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Missing Link Fossil Discovered

choongiri writes "The Guardian is reporting the discovery of a missing link of evolution. From the article: "Scientists have made one of the most important fossil finds in history: a missing link between fish and land animals, showing how creatures first walked out of the water and on to dry land more than 375m years ago.""

864 comments

  1. I got your link right here by Le+Marteau · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I got your missing link right here.
    I'll take any opportunity to take a frosty one all over the uncanny resemblance of Dumbya to a
    monkey. Fish to land? That ain't no big deal. O Please. This is the missing link of importance.
    Monkey to Leader of the Free World. Be afraid. Be very afraid. Fnord.

    --
    Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
    1. Re:I got your link right here by dual_boot_brain · · Score: 1

      No need to insult chimps....

      --
      There is no reset button in life; however, there are bonus levels.
  2. I found him too! by vought · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    1. Re:I found him too! by mh101 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Funny... following your link to "The Missing Link" says "The page cannot be found." So I guess that means it's still missing? :)

      --
      Duct tape is like the Force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it holds the universe together.
    2. Re:I found him too! by davidsyes · · Score: 1

      Any of those missing links have tufts of hair around them?

      (I'm thinking of old cave man movies where the have an asssssload of hair all over the body. They'd better not reappear and then dive into anybody's swimming pool. They'll clog it up whether or NOT they get snagged by the suction tubes...)

      Then again, if they drown and then the pump dies from overheating and cubic feet of natty-assed-teflon-strong hair, they'll drift away like so much flotsam....

      --
      Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
    3. Re:I found him too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure if you were serious about any part of that, but, if you are honestly wondering if such an evolution could reoccur, simply put, it would not reoccur the same at all if it did at all. The environment is different by exponential multitudes and it's impossible for the exact same evolution to reoccur.

      And hair is a land thing anyway. In the water it serves little purpose.

    4. Re:I found him too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NICE autoflame there...I love the part where you admit that YOUR the sad. Basically I helped to turn encoding into more of a pissing contest than some twisted version of "show and tell" to get slurps from ignorant pathetic imbeciles who had such a lack of discriminating tastes that they would probably eat shit off the floor if they were hungry enough. LOOKING muscular is not the same as being strong, Sunshine. `, ) I found a way of combining DHMTL and PHP in a way that's NEVER been done before.

  3. It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Ignorant+Aardvark · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can we please stop using this "missing link" terminology? It's one of those terms often bandied about by creationists, but it has very little meaning in science. And anyway, everytime we find another transitional fossil the creationists are just going to point to the two gaps on either side of the new transitional and say, "Now there's two missing links! Nyah nyah nyah!" They already don't believe evolution is possible anyway.

    Now as for this find, there's something very important here that the writeup isn't covering. The scientists used their theory to not only predict the existence of such a transitional species, but also where, geologically, it would be located. And guess what - they found what they were looking for exactly where they were looking for it! Talk about predictive power! The predictive power of the theory of evolution is one of its many strengths, and one often overlooked by science-deniers.

    1. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by M0b1u5 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If I could MOD you up, I would!

      Yep - there's no such think as a missing link. There might have been in the past, but morphological properties allow us to make the connections without having to see all the transitional forms in between. As parent noted: Ambulocetus was predicted by evolution, and then it was found pretty much oin the form predicted, with the bony structures of the inner ear as predicted, in the geological strata at the date predicted - so there's nothing new about evolution proving its own efficacy.

      It might be exciting for scientists to actually discover a predicted fossil (well, of course it is!) but us mere mortals don't need to see it to know the truth: we have seen mud skippers on mud flats. We have seen an eel a kilometre from water in the middle of a field, wriggling to the next waterway. We've learned that Inter-tidal zone animals are extremely tough, and can survive long periods of exposure to the extremely hard environment of "air".

      So this isn't exactly surprising.

      What IS surprising, is that there is no image - not even the obligatory 100-pixel-across thumbnail, which links to a lame-ass 200-pixel-across "Large Picture". I am very interested in seeing this thing - so where the bloody hell is it?

      --
      How many escape pods are there? "NONE,SIR!" You counted them? "TWICE, SIR!"
    2. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1
      Missing link, missing step. Whatever. This is a kind of creature that was missing in the evolutionary chain, and it was actively being searched for -- not because ID protagonists were talking about it, but because evolutionary biologists knew that it had to be somewhere.

      You do bring up a good point, though about the fact that they (some of them, at least) had a reasonable idea as to where somewhere was. -- and, yes, the predictive nature of the evolutionary theory is one of the missing links (bwahahahaha!) in the ID process.

      ID proponents just sit back and scream "HA! but now, you're missing step 2.3!"

      "Uh, yes mam, I think I just said that."

      Lessee now, God spent 2 billion years making them, and we've spent 200 years looking for them. It's not a big shock that we haven't found them all yet.

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    3. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by ari_j · · Score: 0

      I believe in the Creation. I also believe that the methodology employed was evolution. Please stop (not just you, but people from the "creation means no evolution" camp as well) claiming that they are mutually exclusive. The two concepts are orthogonal. You can believe in one, the other, both, or neither without any inconsistencies.

    4. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Then do you also believe that Homosapien is the final product of Creation? Are we the zenith of Evolution?

      If you believe that evolution is happening and is continually differentiating species, then where does Homosapien stand in that evolutionary timeline? Are we just another interesting node in the evolutionary history of the Universe, to be supplanted by the homo-superior (not talking about Mac fanatics) species that we will eventually spawn (alternatively, we will die out and another evolutionary lineage will take our place)?

    5. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Chris+Graham · · Score: 1

      I'd love to hear an elaboration of this idea, because I've heard it a few times now, but never with any detail. Do you believe the process of evolution was controlled by laws of nature that were planned to reach the result we are now at, whether it was 'helped along', and/or whether it would never have happened naturally without a 'spark', etc? I'd just like to get an understanding really of how God fits into your beliefs in evolution.

    6. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by GoodbyeBlueSky1 · · Score: 2, Funny

      You know, the grandparent post was a little difficult to understand for me, thank you for translating it into numbers.

      --
      why? forty-two.
    7. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe you are easily led, nay I know it.

    8. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by skogs · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      The scientists used their theory to not only predict the existence of such a transitional species, but also where, geologically, it would be located. And guess what - they found what they were looking for exactly where they were looking for it! Talk about predictive power!

      Amazing how similar thinking can also prove just about any other faith based religion in the world. I know exactly what the bible says about foobar and I can see it in exactly this spot!! I know exactly what confucious says about foo, and look, it happened in japan on exactly the right day! The Omega code is absolutely true, the world will end on date in the past and it will be started by this country taking oil from this country.

      The sooner we realize that faith in evolution is no more scientific than those damn bible thumping fools, then the sooner we can just quit arguing and realize that our way is not the way.

      You can no more observe the beginning of time, and the exact way evolution happened than you can tell whether I am wearing pants or not. You aren't here to watch me make my post, so you can never really know...yes my pants have my skin cells on them, yes they are carbon dated to have carbon in the cells exactly yea old, but you can never prove beyond a shadow of __person's__ doubt that I truly was, or was not, wearing any pants while posting.

      Flame away diephobic moderators...flame away.

      I actually realize the things I believe are just that. :)
      --
      Who is this that even the wind and the waves obey Him? Surely this computer must submit also!
    9. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could someone please translate it into something simpler than numbers? Math hurts my brain.

    10. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> also where, geologically, it would be located.

      This is inaccurate. This area has been combed over and over by scientists for decades - because it is a rather well preserved, fossil-ridden area. Many research grants for this area were granted for other purposes (early mammil, reptile, etc...) It has not all been "we're here to look for this specific missing link because we know it's here". More than likely, during studies on reptile fossils in general - this was uncovered.

    11. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      The sooner we realize that faith in evolution is no more scientific than those damn bible thumping fools, then the sooner we can just quit arguing and realize that our way is not the way.

      Perhaps you should address the evidence and explain why a validated, tangible specific prediction is somehow equivalent to "religious faith". Supporting your claims, rather than just asserting them, would give you a great deal more credibility.

    12. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by rk · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Then do you also believe that Homosapien is the final product of Creation? Are we the zenith of Evolution?"

      Well, I don't know about this we business, but I know I am... :-D

    13. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by skogs · · Score: 1

      You can support your claims about my pants as much as you like...I still say you believe them and can't prove it...since you aren't here to witness the unfolding of my posts.

      --
      Who is this that even the wind and the waves obey Him? Surely this computer must submit also!
    14. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 1

      Your mother was an intermediate form!

    15. Re: It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > > The sooner we realize that faith in evolution is no more scientific than those damn bible thumping fools, then the sooner we can just quit arguing and realize that our way is not the way.

