and he will attest that the World and life (including mountains, trees and a midget) were created by the almighty Flying Spaghetti Monster through the touch of His Noodly Appendage. We must make it so the Truth is heard. Teach the controversy!!
for an object to continue to do something when it never even started to perform the action to begin with. Our brain is the same now as it always has been. If natural selection/evolution were plausible then humans would be the only species on this planet. There would be the need for only 1 species at a time to exist which would be the fittest one. As it stands, there are obviously more than just humans that exist on this planet so therefore natural selection is not at work since many forms of intelligence can exist without the lesser ones dying out.
this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
> Nice job. Not many people take pride in their trolling these days. Most just try to post something "shocking" or "obscene."
His post is shocking, if he really believes it.
Of course, then it wouldn't be a troll, either.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
> > God made life. It is called a soul.
> So life is a soul? So cows aren't alive?
No, you've got it all wrong: cows are souls!
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
general practice doctors (i.e. non-specialists) are absurdly overworked... if they had a minute to spare (seriously) they might mention pro-biotics.
Why would bacteria have anything to do with the human production of lactase enzymes or lack thereof?
There is still a differential rate of reproduction between different groups and so natural selection is carrying on exactly like it has always done.
No... that's not correct. The difference here is that we humans tamper with 'evolution' in unnatural ways. Not just us -- but everything we domesticate. This includes crops, livestock, even the family pet. Bulldogs are unlikely to reproduce successfully on their own because they need c-section births. If "natural" selection were at work, the breed would be extinct. How is the 'natural' selection process carrying on exactly as it has always done in this case?
Bulldogs are one example, but we do it with a lot more than the family pet. We have crops that don't reproduce at all -- yet these crops *still* exist! Natural selection? I think not!
I suppose it's politically easier to argue about how it applies to pets than it is to argue about how it applies to people. I think you'll find that differences in the reproduction between different groups of people is less to do with genetics and more to do with social and/or political environments. There may be differences, but you can't pin these differences on nature.
Natural selection does not necessarily apply equal pressure on each generation. Many generations may have it easy, allowing genetic variations to propogate for some time until a more severe event occurs (e.g. a plague) that genetically attacks our species. Perhaps only a minority of us are fortunate enough to have the genetic makeup to survive. Think of it as a rubber-band stretching -- allowing us to beat natural selection for only so long before the rubber band snaps us back.
But for now, medical science is frequently beating nature. 'Natural' selection may not be neutralized to the point of having zero impact, but it sure has been reduced to a much less significant factor than it was in years past.
I don't remember the author but I do remember the storyline. The story was set in the far-flung future (probably 2001 ish).
Due to the trend of intelligent hardworking people having fewer offspring than stereotypical trailer trash who were breeding like rabbits, there were only a handful of people left on the planet intelligent enough to keep things running.
This small group of intelligent people were busting their collective asses to make sure the idiots got fed and they were getting pretty tired of it and couldn't keep up. So they decided they'd have to cull the heard a bit.
They started running commercials (during I Love Lucy re-runs which were all the rage in the trailer parks) showing happy people vacationing on Venus. Eventually they started a lottery for free rides to Venus in a series of "rocket ships". Turns out the rocket ships were simply ovens and anyone stupid enough to try to vacation on Venus was incinerated.
This scenario seems really cold and hard but it also seems almost inevitable to me. I expect that more subtle measures will be taken before things get as bad as in that story though.
Anyone know what I'm talking about? Anyone remember the author's name or title of that story?
Evolution requires survival of the fittest.... Once you get to the point when you stop dying before you procreate, you are simply randomly mutating.
G
> A hypothesis is any idiots guess. A theory is the guess of a person with many letters behind their name.
No, a hypothesis is a trial explanation, which stands or falls on the basis of what additional observations reveal. A theory is a hypothesis, our usually a big collection or related hypotheses, that models some important class of phenomena. We usually reserve the word for models that have withstood the test of time, but not always (e.g., string theory).
IMO it would be better if we had a different term for the latter category, so we could distinguish between well supported theories (relativity, QM, evolution) and conjectural theoretical systems (string theory, etc.).
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
> So you say that for anyone to have a discussion of evolution they must use your conventions of naming? I say bullshit.
You can use made-up words if you wish, but if you want anyone to know what you're talking about you need to learn the terminology.
Besides, what good does it do you to criticize the "theory of evolution" if "theory of evolution" doesn't mean what scientists say? What, precisely, would you be criticizing? And why would anyone care?
> You will learn more about evolution in the Bible than any PH.D. granting institution can teach you. And you will live a better life. You should read "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" by Edwards.
And you should listen to the idiocies of John Ashcroft and Pat Robertson.
> How do you explain miricles?
Define 'miracle', and show us one to try our hand at explaining.
> How do you explain the works of Mother Theresa?
Not much beyond con artistry, if you care to read up on it.
> How do you explain it when modern medicine says a person will die, that there is nothing else that can be done, but a priest comes and the person wakes up?
Luck.
How do you explain it when a priest comes and the person dies anyway? And what distinguishes your explanation from luck?
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Knock it up another notch! BAM!
I change my sig often.
But seriously, we have room to grow for a reason that we never had before: Caesarean births. Now that we have the technology, the circumference of the human skull is no longer constrained to the diameter of the birth canal. Note how earlier people valued wide-hipped women for their child-producing ability, and how today, popular culture values only women with skeletal stork's bodies...a subconcious acknowledgement that natural birth is no longer a factor in evolutionary development.
It might be good to distinguish between trying to breed humans towards a certain form, and attempting to prevent a particularly troublesome genetic trait from being passed on. Is it eugenics for a government to subsidize a genetic counseling service that would allow people to know if they are about to marry someone else with the same recessive gene? Does it matter if the gene is thought to be beneficial or harmful, or if the harm is "kid likely to have 5 points lower IQ" versus "kid likely to die very early because he needs a working copy of the gene to make an enzyme his body can't do without"?
let's face it - evolution and compassion work in opposite directions.
If the weak survive they are peeing in the gene pool, yet they are also a crucial part of the higher ideals we are capable of postulating (elaboration required ? or do you get it ?)....
what if we just killed and ate the weaker, dumber, and fatter ? where to draw the line that we like to think seperates us from animals with shoes ????
you think it's easy, but you're wrong...
First to be clear, pro-biotics help digest milk, I did not say anything about lactase; his description fit my diagnosis better than sudden loss/regain of lactose tolerance.
Next, as to the question of why bacteria matter, the answer is co-evolution. Yogurt, one of the first milk products used by humans, is essentially a bacteria colony. It just so happens that those bacteria digest milk, and that process helps humans digest milk. If those bacteria didnt have this effect, milk would never have become a human food source in the first place. [It is important to note that milk consumption is fairly recent in human history, probly because proper handling which allowed the 'good' bacteria to live while the 'bad' bacteria was avoided required some special cultural circumstances.]
So does this mean that in a few generations, /. will be a graveyard after all the virgins grow old and die?
eTrade SUCKS
Someone once said that in a song... it must be true...
I hope I haven't upset any nerds with that.. sorry.
> Only those with severe medical or physical problems are no longer "able" to reproduce
/. readers of course :-)
not forgetting
The discovery adds further weight to the view that human evolution is still a work in progres...
Does this mean the brain is intelligently designing itself?
Imagine that! Kansas preaches with the Bible in one hand and On the Origins of Species in the other!
The Luddites were ahead of their time.
We are branching. I really think if evolution occured in such a way to make us look so much different from each other (even if we are still human beings) then it's very difficult to hope our brain or even other physical aspects evolved to be the same. We can even go back to that very controversial subject.
Only if every human born produces exactly as many offspring as all the others will evolultion stop. And clearly that is not the case. Some people have lots of kids, some have none. And much of the reason is genetical.
As an example, males who manage to sleep with lots of careless women can easily produce hundreds of kids. Look for more of those kind of genes in the future.
While intelligent people *might* have some small economic advantage over the less intelligent in modern society (which obviously doesn't apply to vast tracts of the world) it's also clear that this advantage doesn't translate into having more children, or having more children survive to reproduce. It doesn't matter for shit if your awesome intellect (and matching ego) garner you $500k a year if you only have one or two kids, while the Jones down the street who need food stamps to feed their family have five or six kids. The Jones have a clear advantage in terms of passing their genes along to the population as a whole, regardless of what kind of car you drive or how many tech toys you manage to accumulate.
I also don't see how intelligence could possibly trump genes for improved communication and social interaction. There's no proven link between these characteristics and intelligence, and certainly from an anecdotal standpoint the ability to successfully interact socially and communicate clearly with other human beings isn't tied to intellect. There's a reason why the stereotypical geek or genius is thought to be socially inept, simply because it's so often true. Exceptions abound, of course, but the stereotype is rooted solidly in reality. Geeks, on the whole, *do not* do as well with the chicks, and aren't passing along their seed willy-nilly as much as those who can talk a good game. Evolution doesn't care what's being passed along, only the frequency at which it's being passed along - and I don't see the geek set (or any group possessed of greater intellect) setting the breeding bar any time in the near future. Or the far future, for that matter.
The brain might still be evolving (and I'd be highly surprised if humans weren't still evolving) but how exactly does that relate to improved intelligence? It seems to me that the characteristic more likely to be selected wouldn't be intelligence but the ability to successfully interact with individuals and groups, and that doesn't necessarily have anything whatsoever to do with intelligence. And frankly, I think that if it comes down to a choice between these two things better social interaction and communication is far more important to the survival of the species as a whole than brains are any day of the week.
Max
My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
Haha, great. Image those two entries spoken by the Hitchiker's guide's voice.
No. Those things changed what would be regarded as "fitness" in that context but didn't somehow magically suspend evolution.
If nature wouldn't have allowed certain individuals to survive attacks by wild animals, and yet throwing rocks and waving burning sticks at those animals have, their "faulty" genes are allowed to continue past their naturally selected "use by date".
Because there's no need for perfect physical health anymore? Seriously, how long would have Stephen Hawking survived in the - say - fifteenth century? Are you sure that mankind would be better off without him?
Seriously, just because you disagree with the laws of nature about what excatly "fitness" means doesn't make nature's definition wrong and yours right. "Fitness" means adaption to the environment, and the environment has changed, as has "fitness".
Free as in mason.
man i cant beleive they found a 60,000 year old brain to back this up. thats really somthing
Life on Earth has :
r tID=254
Existed in its present form since the dawn of time : 42%
Evolved over time : 48%
Guided by a supremem being : 18%
Guided by natural selection : 26%
Don't know : 4%
Don't know : 10%
http://people-press.org/reports/display.php3?Repo
Results for this survey are based on telephone interviews conducted under the direction of Princeton Survey Research Associates International among a nationwide sample of 2,000 adults, 18 years of age or older, from July 7-17, 2005. For results based on the total sample, one can say with 95% confidence that the error attributable to sampling is plus or minus 2.5 percentage points. For results based on Form 1 (N=1,000) or Form 2 (N=1,000) only, the error attributable to sampling is plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
I know I am going completely off-topic here..
But why is parent given troll ?
Just because we dont believe in his theories, we shouldnt be modding him down..
I also am completely against the whole idea postulated by the parent.. But pushing the idea down is exactly opposite of what any discussion should be.
Adaptation and survival fittest changes human immune system, better nutrition help grow taller....but genes also play a part....it's not like if drinking lots milk...than everybody can grow like Michael Jordan..... Evolution...the theory of it portrays several elements of errors. First, if someone say...yeah human are from monkeys....there is no known intermediate fossil.....maybe ape look alike kinda fossil..but what makes human and apes so distinguish from each other today? Even if mutation occors, there should be several combinations. One such as ape has learning, speaking ability like human and human has ape like behavior. Although several resemblism can be brought together, but there is nothing shows the intermix of the two. Second, most of the mutation that alter gene would only weaken the species of themselves. Fictional spiderman and several others remain fictional. no know facts today that shows mutated animal or human has special dominant gene in today's society....they either lack a leg, an arm or other 'defects' ..... steroid isn't part of natural selection and so called evolution. Environment shapes and culture different genes to be dominant....people live in labor intense world might have better genes for physical...no racism involved...but quite a few African American are very atheletic....although some white male and female are very well build, too....due to individual genes... That is why i propose the error imbeded in the scientific evaluation....along with another article...that shows scientific publication are not necessary 'facts' but they are ideas being formed to speculate the possibilities of their assumption...and thus experiement is conducted. However, one important fact still remains....if you have your hypothesis for the experiment, bias is easily formed,...since we like to have result that match with our hypothesis...which we would use many methods to match that...
just Me.....humble opinion
It's not "survival of the fittest" anymore - it's "reproduction of the fittest". Consider the man who "loves'em and leaves'em" - for a few hundred women a year. Chances are those genes are being reproduced far more than the average man.
Social skills are at least partially genetic, including the ability to predict and manipulate people. These skills are affected by brain structure and chemistry, so to say the brain is an exception to evolution is almost certainly false.
Of *course* there are stupid people breeding. There are still people born with tails too, but you don't consider that to be a trait of a normal human. On the whole, I suspect that truly stupid (not just poor or underprivileged) do not reproduce as much - or if they do their children are also less likely to survive (which is the same thing to the genes). That's how evolution works.
Last post!
I've often wondered if eye sight has started to degrade. In the hunter-gatherer days, surely good eyesight would have been required to provide for your family.
As such i'd imagine that those with excellent eyesight would reproduce more.
However, with corrective lenses, poor eyesight is no longer the hinderance it was, and i'm sure that those with poor eyesight reproduce at the same rate as everyone else.
Just a thought...
Right, but as we all know, about 75% of all statistics are bunk.
Anyway, who cares what people believe? It's what's been proven that counts. There are a lot of facts people tend to refute and ignore because they don't believe it. Simple belief or dis-belief doesn't mean squat. Just because you don't believe something doesn't make it any less true.
The Darwin Awards.
:)
They really still do weed themselves out (just not always the ones *you'd* like).
Quack, quack.
Given how radically the human environment has changed in the last 60k years and how radically the selection pressures have changed, I assume that 'evolution' (an imprecise term at best in context) is still a major and rapid force on the human genome.
On the other hand, the glacial speeds at which 'evolution' works on our gene pool are certainly overwhelmed by the rate at which we are changing and rechanging our environment. Evolution can't change us nearly as fast as we can change ourselves.
My problem was definately about a lack of lactase. I was not planning on going into the disgusting details, but perhaps it'll make my situation clearer.
Lactose has a very distinctive smell. When I couldn't digest milk, it would run straight through me and I'd have to get rid of all the undigested milk. The smell of the lactose was very much evident.
I was not producing lactase. If I took a lactase pill or drank lactose free milk I had no problems.
Eventually I got to the point where I didn't need to do either of those things anymore.
LK
"Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
We don't have the choice whether or not to believe his theories, because he presents his belief as *fact* not *theory*.
Thats why he was modded troll.
You are absolutely right...smart people are not breeding enough in the first world. Birthrates are now below replacement levels in every advanced country, with the US being in the least-bad position. In other nations, such as Japan, the lack of children is becoming a serious political issue. It will eventually be a problem in the US as well.
In order to sustain our population (which seems a reasonable target) we need to have about 2.1 children per woman. In the US, lower class people are doing just about that. It is the top half of the income distribution that is failing to do its duty by replacing itself in the next generation.
I have seen some estimates that we could lose as much as one point of IQ per generation due to differential numbers of children and mother's age at birth - a pretty scary thought if you ask me.
Unless some amazing new technology comes to save the day, in the next few years we are seriously going to have to consider more government manipulation of birthrates, or our society and culture could disappear.
The Origin of Species isn't about evolution. It's about evolution by natural selection. There is a difference. The human species will continue to evolve even if there wasn't natural selection.
As for Stephen Hawking and the like, as I said I am not advocating that social programs be repealed, that we all become Christian Scientists and that we all shun invitro fertilization... I am simply supporting the idea that evolution has, for all intents and purposes, stopped in the human population due to these factors. I don't want to see the day where the "duh, football..." guys are the only ones who can survive, nor am I saying everyone deemed to be developmentally disabled should be clubbed on the head.
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
How many times would I have to flip a quarter and get heads in a row? 100,000,000,000 times? 100,000,000,000,000 times?
The probability of getting N heads in a row is 1/(2^N). But that is irrelevant to the discussion.
It's relevant in that it demonstrates the ignorance of the parent. Even if the probability is vanishingly small, the universe is insanely big, so even vanishingly small probabilities will produce some number of successful cases.
We happen to be familiar with one such successful case, but because were are stuck here with only the ability to observe ourselves, we are unfamiliar with the quadrillions of unsuccessful cases scattered about the universe. There are no people there complaining about their own lack of existence.
interesting argumentation. if many people think something is true, it cannot be wrong. following this reasoning, one could argue that adolf hitler was some kind of god (at least for a while he was).
kjots says: Duh!
they are not sure about anything. all right, there is a higher frequency of occurance of a certain allele and the size of the brain. but i think it's highly speculative - on the verge of stupid even - to correlate this to "smartness", as some here on /. like to do.
/. visitors, although that's an amusing side-effect ;-)
a *lot* of work needs to be done before anyone can make any sense about the actual effect of these mutations on human behaviour. which is of course why this information is being made public - to get some funding. not to feed the overly active imagination of
People that get worked up over evolution "stopping" are showing, quite obviously, that they think the system is perfectly fair. What you are really saying is that poor people are reproducing more, and it bothers you, because you think that wealth is a sign of intelligence. Therefore, if wealthy people reproduce less, we are "dumbing down". I can see a few holes in this premise, one of them being that wealthy people are more intelligent. In fact, I think the fact that the kinds of people who are wealthy are reproducing at a slower rate is a good thing. Capitalism might be selecting for these kinds of people, but at least evolution has enough sense to pass them by. I'm really not so sure I would consider the perfect capitalist is the person who I would want us to evolve into.