      > Perhaps you should address the evidence and explain why a validated, tangible specific prediction is somehow equivalent to "religious faith". Supporting your claims, rather than just asserting them, would give you a great deal more credibility.

      Yeah, but when you can't support your claims you have to fall back on that sort of rhetorical posturing as a substitute.

      Or else abandon your claims, but that's not an option for some people.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    16. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by c_forq · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's like having a 1970 VW Beetle and a 2006 VW Beetle then saying "look, this 1990 VM Beetle is the missing link" then someone else coming and saying "No, this 1980 VW Beetle is the missing link"

      --
      Computers allow humans to make mistakes at the fastest speeds known, with the possible exception of tequila and handguns
    17. Re: It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Funny

      > > > agree. It's time to stop. It's like saying that 1.5 is the missing link between 1 and 2 and then someone comes along and says "no, there's a gap between 1 and 1.5".

      > > You know, the grandparent post was a little difficult to understand for me, thank you for translating it into numbers.

      > Could someone please translate it into something simpler than numbers? Math hurts my brain.

      Ok, try "no, there's a gap between l and l.S".

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    18. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      I still say you believe them and can't prove it

      Actually, nothing in science is "proven". Explanations can only be further supported as potentially valid through additional evidence, or they can be disproven through contradictory evidence.

    19. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by ezdude · · Score: 1

      Some things just ARE, whether you believe in them or not. Whether I believe you are wearing pants is irrelevant. You either ARE or ARE NOT wearing pants. There are a set of facts that must be consistent with the state of "you wearing pants". It is my job as a scientist to figure out what those facts are. Sometimes, you can prove to a within a reasonable amount of error that something is true (i.e likely to be true). The Theory of Evolution falls into this category. It's hard to argue with the facts and voluminous data that support Evolution, unless, of course, you are a religious zealot with little formal education. Moreover, there are no alternative theories that have even a handful of credible data to support them. Creation or ID fit in this category. This so-called debate (which is a complete misnomer) is not about beliefs. Joe Friday said it best, "We just want the facts."

    20. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Tatarize · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Typically the idea is to have divinely driven evolution. Where the evolution goes is guided by some kind of higher-power or God as a tool to make creation.

      In short, it's a load of crap. Giving God credit for evolution is about as effective as giving fish credit for plate tectonics. In fact, it's worse. The utter mind-blowing jaw-dropping bodypartnoun-verbing power of evolution is that it requires no intelligence at all to create something fantastic. Caltech has a program called Avida which shows exactly this, evolution is extremely effective when simulated by a computer. A number of programs have been written to use evolution to do the designing.

      Make a number of random models.
      Test model based on some goal.
      Allow better model to reproduce more.
      Introduce random mutation to reproduction.

      If you can test for a property in a model, you can implement evolution in a computer program.

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    21. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Mozk · · Score: 1

      Taking into account the fact that even mentally or physically disabled humans still reproduce, I doubt that Homo sapien will die out. If for some reason the environment gradually changes so that only a fraction of humans can survive, by that time we will all, either by genetics or other technology, be able to survive. That's not good in my opinion since we are already overpopulated in several areas, but I can see it happening.

      --
      No existe.
    22. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by aichpvee · · Score: 2, Funny

      Wait, they make Gods that create animals? Mine only keeps hot things hot and cold things cold.

      --
      The Farewell Tour II
    23. Re: It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by skogs · · Score: 1
      April Fool's Day called. They want your post back.

      Which of us is rhetorical in their posturing?

      Dimensio said it best so far in this argument...that shouldn't be an argument if you actually read my first post:

      Actually, nothing in science is "proven". Explanations can only be further supported as potentially valid through additional evidence, or they can be disproven through contradictory evidence.

      Don't even get me started on education level. My own education aside...there are plenty of doctorates degree toting morons out there I wouldn't trust with my peanut butter jar.

      --
      Who is this that even the wind and the waves obey Him? Surely this computer must submit also!
    24. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mikeburke · · Score: 5, Informative
      Get them to explain the evolutionary path that lead to creatures having sight.

      Richard Dawkins, Climbing Mount Improbable. pp 138-197.

    25. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      1) OK, so God caused the big bang. Where did God come from?

      2) The land came to them - you know, sometimes rivers and such dry out. The ones that could adapt to land survived.

      3) You're kidding, right? The advantage from even simple photosensitivity is pretty obvious.

    26. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by arrrrg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      2. Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

      Well, putting the loaded word "decide" aside, the obvious answer is that land represented a huge unexploited ecological niche, with tons of food and no predators.

    27. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Tatarize · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't even like the term transitional form. It seems to imply that there is a set goal of evolution, that the species is making the transition from this form to that form. In reality, going all the way back to our earliest ancestors you won't find a parent which was a different species than its offspring (some very special cases exist though, but typically never). Everything is a transitional form, from what its ancestors were to what its progeny will become.

      The organism 1.39390 isn't really making the transition from 1.39389 to 1.39391. It's just there.

      If anything is, I am a transitional form between apes and super-humans.

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    28. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by killjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "What caused the big bang? or What external force was there that caused the big bang?"

      To paraphrase Stephen Hawkings "that's like asking what's north of the north pole". It's also like asking "who created god?".

      --
      evil is as evil does
    29. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by NMerriam · · Score: 2, Informative

      With all due respect, Creationism is not used by many people in the way you use it.

      You are right, there is nothing mutually exclusive about religion and evolution, or divine creation and evolution. There are many who believe in theistic evolution and there is nothing contradictory about it -- that God set up the laws of evolution, or even that he guides the process.

      But Creationism is a word that, right or wrong, is used by both the general public and its most vocal proponents to mean a belief in a literal interpretation of the Biblical account of Genesis, and as such is incompatible with any evolutionary theory.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    30. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by flewp · · Score: 2, Funny

      Did his father smell of elderberries?

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
    31. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by myth_of_sisyphus · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Well, I'm just an amateur who's done a bit of reading on this so I'll give it a try:

      1. What caused the big bang? or What external force was there that caused the big bang?

      Time was created during the Big Bang so "before" is meaningless. There is no "before" or "after" or "cause" and "effect" if there is no Time.

      Same goes with "external." The whole universe was contained in this ball of energy so there is no "internal" or "external." So the whole question is absurd and moot.

      2. Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

      They didn't "decide" to do anything. They were compelled by nature to seek land: to lay eggs, to find food, to mate safely.

      3. Get them to explain the evolutionary path that lead to creatures having sight.

      Here goes: an eye spot that detects light and dark develops into a pit eye, which enables the creature to detect direction. This develops into a Pinhole Eye. This develops a protective layer. The layer develops fluid. Fluid turns into a protein lens. Cornea and Iris separate. Organism is perfected into what we have now. Totally simplified of course but good enough for slashdot!

    32. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      i think a Dawkins quote applies here "'Show me a cultural relativist at thirty thousand feet and I'll show you a hypocrite. Airplanes are built according to scientific principals and they work. They stay aloft and they get you to a chosen destination. Airplanes built to tribal or mythological specifications such as the dummy planes of the Cargo cults in jungle clearings or the bees-waxed wings of Icaraus don't.'"

      There parent post was talking about reality - you are talking about subjective truth relative systems that don't equate.

    33. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mcasaday · · Score: 4, Funny
      Ignorant Aardvark
      anyway, everytime we find another transitional fossil the creationists are just going to point to the two gaps on either side of the new transitional and say, "Now there's two missing links! Nyah nyah nyah!" They already don't believe evolution is possible anyway.
      cartel
      For me personally, there are just too many gaps. To convince me at least, one fossil/species is not enough.

      Whoa! Speaking of predictive power! Man, you really nailed it!

    34. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      from the sounds of your post, it would seem you are atheistic or agnostic.

      it is interesting to see the "intellectuals" turn on you for not supporting their "dogma."

      it's as if... a christian rejected the deity fo christ... all the rght wing faithful would turn on them in a heartbeat...

      then again, that *was* your point, wasn't it?

      too many similarities.

      as a christian, i agree.

      please don't lump me in with the right wing nutjobs. in fact, i'm so disgusted with organized religion, i can't find a church to attend.

      i'll be sending my son to christian private school shortly and i'll have to spend a lot of time getting him to discern the nonsense they will teach him (the predominant heaven / hell teaching is 100% bogus and blatantly contradicts numerous scriptures).

      anyway, it will all come out in the wash.

    35. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by kmcrober · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sweet Zombie Jesus, you have to be kidding. ID is BS. Period. An educated and honest human being has no excuse for pandering to such an invidiously ignorant ideology. A quick reply to your frankly ridiculous bullet points:

      1. Evolution is a biological phenomenon. It has no answer for this question, because this question is not relevant to the evolution of species. Inasmuch as you are indicting all of objective science, I'll simply note that ID has no better answer than consensus physics. "Jesus did it" (or Unnameddesignerwhowewon'tcallGodeventhoughweallkno wthat'swhowe'retalkingabout) is not a testable or falsifiable answer, and is a statement of faith rather than a scientific hypothesis.