In this age of plenty, the best selection traits I can think of are:
1) Ability to predict and manipulate other people;
2) High sex drive;
These two traits in the modern world will almost certainly result in more children, with a high diversity in genes. I certainly don't think that "stupid" people are reproducing more - or if they are, their children are less likely to successfully reproduce.
While both of these may sound negative, the first can actually be very useful in advanced pattern-prediction, and may be highly-related to intelligence. What I don't know is where morality falls into all of this. With the fall of tribalism and the high mobility of modern life, morality may fall by the wayside, as you can subtly screw people for personal gain over without suffering any consequences.
The flipside is that with the current rise in communications and the subsequent loss of worldwide anonymity, we may see some selection for people who are genuinely nice in the coming centuries.
The thing to realize is that we really have no control over this. It's the environment and lifestyle that's providing the biggest pushes in any direction (not eugenics). We have the ability to affect these, but we have *never* used the ability with the intent to drive evolution in any direction.
Last post!
Ever have sex with someone of the opposite gender? Were you attracted to them? For whatever reason? And they you?
Yes?
Congratulations, you just participated in the ongoing process of natural selection. You yourself have applied selective pressure in favor of whatever it was that attracted you to him/her, regardless of what the nature of the attraction was or whether you can even spell it out.
Multiply by six billion and you have the human race... evolving.
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
In that case, your definition of "fitness" is obsolete. In fact, it has been obsolete since humanity started using tools. Had your definition of fitness not become obsolete that long ago, well, we wouldn't be having this discussion on the internet.
I am simply supporting the idea that evolution has, for all intents and purposes, stopped in the human population due to these factors.
No, it has not. First of all, evolution is _slow_ compared to human lifetimes. How can you tell that a process has completely stopped that has time constants in the thousands of years ?
Also, these factors did not stop evolution at all. They merely modified the criteria used in the selection process. A very common fallacy of "critics" of evolution is that the criteria for selection stay the same. If this were the case, well, where are the dinosaurs ? They were wiped off the planet by a change in the selection criteria which they suddenly did not fulfill anymore
time?
You had better ask all those tens of millions that starved just a couple of generations ago, and the hundreds of millions that are still impoverished today.
You can still see the effects of WWII in Japan tody, where I live. People born in that era are far shorter than people younger than them - a clear sign of poor nutrition. Young Japanese are close to the same height as Americans, as far as I can tell.
Also, the Flynn effect seems to be leveling off in advanced countries, which is perfectly consistent with the nutrition model, for reasons you noted.
is that some people have to evolution pointed out to them. I for one will welcome our new Psionic overlords.
BTW closed minded religous type what if evloution is gods own service pack?? Homosapien V12.2beta service 99999999
fixes : Psychic powers option now avaiable
Control module for penis fixed (now remains enabled)
installed error checking to prevent feminist bigatory loop
Spell checker for slashdot posters added
In the not too distant future, next Sunday A.D.
Food allergies can be symptomless if you consume the food all the time. If you go without the food for a while and then start eating it again the allergy reaction happens at full strenngth. After you have been eating the food you're allergy to for a while the allergic reaction dies down and becomes symptomless again.
Milk is very hard to digest and many people are allergic to it.
Imagine a very smart, very horny, very manipulative person.
Now imaging that all of these traits are dominant, so children are likely to be smart, horny, and able to get what they want.
Eventually, these genes will be prevalent in the human race - and could eventually be in every single human being. That's not random, that's very directed, and very selected.
Evolution is not *just* the survival of an individual. It's even not *just* the ability of an individual to reproduce. You can have a society where everyone gets to have sex, but where at least one partner has a certain trait. It doesn't matter that no one is left out, that trait is now a permanent part of the human landscape.
Last post!
Yes, evolution is still going on, and no one wants to take responsibility for what their decisions are doing to distort evolution because to even think about it gets the Church Ladies of Political Correctness pursing their lips and asking "Could it be... HITLER!?!?!?!?"
So the Church Ladies of Political Correctness are dooming the world to a Hell where hypocrites thrive and spread their genes to the point that words become meaningless -- humanity slowly disappearing to be replaced by gibbering humanoid zombies that use words the way insects use pheromones.
Seastead this.
Atheism is not the belief that a god does not exist nor does it require any proof of the non-existence of a god. Atheism is the lack of belief in the existence of a god or gods. A-thiesm means 'without theism' and nothing more. Atheism is not the positive belief "Gods do not exist". Atheism is not the opposite of Theism.
Agnosticism is more of a statement about the limits of human knowledge than a stantement about the existence of a god. Agnosticism is the belief that humans can never have knowledge of the existence or nonexistence of gods. Agnosticism is not a middle ground between theism and atheism. More importantly, agnosticism and atheism are not mutually exclusive. All true agnostics are atheists and so was Bertrand Russell.
In "Is There a God?" Russel writes:
"Many orthodox people speak as though it were the business of sceptics to disprove received dogmas rather than of dogmatists to prove them. This is, of course, a mistake. If I were to suggest that between the Earth and Mars there is a china teapot revolving about the sun in an elliptical orbit, nobody would be able to disprove my assertion provided I were careful to add that the teapot is too small to be revealed even by our most powerful telescopes. But if I were to go on to say that, since my assertion cannot be disproved, it is intolerable presumption on the part of human reason to doubt it, I should rightly be thought to be talking nonsense. If, however, the existence of such a teapot were affirmed in ancient books, taught as the sacred truth every Sunday, and instilled into the minds of children at school, hesitation to believe in its existence would become a mark of eccentricity and entitle the doubter to the attentions of the psychiatrist in an enlightened age or of the Inquisitor in an earlier time.
-- Bertrand Russell, "Is There a God?"
As a scientist you are not required to prove that pink unicorns do not exist. A scientist does not believe in pink unicorns because there is not enough evidence or proof to justify that belief. Scientists that require a higher level of proof for religion than they require for science are making a mistake.
I was told that the Chinese said they would bury me by the Western Lake and build a shrine to my memory. I have some slight regret that this did not happen, as I might have become a god, which would have been very chic for an atheist.
-- Bertrand Russell, The Autobiography of Bertrand Russell (1967-1969)
"So you say that for anyone to have a discussion of evolution they must use your conventions of naming?"
.if you start to misuse or make up words then things get rather silly.
if you shanty use rubber naming conventions , the boat point makes little cobra.
this is bong we have mulling of words , so shark makes harpy
or to translate
if you wish to make a point about science , please use the proper terminology and correct words
It is fine to argue against evolution , but be sure to do from a position of understanding , not misconceptions due to the wording (your understanding of them at least).
Chances are you won't find a good counter theory to evolution(I very much doubt you have a degree in any school of biology , I stand corrected if you do) , but at least it will make sense
The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
So heartwarming that so many "intelligent" people confuse poverty with stupidity.
That's the way of the future, wipe out the poor, except those needed for menial jobs (like taking care of our children while we're busy doing intelligent things).
The funniest posts are those who say things like "let's be realistic" before intelligently debating the merits of endlosing to save our gene pool.
Takes me back to a debate I had with someone who assured me that the jews were destroying themselves by inbreeding.
That from a guy who spoke one single language and had only one degree, while my inbreeding neighbours spoke at least six languages and considered one degree only just above no degree at all.
Mind, some of my neighbours have tried to explain to me that arabs are not people, which goes to show:
Big brains are overrated. By the intelligent *and* the stupid.
I think, therefore I am...I think.
Ironic results in that:
--- More people believe what the ancestral Bible - and their parents - tell them than what the scientific evidence describes.
--- Jesus said "Give up your mother and father..."
It seems to me wholly compatible with Christianity to trust science (our extended senses) to analyze the nature of material reality. Then one can apply faith properly - where uncertainties truly exist.
As an aside, from what I can tell, whenever Jesus says the word "faith" he seems actually to mean "creativity" or the ability to extend analogies.... Just a weird observation of mine.
-- thinkyhead software and media
[quote]
;-)
"intelligent design" is a meticulously planned, focus-group designed, carefully executed fraud.
It is created only to deceive. It's intended purpose is not to explain anything, but only to diminish the public credibility of any real scientific explanatory model of life or the origin of our world.
[/quote]
OK, broadly the same could be said about religion in general and most political statements.
But that doesn't mean people don't BELIEVE it.
My sister just can't believe we're somehow sharing traits with apes, while to me that's maybe our most redeeming quality
I think, therefore I am...I think.
Why should KY be excluded ? Lubrication is built into humans and has been for ever. Those who need assistance in this matter either pick the wrong orifice (naughty naughty) or, by your own terms, aren't fit to reproduce.
May contain traces of nut.
Made from the freshest electrons.
Thank you for replying so well; otherwise, I would've had to have done it.
--Agnostic atheist
Waiiii!!!!!! I have bad karma!
I no taht Intel-igent Desine is betta. And its true to. Its a fact. Not like you're evolution theory. And us christian's people are celverer than you, becaus we have comma sense. And your alway hating us and sayin were dum. ;)
Now, with that out of the way... look at another post I made here:
My definition of "fitness" is the ability to procreate without the help of technology - medical or otherwise (KY is, of course excluded). If you can't do that yourself, or could not have lived to an age to do that yourself, yes I believe you're a detriment to the gene pool (Darwin-isticially speaking). And yes, when nearly everyone who chooses to procreate can, evolution has been "magically suspend[ed]" (again IMHO).
As for Stephen Hawking and the like [or the poor in your case composer777], as I said I am not advocating that social programs be repealed, that we all become Christian Scientists and that we all shun invitro fertilization... I am simply supporting the idea that evolution has, for all intents and purposes, stopped in the human population due to these factors. I don't want to see the day where the "duh, football..." guys are the only ones who can survive, nor am I saying everyone deemed to be developmentally disabled [or the poor, composer777] should be clubbed on the head.
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
With the BugMeNot FireFox extension: http://www.bugmenot.com/ It rocks.
2) Yes, evolution is slow. But in the Darwin definition of evolution by natural selection, when nearly 100% of the population that *choose* to procreate can and do, I find it hard to see how evolution by natural selection is still functioning on a level higher then "ever so slightly" (Disclaimer: At anything 100% it very much still is functioning, if ever so slightly, so in that way you have a point there, but 0.10322% functionality is hardly anything to get all hot and bothered about).
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
I'm truly not trolling here... but how does evolution proceed without natural selection? This computer nerd with only the min required number of Bio. classes can't see how it can (while fully realizing his limitation of knowledge in the matter)?
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
That does in itself not exclude the theory of the good/bad bacteriae. Yoghurt bacteriae transform lactose into lactic acid (see wikipedia.
I doubt though that eating yoghurt will help someone who's lactose intolerant to digest normal milk. Most bacteriae won't make it through the acidity of the stomach (except if you ingest those special yoghurts with acid-tolerant bacteriae) and even then they would need several hours to convert the lactose. (Yoghurt preparation takes 6 hours at 43 C (110 F)).
Avantslash: low-bandwidth mobile slashdot.
Ummm... so right are granted by genes now then? Rights granted by mixes of chemicals inside a helix molecule inside your cells... a 'different' viewpoint to say the least. DNA as God, and proteins as Angels carrying out his holy mission.
There is no such thing as a fundamental right, only superficial ones granted by society, and they are really just priveledges with a bit more weight behind them.
You are correct , he shouldn't be modded troll . he should be marked as flamebait.
If he does believe it , then stating it here in such a way as to attempt to ridicule evolution is bound to cause an argument here.
Even people that believe in Creationism as a science must know that
The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
Look at his recent posting history. He is a troll.
intelligence and income. What are you talking about?
Do you want to raise taxes by 5% (of your total income, for life) to pay for this? If you want teachers to have the same amount of education as doctors, you will have to pay them accordingly.
All that, and there is little evidence that dumping more money in schools makes much of a difference in the first place.
As someone who has sat through a number of teacher education courses, I can't possibly imagine what years of enduring such BS would accomplish except to drive almost every teacher out of the profession before they taught anyone anything.
I say it was the Flying Spaghetti Monster and my religious faith is just as valid as yours!
One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
The tools that allow individuals to actually get that far along the way of reproduction.
Fire. Helps to avoid freezing off important parts during cold winter nights. Also helps to keep your offspring from freezing solid during those nights, and helps to keeps the tigers away that want to snack on you, your partner and your offspring.
Clothing. See above. Can also help to influence potential mating partner's preference towards the wearer.
Jewelry/other adornments. See latter point of clothing.
Weapons. See the part about tigers above. Also help to impress potential partners, keep rivals away and provide food to you, your partner and your offspring.
Blankets. Ever tried to have sex outside during the cold season without one ?
Houses. Better version of blankets for that purpose.
Reducing "fitness" to the short time from intercourse to conception is quite shortsighted (to the point of blindness). Whoever can reproduce and ensure the survival of the offspring is "fit". Regardless of the tools used in the process. If someone can't do this even with currently available tools, well, in that case they should come up with better tool or they'll end up "unfit".
Is there not a major assumption being made here - that smart people are wealthier than poor people?
I think of myself as pretty smart, but I know a lot of dumb people who earn more than I do. Wealth (and by implication survival in the modern world - although that is another questionable assumption) is far more a matter of luck and inheritance (wealth or status, not genes) than intelligence.
In fact, I suspect that there are far more important qualities, relating to the ability to focus on specific activities or goals that are relevant to an individuals wealth generating ability.
In any event, I would completely reject your implication that we kill off the poor because they are polluting the human gene pool. Your argument is based on false assumptions, could itself potentially remove useful variety from the gene pool, and goes against every compassionate human instinct I possess.
I don't like it.
Sorry.
At this point, I think we should invoke Godwin's law , and shut up.
- These are small, *those* are _far away_
I agree. This whole civilization thing is way overrated. The mere concept of helping each other for no immediate personal profit reeks of communism. Let's abolish all of this crap and adopt an efficient win-or-die model. Well, the wolves have been doing this for eons, and they are obviously a much better evolutionary success than us humans.
Look, what you wrote is wrong on so many ways... Factually, morally, economically, you name it. People like you consider that misery is a feature of the system rather than a bug. You have wilfully renounced what has always driven human development.
You, sir, are evil.
It would be nice to be sure of anything the way some people are of everything.
Maybe what we are looking at is two different survival strategies between the rich and poor. It is a fair assumption that in the USA at least, the poor have a greater reproductive rate than the more affluent members of society. The affluent have based their survival strategy upon insulating themselves from environmental affects (the people most likely to have escaped Katrina were those who could afford to) that threaten them, and therefore can chose to select their mates based upon more selective criteria: looks, fitness, a propensity within a family to be able to accumulate wealth. The human race will benefit from this together for as long as there is "crossovers" from one gene pool to the other, as can happen frequently in this country (the actual frequency of the poor becoming rich is debatable, but it DOES happen) so that useful adaptations are itroduced back and forth between the two classes. It is even conceivable that the human species could eventually (millions of years, forget I said this, it's pure speculation) cease to breed between the haves and have nots, and become two seperate species in some kind of scene from H.G. Wells. Th fact that the poor seem to reproduce more effectively than the rich (even assuming that there IS a corrolation between wealth and intelligence) does not mean that evolution has been undermined though, it simply means that we cannot see into the future enough to know what selective pressures the environment will favor next.
Rather than killing the idiots off, how about we get government intervention then? Shock troops leaping through the window whenever a jock traumatizes some nerd by shoving them in the locker. Tax credits for your daughter taking a nerd to the prom instead of the football hero (exceptions of course being made in cases where the football players aren't just jocks), and so on ;)
The cool thing [about] Intelligent Design is we know God made us.
How do "we" know that? Oh yes, through the auspices of a poorly translated book that was admittedly written by men. Well that settles it.
Think about how the world was made. Science has a theory called "Big Bang". It is a theory which states that in the start the mass was so dense, it exploded and everything flew away randomly, making stars and planets, and life.
For any people who know statistics, what is the probability of that happening?
1. Physics/evolution: The universe spontaneously (in our current understanding) pops into being, with quarks agglomerating into fundamental particles agglomerating into atoms agglomerating into molecules agglomerating into untold numbers of astronomical structures, with an incredibly tiny fraction experiencing conditions that (theoretically) cause molecules to agglomerate into simple life forms that develop into more complex life, etc.
2. Creationism/ID: An omnipotent and omniscient god (according to the Bible) or unspecified smarter-than-us-type (according to ID) pops into being (strangely, both positions neglect this detail) and causes the universe to pop into being (see point 1 above if you Catholic, peruse the begats if you're a fundamentalist). If you claim that ID does not require a "God", refer back to point 1 but do a lot of hand waving so that nobody realizes that you have failed to postulate an origin to the universe.
The point: Excuse me, but I'm terribly confused -- Which is the more unlikely event?
God made life. It is called a soul.
If that is the case, then what made God? What is a soul? Where is the reproducible physical evidence that souls exist? Why has the church (pick your favorite) failed to fund the superconducting super soul collider to investigate and prove the existence of the mysterious Higgs soulson?
More to the point, how can natural selection occur without a selection pressure?
The fact is, there are still selection pressures, but they're social rather than physical. Virtually everyone can survive, and with modern technology is capable of reproduction, but not everyone does. What's selected depends largely on what characteristics people look for in potential mates. Note that there's a big difference between "who I'd want to have sex with" and "who I'd want to have my children", which has come about due to the prevalence of contraceptives.