      2. Sea creatures did not "decide" to become amphibious. Evolution is not a directed process in which species consider their options and choose one. Nor do species evolve "towards" a higher form. That sort of teleology is, again, not a scientific hypothesis. This question is particularly egregious; even a primary school education should have taught you that creatures don't "decide" on how to evolve. I'll charitably assume that you mean, "How did aquatic species become amphibious and then terrestrial species?" The answer is complicated, because science is hard. Read a book. Preferably one by a real scientist, or at least someone with a biology degree. The shortest and easiest (and therefore oversimplified) version is that organisms capable of thriving in more and more marginal environments reproduced more successfully, preserving and spreading their inheritable successful traits.

      3. Again, this question betrays remarkable ignorance. Darwin proposed an evolutionary chain for the development of the eye well over a century ago, and evolutionary biology has demonstrated that the eye evolved early and often. (There's a pithy quote to that effect, but I can't recall to whom it should be attributed.) Even basic light-sensitive skin cells can confer an advantage, and the development of those cells into complex lens-bearing eyes is hardly the deep and overpowering mystery that hacks like Behe would like credulous fools to believe that it is. Again, please read a book by someone who *isn't* a creationist. You will be amazed how much there is to learn.

      Obviously, I am very contemptuous of your ignorance. But it's more than just that--what is so aggravating to me is the classic creationist arrogance. You assume that your questions are great traps to confound scientists and educated people, when in fact they are literally so foolish that a child could answer them. Do you really think that you know better than specialists who have spent their entire adult lives studying the field? Do you really think that they will be unable to answer your questions? Why haven't you learned the answers to those questions by now yourself? I suspect that the problem may be that you're getting your information from biased sources, such as ID blogs. Someone has badly misled you. But as impoverished as your understanding of the issue is, I'm even more disappointed by the moderators who rated your questions as "interesting." Honestly, the exposure of such rank ignorance on a site geared towards highly educated and presumably intelligent people is disillusioning.

      I need a drink. You need a book. Let's hope we both get what we need.

    36. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by skogs · · Score: 1
      From another post later on:

      by aussie_a It's amazing what you can find if you have a preconception. Religious people do this every day of their lives, constantly finding proof of God being alive...and yet scientists constantly dismiss their evidence, because they were found by people who had a prior belief. And yet when scientists do this, looking for evidence in a theory they believe in, and miraculously finding it, the scientists hold it up as the greatest achievement of thier lives. They're just so hypocritical, and I am flabbergasted...

      While the aussie_a poster was a bit more pro-creation than I would have liked...the idea of the post was the same as my parent post. When you go looking for something, chances are you'll find it. When I don't have a hammer available...and I am looking for that missing item...amazing what begins to fill that void. Shoe, screwdriver, old computer mouse, trophy from the last professional convention, indentured servant named Rita... ...doh...

      If I may expand, as I seem to have attracted a throng of close minded evolutionists (of which I am, but not quite so close minded) Why does the typical scientist assume they know it all? Why does a scientist in any field think they are right, and that there is no more to know? That somebody that has spent their entire life achieving a doctorate in some odd religeous program, and ministered to thousands of people...obviously doesn't know jack? How do scientists find the time to become experts at religeous teaching?

      There was another post later on, mentioning how you can believe/disbelieve in a faith, and still believe in scientific evolution. Neither are mutually exclusive and bar restraint from eachother. This isn't Riyad...they aren't going to chop off your hands. I think the silent majority believe some/most of both...and that the more you argue the more you turn people off of whatever side you happen to be promoting.

      --
      Who is this that even the wind and the waves obey Him? Surely this computer must submit also!
    37. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      The term "creationalist" is generally used to mean one who believes god created all creatures essentially as they are, no macro evolution. Both creationalists themselves and scientists tend to use the term this way. So if you believe that god created the universe, but did so billions of years ago and we are the products of evolution, that's not really a creationalist stance. The creationalist stance is what Dwane Gish and his ilk believe, that we were created as is, generally a short time ago (5000 years is common) and we have not changed.

      Now what has made it more confusing is htey often soften their stance to try and get it in school science classrooms. They want to teach that humans are too complex to have evolved, thus there must be an intelligent designer working. That is, of course, contrary to evolutionary theory and backed by no evidence (and indeed is the kind of claim that is unscientific becuase it's untestable). However the root of their beliefs is in a literal interpretation of biblical style creation, hence the title "Creationalists".

    38. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please note that there is no evolutionary chain, there is an evolutionary tree. This link/step/thing is newsworthy because it is on a path that leads to us, but there are many other paths.

    39. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      And with all due respect, "evolution" is not used by many people in the way you use it. The same, as slashdotters all know, goes for "hacker", "free software" and "intellectual property".

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    40. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a very common complaint about the standard terminology. There really isn't a solid concensus about which terms mean what, but the particularly loaded term is "creation." You are absolutely right that evolutionary biology (and consensus, secular science in general) does not exclude belief in the divine creation of life, the universe, and everything. Your position--divine creation through scientifically detectable and understandable natural processes--is probably the majority position by a long ways, loaded polls aside. There are very few scientists who would contest that position, because science makes no claims as to the faith, and that variety of faith makes no claims as to what will be or has been naturally discovered.

      But "creation" is usually meant to mean "special creation," that is, creation outside scientifically discoverable, observable, or understandable processes. When ID creationists talk about design, they don't mean design in a sense that is orthogonal to objective science--they, like classic creationists, mean special creation that happened through a magical, miraculous, or otherwise supernatural process.

      So when you say that believing in "the Creation" does not preclude actual, legitimate science, you are completely right. But many people will hear "creation" and think "special creation," which is incompatible with science because science does not make room for magic or miracles.

      So you'll probably have to repeat your point a lot in the future, because the debate isn't (unfortunately) going anywhere. But that's OK, because it bears repeating: Science is not a threat to religion. It's science that is under attack by a small, dishonest, and aggressively ignorant faction of religion.

    41. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Stalyn · · Score: 0

      There is a huge difference between the kinds of predictions evolution makes and kinds of predictions physics and chemistry make.

      Physics is able to predict the future outcome of an experiment. Evolution is only able to predict the past. Evolution in essence is only able to describe a history. In that sense evolution does not predict anything but explains an event. This may be because evolution is incomplete or evolution as a theory has a large computational complexity. Most likely both.

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    42. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by skogs · · Score: 1
      Man...just be glad you don't live where I live...


      No crap, there is a private religeous school in town here...they don't actually have real teachers. No crap. They don't teach, they don't lecture. They do worksheets. All day long. Oh yeah, and the King James Bible...its the only true and accurate Bible ... which as far as translations of anything go...I wouldn't put it up there anywhere near even Microsoft's coding to be fully true to either the exact word or the exact thought/meaning.


      This school sucks. I have a pair of kids that come and visit...sort of get tutoring out of my wife or I...but they don't really need any tutoring...they aren't stupid. Its just that the school sucks, and things don't get explained to them. If they aren't good at reading it for themselves and figuring it out (especially considering the poor worksheets) then they are screwed. No hands on experiential learning here, no visual learning, no social learning, just read from poor worksheets - there are no books at all by the way - only worksheets.

      No pun intended - May God have mercy on those poor deprived children. They are growing up stupid...well meaning, but stupid.

      --
      Who is this that even the wind and the waves obey Him? Surely this computer must submit also!
    43. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Pseudonym · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Also not speaking for the parent poster, but I'd just like to make a couple of comments from a theological point of view.

      First off, evolution actually fits better with Christian theology than young-earth creation, because it depicts "creation" as an ongoing process rather than a one-off event. It places God in history rather than outside it, which is one of the themes that you'll find running through the Bible.

      Secondly, various biblical verses claim that humans are "made in God's image", or words to that effect. This has caused a lot of theological discussion over the years, such as the way that God has been depicted in art. Should God be represented as a grey-haired old man in the sky? "God is spirit" (see John 4:24), after all.

      Well if God has no body, it makes more sense to say that the part that when we say "made in God's image", we're not talking about our bodies, which we understand to be evolved animal bodies, but rather the "spirit" part.