Being a Slashdotter, of course, that last sentence is largely hypothetical.
I leave the rest to the sociologists - there's a lot of research on this, which I'm barely familiar with, but I don't think it's quite as bleak as it might seem.
What good is evolution if I'm not privy to the next generation's upgrades?
Now I know how a 386 feels.
*cry*
Yee-argh, Jim lad. Let's us be tackling that old global warming by dressing up as pirates before splicing the mainbrace and giving the cap'n's favourite cabin-boy a lick of the cat!
Yee-argh I say again, and I might venture, a yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum, me old shipmates!
Is there not a major assumption being made here - that smart people are wealthier than poor people? The correlation between intelligence and wealth is very high. Of course, humans consist of too many variables for the correlation to be perfect. "Wealth (and by implication survival in the modern world - although that is another questionable assumption) is far more a matter of luck and inheritance (wealth or status, not genes) than intelligence." 90% of millionaires are self-made and earned the money. Luck has little to do with it. Even in the cases of inheritance, which are rare, you would still find a correlation between wealth and intellgence, because whomever they inherited from was likely to be intelligent and also likely to be related. In fact, I suspect that there are far more important qualities, relating to the ability to focus on specific activities or goals that are relevant to an individuals wealth generating ability. No doubt there are other abilities, but I don't think any of them matter as much as intelligence. Most jobs with good salaries nowadays require a good mind, not a pretty face or a strong back. In any event, I would completely reject your implication that we kill off the poor because they are polluting the human gene pool. I never said that. I specifically said that the lower classes are reproducing at approximately the rate consistent with zero population growth, which is fine. It is rich/educated/intelligent people who are not having enough children to replace themselves. We need polices that encourage them to have children, not policies that punish the poor for doing so. One idea that I like is to tie your Social Security payments to the productivity of your children. If half of your paycheck came directly from your kids (and from the kids' perspective, half your payment went to your parents), there would be much more incentive to middle and upper class families to have children, and much less dead-weight economic loss.
With this angle of argument, you could probably get me to concede that insulin for a severe diabetic that otherwise would not have survived into adulthood is a logical extension of the cave man using fire to be able to live 2 hills over (just because 1 tool is "more complicated" then another doesn't change the fact that they are both tools). But the fact remains, in that case that individual is able to pass along his/her traits of severe diabetes which is not a desirable trait to carry. 'Cause should that particular "tool" (insulin) become unavailable for even a short amount of time... Darwin gets ya and your offspring should they carry the same trait. And that, in my opinion is a "weakness" of that individual, genetically speaking.
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
Only superficially. Ultimately, science is about questioning and religion is about dogma (or "faith" if you prefer) and in the final analysis that means they are totally opposed to each other.
A nice lie like Chirstianity is still a lie; we're better off not knowing than living with that.
TWW
"Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
you forget that technology and civilization has all but removed natures influence on mankind. The orginal "intent" or reason for selection was to select for DNA that deals with nature efficiently. Alas, nowadays, no one needs a hide to survive cold winters. No one needs the kind of physical prowness to hunt and kill game with almost bare hands. The shaping influences to man, and the challenges he faces come from society nowadays. It follows that evolution selects for adaption to society and civilization.
Also, the inability to reproduce wouldn't be selected against if reproduction wasn't necessary for selection to occure in the first place. On survival or any other function of life, it absolutely has no impact. Thus artificial reproduction doesn't dump down the gene pool at all.
___
No power in the 'verse can stop me
I'm always amazed at the apparent self confidence in people who make comments such as this. So the gene pool is being contaminated by the genes of people who shouldn't reproduce. Guess what? we've been doing this for a long time. Most people writing on slashdot should not be alive. Do you think that weakling dweebs were the great survivors of the long hunter-gatherer stage? Perhaps that is why young fertile women are drawn to geeks, they have evolved to recognize the superior male. Do any of you wear glasses? You should be dead or do you think there wear short-sighted people avoiding predators, hunting and combating rival tribes during most of Homo history.
Sorry if this sounds like a personal attack, it actually isn't. Most of us would not have survived the childhood diseases that we currently vaccinate against. We have evolved to help each other. This has led to many, many changes in our genetic composition to the point were we are the top predator and most adaptable organism. The price we pay is a slightly higher load of deleterious alleles that we are mostly able to handle. Overall a genetic bargain because we have out competed every organism that only relies on Selection whereas humans sidestep it.
My definition of "fitness" is the ability to procreate without the help of technology -
This is wrong. Think about it, selection serves the 'purpose' of creating organisms best suited to the enviroment that challenges them. In no way has fitness any relation to procreation. It's just a correlation that fucking more used to equal being successfully adapted (enough food a) for the fucking and b) for keeping the kids alive). In the natural state, it just happens that the ability to procreate is a prequesite to having your genes selected for. At this point, the fitness of those genes meaning the prowness to survive in a given enviroment doesn't even enter in the equation.
As an krass example: Take human A, living in a culture that prohibts birth control, who is also a lousy farmer. Loaded with testerstron, he soon has 10 kids. Because he sucks so bad at farming one year his harvest failes. His family dies from starvation, because he also is'nt a savy saver. Human B is a sucessful farmer. He has little sexdrive and thus only has one kid. His harvests never fail, and if they do, he'd have saved enough to bring his family through the rough times.
It's obvious what just has been selected for: The ability to keep the family alive. B is an evolutionary success story because he was skilled and utilized long term planning not because he was able to out-procreate someone else.
___
No power in the 'verse can stop me
Evolution nothing but a theory?
Well, thats an accurate statement.
But it doesn't mean that Intelligent Design is more, or even equally, credible. There is solid evidence for evolution. While very little of it has been directly observed, there is a great deal of fossil remnants of various life forms that shows development over time, giving a strong, and direct suggestion that they evolved.
There is, well, no evedentiary support for Intelligent Design apart from the fact that things exist in the first place. People who say things are too complex- I can see their point. You aren't going to get a few chemicals to mix and out pops Homo Sapiens. But they forget- this took place over billions of years. Things that are far too complex to happen in an observable time frame can be very likely to occur over a longer time frame. I've heard this said of New York City, its a similar(though not identical) concept "Million to one chances happen 11 times a day in a city of 11 million". Basically, if you have a large enough sample size, incredibly unlikely things will inevitably occur. Of course, if you go with a purely literal interpretation of the Bible, there wouldn't be time for this. While I'll grant that as a legitimate belief to hold, cloaking it as a science is just total bullshit.
Note that this does not rule out God having a role, if you accept large parts of the Bible as allegorical. Which you really should anyways. The parables of Jesus were allegorical after all, that much is crystal clear even from a literal reading of the Bible. Considering that, where the Son of God used allegory to explain spiritual truths, why is it so out of line to think that the previous Prophets, and God the Father would not have used allegory? Presumably the people in Jesus time would be even *more* likely to understand a more direct way of stating things, so
Furthermore, look over the Genesis story again. Note how each step incrementally brought the world to the current stage where humans were dominant. Hmmmm... That sounds somewhat like evolution to me. More allegory? I think so. Also keep in mind that the Sun wasn't created until the second "day"- how could these days be meant literally, when the thing that defines a day didn't even exist when they were first counted as such?
Intelligent Design as it is pushed in the media is only supportable by a literal reading of Genesis, and the precedent in other sections(supposedly more important sections such as the Gospels), and simple common sense, suggest that it was meant as allegory. Allegory does *not* diminish the spiritual truths behind it. How many times have you found great wisdom in a science fiction story, or even a bit of wisdom humorously expressed in The Far Side? Does the truth of what you found change because the source was not literally factual? NO.
Maybe. In the context of "selection", to me that's anything not caused by FSMs, IPUs or similar entities. Evolution does not really care about the origin of the selection, though, just that the selection exists.
But the fact remains, in that case that individual is able to pass along his/her traits of severe diabetes which is not a desirable trait to carry. 'Cause should that particular "tool" (insulin) become unavailable for even a short amount of time... Darwin gets ya and your offspring should they carry the same trait. And that, in my opinion is a "weakness" of that individual, genetically speaking.
That is one of the problems with evolution - it has a long memory, but close to zero foresight.
And while dependence on certain substances or tools might look undesirable, look at how many of those dependencies humans already have: a certain range of gravity, pressure, oxygen, a certain temperature range, suitable food, etc. Darwin will get ya if you suddenly take any of those away, too. Happened to the dinosaurs.
From where I'm standing it looks like stupid people are reproducing far more than intelligent people (e.g. the stupid people who listen to the pope about contraception!), so if anything were devolving.
thank God the internet isn't a human right.
Actually, hypotheses and theories are quite disconnected, as are theories and laws.
A hypothesis is a testable prediction. A theory is a hypothesis-generating model. A law is a mathematical description.
For example:
Hypothesis: If I throw an object X with a force of Y at a vector of Z, it will land at point Q.
Theory: Gravity is caused by the warping of space by mass
Law: F=G*(m1*m2/r^2)
Note that even with dramatic changes to the _theory_ of gravity, the Law is relatively stable -- it is simply a mathematical description.
Thus, creationists and evolutionists are both wrong when one says "evolution is just a theory, it's basically a guess" and the other says "evolution is a proven fact, just like the 'theory of gravity'". Theories are merely hypothesis-producing mechanisms, and are judged by their usefulness of producing testable hypotheses.
Engineering and the Ultimate
I was waiting for someone to make this allusion...
"I wouldn't even call it a conjecture. It's apologetics, almost certainly conceived and propagated dishonestly."
Who in the ID community is being dishonest?
"It's possible that someone could offer "intelligent design" as a conjectural explanation for some poorly understood phenomenon"
Actually, most people offer up "intelligent design" for well-understood phenomena. Would you say that the works of Mozart are not intelligently designed? Or perhaps that the Apache server was not intelligently designed? ID simply says that we can analyze design mathematically, and use the results of that to determine if a given physical system is likely the result of an intelligent agent. In fact, this process is already implicit in Archaeology and in SETI. It's just that biologists don't like it being applied to their neck of the woods.
"They're trying to convince the courts that creationists have sound scientific reasons for their beliefs."
This is incorrect. ID does not want either ID or creationism taught in science classes. In fact, most creationist organizations don't want creationism as a mandatory topic. And all groups I am aware of agree that evolution should be fully taught to students.
Engineering and the Ultimate
Id believe devolving.. based on the random thoughtless acts fueled by lack of common sense I see on a daily basis.... Computers might be evolving... perhaps human looking machines may be an evolution... judgement day is right around the corner.
Right? I mean, they kept telling us that that it cause "chromosone damage" - then they quit talking aobut that suddenly. Now it's just illegal. Like human cloning. Huh.
In any case, we're a couple generations out, now, from that first generation whose parents "tripped", and the tracking of those "Firestarter" kids is *still* a 'black proect' that nobody wants to talk about. Mutants are a reality - it just remains to define the mutations.
"The Internet is made of cats."
So, I didn't know they had 60,000 year old genes to compare with modern. Obviously, they find what they expect to find...
Ad Astra Per Asper
The thing that hampers evolution is the defining the age for the universe at 13.7 billion years old. http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/map_discover y_030211.html
All the sudden you do not have enough time for certain astronomical things to happen like white dwarfs, black holes, and what not. http://www.wheatonma.edu/Academic/AcademicDept/Ast ronomy/TBarker120/Feb14/ClassNotes.html
When our sun is having it's beginning around 10.3 billion years ago and the needed cycles to produce heavy elements to form planets like the Earth, evolution and Big Bang as people have postulated them, do not have enough time. You can clearly start to argue that things like intelligent life further along than us probably is false due to a time factor, not to mention the earth should not be possible because you have not had enough stars go supernova to create all the heavier elements required.
I remember growing up and people postulating that the universe was trillion of years old, like 2.4 trillion. We see that this was false, but that amount of time is necessary for Big Bang and evolution to work as postulated. The question is what is really true and what is the cosmology make-up? Evolution is not possible because the Earth should not exist, yet it does. I like how people love Einstein but seem to forget the words of wisdom he had.
I eat Karma for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. That's why I don't have any.
"God made life. It is called a soul.
And the tooth fairy and santa claus exist too. Except that we stop believing in them as we realise what a crock they are. Some don't do the sam with these god myths though."
The difference is that material processes do not even have the potential to explain life and consciousness as we experience it. The best that neuroscience has ever been able to do is discover corrolaries of consciousness. But the gap between the event of consciousness and it having brain correlations is huge.
No amount of mechanical processes cause a machine to snap from being without consciousness to being with consciousness. Consciousness and subjectivity are simply outside the realm of material processes, and no amount of yammering from the metaphysically confused (like Dawkins) changes that fact.
In addition, if material processes could explain all of the universe, it would completely undermine reason. Let's say that person A is a lifelong republican. And person A then goes and says, "George Bush is a great guy". Most democrats would say that person A is not speaking from reason, but says that only because he is a Republican. What they are saying is that he is influenced by outside events, which prevent him from being rational. However, in the materialist view, ALL events are outside, deterministic or chance, events. Therefore, all reason, including the reasoning that says that all things are the result of material processes, is not reasonable but instead imposed on the subject from the outside.
Engineering and the Ultimate
Regardless of what they might spew in DARE classes...
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Remember "News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters"? Help make it a reality again! http://soylentnews.org
Evolution is a progession, not a reaction!
How many times do I have to say this before you people get it?
It is our best interest as a species to keep as large genetic toolkit (diversity in the gene pool) as possible. Civilization helps us hold to that diversity by allowing as many people as possible to reproduce.
You see it as somehow halting our progression to that perfect being but let me clue you in: there is no perfect being. A being can be perfectly suited to its conditions, but then it is dangerously tied to those conditions. If a being has evolved too much and its environmental conditions change then it has no way to adapt quickly enough to survive.
Additionally, as a species we need all the diversity we can get. Our gene pool is incredibly small compared to other primates (a strong indicator that we came from a very small population), so while we aren't exactly Dodo-like, we aren't as far off as we like to think.
Let me reiterate, slowly.
Environments change. Evolution is the process through which a species changes to adapt to new environments. Evolution needs genetic diversity to function well. So greater diversity makes a stronger species.
We don't know what genes will play a vital role in our species' survival.
Read about the link between sickle-cell anemia and malaria if you don't think that a "bad" gene can have good effects in the right conditions.
but the correlation between intelligence and wealth is around .7. The correlation between parents' and a child's intelligence is about the same. Therefore, you should see a quite robust correlation between the wealth and intelligence - even before you consider the positive effects on learning that a good family would typically provide.
Is there not a major assumption being made here - that smart people are wealthier than poor people?
I think of myself as pretty smart, but I know a lot of dumb people who earn more than I do. Wealth (and by implication survival in the modern world - although that is another questionable assumption) is far more a matter of luck and inheritance (wealth or status, not genes) than intelligence.
While there will always be deviation from the average, the fact remains that, on average, smart people make more money than poor people. If you look at the many studies that have been done on this, you'll see that IQ closely correlates to wealth.
Bringup up a deviation and saying that it disproves the general trend is ignorant. It's just like with people with college degrees- sure, you have some self-made men like Bill Gates who make more money than most college degree holders. But the fact remains that on average, a college degree holder makes more money than someone who doesn't have a degree.
We're talking genetics here, so it's the averages on the long run that matter.
And bringing up Godwin's law was senseless. Nobody mentioned Nazi's. That was just a thinly-veiled attempt to do so. You wanted to bring it up but you didn't want to look like a fool.
I already posted to this thread or I would. Horseshoe crabs were the first thing I thought of as well. I've seen statements that the horseshoe crab has hardly changed in over 200 million years -- I guess evolution gets it right sometimes.
The same gene for digesting milk makes you high from caffeine. The proff is the success of Starbucks, and those drive-through Espresso stands that are starting to show up in California now, many years after they appeared in Seattle. This just proves that people in California take more time to think about things, or maybe we're just "slow"? How come, if we needed caffeine more, we got it later?
Software freedom...I love it!
I think we have been making a wrong assumption here all this time. Who said evoluntionary intelligence has anything to do with performing well in IQ tests? Maybe Mother Nature or God just don't like highly cerebral humans. Why?
Firstly, just as they are capable of great benefits to society, they are also capable of great harm, like intelligent criminals? Secondly, smart people can vastly impact the eco-system and not always for the best, how about short-sighted scientists? Lastly, maybe folks with lower IQ can relate better to others, empathize with the masses....becoz they in the majority! So they are easier to get along....same frequency perhaps.
So the next time, someone praised you for being intelligent and well-off....just bear these in mind.....seriously, it may not be a good thing in my not-so-honorable opinion ;P
Reality is what we taste, smell, see, hear and touch yet we cannot comprehend it...only approximate it.
If we lived in societies where the amount of money you had was related to intelligence then maybe you'd have a point but unfortunately we don't.
We do.
Wealth is definitely related to intelligence. There have been many studies stating that obvious fact. Just do a search and take a look at them for yourself.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
If everyone had a few common ancestors from what is now Ethiopia like the discovery channel would have me believe - going from there to now (with noticiably different black, white, asian, and aboraginals etc..) is it not pretty clear we have diverged greatly into different species?
Unless I'm to believe, not only did we have a few common ancestors but one looked asian, one looked 'euro-white', another black etc... That is just too far fetched.
Is it the work species that is in confusion? When observed dogs that are quite varried in size, proportions, and coloring we call them different breeds -why not so with people? Not saying one is better than the other but a African Pygmy and a Pacific Samoian are pretty unmistakably different.
Hey there mutant girl, why don't you come lay down over here so we can make us some evolution.
The US tax code reqrds those who breed by giving them tax credits. It's welfare in the tax code.
Blar.
These things made society what it is and made the idea of society sustainable
Implying that social contracts (such as: "I won't steal your stuff - or wife - if you don't steal mine" etc) are reinforced by various religious documents and tenets is one thing. Suggesting that a collection of idealized histories and fables that reinforce those social concepts is somehow informing you about evolution (see the previous post), is still incorrect. Developing a viable culture is not the same as evolving the meat computer that's first needed as a platform. All sorts of animals have simplified cultures, and we've got a particularly good brain for that sort of thing. The Bible is not a resource for people who want to understand the evolutionary mechanisms that support speciation, adaptation of populations, and the like. Rather, things like the Noah myth fly completely in the face of any rational take on natural history, and those that take it literally are willingly stepping away from anything like a rational view of the world around them. From that deliberate embrace of an irrational world view comes just about everything that's been wrong with human affairs for the last several thousand years. The early folks have an excuse: no practical science to show them how things actually work. There's no excuse today for believing that Santa really does bring presents, or that God (again, with the sense of humor!) plants fake dinosaur bones just to see how far he can push the true believers into not believing their own eyes.
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
I'm disturbed by the number of otherwise intelligent atheist evolutionists that are falling for creationist trolls. You're all biting it hook, line, and sinker. Even the mods.
Maybe we are thinking about it the wrong way.
Ever notice in an anthill, only a small percentage of the bees actually reproduce. They have workers and fighters, who live only to produce something for the rest of the hive, such that it may survive.
Maybe nerds are a periodic anomoly that has always appeared throughout history. Maybe we are here to spur innovation and advance our culture, so that the other 70% of society can veg out and reproduce.
Damn, that sucks.
This is incorrect. ID does not want either ID or creationism taught in science classes.
The whole purpose of creatonism (and its newest incarnation ID) is to get their god concept regarded as an equivalent or even superior scientific theory. That is why almost 100% of all Creationists and ID proponents are religious and almost all of them happen to be Christians. There is not a single scientific field, including theology, with such a dominance of one specific religion.
see a Text Widget
Nokilli, thank you for making this discernment with an excellent example.
RAmen.
If you look at it, religion is little more than a cult gone out of control. Christianity is centered around (and named after) a single charismatic and egomaniac leader who passed away 2000 years ago. No matter how watered down it is, it's still a personality-cult at its core.
I find that scary... but maybe I don't have the right genes to "get" this stuff.
see a Text Widget
Of course with that, you must define what a "flaw" is. I submit that any genetic predisposition that would serve to limit your procreation, either via shear inability or by a lack of reaching maturity is a "flaw" (let's say diabetes, just as an example). Now... in today's "environment" (that is, the environment that we create for ourselves, which includes Merck, Pfizer, etc) diabetes is not an issue. But place said person in say, New Orleans (either last week or 100 years ago - "environments change" as you said). Said genetic propensity becomes a major liability, as Merck, Pfizer and their ilk are no longer present in your "environment" (as you put it - the individual is "dangerously tied to those conditions"). Call me crazy, but I view that as a "genetic weakness". But you are right... some "flaws" turn out to be advantages in some cases. But how is it in our best interest to keep something in our "genetic toolkit" that nature itself is trying to get rid of by limiting the individuals procreation? Just because we can play god doesn't mean we should, or even have the right to. And yet in many ways that is exactly what we do.
As for evolution being a progression rather then a reaction, I call bullshit. Evolution in the Darwinian sense is via natural selection - a *reaction* to your environment. You can't run faster then your predator? You're dead. You can't see the color red very well and another predator is mostly red, you're dead. You can't tolerate the bacteria in the only source of water, you're dead. Reaction to the environment around you. Just like the predator who became a faster runner (or red) to catch yo ass.
I suppose that we are "progressing" now, in so far as there are no "environmental" influences on our choices. And by "environmental" I mean the natural environment (faster predators, etc), not the man made one (Pfizer, socioeconomic, etc). Anyone who wants to procreate pretty much can. Sure, we can't all rail Scarlet Johansen or Natalie Portman (or get knocked up by Brad Pitt for the lady in the audience, you know there's at least 1 on /.!!). But we manage, despite diabetes, traditional infertility and the like. But sink your ass in the middle of an "environment" without Pfizer, invitro fertilization, etc and your genetic line is in serious trouble. So who is the better determiner of the "best" traits? Nature or Pfizer? Sorry, but I pick nature, and I guess that makes me "blind" thinking that the thing that has brought us this far is not better suited then ourselves to determine our genetic direction.
Silly me.
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
BTW, WTF is FSMs and IPUs? (and yes, I exploited the irony).
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
I've seen lots of comments on this thread about how traits are selected because they increase survivability, or they increase a person's ability to procreate, blah, blah, blah.
What I haven't seen is anyone stating the mechanism by which this happens. Evolution isn't some driving force. Evolution is simply a result. Evolution is simply a pattern - a way to explain what we see - that traits are statistically more or less common in species in given geographic areas.
The question is Why? Can one seriously argue that lactose tolerance (or intolerance) increases survival of humans in areas that produce (or don't produce) bovine milk? Probabily not. It is, I believe a mathmatical fallacy to suggest that statistics provide answers. Statistics simply are summary of data that, due to their curiosity, cause people to ask questions (and rightly so).
The argument that the welfare state, or high sex drive, or intelligence has been selected would seem to also be silly, until related events can be correlated against them.
If an Atlantic tsunami wipes out the entire East Coast, there will be an associated reduction in traits that were concentrated there. In addition, beings digging through the fossils ten thousand years from now might be inclined to draw some conclusion based on the stark differences in numbers of fossils with various traits (uh, smart people don't live in coastal areas), when no such conclusion may be warranted.
In an evolutionary sense, did the people who live in the interior have some sort of advantage based on their genetics? Maybe. Maybe we're just lucky in ten thousand years we'll know for sure.
However what we WILL find is that of the people that live on the coast and survive the tsunami, there will be a statistically higher concentration of certain traits, that might have enabled them to survive. Their genes will survive. The others won't.
Oh, and just so we don't have a repeat of the hand-wringing that we're having over NOLA, I would like to serve notice right now: There WILL be a tsunami that causes devestation to the East Coast. Yet I don't see a mass exodus out of there. Why is that? Maybe people in the interior are smarter after all.
Friends help you move. Real friends help you move bodies.
Never forget: 2 + 2 = 5 for extremely large values of 2.
Only in Soviet Russia...
The scary part is how important that belief is. Hell, I'll believe anything on a good day, but for instance training young people not to believe in human accomplishments because it doesn't conform with religious "fact", that's scary. And perverse...
I think, therefore I am...I think.
Ok, here's another case in point - angora rabbits. They are so overly inbred that approx. half are infertile. They are even incapable of surviving outside of captivity (as they have to be shaved every 3 months, else they overheat and die). Now this is an apples and oranges comparison, but I believe this also works in the reverse. When you focus genetics to express certain traits, weaknesses are exposed. So what happens when you "allow" weaknesses to continue in the gene pool in direct opposition to what nature is trying to do (in this case, weed them out by stopping the genetic line)? At some point I believe you'll end up with more holes then cheese.
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
No, there is no "Mother Nature" who shuns nerds, other than as a methaphor. If you reproduce faster, evolution favors you, if not not. That's it. There is noone (other than maybe your potential gf/bf) going "ooh, this guy might do eco damage, let's not let him reproduce."
;P" But that hasn't always been the case.
In fact, au contraire, the humans which _did_ reproduce are those who survived the ice age by causing thousands of species, mamoths included, to go extinct. If there is a "Mother Nature", it actually favoured the most ruthless and destructive bastards back then.
But that's the whole point: "back then." Selection factors existed that just don't exist any more. I'm not blaming it on socialism or anything. It's just the very same economic factors that allow us to live better than our ancestors, that also allow people to survive that wouldn't have some 5000 years ago.
Life used to be harsh and challenging, and oportunities to die were aplenty. Being smart enough to avoid them was a very clear advantage. I don't necessarily mean "smart" in the "nerd studying ancient scrolls" way (and definitely not as in strictly the IQ number), but even simply smart enough to figure out a good hiding place when bandits raided your village, or whatever.
Being smart or dumb also greatly affected your chances to move up or down the social pyramid. E.g., if you tried being a trader, knowing some maths and the ability to learn new languages could make all the difference in the world between bankruptcy and one day even buying a nobility title. (There's a reason why it was the phoenicians that invented the alphabet: they needed to transcribe stuff in all languages of the people they did business with.) E.g., being able and ambitious enough to learn the Egyptian or Chinese symbols, almost automatically granted you a much safer and easier life as a scribe.
These moves between social strata were a lot more meaningful back then. E.g., moving from peasant to scribe actually made a difference in your chances of survival. The next time a drought hit, you would no longer be among those that starved to death. E.g., being a _successful_ mechant almost doubled your life expectancy.
Now however, we're at the point where being a heart surgeon, sure, gives you more money and luxuries, but you don't risk starving to death as a janitor either. See his neighbour.
Now I'm not saying it's a bad thing. I very much like having today's luxuries instead of the harsh natural selection that was the norm 1000 years ago. And I certainly don't wish anyone to starve to death or have any other of the misfortunes that were the norm back then. I'm just saying that a change _did_ happen, and a very real selection factor _did_ disappear.
So, yes, nowadays with the guaranteed survival of everyone, and the broken culture it spawned where learning anything or showing any signs of intelligence is uncool, you're right: "So the next time, someone praised you for being intelligent and well-off....just bear these in mind.....seriously, it may not be a good thing in my not-so-honorable opinion
A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
I'd say that as long as we still have wars fought over religion... we have quite a way to go in the brain evolution process.
Maybe Darwin and Dawkins are right!?
The new D&D = Darwin and Dawkins
Christian researchers corrected:
"Researchers Say Human Brain is Still being intelligently designed."
So you're not a bible belt christian, but a hindu?
Very confusing, keeping up with religious people.
I think, therefore I am...I think.
But I "...forget that technology and civilization has all but removed natures influence on mankind. The orginal "intent" or reason for selection was to select for DNA that deals with nature efficiently. Alas, nowadays, no one needs..." a heart that pumps blood! Oh, wait...
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
evolution is _slow_ compared to human lifetimes
This should be clarified that human evolution is slow compared to human lifetimes. Many bacteria and single celled organisms are observed to evolve in a course of hours.
Some creatures are observed to evolve in a course of weeks. For non-believers in evolution, I offer an example. In the south-east US there is a hug problem with cockroaches. You can go and buy a bug spray that will wipe them out. However, in a course of a few weeks you will notice that spray that used to kill the bugs if they got near it becomes completely in-effective even when sprayed directly on the bug. (funny how so many people in the south don't believe in evolution yet, observe it in their daily lives...)
Other, species are observed to evolve over a course of a few years. Especially in areas where we (humans) have changed the local environment. Some examples are round-up resistent coca plants, much to the dismay of the DEA. Also, changes have been observed in birds, fish, and small mammals in areas where forest has been replaced with farms or urban development.
I agree with you that we really don't know how we humans are changing because the speed of evolution tends to be pretty relative to the species undergoing it. And even though we have removed natural selection, there are still people born with mutations, and they continue to have children (for better or worse). These genes are mixing into the gene pool.
Humans evolution is now at a really interesting state. We are one of the few species where the vast majority of the population have the opportunity to reproduce, and the vast majority of our offspring live to do the same. Combine this with ongoing mutations where those with both beneficial and harmful changes survive and reproduce. I don't think anyone can imagine the direction our species will go.
Geniuses, autistics, athlethes and diabetics are surviving and reproducing. We may have some interesting times ahead
----- If communism is a system where the government owns business, what do you call a system where business owns govern
if you don't know what your representative stands for, then you have no business electing them to represent you
I for one, want a representative that sets his/her owns views and beliefs aside and represents mine. A representative has no business standing up for his own beliefs while he is representing.
----- If communism is a system where the government owns business, what do you call a system where business owns govern
I hate to break it to all my fellow slashdotters, but a BS, MS, or PHD doesn't make you more intelligent than a HS dropout that works as an McDonald's Manager making 30-40K and has 4-5 kids.
Evolution is a process. It doesn't freaking select anything! ID may freaking select something. You have to prove an enity of actually meddling with humanity though to bring up ID though. We could invent some AI that lives in nano-bio-virsus that we inject into everyone and it subtly could control us or aliens could be meddling with us. When God decides to let the basic rules decide it is evolution.
I'd be curious about how humanity has evolved in the last 3000 years. Attendance at educational environments beyond HS or middle school do not show that US humans have evolved to be smarter than those that don't have that educational system in place.
What it does show is that those in attendance to any educational environments beyond HS produce vastly reduced numbers of offspring than those that didn't attend these environments. Attendance at an educational institution has no relation to an individual's intelligence.
What would be interesting is seeing a graphs of occupation and/or income vs number of childern. Hint: those that have less than 2 children are being selected against. Heck, put one up showing different religions vs number of childern or even number of toliets vs number of childern that would trully show a family stress level.
Evolution doesn't even care about numbers though. As long as we muddle through and reproduce and survive that's all that is needed.
Yet, my point is more focused on invitro fertilization, making those who physically can't procreate, can. But you do make a valid point, and I am slicing my view of "nature" and "natural" fairly thin I suppose. But I'll make a point I made in another post...
So say you have a genetic heart defect that is surgically repaired (no worries, we have the technology). You pass those traits onto your offspring just like you pass on your blue eyes or brown hair. Now, they simply get their heart defect patched up, but their mother passed blood that doesn't properly coagulate, complicating the surgery.
But I "...forgot that technology and civilization has all but removed natures influence on mankind. The original "intent" or reason for selection was to select for DNA that deals with nature efficiently. Alas, nowadays, no one needs..." a heart that pumps blood! Oh, wait...
At some point I believe you'll end up with more holes then cheese.
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
If you can procreate and don't, you are an evolutionary dead end. It doesn't matter how good your own genes are; not procreating is the equivalent of being born completely sterile (so that even the best of modern medicine cannot help you get it on). In other words, you failed life (from a Darwinian perspective) because you never passed on your genes. Evolution is about the propagation of genes that are best suited to the current environment. No propagation, no evolution. If you have 1 child, and you take very good care of it and it survives to procreate, you and your child have succeded. If some other guy has 10 children, but they all die because he's a 'tard, you are more successful than he is; however, if you don't have any children, you are exactly as successful as he is (from a Darwinian perspective).
Take human A, living in a culture that prohibts birth control, who is also a lousy farmer. Loaded with testerstron, he soon has 10 kids. Because he sucks so bad at farming one year his harvest failes.
Then, liberals and international socialists in your goverment hear about this, use the money that they have aquired solely through the threat of force (taxation) from those who are skilled and motivated enough to generatate capital, and ship it pronto over there. All of human A's children survive, and he lives to have 10 more. Human B still has 1 kid because of the same reason as before, and he doesn't benefit from all the aid at all. Now, the population of this country is best suited to the environment you have created (taking handouts from the West) in accordance with the rules of Darwinism; however, now the West has to constantly feed these people because only 1/21 people can actually do anything besides live on Western welfare. When China kicks the economic feces out of the West and the West is no longer able to keep these people on life support, 20/21 of them would die; however, they will probably riot, kill the 1/21 of them who actually knows how to farm (the offspring of human B), and redistribute his wealth. Since they killed him and took all his wealth, he is no longer able to generate any more wealth, and the economy now becomes a zero sum game because it consists solely of parasites.
Sad but probably true. It always amazes me that liberals and socialists are so passionate about having evolution taught in the public indoctrination centers (schools) but then never bother to apply the principles of evolution to anything. Knowledge which is never applied is useless. (Much like good genes that are never passed on.)
Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
Who in the ID community is being dishonest?
Without naming names:
The people involved in attempting to put stickers on science books discrediting evolution as "just a theory". That was sneaky, underhanded, dishonest.
You can't take the sky from me...
So who made God?
Creationists argue that something as complex as a human being could not possibly be the result of anything but intelligent design. If that is the case, then it would follow that the designer (who is presumably at least as complex as a human being) also could not possibly be the result of anything but intelligent design. And it's turtles all the way down...
http://blaklion.best.vwh.net/images/UniMind.jpg
How the hell is human evolution slow compared to human lifetimes? If an epidemic spreads that has a 100% mortality rate unless you have the rare mutation that makes you immune to it, all the people without the mutation die instantly, leaving only those with what was previously a rare random mutation. Sure, other selective pressures may be a bit less apparent, but "survival of the fittest" is never slow. Each generation, only those properly adapted to their environment survive and go on to procreate. What exactly is slow about that?
Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
How can this be right? At least in America, brains would not evolve, they would be re-designed intelligently.
Nope, nerds have always existed, but only in the second half of the 20'th century it's become unfashionable to be one.
Probably the apogee of nerddom was ancient Greece, where a full third of the population were full time nerds between wars. (In wars, they also served as soldiers.) I'm pretty sure it didn't put them outside the reproduction pool, because that were all the free males in their society. If those didn't reproduce, you'd be left with only the slaves after one generation.
Between that and, say, the explosion of arts, philosophy and sciences in the 19'th century, we're talking some thousands of years in a row when it was actually cool to be educated and to _think_. It also offered some very clear survival advantages.
The problem was being able to afford it, not being uncool to be one. Hence the explosion in the 19'th century, when it started being affordable for more and more people.
The broken culture in which learning is uncool, and being a skinny airhead or a dumb jock are the only real achievements, is a 20'th century invention. With less and less actual penalties or risks for being uneducated and/or stupid, it became more and more viable to set one's target very very low. Why bother learning for college, when you can survive just as well on a McDonalds or WalMart wage? So unsurprisingly, most people did set their aim low and hit even lower.