      This looks like intellectual wankery, much like counting pin-head-dancing angels, and you'd be partly right. But for people who care about this sort of thing, evolutionary theory actually answers a number of long-standing theological problems, and the answers turn out to be much simpler than anyone thought.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    44. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by misleb · · Score: 1, Interesting
      But Creationism is a word that, right or wrong, is used by both the general public and its most vocal proponents to mean a belief in a literal interpretation of the Biblical account of Genesis, and as such is incompatible with any evolutionary theory.
      Actually, even that type of Creationist believes in evolution. First, ask a creationist how Noah fit 2 (or more) or each species on the ark. After they run a few numbers, they'll come back and say something like "Noah only had to put 2 of each created 'kind' onto the Ark." Then ask them the process by which those prototypical "kinds" diversified into the species we know of today. Not only do they believe in evolution, but hyper-evolution. All those species evolving over a mere few thousand years? Amazing! From one couple of "cats" we got everything from the house cat to tigers.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    45. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1

      I think you'll find that most scientists don't think they know it all. There wouldn't be much point in doing research if you did know everything would there? Let's assume for the sake of argument that you're the one with the doctorate in let's say some form of Christian theology. Now, let us further assume that some physicist, who has only read the Epistles comes along and starts preaching about the Word to your flock.

      He completely gets it wrong, since he is ignorant of such important points as the Sermon on the Mount, the Resurrection (at least the details thereof), and so forth. I'm assuming that you, as our hypothetical Doctor of Divinity, would be horrified, and would attempt to correct him. In this situation, you're not saying that he might not have anything useful to add, nor are you saying that you know everything about the Word of God, you're merely saying that he isn't in possession of the complete facts.

      The important point here is that you're better qualified at this than he is, and thus you're in a position to address his errors. When a preacher makes scientific claims, the roles are reversed.

    46. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by kmcrober · · Score: 1

      "Physics is able to predict the future outcome of an experiment. Evolution is only able to predict the past."

      Untrue, and a little bit ridiculous. One very easy example: Evolutionary theory is used to predict how organisms (such as, say, the Ebola pathogen) will evolve.

      Moreover, it would be sufficient if evolutionary biology *did* simply make accurate predictions about the past. That is, of course, more than creationism can do. We look to the making and testing of predictions as a way of gauging whether a field is legitimately scientific; whether the event underlying the prediction has occured or will occur is not relevant, so long as the theory makes a prediction about an unknown outcome and that prediction can be tested.

    47. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "They already don't believe evolution is possible anyway."

      If people believe that's true, then God must be creating new species all the time (in geological terms). That is, it should be obvious that species have disappeared. And new ones have emereged. So are they constantly being created? But I thought everything was supose to be created pretty much at the same time? But evidence indicates some hundreds of million years before others. What's the ID answer to that, I wonder?

    48. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Ugly+American · · Score: 4, Informative

      Fox has some pictures of the model and sketches accompanying their article.

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    49. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by kmcrober · · Score: 1

      I was halfway through a reply of my own when I saw yours. A choice quotation, and well placed.

    50. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by servognome · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I agree. It's time to stop. It's like saying that 1.5 is the missing link between 1 and 2 and then someone comes along and says "no, there's a gap between 1 and 1.5".

      You mean stop science itself? Science is based on data, without the missing link between 1 and 1.5 you can't fully understand what occurred during that transition.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    51. Re: It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by kmcrober · · Score: 1

      "My own education aside...there are plenty of doctorates degree toting morons out there I wouldn't trust with my peanut butter jar."

      You trust those doctorates (and any number of intelligent, rational people with other degrees) with your health and safety whenever you climb into an automobile, go into surgery, or ride an elevator. Subjectively believing that you are truckproof, that your cancer won't spread, or that you can fly won't make those things true. The experts that you are trusting in those situations, like evolutionary biologists, put their faith is solid and objective results, not empty and sophomorical rhetoric. That is why people roll their eyes when fools say things like, "The sooner we realize that faith in evolution is no more scientific than those damn bible thumping fools, then the sooner we can just quit arguing and realize that our way is not the way."

      Proving the accuracy of a testable prediction is one of the things that makes evolutionary theory not "faith."

    52. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Well, actually that isn't Evolution, but selective breeding. Simply because Evolution isn't goal-driven - which is exactly why it can come up with stuff we can't even dream of until we find them. But even selective breeding shows that "the Creation" isn't static.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    53. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by x2A · · Score: 3, Insightful

      um, no... if you read what he said you'll spot the words "in between", which creates a context which has a start and an end point, making everything in between - transitional stages. His wording was perfectly valid. That doesn't mean that you have to like the term, but it'll take more than not liking it to stop it being valid.

      If you're going to argue about wording, you have to take into account the context which it's used.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    54. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      I was simply stating that evolution as compared to physics are two different kinds of theories. To say evolution has the same explanatory and predictive power as physics would be a false statement. Also the study you cited was not very convincing in showing evolution has a similar predictive power as compared to physics. The blog author was very enthusiastic but the authors of the study were much more reserved. However the conclusions cover things that already have happened or are happening and do not predict any future events.

      Also I am not a creationist.

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    55. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by x2A · · Score: 3, Funny

      "Lessee now, God spent 2 billion years making them, and we've spent 200 years looking for them"

      Um, no, God spent 6 days making them, and that was only 6000 years ago, the universe didn't even exist 2 billion years ago, DUH!!!

      hehehe, how stupid do you feel now?! :-p

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    56. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by cashman73 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I had a debate on evolution vs. creationism/intelligent design once with a born-again Christian. It lasted about 15 minutes. Only after I gave up having gotten frustrated that I felt like I was talking to a brick wall.

    57. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by ZeroExistenZ · · Score: 1
      3) You're kidding, right? The advantage from even simple photosensitivity is pretty obvious.

      As it's obviously, it's not as straightforward but it's a fascinating thought;
      Imagine you and anyone of your environment don't know sight.
      Your being is without photosensitivity ENTIRELY. But suddenly there's something causing for something usefull to evolve... and in a very complex form... adapting to perceive and interprent this "vision". (Logically, it should've evolved out of tentacles of "feelers" which got sensitive for light and going from there...).

      It's like humans evolving with some sensory organs with sensitivity for something we don't know yet and cannot comprehend because our organism isn't adjusted and adapted to interprent or even to grasp the concept thereof. (like out brains have evolved to interprent light as vision, and you're trying to explain a mole what sight is.)

      There could be advantage out for some people to develop infrared sight, how hard you wish you want it, you don't really have control over your evolution. Maybe if you sit for generations-long in the dark, however that more likely will result in blindness and other sensory-organs to enhance as your eyes have become absolete.

      I'm not an ID-believer, but it's fascinating to think these things over. It's easiest hoewever to just say "my mind cannot grasp it, so there must be some higher almighty force which created everything and that explains it."

      --
      I think we can keep recursing like this until someone returns 1
    58. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by kmcrober · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "I was simply stating that evolution as compared to physics are two different kinds of theories."

      Well, it's a good thing that you're simply stating it, because you'd have a hard time defending that statement as any sort of meaningful conclusion. Your assertion is meaningless. Evolution is not equivalent to "physics" in the sense that you mean. Evolutionary theory is to biology as atomic theory is to physics. Both have been exhaustively proven by legitimate scientists, and both offer crucial insights that underlie their overarching fields. Unfortunately, one of the two theories runs counter to the teachings of a narrow strata of religious zealots, and so suffers from the hands of a particularly aggressive strain of ignorance. But there are crackpots in both fields. Antievolutionists are pretty much the biology version of the Timecube guy.

      Also, and again, your assertion that predictive power is only meaningful if the event being predicted list in the future is just goofy. See, for instance, an entire FAQ entry expressly dealing with this particularly silly idea.

    59. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here are some good questions to ask your local "ID is BS" person:

      Can we see the positive evidence for ID first?

    60. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Splab · · Score: 1

      And ligers http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liger/

      Btw. I'm neither in one or the other camp, I usually go by being ignorant and pretty good at it, but once in a while you got to stop and think "how the hell did that happen". I mean, if there was a divine power, how come I don't get to win the lottery when I need some money for beers? On the other hand how the hell did Malaria figure out it's life cyclus? (and I think theres an even more weird example of some sort of parasite that makes an ant crawl up on top of a grass straw in order to get eaten by the parasites next host)

    61. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by x2A · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you think "what caused the big bang" is such a brilliant question to prove the existance of a god, try this one: what created god?

      If you think that everything must have been created, then you can't believe in a god that wasn't created. If, on the other hand, you believe that god can get away without being created, then how can you believe that the big bang can't?