And the culture changed to reflect just that majority point of view: aiming any higher isn't worth the effort, and if you do make the effort, there must be something wrong with your head.
That's all. That's the anomaly, and it's not periodic.
A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
"That was sneaky"
Did they do it in secret? If not, how is it sneaky?
"underhanded"
In what way? I think it's underhanded for biologists to make metaphysical pronouncements as if they were observable facts.
"dishonest"
Again, in what way? Biology textbooks often present the unobserved past on equal footing with observable, experimental science. THAT is pushing on dishonest.
Perhaps you don't understand what the issue is that is being discussed. Here is a good introduction to it:
The Unraveling of Scientific Materialism
Engineering and the Ultimate
Errr, no, never.
your example strengthens my argument. Inbreds problems aren't that they can't reproduce. They can't survive. This is the selection process in action. Your mythicistic attitue doesn't aid you in getting it either. Nature doesn't *want* to do anything. You either do (adapt) or you die. Mankind said thousands of years ago: screw nature, we'll have civlization. That is an improvement. Civilization is the new nature and human genes are selected for according how well adapted they are to civlization. This includes tool use. It does not include anything that can be 'fixed' by tool use. If you refuse to use tools you won't make head way. If you attempt to force others to not use tools, you'll get laughed out of our cities and be left to starve in the wilderness.
___
No power in the 'verse can stop me
Many of the responses to this story say that stupid people breed with stupid people, and reproduce more than smart people. I'm curious what evidence this is based on. There is plenty of evidence that poor people reproduce more than rich people. But where is the evidence that poor people are stupid?
Intelligence undoubtedly plays as big a role in survival as it always has. Yes, medicine reduces the selective pressure, but it does not eliminate it. There are plenty of opportunities throughout our lives to make choices that would result in our death, and both rich and poor make such choices all the time.
Then, liberals and international socialists in your goverment hear about this ...
:)
Woah! How did this get here? I mean, I'm a libertarian so obviously debate politics a lot but there really is no need to drag it into a debate on this topic. The rest of the post is exactly my sentiment. Problem is: the OP thinks that procreation should only occure in the natural way. In my opinion, the natural way is version alpha 0.01. We could do better, but thats an other topic all together. Point stands: doesn't matter how you do it, if you do it, you win at evolution
___
No power in the 'verse can stop me
Dammit, evolution is a REACTION not a progression. That'll teach me to post without coffee. But did you read the read of my post which clearly argues the other point (which I intended to make)?
Did you not read about sickle-cell anemia and malaria?
You have a fundamental misunderstanding of evolution. "Flaws" according to evolution are mismatches between environment and species. While we can modify the environment to some extent, it still acts on us and we become the "perfect" species to suit it. We can't not!
But if we start to impose an artifical "natural" environment to further progress toward a more perfect being then we are only setting ourselves down an artifical evolutionary path.
Imagine the species as one human, in a room with hundreds of doors. Each door leads toward a particular evolutionary development. (Keeping it simple, obviously this would be more like an interconnected labyrinth.) The more diversity we have, the more doors we have. If WE choose to fuck with evolution by selecting for things that WE consider more perfect (smarter, stronger, less disease in our understanding) then WE start to walk through doors and close off areas that may be necessary someday.
It is in our best interest to keep as many doors as possible.
Now YOU are perfectly able (indeed, heavily encouraged by nature) to practice genetic selection of your mate for your own progeny. But no one is capable of predicting what genetic variances that the species will need in the millions of years to come.
With every generation homo sapiens becomes less like sapiens and more like superior.
And it isn't just brain size that's been growing, but as was indicated genetic resistance to disease, etc.
Who know, maybe the premise that the captors of the 4400 isn't so far off.
I mean, most people describe the greys as humanoid in shape, with large heads and eyes, no nose but nasal openings, and a very narrow mouth.
I mean, in case anyone hadn't read about it, they've figured out that the human jaw is getting more narrow because more of our food is processed before we eat it.
But I've gone off in 'what if' territory here for too long.
Why should KY be excluded ? Lubrication is built into humans and has been for ever.
When I first read the grandparent's comment, I thought "what's so special about Kentucky?"
Your interpretation makes a lot more sense.
Thanks to the internet, we can now all die alone together! -SomeWoman
well, if technology can't help you to, you know, not die, the point is mood. No 'dumping down' of the gene pool has occured because the organism in question is, well, dead. There is however no connection between 'unability to survive' and 'unability to reproduce'. In your example, two humans could reproduce and the offspring still dies because his genes aren't fit enough. I'm just saying that two humans who reproduce through technological aids don't confer any disadvantages to their offspring.
___
No power in the 'verse can stop me
and end the discussion.
how is this post only "2, Informative", but the one it's replying to is "5, Insightful"?
intelligence doesn't have anything to do with wealth. if everybody had an IQ of 200, guess what, there would still be poor people!
and, if everybody had an IQ of 65, there would still be rich people!
society wouldn't improve if everybody was smarter, didn't you people see this...
http://www.thesimpsons.com/episode_guide/1022.htm
Inequitable distribution of resources might explain part of the problem. Are the folks in the trailer part with 12 kids stupid or did they just lack access to educational resources (or grow up in a subculture where education was not a priority)?
Folks that appear dumb to highly educated DINCs might actually be quite intelligent, but using their intelligence differently (like trying to figure out how to feed, clothe, and raise 12 kids while still sticking around for their lives).
Or they may have substance abuse problems due to genetics and/or environment, it's certainly clear that intelligent people may have other problems that keep them from appearing successful in the mainstream culture.
It certainly is clear that the rewards of mainstream culture come easier to those who limit the number of children they have, however I don't think it is clear that mainstream cultural rewards correlate reliably with raw intelligence at this time.
E.g. 'smart' vs 'stupid' is not an objective measure of genetic intelligence, rather it contains a large component of culture: they are stupid because they are different vs. they are stupid because they lack processing power & RAM.
Fuck, my main point. Obliterated by my irritation.
Evolution is a REACTION , not a progression.
While my argument clearly indicates that I meant to say thus, most people will only read the first line. And most people won't read this correction. Yay.
Ever tried to have sex outside during the cold season without one ?
Since we are on /., the right question should be:
Ever tried to have sex?
Could someone please explain to me how you can patent a gene? Or why its even possible to do so?
You say you got a real solution
Well, you know
We'd all love to see the plan
(The Beatles)
Smart people have fewer.
If the human brain is evolving, its probably doing a 180 right about now and heading back to chimp land.
------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
I live in Canada. I listen to the state owned TV station, state owned radio station, pay exorbitant taxes, go get my healthcare at public institutions because private ones are illegal (that's right), watch CNN because anything slightly to the right of it (e.g. Fox News I take it) was banned by our media overlords until last year, and will probably be banned again, read the Toronto Star, live under the Liberal Party (ultra-socialists), the NDP (ultra-ultra-socialists), the Bloc (regional ultra-socialists), and the Conservative Party (socialists), talk almost exclusively to rabid socialists, used to be a socialist myself (because I never heard an alternative viewpoint), etc.
Before coming to Canada, I used to live in a Socialist Republic in Eastern Europe. Anyways, sufficed to say, my life has always been dominated by socialists, and it's a constant chip on my shoulder.
Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
NEWS FLASH: Moms stop nursing BEFORE ONE YEAR. Do you know why? BECAUSE KIDS GROW TEETH AT AROUND SIX TO EIGHT MONTHS! I've got...oh crap...many...children. The kids that didn't ween themselves got forced off Mom because nursing hurts like hell anyway (especially with some kids, who just can't figure it out, or are so hungry all the time that they are feeding almost constantly, resulting in lots of sores on Mama), and once kids have teeth it's unbelievably painful.
So four years is WAY past the time when Mom would be done with them already.
Friends help you move. Real friends help you move bodies.
Never forget: 2 + 2 = 5 for extremely large values of 2.
It's pretty obvious you don't have children. The tax break for having a kid doesn't come anywhere close to compensating you for the cost of a child.
If you have a problem with that (or with property taxes), keep in mind who's going to be paying for what little Social Security income you get when you retire. And who's going to be wiping the drool off your face.
Just something I thought about once and awhile. I myself am pretty blind, I also have a number of other genetic 'issues'.
With the advent of medicine and civilization over say the last 5000 years or so, could we actually be devolving.
What I mean is that darwinism and procreation but in a negitive context. That is I am pretty sure if I lived back in Unga Bunga days I would last about 6 seconds before being killed, thus not reproducing.
If this is the case, and our civilizations become more advanced and allow more people to live than otherwise wouldn't, won't this have a negitive effect upon our evolution?
I know its very SciFi, but eventually having people bourn crippled and proped up by science, technology, and medical expertise? I guess at somepoint scientist might be able to figure out (play god in the truest sense), and bascially custom make babies before they are bourn (perhaps even concived), making so called 'perfect' babies, or only introduting a limited amount of variation.
I don't mean to be crass but I wonder if there were as many people with crappy eyesight long ago, or respritory illness, or diabities, or any genetic problems, palsy, deformations, etc.... Could it be we are promoting these thing inadvertantly?
Anyway just something to think about. I don't see any real solution, and any solution involves some real moral questions no matter what. Taking the reigns of our evolutional developement is the basic "playing god" kinda thing, which for good or bad it happening now, and will continue no matter what into the future.
On the lighter side, with the proliferation of Hair implants for men, making bald men more suitable mates, and this altering our evolutionalry course. Will that mean that in the future all men will be bald?
No Spelling Nazi's please, I can't be bothered to go back and spellcheck for a fourm entry.
Sorry for another reply, but I forgot to make a point. When the Western economy implodes because the Western worker is uncompetitive, the West has no comparative advantage, and the Chinese can do everything better, faster, and cheaper, and Western socialism implodes, the environment is going to change rapidly to something far closer to "the natural way" and almost all of population is not going to be well adapted (much like the Dinosaurs) because of our reliance on high tech medicine. Evolution will correct this of course, but I certainly don't want to be around when that happens.
Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
Ok, based on the above assumptions here are some thoughts:
These seem to be macro or large scale pressures, what about some minor, subtle selective pressures? BTW, IANASD (I am not a Social Darwinist). It may not be PC these days to talk about genetic differences between races, realistically, there are differences, and it's ok to want to know what brought about those differences, from a scientific point of view.
*Human races taken from Guns, Germs, and Steel
In the US, lower class people are doing just about that. It is the top half of the income distribution that is failing to do its duty by replacing itself in the next generation.
So income makes people smart? If you are low income, and thus "not smart" by what I'm inferring by your post, do you somehow become smart if you win the lottery?
Now I would concede that intelligent people tend to have better careers. But I'm sure there are plenty of brilliant professors making less than successful used car salespeople. Careful observation even shows that there are even leaders of major western countries who owe everything to family connections rather than intelligence or education.
"Stop throwing the Constitution in my face, it's just a goddamned piece of paper!" - George W. Bush Nov. 2005
You are totally broke, aren't you?
Gentlemen, you can't fight in here, this is the War Room!
Evolution is nothing but a theory.
k disclaimers/wackononsense.pdf
E C-7D5B-1D07-8E49809EC588EEDF&sc=I100322
And again....
I hate crap like that. Scientific America had a great article a while back that explains this just as well as I ever could. Here, I found a copy of the article (Scientific America wants you to reg to read the original on their site):
"1. Evolution is only a theory. It is not a fact or a scientific law.
Many people learned in elementary school that a theory falls in the middle of a hierarchy of certainty--above a mere hypothesis but below a law. Scientists do not use the terms that way, however. According to the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), a scientific theory is "a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world that can incorporate facts, laws, inferences, and tested hypotheses." No amount of validation changes a theory into a law, which is a descriptive generalization about nature. So when scientists talk about the theory of evolution--or the atomic theory or the theory of relativity, for that matter--they are not expressing reservations about its truth."
PDF version: http://www.swarthmore.edu/NatSci/cpurrin1/textboo
Original: http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000D4F
-Valiss
"Whole foods" sells enteric (sp?) coated "gut" pills so they survive your stomach acid.
Couple years ago I had an illness that seemed to specifically target my gut bugs. I felt vaguely ill after eating and it would go through me not fully digested.
It took me a few weeks to figure it out but after I took the friendly bug pills for a few days the problem cleared up. Actually they almost cleared up completely the first day.
It is an issue for anyone that takes antibiotics- and it applies to female parts as well (yeast infections easier if you don't have friendly bugs).
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
Well you don't get to define it. Evolution does. You can maybe look back afterward and see what it was, but that's about it.
Evolution is not directed, it does not progress. It merely ensures the survival of the fittest, and if being more intelligent no longer makes you more fit, that does not preclude evolution. Also, evolution works on vast scales and tiny percentages. Are you saying that being more intelligent doesn't convey even a .005% greater chance of procreating? Even if only one in a million stupid people forget to look both ways at a streetcorner and get creamed by a bus, evolution still has a chance to select for people that are smart enough to look both ways at street corners.
Civilization has not and CAN NOT remove the engine that drives the evolution of species. It can change the way it works, what is selected for and what is unimportant but it can't remove it. Moreso, I feel that it hasn't even changed it that much. Stupid people (not uneducated, but actually dumb) are slightly less likely to reproduce, and that's all it takes for evolution to work.
I find it ironic that you pontificate about others not understanding evolution when you clearly do not understand it yourself.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
...what can be attributed to lack of evolution.
Of course, that doesn't explain why all the stupid guys get the chicks. Evolution is supposed to weed them out! Out I say!
part of it is attitude
before welfare reform in the US, there was the smart person attitude of "I'm too poor to have more kids" and dumb people attitude of "I gets me sum more welfare money if I has dem kids"
now all those big families before welfare reform want big families of their own just because it doesn't feel like a family without a swarm of kids around.
Unfortunately, these days, I think you're right, it's not stupid people that are breeding, but far too often it's religious people (and I think many of these people lack free thinking - like that silly Catholic belief that dogs don't dream and the devil makes them twitch in REM sleep... shah, right - that's as inane as the Jehovah's Witnesses age of the earth and dinosaur bones were placed there by satan - who makes up this stuff?).
Miracles=Noodly Appendage
Mother Theresa=Marinara Sauce of His Holy Writ
Modern Medicine says a person will die...a priest comes and the person wakes up?=Person was sleeping, annoying priest woke him up?
Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
what a retarded "discovery"
Then we need a new word. Because there are many atheists who -believe- there is no god. They have "faith" that there is no god.
It's pretty common actually.
OTH, in my experience, People that call themselves agnostics more typically talk about a lack of belief.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
The probability of the event cannot be determined because we lack understanding of the state space."
I think we all know the probability of our existence is 1.
Marshall McLuhan, of course...Quite a while ago. There is a more complete article here: http://www.innovations-report.com/html/reports/lif e_sciences/report-38309.html
From Robert Logan's "The Extended Mind Model of the Origin of Language and Culture"
"The evolution of notated language has lessons that can help us understand the origin and
emergence of speech. In a study of notated language (McLuhan and Logan 1977; Logan 1986)
the effects of the phonetic alphabet and literacy on the development of deductive logic, abstract
science, codified law, and monotheism were revealed. We showed that these five developments,
which emerged between the Tigris-Euphrates Rivers and the Aegean Sea between 2000 and 500
BC, formed an autocatalytic set of ideas that supported each other's development. The alphabet
not only served as a convenient way to notate speech it also taught the lessons of analysis
(breaking up words into their basic phonemes), coding (writing), decoding (reading) and
classification (alphebetization).
From this work emerged the notion that language is both a medium of communication and an
informatic tool since the structure of a language influences the way in which people organize
information and develop ideas. This work led to the hypothesis that speech, writing, math,
science, computing and the Internet represented six independent languages each with its own
unique semantics and syntax (Logan 1995; 2000a). It was shown that these six forms of language
formed an evolutionary chain of languages with each new language emerging from the previous
forms of language as a bifurcation to a new level of order à la Prigogine in response to an
information overload that the previous set of languages could not handle."
So now we are finally linking the structural (genetic) changes that must accompany the intellectual changes. Why is everyone so scared of this? Because behaviour might (gasp) be largely genetically encoded?
time?
You had better ask all those tens of millions that starved just a couple of generations ago, and the hundreds of millions that are still impoverished today.
You can still see the effects of WWII in Japan tody, where I live. People born in that era are far shorter than people younger than them - a clear sign of poor nutrition. Young Japanese are close to the same height as Americans, as far as I can tell.
Also, the Flynn effect seems to be leveling off in advanced countries, which is perfectly consistent with the nutrition model, for reasons you noted.
[ Reply to This ]
Temporally local and short. The starvation in china was due to gross incompetence of the administration and last a decade before the ruling party was disposed by another group.
The average height still differs because the genetics of the groups are different, nothern chinese are close to the average height of americans but southern chinese are not. Japanese people still seem shorter from the exchange students I've met but both our anicdotes needs some stats to back it up.
In either case IQ doesn't seem to correlate since the 2nd highest IQ ethnicity is east asian (chinese vietnamese japanese korean). They are close to the ashkenazi jews and signifigantly higher then caucasians who generally had better nutrition during the 50's and 60's.
"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
It's amazing how that perception changes when you actually become an adult... ;^)
12-year olds always think they are smarter than adults, until they have to actually be responsible for consequences of something important (e.g., keeping the roof over some heads, or some bellies full when the employment market goes south)...
Mutating in response to threats is not what I was taught in medical school or in biology.
When there is a threat, we do *not* mutate. We are *selected*.