      It's these inconsistancies that leave the sane world laughing at you.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    62. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      I think you and I agree on the facts (and both trust biologists that their latest iteration of natural selection is more or less correct), but I disagree with you, most days of the week, in your interpretation of them. First, let me distinguish between what I will call (correctly?) the theory of natural selection and the Evolution of the Species. The former, being a scientific model, is quite well understood and is what is seemingly programmed into Avida. You summed it up nicely with your 4 steps. Evolution of the Species is a physical process that took place over billions of years and resulted in concrete individual animals, among them human beings. I think we can probably agree that the Evolution of the Species in general, and the evolution of human beings in particular, is contingent. You seem to conclude this means that our existence is incredibly accidental. It seems to me to be more satisfying to see the evolution of human beings not as contingent and accidental but as a contingent and purposeful miracle, ie as the creative act of God. I think that my conclusion is more consistent with my own optimism that human beings are important in the universe. I suppose that I also believe that the entire Evolution of the Species, inconceivable as it is, ought to be comprehensible, and the only way I can imagine the entire process to be comprehensible is for it also to be purposeful because I believe natural selection does make the whole history seem so very contingent.

    63. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by boomgopher · · Score: 0

      Good point from a amazon review:

      "In the case of the eye, he concentrates on the evolution of its shape and does a solid job at that. However, it seems like the evolution of photocells with light-detecting pigments and the development of the proper neural pathways to interpret signals from the eye would be considerably more substantial achievements than the eye simply attaining the shape it has today, and Dawkins leaves these issues out. Also, Dawkins never really gets around to addressing the issue of how complicated protein molecules like hemoglobin could have come into being through only random mutations and non-random natural selection, an question which, as Dawkins himself mentions, a number of people have some problems with."

      --
      Your hybrid is not saving the environment. Its purpose is to make you feel good about buying something.
    64. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by kmcrober · · Score: 1

      Replying to myself - I overlooked your statement that you are not a creationist. I apologize for implying that you are.

    65. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      And with all due respect, "evolution" is not used by many people in the way you use it.

      With all due respect, all evolutionary scientists and professional "evolutionists" use it in the proper sense. Those who use it differently do so out of ignorance or deliberate misrepresentation.

      As I said in the original message, both the general public AND the professional proponents of Creationism use the term in a manner other than the poster. There is no group with either professional/historical/religious/technical authority or sheer numbers claiming it means what the poster claims it means.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    66. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      Many Creationists will reply that evolution can certainly apply to the animal kingdom, but that Man is a divinely created being who is outside of evolution as a process, or at least did not evolve from any "lower" animal.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    67. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if you are arguing against me or someone else.

      1. I never said evolution was not a science because it could not predict future events.

      2. I never said evolution was lesser of a theory than physics. Physics is able to explain more within its domain but that does not make physics a better theory.

      Also I said the reasons evolution is unable to explain future events is two things; evolution is incomplete as a theory and the computational complexity of evolution as a theory might make such predictions impossible.

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    68. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All those species evolving over a mere few thousand years? Amazing! From one couple of "cats" we got everything from the house cat to tigers.

      Another thing that is amazing, is that apparently there is a disease of the brain mentioned in the Bible, which people can only contract by eating the brain of a person who is infected with that disease. That disease was still present well after Noah's ark was supposedly used. So, that disease existed before and after Noah's ark and how many people were on the Ark? Three?

      So at least one of them was a canibal. Was Noah a canibal?

      Hmmm, maybe it just didn't rain so much as to fill the Earth with so much water to cover all the land. Hang on, wouldn't all that water have just run off the sides of our flat Earth? Maybe the Bible is just a bunch of bed time fairy tales, with morals to live by and a whole lot of nut cases take it is being absolute truth.

    69. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by binarybum · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Taking into account the fact that even mentally or physically disabled humans still reproduce
              We are far from the only species that do this.

      If for some reason the environment gradually changes so that only a fraction of humans can survive, by that time we will all, either by genetics or other technology, be able to survive. That's not good in my opinion since we are already overpopulated in several areas, but I can see it happening

            This faith in technology seems unfounded. It's the year 2006, we should have been vacationing on the moon for at least the last five years. Instead, we could nuke the surface of every continent by noon tomorrow, but meanwhile millions of people on this planet are still dying of things like diarrhea.

      --
      ôó
    70. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Chrispy1000000+the+2 · · Score: 1

      Your half brother is a pure bred horse!

      --
      Sig
    71. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or maybe the bible is JUST A STORY.

      Next.

    72. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mcc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      1. What caused the big bang? or What external force was there that caused the big bang?

      I'm sorry, what does this have to do with evolution versus intelligent design?

      Though the big bang cosmology theory has nothing to do with biology, I would agree that Science in general probably doesn't at current have an answer to what caused the big bang. I've seen a few tentative attempts to answer that question, but I don't think there's a consensus. The thing is though, this doesn't exactly matter. We don't take the big bang seriously because we know or care where big bangs come from; we take it seriously because we observe it's what seems to have happened. Nobody particularly wants the big bang theory to be true. Nobody has a particularly vested philosophical interest in the universe being an explosion. We do, however, have rather a decent lot of evidence concerning the exact way that the universe formed, gathered from looking at the aftermath (i.e.: the universe). That evidence has come to suggest what is called the big bang theory. If this is messy, or strange, or we can't come up with a good explanation as to what caused the cause behind that big bang, there really isn't anything we can do about this. Unlike religion, science doesn't get to decide what happened. Science is forced to go whereever the facts the universe contains takes it. And whether we want them to or not, those facts point at this.

      But of course our inability to explain the Big Bang is quite separate from the status of other theories-- for example, the theory of Evolution-- in which we understand not only what happened, but the mechanism, reasons, and context that brought the thing that happened about.

      2. Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

      Oh, that's easy; there was food up there. Plants have been on land since at least 475 million years ago. Creatures have been permanently stationed up there since at least 425 million years ago. It's entirely unreasonable to say those millipedes "decided" to get up on land; this is undue anthropomorphization. The change to settle on land was made possible by mutation, which was a random act not guided by any conscious decision making process. It also seems unlikely to me that the first creatures to leave the ocean had any kind of purposeful goal, since I doubt they had enough sensory equipment to tell what the heck they were even doing.

      More likely the very first time it happened, it went like this: something that could eat algae was crawling along a rock eating algae. This rock happened to be partially in, and partially out of, the ocean. The thing kept crawling along the rock, eating algae, and eventually it reached the interface between the ocean and the atmosphere, and it kept on crawling, and kept on eating algae. Why not? Of course, it may well have died very shortly after that, depending on whether and how long it could survive in the atmosphere. But: if there's all these algae and plants out in the dry world, and nobody's out there eating them or their dead, well heck, free food and no competition. This creates what we think of (it's a metaphor of sorts) as "evolutionary pressure", kind of like how, if we lived in a world where canned food was common but there weren't any can openers, the process of capitalism would create a tremendous metaphorical pressure for somebody to invent and start selling some.

      Now let's say there's not just one thingy that eats algae and one rock where the algae is growing out in the atmosphere. Let's say there's lots and lots of thingies and lots and lots of rocks. The earth is pretty big. If, by coincidence, one of the thingies somewhere on the earth eventually winds up with some genes that, in its little gastropod nervous system, make it feel like it's a really good idea to

    73. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by palndrumm · · Score: 1

      about as effective as giving fish credit for plate tectonics.

      Yeah - everyone knows it wasn't fish, it was microbes... :)

    74. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by gowen · · Score: 1
      On the other hand how the hell did Malaria figure out it's life cyclus?
      In short : Random mutation attempted all life cycles, and the one that was successful are the ones that survived. Evolution isn't a process of "figuring out", it's a process of throwing an enormous number of mutations at a wall, and seeing which stick.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    75. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by gowen · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But at least they have the honesty to be creationists.
      I've no problem with people who actively and honestly choose to believe their religion over science, as long as they're honest about what they're doing. Pretending their religion is science; now thats dangerous.

      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    76. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by sumdumass · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Thanks for the link./ I am wondering though, isn't this just like a frog or toad and how they becopme born and what they are today but stretched over a longer time?

      Whats the possability they just found some really old and big frogs that looked like aligators?

    77. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by DenDave · · Score: 1, Funny

      Dude, who cares ok?

      Wanna see what life forms look like when they live half in and half out of the water? Go watch surfers...

      --
      -if at first you don't succeed, stay the heck away from paragliding.
    78. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here are some good questions to ask your local "ID is BS" person:

      1. What caused the big bang? or What external force was there that caused the big bang?

      2. Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

      3. Get them to explain the evolutionary path that lead to creatures having sight.


      Well all of your questions can be answered by randomness in some form or another.
      1. THis is a very brief and skimming summery. The universe existed as a whole bunch of energy, be it visibly light, infrared(heat radiation), etc in a giant sphere. Energy is made of up matter and antimatter (matter + antimatter to energy in equilibrium). If you dont believe that, please consider E=MC^2 (energy = mass * speed of light * speed of light) That shows that there is a direct relation between energy and matter (because energy has no mass, something has to be a massed object). Because of the light to m/am reactions taking a different time each time, then in some areas you would have a whole bunch of m/am, and by random chance, a huge density of mass was created (along with its am), and since it was such a huge mass, there was enough energy to suck energy in, and out of it all, it blew up. Now thats not enritely accurate, but at the moment, i'm tired and dont want to write you a scientific journal about it.

      2. Why did the british sail over seas to discover (although not the first to do so) places like america and australia? Because of the open niche. Its also the same reason why bacteria respire and plant cells photosynthesize. The niche is there to be taken. If you were stuck in an areas vastly populated by others, and there was a food shortage, would you try to fight it out, or would you go 5 km down the road, live there where there is plenty of food? Well if you were half sensible you would go down the road. In those days, land was a HUGE unconquered niche just waiting to be taken.

      3. IIRC it goes something in this order:
      i. Photoreceptive cells (i could explain the way a photoreceptor works, but cbf, basically it involves a proten receptor that already has a ligand attached, when light hits, the ligand changes shape via chemical reaction, and releases from receptor, sending a nerve impulse) on some animals (earth worms) that let them sense if they were in light or not.
      ii Dense packing of photoreceptor cells interacting with each other to sense which light was coming from, or which way a shadow is coming from (star fish etc)
      iii Denser packings to show a wider area that was light/dark (shape recognition)
      iv Focal layer developement so light refracts onto packings of photo receptors Encapsulated by cell layer to keep it in place
      v developement of basic eye to see intensity of light (black and white only)
      vi Photoreceptors splitting into rods and cones to show colours (as in us, some animals, etc)

      What i want to ask you however, is that if the eye was made by this intellegent designer, then why is it inherently flawed? Why do the photoreceptors lie beneath the layer of nerve cells, and where all the nerve cells leave in a dense area, we have a "blind" spot? Octopi/squid/etc all have a far better eye then the human eye with the nerve cells laying underneath the receptors.

    79. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      Why wouldn't the universe have existed 2 billions years ago? Oh yea, it is also mostly the newborns and catholics that cite the 6000 year stuff. I think it is more commonly thought as being universal corect then different religions actualy hold claim to it.

    80. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Witchblade · · Score: 4, Informative

      What IS surprising, is that there is no image - not even the obligatory 100-pixel-across thumbnail, which links to a lame-ass 200-pixel-across "Large Picture". I am very interested in seeing this thing - so where the bloody hell is it?

      Picture courtesy of New Scientist.

    81. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by sumdumass · · Score: 3, Funny

      Not living on the moon for the last 5 years is probably one of the bigest reasons no one will nuke every city by noon tomarrow.

      In other words, I think the only thing stoping us from vacationing on the moon is the fact that too many people think that if governments had a safe place to escape the effects of nukes, they would be used more then they have been. We have the ability, just the desire of those with the ability has seemed to weaken a little.

      Maybe i'm wrong and it is just a fuunding issue?

    82. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 0, Troll
      Ah, yes, ever has it been such. Better to silence the heretics then heaven forbid try to respond to them. Sad to see the road that religeon followed is now being followed just as blindly by the new 'science as religeon' crowd. For the record, I have been in IT full time for about 2 years now, before that I managed a Microbiology lab. Take that Mr Troll Mod.

      Sera

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    83. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by shmlco · · Score: 1
      "I think that my conclusion is more consistent with my own optimism that human beings are important in the universe."

      So. In all of the billions of galaxies and trillions of stars there's one god who created one and only one intelligent species inhabiting one single insignificant speck?

      As has been said before, "That seems like an aweful waste of space."

      On the flip side, if there are other planets with other intelligent species out there, do you not suppose that they have their own creation mythos, and that they, in turn, are optimistic that they are important in the universe?

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    84. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by slamb · · Score: 1

      skogs' post was just crazy. It was not a good representation of cultural relativism, so I'll play the Devil's Advocate and provide one.

      Camel Pilot said, quoting Dawkins: Airplanes are built according to scientific principals and they work. [...] Airplanes built to tribal or mythological specifications such as the dummy planes of the Cargo cults in jungle clearings or the bees-waxed wings of Icaraus don't.

      Absolutely. Few would question the West's dominance of exploration, travel, communication, science, engineering, medicine, and raw population growth.

      But does that makes us great? Those are our metrics. Another culture might claim greatness due to peacefulness (lack of war and crime), happiness, lack of poverty, equal rights, harmony with nature, etc.

      In this study (linked from "Clinical depression" on wikipedia), 4.4% of Americans vs. 1.0% of rural Taiwanese suffer from clinical depression. In Europe, it's much higher - 16.4% in Paris. The Middle East is higher still - Beirut, 19.0%. Let's disregard any potential problems with the study (sample size, etc.) and assume for the moment that it's accurate. Is this a fair way to judge a culture? Is the Middle East the worst, Europe slightly better, North America better, and the Far East the best?

      How do you judge a culture? It ultimately comes down to your values, and those are set by your culture. So really, it's an unanswerable question.

    85. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Time was created during the Big Bang so "before" is meaningless

      How do you know?

    86. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 1
      If you believe that evolution is happening and is continually differentiating species, then where does Homosapien stand in that evolutionary timeline?

      If, as I'm hoping, it's infinite, I'd say we're mathematically smack in the middle.

      The only truly contentious issue between "creationism" and "evolution" is whether the Irish Anglican archbishop James Ussher was a good or a bad mathematician in 1580. All else is nothing but choice of granularity.

      --
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    87. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      And anyway, everytime we find another transitional fossil the creationists are just going to point to the two gaps on either side of the new transitional and say, "Now there's two missing links! Nyah nyah nyah!" They already don't believe evolution is possible anyway.

      Maybe, but at some point the remaining gaps are small enough to be explained by microevolution :-)

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    88. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know! I know ... It's Zues!!!

      Oh wait, if we couldnt name him either, we'd have to call him god to!?
      Hmm, so then he must be god too. But if he created god, and he is god, then god mightve created him too! Oooooh I found one for Steven Hawkin... It's a Conundrum !! OMG 1337

    89. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      So. In all of the billions of galaxies and trillions of stars there's one god who created one and only one intelligent species inhabiting one single insignificant speck?

      My own suspicion is that there must be life on other planets. And I think that if they exist, they ARE important in the universe. You and I are only two human beings among 6 billion currently living, and many more (12 billion total?) that have ever lived, but I believe we are both important all the same. If the universe is infinitely large and the probability of intelligent life is finite, which is quite possible, then there may be an infinite number of intelligent beings, but that does not need to make us seem any less important, especially if we understand our existence as the product of an infinitely loving creator.

    90. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      What IS surprising, is that there is no image

      Google news for Tiktaalik and find 231 stories at the moment. Several have photos of the fossils and reconstructions of the living animal. I'm surprised that it's so big -- I imagined the first walking animal would be small, cat sized, rather than this, crocodile sized. I think all of our known direct ancestors have been smaller than we are now, certainly the further back we go in primate history. Having this rather fearsome creature in our family tree is like finding you're descended from Genghis Khan.

      It's possible, likely even, that it isn't "the" link, there could have been many animals making the transition to land at the time. As for "missing link", well every fossil was a "missing link" before it was found. Just some seem more significant than others.

    91. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Maow · · Score: 1
      Sweet Zombie Jesus, you have to be kidding. ID is BS. Period. An educated and honest human being has no excuse for pandering to such an invidiously ignorant ideology. A quick reply to your frankly ridiculous bullet points:

      Thank you - possibly the best posting on /. ever.

      Should be printed out and nailed to the doors of every school & church in the land.

    92. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Mercedes308 · · Score: 1

      I laughed my arse off reading this, very nicely put.

      --
      And no, I couldn't give a shit what my karma is.
    93. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      What caused the big bang? or What external force was there that caused the big bang?

      Who knows. It may or may not have been some supreme being that may or may not be the Christian God. WMaybe the same being zapped the first proto-life into existence as well. Why do ID enthusiasts keep bringing this one up. We're talking about the origin of species here. Not the origin of the universe. Not all scientists are athiests. They just tend not to believe in a God that micromanages and goes for some generally rather badly designed ready made species when evolution is so much better a mechanism for creating adaptable life.

      Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

      They didn't have a choice. They ended up there and one of them was lucky enough to have the mutation that allowed it to survive. This mutation was passsed onto its decendants. This gave them a small advantage since they were actually able to go to land to feed, and there was a lot of food for them.

      Get them to explain the evolutionary path that lead to creatures having sight.

      Well, even Darwin managed to pose this question, and came up with the basis for the answer. If you google for "how did the eye evolve" you'll see a lot of answers

    94. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And let's face it: a guy whose name is a mix of "Darwin" and "Hawking" *must* be right.

    95. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, you can see pictures of the pretty well preserved skeleton here. I don't know why you said that, it's a skeleton, not an image of Jesus on toast.

    96. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only after I gave up having gotten frustrated that I felt like I was talking to a brick wall.