For example, if suddenly tomorrow an Ice Age kicked in - your genes would not mutate. If you had a child, his or her genes would not be mutated.
Instead, people with the most amount of body hair, or those better able to find shelter, would be "selected" to survive. Twenty generations later, we might have a race of hairy people.
You may be surprised to learn that the mathematics of genetics (and artificial life simulations) have conclusively demonstrated that mutation is estimated to account for only a *tiny* fraction evolutionary change (many simulations show less than 1%). Mutation is almost universally destructive.
Chromosomal crossing over during meiosis, where the greatest swap of DNA occurs (between mother and father), accounts for almost all of evolutionary genetic change. This is why sex evolved.
My definition of "fitness" is the ability to procreate without the help of technology - medical or otherwise
So, you are making up your own words unlike those used in the English language or by biologists in particular. If you wanted to invent your own language, don't make it sound so much like the one other people already use.
If you can't do that yourself, or could not have lived to an age to do that yourself, yes I believe you're a detriment to the gene pool (Darwin-isticially speaking).
That is emphatically and obviously false, unless you have some reason to believe that reproductive assistance technology will become less available in the future.
I am simply supporting the idea that evolution has, for all intents and purposes, stopped in the human population due to these factors.
No, you are NOT supporting that idea. You are claiming that evolution is now moving in a direction (technology required for reproduction) which you don't like.
You think that's a negative change? Fine- but it's still a CHANGE, which is all that "evolution" means.
Maybe someday the human male will evolve with internal testicles so the sperm is impotent without artificial cooling. That idea may disgust you, but it's an example of (potential) evolution.
If they've proved that the brain is still evolving then I think I just discovered the scientific proof for reincarnation. Bush couldn't have gotten *this* stupid in one lifetime.
They don't have a 60,000 year old brain to compare it to. Until they do, this is nothing but a theory and theories are not truth.
I would still say that intelligence helps in reproductive success, and that whatever other traits we might be losing, we will keep getting smarter for quite some time. As long as we keep getting smarter, the other traits will eventually become moot. As far as other traits go, well, that was a losing battle the first day our ancestors discovered that fire and animal clothing was a better way to keep warm than waiting for evolution to grow fur.
I haven't laughed this much for a long time.
Any moderators out there??
1. Because that's what he said.
2. Because I'm smarter than you.
3. Because I can read for context, and understand main ideas
4. Again, because I'm smarter than you.
Have a nice day!
I make enough money that I won't be getting any social security by the time I retire. Good thing I'm investing on my own, huh?
I never said anything about it 'covering' the cost of raising a child. Government assistance for the poor doesn't completely replace a decent job either.
Blar.
Wow, someone gets quite cranky when his own words are thrown in his face. If you look at the parts of YOUR comment and HIS comment that I quoted, it is pretty obvious that what YOU paraphrased is NOT what he said, the contextual meaning is slightly different. He makes NO reference to money's impact on a gene's survival, merely on it's lack of impact on a gene's "hardiness". See, in the context of the thread, and the rest of his comment, he is saying that a gene for, say, transmuting lead into gold that also caused the person to be unable to properly break down protein would have, in the past, been contra-survival. You would probably not survive to procreate. Today, however, with the advances in modern medicine, having unlimited wealth overly compensates for a natural inability to break down protein. You can buy drugs that will enable you to live, and the extra wealth will allow for lots of procreation opportunities that a poor person that can break down protein just fine will not have. :)
But, I'm sure this is all obvious, since you are smarter than me. I mean, you said it twice and all, it must be true.
...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
Exactly, recognizing the importance of having many children above the temptation of self indulgant materialism may be a different(and evolutionarily superior) type of intelligence. My great grandfather had one child, and was a mulit-millionaire(in the 20's which is hundreds of millions today) who owned a shitload of land. He was arguably very intelligent in business, but he had vices, and lost his fortune by running someone down with his car while drunk and paying out a shitload in the lawsuit. My grandfather(the ggf's one kid) on the other hand, was also very intelligent, but he chose to have alot of kids(9) and thus was always low on money paying for them, but this was his conscious choice. I'm trying to do both(money plus kids), and maybe I'll suceed being arguably much smarter than my predicessors, but it's a PITA to find a woman of good genes these days who will accept the pain and sacrifice of many births(womans lib sucks sometimes), may have to import me a willing and superior immigrant from a 3rd world country whose culture agrees with my views wrt children. This is what I call "larger consciousness", consciousness of your line, and even the species. Thinking of yourself alone will lead to extinction.
True genius is grasping a situation like a peice of fruit, and peircing it just right so that it drains dry.
They used political power to attempt to discredit the content of a science book because it does not correspond to their religious beliefs. To do this, they disguised their religious agenda under a veil of pseudoscience because they aren't allowed to overtly censor scientific teaching based on religious grounds.
It is sneaky because they snuck their faith in a science class through the ballot box.
It is dishonest because they hid their religious motivations.
It is underhanded because it was worded so as to evade notice of their religious motivations.
"Intelligent Design" is a religious movement using scientific jargon to discredit actual science. That is not honest.
You can't take the sky from me...
I like how when you bring up scientific fact it becomes flamebait. Truly people do not wish to try to find the truth whatever it may be. It is clear we do not understand even a tenth of the universe, but people go around like we understand all but 5%.
I eat Karma for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. That's why I don't have any.
He makes NO reference to money's impact on a gene's survival, merely on it's lack of impact on a gene's "hardiness".
In this context, there is essentially no difference between "hardiness" and ability to survive. (Even in general usage, "hardiness" and "survivability" are virtually synonyms).
But, I'm sure this is all obvious, since you are smarter than me.
Well, yes it is quite obvious. And if you can't tell, that does strongly suggest you are less intelligent (or are prehaps writing in a non-native language, or otherwise disadvantaged to understand)
In this context, there is essentially no difference between "hardiness" and ability to survive.
:)
Well, that is pretty much the crux of the disagreement. I guess we would have to have the original poster elucidate to be sure, but the way I interpret his statement, he is NOT using "hardiness" as a synonym for "ability to survive". As in my example. I don't think very many people would say that a specimen that can't process vital nutrients out of food is hardier than a specimen that can; quite the opposite. However (and this is what I think the whole point was), this less hardy specimen has a possibly GREATER ability to survive in today's society, due to the somewhat artificial nature of the evolutionary pressures we have created for ourselves.
You should be careful about what is obvious and what is not. Maybe it is my inferior intellect, but I find the things that are "obvious" are most often simply more complex than I initially thought. But again, I'm sure a smart cookie like you doesn't have to worry about that
...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
Then we need a new word.
But why do we?
When it comes to anything else, such as ghosts, unicorns, aliens or fairies, it's simple: Do you believe in x? Yes or No, or perhaps Not Sure.
I never hear of people trying to distinguishing between "no belief in pixies" and "belief that pixies don't exist". I never hear people claiming that those who answer "No" have a belief, and therefore they require faith for that belief, or they are being irrational, or that their "belief" is a religion.
So why does it happen with the issue of God?
"They used political power to attempt to discredit the content of a science book because it does not correspond to their religious beliefs."
They were not discreditting the book, but rather noting that the metaphysical assumptions were unproven, which is true.
"To do this, they disguised their religious agenda under a veil of pseudoscience because they aren't allowed to overtly censor scientific teaching based on religious grounds."
Except that evolution is done on religious grounds, namely naturalism. This is the problem - evolution presents the results of secular philosophy as an observable fact, when it is not.
"It is sneaky because they snuck their faith in a science class through the ballot box."
The ballot box is precisely the place where a publicly-funded, publicly-run course should be handled. We opted for a democracy rather than rule by philosophers. This is part of it.
"It is dishonest because they hid their religious motivations."
You mean the biologists? I agree completely. They should not pretend that materialism is an observable fact of nature and should admit its philosophical and theological underpinnings.
"It is underhanded because it was worded so as to evade notice of their religious motivations."
Oh, you're talking about the people who put in the sticker. You are correct that people involved with religion tend to understand philosophical issues better than others, but I don't think its necessary that they explicitly mention their worldview every time. Should we have made Francis Crick mention the fact that the whole reason he was in biology was to discredit the Christian faith every time he spoke? What about Dawkins, same there? Or are you just prejudiced against Christians? If we always mention religious motivations, shouldn't we always tell people when we talk about genetics why Mendel thought it was evidence against evolution, and his religious motivations for developing his theory?
""Intelligent Design" is a religious movement using scientific jargon to discredit actual science. That is not honest."
Actually, Intelligent Design is two things:
1) a mathematical description of design, used to detect design in objects and systems
2) a rejection of materialist philosophy as the sole operating mode of science
Engineering and the Ultimate
Ok, sure so you're chanting "beavers" at me. While I find the word beaver to be most humorous, I say they are not controlling, creating or constructing their environment so much as simply modifying pieces of it (like trees)...which had ALREADY naturally evolved there. No thanks to the beaver.
I stand by my original post about humans modifying their environment.
Take away the trees from beavers and what do they do? They sit around all day, or maybe they swim around in circles...confused as if they had needed to do something but had forgotten what it was. Show me a beaver, that in an environment lacking trees, combines polymers to form a synthetic trunk...which is used to construct a dam and reroute the river through a bypass. And make the damn dam hydroelectric too, and have it provide power for lights used to grow real trees in an artificial environment with the intent of making the process of building dams in that location self-sustainable.
Then maybe I'll do more than chuckle when I read these eager beaver posts.
The Microcephalin, OK it's advantageous, but it was riding this huge expansion of homo sapiens into the rest of the world. It got a big boost by just coming along for the ride.
ASPM -- now that one's remarkable. Started somewhere between 14,100 and 500 years ago, most likely 5,800 years ago, and is now around 50% of Europe? I hear the British have 80% the same genetics as they did 12,000 years ago. So this variant has come to dominate, without a new group of people as a whole coming to dominate.
If 1 generation is 25 years, 5,800 years is 232 generations. There were around 10 million people total 5,800 years ago. 1.066^^232 = 3 million which would be 30% of the population at that time (or if the population increased uniformly, 30% of our population today). But that assumes carriers never marry carriers, which isn't close to true. People usually marry people from the same community. Any further expansion relies on the rare people who marry outside their community. So I'm guessing the relative reproductive advantage is quite a bit more than 6.6%, either that or it started longer than 5,800 years ago. If it started 14,100 years ago, when the total population was 3 million, the advantage just has to be way more than 2.5%.
500 years ago, with a population of 400 million, way more than 154%, no way. I'm guessing it's towards the 14,000 year end. But even so, these advantages are something big enough that people can see them without doing statistical studies. It's probably something you can tell about a person by looking at them or talking to them.
Flying Spaghetti Monsters and Invisible Pink Unicorns.
It is a good thing you have no idea what you are talking about. Science is the study of the things of nature and if "God" created the Cosmos, then you should be able to find a "fingerprint" of a design. As the master himself said "Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind." Einstein http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/24949.html
I eat Karma for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. That's why I don't have any.
even if there must be a designer, why the Christian God? There is a leap made there in ID that reveals the movememt for what it is: Creationism, wrapped in pseudo-scientific language.
As the nytimes article showed, professional ID proponents are actually careful never to make that leap when going about their business. You can look backwards at their prior espoused beliefs, but they are nonspecific about the Designer's identity in their official propaganda.
But maybe someone else did
Ha! Nobody else read it, not even me.
Or maybe I'll get a mod point. I could use a mod point.
Ha! No karma for you!
Then we need a new word.
Antitheist. You're welcome!
Because there are many atheists who -believe- there is no god.
It's far more common for an atheist to believe there is no God than that there is no god.
Capitalized "God" is a specific named individual (aka "Yahweh" or "Jehova" or "Jesus"), revered by at least 4 difference religions, and attributed with specific traits, some of which are mutually contradictory. Lowercase "god" is an individual of power greatly exceeding any human being, who may or may not be alleged to be virtuous, honest, or any of that.
Because "god" potentially includes evil tricksters, skeptics are more likely to call it an irrelevant concept instead of a demonstrably false one.
Like most others defending "Intelligent Design", you too are quite dishonest.
e.g. Dishonestly putting words in my mouth: You are correct that people involved with religion tend to understand philosophical issues better than others
Here are MY words: People involved DO NOT tend to understand philosophical issues better than others. Quite the contrary.
They tend to obsess over one philosophy, irrationally clinging to it no matter what, without understanding it.
And, honestly, I can't stop you from polluting science threads with your "I know you are, but what I am" attemps at equating science and religion, but neither can you fool me in believing that you are honest in your discourse. So, STFU&GBTW.
You can't take the sky from me...
Actually, the theory of Puncutated Equilibrium would happily say that our rate of evolution is currently low. Perhaps it's not a coincidence that the signs of selection found in the article occured in a period of socioenvironmental change?
"If".
The problem is that if God didn't design the universe, and there's no reason to think a sane (or at least friendly) mind was involved, then science must be free to say so. Religion, as I said, is dogma and unpleasant truths are simply outlawed. Therefore, science and religion are polar opposites by their very nature. That's not to say that occassionally a religious work might not sometimes be right just by chance, just as with any work of fiction it's not all fairy stories, just most of it.
By the way, your signature is spelt incorrectly.
TWW
"Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
Blankets. Ever tried to have sex outside during the cold season without one ?
/.
You must be new here... this is
As the nytimes article showed, professional ID proponents are actually careful never to make that leap when going about their business. You can look backwards at their prior espoused beliefs, but they are nonspecific about the Designer's identity in their official propaganda.
Still, it's implicit, as the official ID proponents do have a particular agenda, right? I think so.
Ha! No karma for you!
I know! One OT and one Redundant, and now I'm stuck down here with the plebs. Ah well.
I read Slashdot for the articles.
That's an 87% advantage per millenia, for a piddling 1% reproductive advantage. It's not hard to imagine a 1% advantage in aspects of modern living. For example, things like not crashing your car, not spending a quarter of your income on credit card interest, not eating and drinking and smoking yourself to death, not building your house on a flood plain, not going on a crystal meth-fueled unprotected gay sex holiday, not telling your son to come back on his shield or carrying it, and so forth. All those examples are strongly determined by intelligence and personality, and therefore by brain genes, so I would expect those genes to currently be under strong selective advantage.
At the same time, a 1% reproductive advantage isn't obvious just by looking. It's a mere one extra baby per hundred people. If you wanted to measure that sort of difference with statistical significance, you'd have to get two groups of several thousand people who were otherwise genetically identical. To untangle it from the effects of environment and culture, you'd probably want tens of thousands of people in your experiment. In a genetically mixed population? Impossible to measure. So gigantic evolutionary differences are nearly invisible if you just look at the people around you.
Really, everyone... many thanks for all of the intelligent responses and counter-counter responses! They have all required me to rethink my original ephemeral ideas on the subject and forced me to justify my own point of view (or readjust it, as the case may be). What I have gotten it down to is this:
You have a genetic heart condition that is repairable by modern medical surgery. Bada bing, this is no longer a "liability" in your current "environment". You have the good fortune to breed with a significant other who themselves have an affliction that thanks to modern medicine is no longer a "liability". Fast forward a dozen generations or more. Your non-liability affliction as permeated your subsequent generations, just as your significant others has, not to mention the afflictions from all their mates and all their ancestors. Now, some dozen generations later, your offspring have the propensity to have congenital heart defects (no worries, Dr. will fix that), blood that won't clot (woops, that'll complicate the surgery) and any number of other afflictions that aren't bad enough to kill you in one's or two's, but when you have 15 or 16 of them you're kinda fucked.
Ok, so the ones that are "fucked" die off and everybody "wins" because nature has taken the "weak" and only the "strong" with the ability to "survive" in the current "environment" do. Thats all fine and good, but when the "environment" is a house of cards (see New Orleans, could you survive with less then 1 weeks interruption to your "environment"?) I call bullshit.
And here is where we begin to split hairs... "If you can't go a week without insulin (or whatever) and you die, I consider you genetically weak." is quickly countered with "Well, you can't got more then a few minutes without oxygen, so I likewise consider you genetically weak." Which is fair enough, what makes your lines any more or less valid then mine? In the end nothing, but I'd submit that Merck, Pfizer, etc aren't required to make "oxygen" for me, where as they are to make insulin.
Then we get into splitting environmental hairs. Is the US "environment" more valid then the rural Chinese "environment"? Americans* have easy and unabated access to insulin (or whatever) so it's not a liability (yet those in rural China may or may not). (* - by "Americans" I mean Americans with health cover, so those 20mil+ poor bastards without it in the states simply don't count - think of them as a "mulligan"!). So where do we end up? Maybe - "If you wouldn't have made it on 'Lost' then your not genetically strong enough in my book."
I suppose in the end, you (not "you", but those on the opposite side of the fence then I) have much more faith in our system then I do. You have faith that Merck and Pfizer will always be there, I don't. And I guess in the end, that is the difference in our argument.
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
I defined "fitness" for the benefit of this discussion because my view of it was questioned. So with that I thought the discussion could benefit from me placing more of a firm view of what I intended the word "fitness" to mean in that context. This is in no way defining my own language, as you so claim. It is simply an effort to forward the debate. Think of how President Clinton "parsed" the English language during the Lewinsky trial. You expose your own intellectual deficiencies when you claim that I'm attempting to "make up my own language". (Ok, that was a bit low, but my own intellectual deficiencies made it so that I simply couldn't resist that cheap shot!)
That is emphatically and obviously false, unless you have some reason to believe that reproductive assistance technology will become less available in the future.