      Maybe if you had finished high school, the Christian could have understood what the fuck you were saying and it might've lasted longer than 15 minutes.

    97. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      Let me preface that I'm not a creationist nor do I believe in ID.

      The thing that bothers me about your post is you do not attempt to answer his questions but you attack him for asking such questions. First off good science is done not by trying to always prove a theory but by trying to disprove it. Much like a good programmer will always look for bugs and do unit testing.

      Your post reminds me of the arrogant programmer who will quickly dismiss a bug report. And not because the bug report is bad but the programmer has an emotional attachment to his project. Instead of thinking objectively this programmer will attack the bug reporter for being misinformed.

      There is nothing wrong with actually answering someone's question without demeaning the question and the person. Also being critical of a scientific theory will only make the theory stronger and more complete.

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    98. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by nowhere.elysium · · Score: 1

      Thank you! every time i read one of these evolution/creation threads, i get shot down in flames for saying what you've just said, so iwanted to congratulate you on a cracking point of view, and i just wish i could mod you up further...

      --
      http://xkcd.com/313/
    99. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Bombula · · Score: 1
      I've no problem with people who actively and honestly choose to believe their religion over science, as long as they're honest about what they're doing.

      I think you speak for everyone when you say that honesty is a quality to be appreciated in other people. But, sorry, I still have a problem with people who choose to believe religion over science. That is, quite simply and in no uncertain terms, asinine.

      Honesty I have no problem with. Freedom of choice I have no problem with. But stupidity? Stupidity I have a problem with.

      --
      A-Bomb
    100. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whatver mr "You can scientifically prove religion by dying" guy. That is so stupid, that is not a realistic and scientific test. You're lucky anyone responded to your bullshit.

    101. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Sqwubbsy · · Score: 0

      catholics that cite the 6000 year stuff.

      I don't know why Catholics would do that, as it is not part of their theology or dogma. Now Evangelicals and fundamentalists...those dudes believe if it ain't in THE BOOK it didn't happen.
      But my Catholic high school ripped the creation stories (plural - there's two of them and they're different) as being little more than Hebrew myth. Powerful and as important as they may be, they're still myth.

    102. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Decaff · · Score: 1

      First off, evolution actually fits better with Christian theology than young-earth creation, because it depicts "creation" as an ongoing process rather than a one-off event. It places God in history rather than outside it, which is one of the themes that you'll find running through the Bible.

      But this is the problem - it doesn't. The whole point of current neo-Darwinian theory is that evolution is the natural selection of random mutations: there is no sign, or need, for any intervention in the process - no sign or need for an intelligent designer!

    103. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Sorry, the supposed difference is just not there. Are particle physicists who predict the existence and characterists of a particular boson, then look for and find it, behaving any differently to the biologists of TFA?

      In this case the science was clearly predictive; an unknown fact was deduced, and certain expectations were set by the theory used to deduce it. The fact was later verified empirically, and the theoretical expectations were satisfied. Whether it's cosmologists looking for gravitational lensing, chemists building silicon analogues of organic molecules or paleontologists looking for fossils, this is hard science.

    104. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by YttriumOxide · · Score: 1

      My thoughts would be that it goes something like this:

      1) Fish swim around being fish
      2) Some fish find themselves in shallower water, forced out by whatever natural environmental forces do so (geology, competition for food, etc)
      3) The fish that are forced out start their own little environment in the shallow water
      4) The bigger ones feed on the little ones (fairly normal)
      5) Competition in such an environment brings on evolutionary changes
      6) Tiktaalik evolves, eats all the other fish and begins to grab little snippets from land now and then
      7) Tiktaalik runs out of fish and moves completely to land
      8) First land animals

      Of course, that's just one plausible scenario amongst many and I lay no claim to it's validity - just plausibility.

      --
      My book about LSD and Self-Discovery
      Also on facebook as: DroppingAcidDaleBewan
    105. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by sumdumass · · Score: 0
      I'm just another amature who has done a litte reading. So i will give your reply a try.

      Time was created during the Big Bang so "before" is meaningless. There is no "before" or "after" or "cause" and "effect" if there is no Time.

      Same goes with "external." The whole universe was contained in this ball of energy so there is no "internal" or "external." So the whole question is absurd and moot.

      Time is reletive to our understanding. In your answer we decide not to care about anythign further in history other then our knowledge of time as we know it. The funny thing is that beyond our universe something had to have existed, some proccess had to have happened and from that proccess we pick up on time. In a way of thinking about it, becuase we choose not to discover what might be more relevent to our time itself (another time-paradox)we choose not to go further back.

      But if we do go further back, we have to asume that without time, nothing could happen (big bang) so we are actualy part of another time. This time could be more massive and slower then we are ready to imagine. Now where does this fit in with our attempts to prove ro disprove a higher power? Well think of it like a bunch of atoms inside another bunch of atoms with quorks behaving like atoms. Each getting smaller and smaller as we go thru the different universes. This does pose the possibility that something beyond our scope could have created at leadt part of what we know. It also creates the possibility that everythign we know or will know (until the universe colapses) could be a fraction of time in the reltivness of the time before us(big bang).

      They didn't "decide" to do anything. They were compelled by nature to seek land: to lay eggs, to find food, to mate safely.

      Most likley they weren't compelled but forced. They atmosphere may have had alot of moister and they could have been thrown onto land and survived. Bones developed in thier flippers and fins in much the same way as callused feet get rockhard in some places on the foot. Iritation from trying to propel itself out of water may have cause calluses to be so common that eventualy those with that prediposition were exposed to mating you know the rest. Now if they did it to lay eggs, to find food, to mate then they actualy did decide. They had to have some form of reasoning inside thier control in order to respond to enviromental changes/whatever. It generaly takes more then enviromental pressure to cause an evolutionary stage. This is one of the reasons we don't see it today. Yes i've read about all the they don't bread natualy anymore and this virus mutates into this virus but that really stretching interspeciality.

      Here goes: an eye spot that detects light and dark develops into a pit eye, which enables the creature to detect direction. This develops into a Pinhole Eye. This develops a protective layer. The layer develops fluid. Fluid turns into a protein lens. Cornea and Iris separate. Organism is perfected into what we have now. Totally simplified of course but good enough for slashdot!

      Good enough for slashdot? This is the only reason i decided to contribute to this thread. You see, you simplified it to the point it is just like the bigbang answer except a lot worse. You seem describe the evolution of an eye but do nothing to produce why the sight is there. What causes the evolutionary path of the eye spot. But more importantly, what causes this spot to be wired into the body in a way that it became usefull to its host. What caused it to happen in more then one animal/organism or supplant the non-sighted portions of the populations. The complexities of the eye alone is just the second part of the answer. The vast majority of the animals lived under the sea were light rarley reaches. The animals would have had to develope eyes before comming to land acording to evolution and common ancestry, otherwise we should see entirly different

    106. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      more like anti-intellectual wankery, actually. but your points are well taken.

    107. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by master_p · · Score: 1

      Actually every fossil discovered is a missing link. But it is not THE missing link, since there is not a single missing link, but thousands of them. In order to have the complete picture of the evolution of a species, you need to have at least one fossil from each major change.

    108. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Mulletproof · · Score: 1

      Which, ironically, doesn't make the question any less valid.

      --
      You need a FREE iPod Nano
    109. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by gowen · · Score: 1

      As Frank Zappa once said : stupidity is the most plentiful substance in the universe.

      If you have a problem with stupidity, it's going to impinge on practically every facet of your life, and generally make you depressed and miserable about humanity.

      As long as someone's stupid beliefs (astrology, divining, creationism, a perverse desire to start land wars in Asia) doesn't directly impinge on the greater good, I'll let it be. To allow oneself to get too worked about it would be ... relatively unintelligent.

      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    110. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by tmossman · · Score: 1

      And how do you propose that a test subject report the data he gathers when he's, you know...dead?

    111. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      Predicting an unknown like the mass of a particle or the location of fossil remains is different that predicting a future event like a solar eclipse. Evolution does not have an analogous prediction. (You could say they predicted that they would find fossil remains which is a future event. But that is metatheoretical)

      All I was doing was making a logical clarification. I never said evolution was not a theory or was not science. I just wanted to contribute to the conversation and maybe get some insightful and informative counterpoints. Thats what a dialogue is supposed to be. An exchange of views and information.

      Sorry but it's becoming harder and harder to have a serious conversation about certain topics on Slashdot, especially Evolution.

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    112. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Mulletproof · · Score: 1

      1. Not if you insist on determining a rational cause and effect.
      2. Or they could have just washed ashore one day like Gilligan's Island. Fact is, you don't know any better than anybody else.
      3. Ah, the joys of being a slashnot scientist...