Yes, I do believe that in the future, given a large enough jolt such technologies will be out of reach for a generation or two (nuclear winter, a flu pandemic, or simply if you currently live in rural China) your current "enviroment" could very well be out of reach for a while. As I mentioned in another post, it seems that "you" (the collective you, not "you" you) have more faith in the system then I do. You have faith that Merck and Pfizer will always be there, I don't. And I guess in the end, that is the difference in our argument.
No, you are NOT supporting that idea. You are claiming that evolution is now moving in a direction (technology required for reproduction) which you don't like. You think that's a negative change? Fine- but it's still a CHANGE, which is all that "evolution" means.
(Agh shit, here I go again "making up my own language...") For me, for the purposes of this discussion, humans playing god is not equal to evolution. Are we "evolving"? Yes, but seemingly only in the directions that *we* deem. I cease to see it as "evolution" when the creature itself is manifesting its own destiny. But yes, I concede that we are still "changing", I just don't see our own artificial version of change to be equal to that of evolution. The results are the same, no doubt, but I see the means as more important then the ends.
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
Really, thanks for the intelligent banter! I love a good clean debate with someone on the opposite side of the fence! You have logical reasons why you believe what you believe, just as I do. With discussions such as these we can each learn from one another and possibly in the end we are not as far apart as we once thought (or once were). The world needs more of these discussions, not less! Thanks again!
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
If WE choose to fuck with evolution by selecting for things that WE consider more perfect (smarter, stronger, less disease in our understanding) then WE start to walk through doors and close off areas that may be necessary someday.
Funny, in the end we are yelling the same point I think. I feel that WE are fucking with evolution by US deciding who can (or cannot) procreate. So I fully agree with you there. Yet I disagree that we should do all we can to forward every genetic line we can simply because we have the technology to do so. But if we start to impose an artificial "natural" environment to further progress toward a more perfect being then we are only setting ourselves down an artificial evolutionary path. I couldn't agree more, yet I believe that with the extensive use of our technology, we're simply imposing an artificial "artificial" environment on ourselves.
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
Can evolutionary discriptions make correct quantitative predictions in-the-large?
Yes, and it has done this.
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
"Like most others defending "Intelligent Design", you too are quite dishonest."
Like most who are calling creationists and ID'ers dishonest, the fact is you just disagree but don't like people on the other side, and so resort to calling names. There has been nothing dishonest -- only things that you disagree with. Yet for some reason you can't simply disagree, you have to call them liars.
"e.g. Dishonestly putting words in my mouth:"
Oh please -- you can't handle a little irony? Play on words? You have to resort to name-calling?
"And, honestly, I can't stop you from polluting science threads with your "I know you are, but what I am" attemps at equating science and religion"
I'm not equating science and religion. I'm differentiating observational science from philosophical claims made in the name of science. The latter do occur regularly, both in science classes and even in science in the field. If materialism is simply an assumption for experimental purposes, science must acknowledge that its results do not hold when non-material causes are at play (which they do not). If they do not acknowledge this, then they are indeed engaging in philosophical and theological statements. That is simply a fact.
Engineering and the Ultimate
> Actually, most people offer up "intelligent design" for well-understood phenomena. Would you say that the works of Mozart are not intelligently designed? Or perhaps that the Apache server was not intelligently designed? ID simply says that we can analyze design mathematically, and use the results of that to determine if a given physical system is likely the result of an intelligent agent. In fact, this process is already implicit in Archaeology and in SETI. It's just that biologists don't like it being applied to their neck of the woods.
What biologists don't like is the dishonest pretense of detecting intelligent design in biological organisms.
BTW, do you say Mozart and Apache are examples of intelligent design because you applied Dembski's "explanatory filter" to them, or because you know people created that stuff? The analogy with the Discovery Institute's pretense of detecting design in biology is entirely spurious.
Also, why aren't these nifty ID detection methods ever used in archaeology and SETI?
> ID does not want either ID or creationism taught in science classes.
After failing in a couple of high profile school board farces, the Discovery Institute has now retrenched to a "teach the controversy" position. And they're completely disowning the Dover case because the fools on the Dover school board ignored the "don't say 'God'" memo, completely blowing ID's cover.
The charade has flopped. Dembski's pretence of being the next Einstein failed; he's is now a Professor of Theology. ID has become nothing more than a buzz word among creationists, to the point that they've relabeled all their old stupid anti-evolution arguments as "ID" without regard to content.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
not IQ post-normalization, which would make no sense in this context.
In any case, the effect that you are referring to (called the Flynn effect) where IQ generally rises over time, has recently been shown to have come to a virtual halt in the first world. It was primarily an effect of the worst scores getting better, probably due to an increase in basic education and childhood nutrition.
are highly correlated, and from what I have read, both are strongly correlated with fewer children and delayed childbearing.
Saying "smart people are not having enough children" and "rich people are not having enough children" are almost identical statements, and equally true.
I'm not equating science and religion.
No, you are trying to masquerade religion as science. The problem with creationists is that they are heavily biased towards one specific religion. Whenever someone defends creationism, you can do a 100 to 1 bet than they'll answer "yes" when asked if they happen to be Christian. Which real scientific field has this level of bias?
Naturalism is not a religion or a foundation for religious thinking. A personality cult centered around (and named after) an egomaniac is a foundation for a religion. Please don't equate your comfortable myth with healthy skepticism.
see a Text Widget
"I think we all know the probability of our existence is 1."
Yes, but what's the probability of life arising on a similar world? That we can't know.
Well, for many people it is probably beneficial to be part of such a cult. It's always possible for people to do even crazier things... and the concept of an invisible Big Brother may be just what they need to stay in check. It is rather amusing when some claim that people without the same invisible friend have no reason to be caring, ethical and so on... with that, they explain exactly what kind of ethics they have at their core.
Interestingly, though... there is not much outside of a narrow range of activities that separates a god-believer and an atheist. They are smart enough to rely on exactly the same things an atheist would, like science, hospitals, police, etc. That's evolution at work, I guess. It's my speculation that at least 20% of those who claim to be religious do it for the social benefits.
see a Text Widget
"Only superficially. Ultimately, science is about questioning and religion is about dogma (or "faith" if you prefer) and in the final analysis that means they are totally opposed to each other."
Dogma is not a way of saying faith with negative implications. But anyway.
It's true that religion requires faith, but it doesn't require you to stop asking questions (including questions about your religion). You're supposed to have faith because your beliefs stood up to your questioning (I suppose this depends on the religion in question- I guess in some you *are* just supposed to believe blindly, but Christianity in general is not like that).
Science and religion can't be "opposed." Science can explore or test religion, and may or may not be able to refute religious claims, but that doesn't mean that science is opposed to religion any more than science is opposed to failed theories...
than the average American. I took a fitness test in Kyoto once and they had the average height at just under 5'10" (177cm), which is a bit shorter than the average American male. The test was clearly normed for Japanese (I got annihilated on the flexibility test, and there is no way the average caucasian man can reach 4 inches past his toes!).
The racial differences in IQ are a whole other matter. Very policitally charged, unfortunately, which makes them difficult to talk about. Unfortunately, the evidence that at least some of the difference may actually be genetic is fairly strong. I dislike the fact that we cannot talk about this openly, but that is simply a reality in today's political climate.
I don't think it's unreasonable to say that science is opposed to failed theories. If you accept that science is an attempt to tell the truth then it must at some level be opposed to, for example, teaching Lamarckian evolution, just as it must at some level be opposed to teaching that Genesis as literal truth. If, like me, you think science is actually an attempt to reveal untruths, then this goes double.
TWW
"Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
You're right I think. I've also met very dedicated good people among believers and non-believers alike.
;-) Ah well, it's the deed that counts.
;-)
But somehow, grownups doing their thing in the name of santa clause, it seems irresponsible
I'd like to point out though that a subset of believers will refuse modern medical attention or ignore rules of society because they clash with their belief system.
But apart from mormons I don't know of anybody shunning modern comforts, which says something I guess, of our real priorities
I think, therefore I am...I think.
All true agnostics are atheists and so was Bertrand Russell.
Bertrand Russell coined the term "agnostic" because he was sick to death of Atheists who treated Atheism as a religion of no God. And so, the language evolved, and the lower-a atheists ceeded the anti-theism word to the capital-A Atheists.
You of course are free to use whatever terms you wish. But the common usage does force a meaning upon "Atheism" of "the belief that there is no God and no group of lesser gods."
Just when I get this one tweaked the way I want it, a new model comes out and it's time to upgrade!
"No, you are trying to masquerade religion as science."
Incorrect. I'm separating out assumptions from observations. It is true that Christians bring a different set of assumptions to the table. It is also true that secularists bring a specific set of assumptions. It is not true that the secular assumptions are somehow "more scientific" than the Christian ones.
"Whenever someone defends creationism, you can do a 100 to 1 bet than they'll answer "yes" when asked if they happen to be Christian"
You can actually do the same for evolution, simply because Christianity is the dominant religion in america, for both evolutionists and creationists.
"Naturalism is not a religion or a foundation for religious thinking."
Yes, it is. Secular humanism (which is simply a form of naturalism) considers itself a religion without a deity.
"Please don't equate your comfortable myth with healthy skepticism"
Of course "skepticism" gets applied to other people's beliefs, not to secularism or naturalism. It's easy to name-call "comfortable" versus "skeptical", but it's really a baseless charge, considering the fact that Christianity requires your very life, while "skepticism" requires nothing at all except what you want it to require.
Engineering and the Ultimate
He implied no such thing. He implied that smart people need to breed more.
And, while I know plenty of rich idiots and lots and lots of poor geniuses, I have to assume that you need to be smart in one way or another to get rich under your own power.
Completely off-topic.
Point is: do you have any children? I don't, and I know that I'm intelligent (pretty arrogant about it, too). Am I going to fuck to save the human race?
No.
I mean, why? I don't have kids, nor do I intend to. Why should I care what kind of world my non-existant children grow up in?
Meanwhile, the world's being taken over by lawyers and morons; gossip-queens and businessmen with rigid objects inserted roughly and firmly up their rectal crevasses. I don't want to raise kinds in that environment anyway.
110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
It is also true that secularists bring a specific set of assumptions. It is not true that the secular assumptions are somehow "more scientific" than the Christian ones.
I don't see it as a secular vs. religious issue: the lack of a religious basis of a claim still says little about its validity. However, the Scientific Method that is at the core of science demands claims to be independently verifiable and falsifiable. Most Christian claims do not meet that criterion and thus do not qualify as scientific. You might argue that science is religious too somehow, but you cannot argue that religion is scientific.
We can see that naturalism gives us the most practical tools and predictive powers. They might have assumptions at their basis, but those assumptions have been proven highly practical again and again. Supernatural claims are almost always circular and can only predict after the fact. Thus even if they had any validity to begin with, they'd still be useless for anything practical.
You can actually do the same for evolution, simply because Christianity is the dominant religion in america, for both evolutionists and creationists.
It's good that you agree that support of Darwin's theory of evolution is not based on what you call "secular assumptions". However, it is impossible to claim that any scientific field has near-100% dominance of Christians. The dictionary definition of Creationism links it strongly to believing in the Genesis myth.
Secular humanism...
Even if we assume what you say about secular humanism is true, then it's still a pointless argument because I brought up naturalism and not secular humanism.
Of course "skepticism" gets applied to other people's beliefs, not to secularism or naturalism.
The difference is that naturalism gives claims we can verify for ourselves. Supernaturalism gives claims we can only verify after we're dead. It's rather natural to be more skeptical of the latter.
while "skepticism" requires nothing at all except what you want it to require.
That same claim goes for about everything else, so it's pretty pointless.
see a Text Widget
"However, the Scientific Method that is at the core of science demands claims to be independently verifiable and falsifiable. Most Christian claims do not meet that criterion and thus do not qualify as scientific."
I think you are confusing Creationism and Intelligent Design. Creationism is a philosophical presupposition, much like the secular humanism, or the philosophical impetus of the Big Bang. As Hawking and Ellis say, you simply cannot do cosmology without mixing in philosophy.
Intelligent Design is simply identifying the characteristics of intelligent action. It is trying to determine a mathematical methodology to apply in order to do this. ID explicitly separates scientific claims of design from religious claims of who the designer is, or whether or not the designer is natural or supernatural.
"You might argue that science is religious too somehow, but you cannot argue that religion is scientific."
I never claimed the latter, though you can do scientific research on certain claims of faith, or using them as a starting point. The former is true of anyone who does cosmology at all. What is happening now is that although those who do cosmology readily admit that they do have a philosophic bias, they reject the philosophic biases of others who start from different places.
Now, perhaps cosmology should be excluded from science entirely -- I'm certainly open to that. But creationism is just as scientific (or unscientific) as any other cosmology, as neither are experimental or observable exercises (which are the characteristics of science). Intelligent Design is much more of a science than either one, because it is not cosmological -- it is simply a measurement.
You might be interested in a summary of Intelligent Design I wrote awhile back:
http://crevo.blogspot.com/2005/03/setting-facts-st raight-on-intelligent.html
"We can see that naturalism gives us the most practical tools and predictive powers."
Incorrect. Experimentation and observation give us those things. Naturalism is the abandonment of reason, and is akin to admitting effects without a cause.
"Supernatural claims are almost always circular and can only predict after the fact"
Three things: (1) Intelligent Design differs from Creationism in that ID does not suppose that anything supernatural has occurred. It simply says that intelligence is a causitive force that is different from, but limitted by, natural law. And thus, reducing everything to material causes leaves out a great amount of what is occurring even in every day life. When I write a computer program, I am limitted to what can be done with natural law, but nonetheless creativity and intelligence act as a causitive force of their own to produce something novel. 2) In the case of historical reconstruction (i.e. cosmology), the point isn't practicality anyway. The point is to determine what happened. That is the question, isn't it? What happened. What practical value do we get from Hawking telling us that we formed from a singularity? Can we recreate the singularity? No. So, cosmology itself is different from observational/experimental science in this regard as a whole subject. 3) However, you are still missing the ultimate practical reason -- if we know who we are, how we were made, and why we were made, it then tells us what and how we should then live. Does God exist? Does He care about us? How does He want us to live? Do His wishes matter, or is God merely an illusion? These questions have more practical import than all that science has given us in the last 1,000 years. To answer them wrong because we have assumed the answer before starting is simply ludicrous.
"It's good that you agree that support of Darwin's theory of evolution is not based on what you call "secular assumptions""
Actually, I do. The Christian Church in America gave itself over to secularism quite a while
Engineering and the Ultimate
I think you are confusing Creationism and Intelligent Design.
I acknowledge the differences between the two, but consider them to originate from the same agenda.
I read the article in the link you gave. There were some interesting points. Does the fact that objects such as computers are intelligently designed by humans mean for you that humans themselves have been intelligently designed as well? Is it possible that intelligence comes into existence by chance? That is: do you think every designing object must have a designer itself?
One of the issues I see with ID is that even if it can prove that the universe was designed intelligently, it still won't explain what designed the designers. Also, a whole realm is left open as to what designed us humans. For example, the people at Rael claim that aliens designed us. That say that the Bible even supports their claims.
Naturalism is the abandonment of reason, and is akin to admitting effects without a cause.
The dictionary definition says that naturalism is the philosophy that the world can be understood in scientific terms without recourse to spiritual or supernatural explanations.
in that ID does not suppose that anything supernatural has occurred.
That's odd, because the authoritative figures on this subject claim otherwise.
These questions have more practical import than all that science has given us in the last 1,000 years. To answer them wrong because we have assumed the answer before starting is simply ludicrous.
As you can see, proponents of Creationism and ID such as yourself are quick to jump from the unnamed Designer to the Christian God and the assumption that we humans must have been designed directly and personally by this Designer. It is much more likely in the scenario of a Designer that we were genetically engineered from apes and have no higher purpose than your average dog or cat. The assumption that higher purpose must exist stems from wishful thinking.
Not in the areas of cosmology or evolution. If these claims were independently verifiable, there would be no creationist movement.
I tend to agree with this, although I believe that no amount of solid science is enough against wishful thinking.
If you're going to be skeptical, shouldn't you be skeptical of ALL unverifiable claims, not just the ones that are based on theistic rather than atheistic assumptions?
Yes, but I can be perfectly skeptical of claims on both sides. The philosophical difference in opinion doesn't stem from preferring natural or supernatural explanations but from the wish to have religion be called religion and science science. I'm all for people being free to follow the personality-worship of their choice. I'll admit that the mathematical angle is a nice one, but the conclusions lead everywhere including UFO-based religions and not just to your church.
see a Text Widget
thank you for the philosophy lesson ;^) you are correct in nuancing my post. the point remains the same, i should've used another example, though.
yet the popular understanding of atheism involves the negation of the existence of a deity. other replies to my post indicate that more people interprete atheism in that way, and it is my personal experience that just about any self-proclaimed atheist thinks this way. within that context, the example was valid to illustrate the frame of mind of people who assume science is about facts.
"That is: do you think every designing object must have a designer itself?"
No.
"One of the issues I see with ID is that even if it can prove that the universe was designed intelligently, it still won't explain what designed the designers."
How is that an issue with ID? What most people don't understand is that ID is simply a measurement. It's like measuring the temperature of the water. No thermometer, for example, will tell us HOW something got to be that temperature. It simply measures what is there. The process for finding out HOW the water got hot is different than determining WHAT the temperature is. ID is simply taking the "design" temperature. How the design got there would be an entirely different field altogether. While I am certain that most ID'ers have their own ideas of how this happened, all of them view that as a separate realm of inquiry. For more information of this separation, you should read Philip Johnson's book "The Wedge of Truth".
"The dictionary definition says that naturalism is the philosophy that the world can be understood in scientific terms without recourse to spiritual or supernatural explanations."
Yes, but doing so abandons the very concept of reason. See the last paragraph on this post of mine for more details.
"That's odd, because the authoritative figures on this subject claim otherwise."
Which ones are these? Philip Johnson does not claim that scientifically, nor think that such would be a scientific conclusion. I am not sure whether he supports it spiritually. I am pretty sure from a rather full reading of Dembski that Dembski is against it as well, though Dembski often plays his cards close to his chest. Most people don't know, but most ID'ers believe completely agree with Universal Common Ancestry, Behe and Dembski included. ID does not of itself appeal to any type of design outside what I would consider "human-capable" design (not that it is limitted to our technology, but that it is limitted to the types of physical limitations that people have). There is another type of Intelligent Design, but I don't imagine that you've heard of any of them who follow it, called General Intelligent Design. I myself am quite unfamiliar with it, but I'm pretty sure it is much more supernatural in the requirements of the intelligence it is speaking of. The main work for that is by a Mathematician named Hermann, but I can't remember the title at the moment.
"It is much more likely in the scenario of a Designer that we were genetically engineered from apes and have no higher purpose than your average dog or cat."
ID does not rule this out, while Creationism does. However, most ID'ers and Creationists believe that science is not the only means to knowledge.
"The assumption that higher purpose must exist stems from wishful thinking."
Actually, it stems from revelation. Revelation as a source of knowledge is a key concept in Christianity.
"I tend to agree with this, although I believe that no amount of solid science is enough against wishful thinking."
Alchemy eventually came to an end. Of course, creation/evolution has been a sticking point since before the Greeks, so its probably wishful thinking to think that we will settle any time soon.
"Yes, but I can be perfectly skeptical of claims on both sides."
Great. It was sounding like you were only being skeptical to one side, but if you treat all sides with equal skepticism, then yes, you are truly a skeptic.
"The philosophical difference in opinion doesn't stem from preferring natural or supernatural explanations but from the wish to have religion be called religion and science science."
But you are still missing the fact that ALL cosmologies are inherently a mix of science and philosophy, as admitted by ALL cosmologists.
"I'll admit that the mathematical angle is a nice one, but the conclusions lead everywhere including UFO-based rel
Engineering and the Ultimate
Ok, I understand your fear, and we're not that far apart in that respect. I think things could get much worse in the near future (near meaning the next century or two). And no, I don't have much faith in corporations or the system. It needs to be replaced. In fact, it's not that I have faith in the system, it's that I think the system is horribly hard on most people, especially the 40 million poor people in the US (living at or below povery level). I think if anything, they have huge selective pressures to battle against. So, for every person that's able to afford proper medical treatment, there is another American, 37% of the population if I remember correctly, who can't even afford health insurance. That, and we're really talking about recent history, the past 100 years, which is very small evolutionarily speaking. Also, I think the people that are getting the kind of medical care you speak of, that allows them to "cheat" evolution, are a small fraction of the population. And, we're enormously successful as a species, so, even if there is some disaster, chances are that there are quite a few people who have what it takes to survive it.
The real reason that I like to argue against those that "worry" about evolution, is that evolution is a mechanism to explain speciation and biological diversity, and I really think that we should concern ourselves with how to care for human beings (not that these things are mutually exclusive, but it often seems to me that those who worry about evolution have a callous attitude towards those who are less fortunate). I think that we are going to go in one of two directions. We will either descend into chaos, in which case, people who worry about evolution won't have to worry anymore. Or, we will keep progressing and eventually learn how to manipulate our genetic code, in which case, again, we won't have to worry about evolution. I think that as long as we don't blow ourselves up, we'll be able to manipulate our genome in a short period of timee.
See Gattaca, The Island, and look at genetically engineered (and patented, and "self destructing") seeds, cows (not self destructing), etc. Monsanto won't give a shit about the hazard of a "mono-culture" until it hits their bottom line.
Best of all, I'm actually an optimist (no, really =)!
"1984" was ment to be a warning, not a guidebook. You hear that Kim Jong-il!? BushCo?!
you are right, except that you miss on last bit: technology and humankind are almost one and the same. Just as some can't live without insulin, you and I can't live without heat and a supermarket. Subsidence farming will have you removed from the gene pool in no time. There is just no way that a human being can be successful without any technology. Now you could argue that fire and speers arn't as advanced as heart surgery and you'd be right. Yet it remains the case that technology is what 'we' (mankind) do to survive. Lions and their teeth and claws, turtels and their shell, whales and their plancton grills, men and their fire. It's our adaption, and should we loose it, we would be screwed just as animals are screwed when their adaption becomes useless.
___
No power in the 'verse can stop me
How is that an issue with ID? What most people don't understand is that ID is simply a measurement.
...
... This is not to say that the biblical issues are unimportant; the point is rather that the time to address them will be after we have separated materialist prejudice from scientific fact."
You are mistaking quantifiable measurements of physical properties with qualitative ones. ID is not simply about making measurements, it's part of what is called the Wedge Strategy.
Besides, if everything needs to have been designed directly or indirectly, then sooner or later you'll run into the question of what designed the designer. Since you seem to claim that ID apparently allows for pockets of unlinked intelligence, evolution theory should be compatible with it, but the leading ID proponents are against evolution theory.
Yes, but doing so abandons the very concept of reason.
So by embracing reason as the arbiter of one's actions, one abandons it? That doesn't make sense.
Which ones are these? Philip Johnson does not claim that scientifically,
Well, Phillip Johnson wrote in 1999 "...the first thing that has to be done is to get the Bible out of the discussion.
Dembski writes in 'Intelligent Design; the Bridge Between Science and Theology' the following: "Christ is indispensible to any scientific theory, even if its practitioners don't have a clue about him. The pragmatics of a scientific theory can, to be sure, be pursued without recourse to Christ. But the conceptual soundness of the theory can in the end only be located in Christ."
In 2000, Dembski writes "Intelligent Design opens the whole possibility of us being created in the image of a benevolent God."
Then in 2003, Phillip Johnson is quoted as saying "Our strategy has been to change the subject a bit so that we can get the issue of intelligent design, which really means the reality of God, before the academic world and into the schools."
Phillip Johnson makes numerous references to Darwin's theory of evolution and clearly regards evolution incompatible with ID.
It's clear to me that those ID proponents not only believe something supernatural occurred, but also have a very clear idea of who the Designer is. They themselves are fully aware of the strategy to repackage religious aspects in science as a first step to introducing overtly religious aspects into it.
However, most ID'ers and Creationists believe that science is not the only means to knowledge.
Then it rather defeats the purpose to try to use science as a route to finding out about the Designer. What purpose does ID serve you personally? You already know more than science can teach you about the Designer and what the Designer wants from you. Just open the Bible and you'll read what you need to know. Why do you need a foundation in science, which is by its nature rooted in naturalism?
Revelation as a source of knowledge is a key concept in Christianity.
It's a key concept in every teaching that claims close ties to (invisible) supernatural forces. The other key concept is that the worst sin possible is rejecting the religion.
but if you treat all sides with equal skepticism, then yes, you are truly a skeptic.
In all honesty, I don't treat all sides with equal skepticism, because not all sides present as strong a case. It is only natural for example, that I am more skeptical of a teaching that claims that Santa delivers presents than of one that is explained in naturalistic terms of parents buying presents.
But you are still missing the fact that ALL cosmologies are inherently a mix of science and philosophy, as admitted by ALL cosmologists.
The point I have an issue with is mixing it with politics and covert religious intentions. Clearly, the creation and support of the ID movement is largely from people who try to repackage the Christian God in secular terms. Maybe you are an exception, but the on
see a Text Widget
"ID is not simply about making measurements, it's part of what is called the Wedge Strategy."
Yes, there are two parts to ID: (1) a mathematical model of Design Detection, and (2) removing materialism as a foregone conclusion in science, law, and education. If you want to know more about it, you should probably read Philip Johnson's book, The Wedge of Truth, and perhaps also Reason in the Balance. Many people make a lot of hoopla over the wedge, but there's nothing really very radical about it. It simply says, "we have assumed too much -- let's go back and revisit our assumptions."
As to your quotes, while I hadn't read the first one (I'd be interested to do so, I know the library has a copy of that book), the rest are simply saying just what I said in my last post -- the ability to ask questions that were previously ruled as out-of-bounds.
"Phillip Johnson makes numerous references to Darwin's theory of evolution and clearly regards evolution incompatible with ID."
The problem is the word "evolution", a word that has so many meanings that it means nothing. If you use it to just mean "change", then there is literally noone in any creationist community who disagrees with you. If you use it to mean "natural selection", Johnson would not disagree with the idea that dead things don't reproduce, and sick things don't reproduce as much. If you mean Universal Common Ancestry, then Johnson probably disagrees with you, though most of the rest of the ID'ers would not. However, if you mean full Darwinism -- that we were created by a completely blind process that had no ends in mind -- that's where you get disagreement.
"It's clear to me that those ID proponents not only believe something supernatural occurred, but also have a very clear idea of who the Designer is."
No doubt at all to me, either. And I never said anything else. What I did say was that they separate theological from scientific arguments, and that Intelligent Design (though I probably would have been more accurate to say "design detection") is the scientific measurement, and the rest comes from other forms of knowledge, not scientific knowledge. I thought I had addressed this in a previous posting, but perhaps not.
"Then it rather defeats the purpose to try to use science as a route to finding out about the Designer."
Why? Science is a route to knowledge, just not the only one. In addition, the different forms of knowledge should not be contradictory, or else one of them is not knowledge. If a person believes that God acted in the world, then it would be a very weak belief if they thought he left no empirical evidence.
"What purpose does ID serve you personally?"
Personally, I am not hugely committed to ID, except to point out to people who are vehemently against it that they usually haven't really understood ID at all. I do agree with, I guess, one and a half of its tenets. I agree that materialism is an unwarranted assumption, and I agree with the idea to remove it as a necessary assumption of science. I also agree with design detection, though I am not entirely sold on the way that Dembski is doing it. It's not that I necessarily think that he is wrong, but I think instead that he is approaching it from the wrong angle, which makes it both harder to comprehend and also harder to determine. I view Intelligent Design from a programming perspective, influenced by Wolfram's "A New Kind of Science". In there, he pointed out that of the cellular automata, Rule 110 was the most chaotic, and also was Turing complete. This lead me to the realization that programmatic expressiveness was a function of the chaotic-ness of the underlying system. The more chaotic the system, the more expressive it is for the programmer. However, this also means that, because the systems are chaotic, errors will cause the problems to be catastrophic, or at least very dramatic. And, it happens to be that Intelligent Designers as a matter of habit bring order to chaotic systems.
"Just open the Bible
Engineering and the Ultimate
"Also, why aren't these nifty ID detection methods ever used in archaeology and SETI?"
Demski's explanatory filter is precisely what is used by both these fields. In SETI, the questions that are asked are:
Is this signal a known type of signal?
Could this signal be a result of random noise?
If the answer is no to both of these, then it has a high likelihood of being a true signal. This is precisely Dembski's explanatory filter in action. SETI tries to accomplish both of these in one swoop by looking for a very high-energy and narrow band (most known types of signals are wide-band, and most noise is low energy).
"BTW, do you say Mozart and Apache are examples of intelligent design because you applied Dembski's "explanatory filter" to them, or because you know people created that stuff?"
While I know origins of Mozart and Apache, let's pretend for a minute that I didn't. If I heard a symphony, I would assume that the symphony had its origins in a designer, and not by random noises. Likewise, if I found a cool computer program on the Internet, and did not know its origin, I would assume that it had a designer and did not come into being through chance manipulations.
Engineering and the Ultimate
It simply says, "we have assumed too much -- let's go back and revisit our assumptions."
:-)
I have no trouble with revisiting assumptions to replace them with better models. We wouldn't have Einstein's theory of relativity if we didn't do so. That is what the scientific method is about. However, this is not just about replacing formulas with better ones but about using ID to make Christianity more acceptable in science. Surely, you agree that there is a strong Christian link?
that we were created by a completely blind process that had no ends in mind -- that's where you get disagreement.
ID as I understand it from you completely allows for this to happen. You agreed in a previous post that the designer of an intelligently designed object (like a computer) does not itself need to be designed. That leads me to the conclusion that intelligence does not need to be linked according to you and Darwinian evolution is possible according to ID. Johnson states opposition to theistic evolution too, so he does seem to favour an involved Designer.
If a person believes that God acted in the world, then it would be a very weak belief if they thought he left no empirical evidence.
Yes, I agree. The problem, however, is that emperical evidence is often ignored or interpreted as a test when it conflicts with the bible. There is perhaps a bit too much noise about what Christianity really claims, because there are too many conflicting accounts.
We have emperical evidence (of sorts) that UFOs exist. Does that mean that a religion based around UFOs finds itself validated that way?
It is an accepted fact that we live in a material reality and that science models a lot of this reality. The issue seems to be whether something outside of this reality - something supernatural - influences this reality. More than removing assumptions, I think it's about adding assumptions where materialistic assumptions don't work out.
Science started off in Western culture as an extension of theology and philosophy. It was made possible by the assumptions about nature brought by Christianity.
If that's true, then hasn't the ID puzzle been solved already in favour of naturalism? The evolution of science seems to favour naturalism so to speak.
Likewise, if naturalism is a faulty assumption, that means that the logical conclusions drawn from naturalism is also faulty.
It's not a black & white situation: naturalism will never be 100% faulty. We can see that a wide range of sciences work very well, even though they are entirely naturalistic. The Designer seems to favour repeatable naturalistic processes with minimum naturalistically detectable involvement.
On the other hand, even if you can prove that intelligent design has taken place in the universe, then still you have no conclusions regarding the Designer and what designed humans. Certainly, as a Christian you would like to find some emperical evidence that can only be interpreted in favour of your own god and not UFO-beings or even theistic evolution?
I realize that I am accusing you of having bias. On the other hand, I have every reason to want your claims to be true: according to my present views, I have only a double-digit number of years left to live. According to your views (at least how I assume them to be), I have millions of cool years ahead of me. It's against my interest for me to be right and in that sense, I am biased against myself
You are saying that Christians cannot do cosmology with non-materialistic assumptions on the same playing field as naturalists with materialistic assumptions, and complaining that Christians are trying to impose their views on others, but not complaining about the same for materialists.
Neither person can deny that a material world exists and that our physical reality is ruled by highly consistent laws of physics. We have overwhelming amounts of emperical evidence for that. The only part where Christian cla
see a Text Widget
This was a very hard question. Here is my answer:
1) Is ignorant of the concept at all. They do not believe or disbelieve or wait for evidence to decide. (not agnostic, religious or atheist)
2) Is aware of them but does not believe. If they were to see evidence they would change their mind. Their disbelief is not a religion- just a fact. "The sky is blue- ghosts don't exist". ( Supposed definition for Atheist ).
3) Is aware of them but believes they definately do not exist. They think illogically to support their disbelief. "That wasn't a ghost- it was just a bad piece of chicken" or "I don't care about the evidence for mendelian genetics, I believe differently and ignore your evidence or even actively suppress it." (Actual Atheist I often observe in practice)
4) Is aware and them and believes they definately do exist. They think illogically to support their belief. "God said it, I believe it, and that settles it." or "nya nya nya, I'm not listening, I'm not listening." or even wierder "I'm a scientist- I believe in evolution and natural selection but I also believe the literal truth of the bible at the same time- I just ignore any conflicts and think religiously in church and scientifically at the lab." (Religous)
5) Is aware of them and can't decide if they exist or not. They would decide based on evidence. Some would need weak evidence- others would need strong evidence. Most would need -physical- evidence or personal revelation to begin believing. (Agnostic)
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
The reason Einstein and others have stated the value of religion is that - as far as institutions go - it is the only one that provides morality, and thus prevents us from indiscriminately using our knowledge without thinking of the consequences. Einstein and others were emphatically NOT saying anything about a designer, or "evidence to back up faith" (as if such made sense!).
-- thinkyhead software and media
Not all religions are dogmatic. In fact Buddhism expressly prescribes the dictum to question everything - right down to your very identity. Other religions - Christianity being a prime example - are meant to be based on similar principles as expounded by their founders, but as institutions they have become corrupted and authoritarian... like most institutions.
The thing is, when it comes to personal enlightenment you do have to transcend the reason and knowledge that locks you into your sense of identity and beliefs about reality. The methods to accomplish this are scientifically applied by trained masters, who understand the tiers of awareness firsthand. Nevertheless enlightenment is not wholly incompatible with science. It merely liberates you from the illusions imposed by discursive thinking. It certainly doesn't preclude using your mind to investigate the material world, and in fact it enhances such activities by providing more enjoyment and delight in the process.
It happens that when people encounter numinous mental states without having had the benefit of a benevolent guide they will attempt to form explanations of the phenomenon using the religious symbols of which they are aware. And if they are involved with an authoritarian church their valid experience of transcendence can be corrupted very quickly and turned into zealotry. That's the trouble. Such experiences are frankly quite accessible, through chanting, dancing, drugs, prayer, etc., but the habit of grasping for explanations makes us susceptible to religious ideology.
So to put it bluntly, religion is not at its core either about dogma or faith. Those devices and attitudes may be helpful one guides and trains himself towards self-realization, but the purpose and aim of true religion is to throw off all such crutches once you learn to exist on your own.
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-- thinkyhead software and media
Hate to break it to you but Einstein was Jewish and a supporter of the Zion movement, which was instrumental in Israel becoming a state again after WWII. You haven't read much of Einstein's work outside of the science realm I would wager.
I eat Karma for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. That's why I don't have any.