      --
      You need a FREE iPod Nano
    113. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Lol. Evolution is selective breeding - the survival of the fittest. Of course evolution is goal driven - it rewards those that live old enough and produce healthy offspring.

    114. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      If you believe in Creation, then where did the Creator come from? Where did the Creator get the raw materials for the Universe from? And why favour a two-stage process {1. produce Creator and raw materials for Universe, 2. let Creator get busy with Creating Universe} over a one-stage process {produce Universe}?

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    115. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1
      Flame away diephobic moderators...flame away.
      I wouldn't be worried about moderators afraid of days...
      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    116. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by bheer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your post demonstrates quite nicely that religious people do not have a monopoly over faith-based reasoning.

      > Time was created during the Big Bang so "before" is meaningless. There is no "before" or "after" or "cause" and "effect" if there is no Time.

      So you're saying that because your belief system cannot conceive of anything before time t, therefore all times before t are meaningless?

      > Same goes with "external." The whole universe was contained in this ball of energy so there is no "internal" or "external." So the whole question is absurd and moot.

      The moment you posit a ball you also have to admit a bounding surface (to wit, a 3-sphere). And when you admit a bounding surface, shying away from what is on the other side of that boundary is intellectual cowardice.

    117. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by JohnFluxx · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Also they could have just been forced. As other pointed out, you can imagine creatures being forced into shallow waters by waves. There they evolve in very shallow water (i'm thinking like a few centimeters). You can imagine creatures that were able to survive seasons where the pool dries up, and from there creatures that move from one pool of water to another. (Someone else pointed out that we know eels can travel large distances across land to move to more water.)
      Just by thinking it's not that hard to come up with a plausible suggestions on why slowly such an advantage would be gained.

    118. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by commodoresloat · · Score: 1
      Honestly, the exposure of such rank ignorance on a site geared towards highly educated and presumably intelligent people is disillusioning.

      You don't visit this site very often, do you?

    119. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by ignavus · · Score: 4, Funny

      2. Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

      To get to the sea on the other side.

      --
      I am anarch of all I survey.
    120. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 0

      6) Tiktaalik evolves, eats all the other fish and begins to grab little snippets from land now and then
      7) Tiktaalik runs out of fish and moves completely to land


      I dont know how 'plausible' that part is, considering this would be taking millions of years, so saying it gets snippets from the land 'now and then' and 'runs out of fish' seems a bit weird.. if it ran out of fish then it would be forced to feed from land all the time immediately, either that or just die. And obviously there are still fish in the sea (even where there are things that eat fish :o ). Yes I'm a creationist so I like to be sceptical, though I do believe in natural selection, and it's interesting just wondering if natural selection could lead to things like a creature with gills then evolving to be able to breathe air over the course of time. I do actually think that these creatures could have been designed/created and placed in their environment, but of course creatures do adapt. I found it funny someone about saying something about 'evolution proving its own efficacy', which sounds like circular reasoning to me.

      You could think of any environment in the world, then imagine the kind of creature it would take to live there. Here, they conjured up a creature, then predicted where it could live. You could use the argument to try and validify either evolution or creation.. evolution does have some merits, though basically the only proof that you can give for it is that it's so 'obvious' (and I find it sad that people just accept it's true because it just feels like it should work, rather than thinking about the individual little changes that would have to occur, and wondering how that is actually going to cause a new species, rather than just a more specialised version within the same species), but you could say the same thing for creation. The way evolutionists view the fossil record is pretty much based on circular reasoning, and the 'record' is very incomplete, since it takes special circumstances (being encased in mud/whatever) for something to become fossilised properly when it dies, and not just degrade naturally.

      I dont think I've seen any evolution/creation discussions on slashdot (at least not for a while if I have). Perfect topic for a flamewar really.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    121. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by coma_bug · · Score: 1

      First off, evolution actually fits better with Christian theology than young-earth creation, because it depicts "creation" as an ongoing process rather than a one-off event.

      Uh huh. Would you be saying this if science had shown that the earth is only six thousand years old, that the various species on earth are unrelated, and that abiogenesis is fundamentally impossible?

    122. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Not sure which reply you read, but weren't points 1, 2 and 3 answers to the original poster's questions?

      I've often wondered why, if god made the world 6,000 odd years ago, he decided to leave so much evidence of it being older. Is it really just, as the late great Bill Hicks put it, that he wants to fuck with us?

    123. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by misleb · · Score: 1

      Of course, but that would be just plain stupid as there is clearly no fundamental psysiological difference between humans and the rest of the animal kingdom. Humans are subject to the same kind of selective pressures and genetic mutations/drift that any other animal is subject to. If humans were really that special physiologically, you'd think it would pretty obvious. LIke, "hey! human genes don't mutate!" Or "Look, humans don't have the same kind of nervous system as every other mammal." In reality, humans fit just fine into the nested hierarchy of life on Earth. If there is anything special about us, it is all in our heads. And I don't mean the brain, because even that is, for the most part, standard mammalian stuff only with a little more horsepower.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    124. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      like the first reply to your comment, I would have to say, do you think humans are a product of evolution? Why would God create the world, wait for the humans to evolve, then claim that they're sinners and send His son to die for them - and when did humans first develop souls etc. It's interesting to wonder if evolution is happening now, or if God did create all the species we are finding separately.. I dont believe that humans have been around for more than a few thousand years, and I dont know the timespan of Genesis 1 (it could have involved evolution, but I dont see why it had to). I feel that trying to be apologetic about creation and reconcile it to evolution isn't necessary - natural selection is a recognised and easily provable process, evolution isn't so easy to prove just by demonstrating it. I believe that species can change over time, but I will never see live proof of evolution. But then there will always be the question of why all this just 'is', or why God just 'was', and I actually find it more plausible that God just was, than the the universe just exists. And even if the universe existed first, then maybe God was the ultimate evolutionary being in that universe, and then created us o_0 I just find the fact that anything exists at all to be so strange. The universe is going to die sometime, and had a beginning. But where was the beginning of that beginning. *brain asplodes*

      --
      which is totally what she said
    125. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, you win slashdot!

      Honestly, thank you for saying, in a clear succinct post, what sorely needed to be said in exactly the tone that needed to be taken. Best post I've seen here in a long time. I don't think ID and creationist proponents will listen, specifically because their beliefs are not based on logic and therefore can't be swayed by logic, but it still needed to be said.

      Kudos.

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    126. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      we cant be smack dab in the middle, if you assume that evolution only occurs in living things - life would have to start somewhere (interesting the idea that we started off as electrons then evolved into atoms, then molecules, then somehow cells etc) - I'd say if it evolution was infinite, we wouldnt be mathematically anywhere (assuming you understand what infinity is), and would always be somewhere near the start (unless you count the 'end' as when the universe succumbs to entropy, assuming we can never reverse entropy).

      --
      which is totally what she said
    127. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by coma_bug · · Score: 1

      Darwin proposed an evolutionary chain for the development of the eye well over a century ago, and evolutionary biology has demonstrated that the eye evolved early and often. (There's a pithy quote to that effect, but I can't recall to whom it should be attributed.)

      "Release early. Release often."

      The evolution of the eye proves that the gods^WIntelligent Designers are open source developers.

    128. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by cyclop · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is nothing magic in the evolution of both neural pathways and biomolecules. Brains are made for plasticity: co-evolving a neural pathway along with the sensory organ sounds like the lesser problem to me. While eyes must evolve a plethora of new tissues, differentiation signals etc., neurons are just there, they just need to grow and wire up in the right way. A simple arc reflex of the kind "if light, then avoid" or "if it moves, then attack" probably requires just a few neurons firing (remember Valentino Breitenberg...) , would be extremly easily selected by evolution, and would be of tremendous advantage.

      On the other hand, the evolution of proteins also is nothing magic IMHO, although it is the newest field of evolutive theory, as of today. Proteins are so chemically long and complex that is easy for them to be able to bind almost anything, at least with low specificity. Evolving specificity by selection alone is easy -in fact, it is something readily done every day both in your immune system and in biochemistry labs.

      --
      -- Patent no.123456: A way to personalize /. comments with a sig attached to the end.
    129. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by cyclop · · Score: 1

      you do not attempt to answer his questions but you attack him for asking such questions.

      The problem is, ID is not a scientific theory, in the philosophical sense. It has no predictive nor explaining value. So yes, the problem is, by using your (lovely geeky :D ) analogy:

      And not because the bug report is bad but the programmer has an emotional attachment to his project.

      Here you're wrong. It's the bug report that is invalid.

      --
      -- Patent no.123456: A way to personalize /. comments with a sig attached to the end.
    130. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "So you're saying that because your belief system cannot conceive of anything before time t, therefore all times before t are meaningless?"

      So you're saying that if we both keep walking north, and we reach the north pole, I'll be compelled to stop by the fact that there's no further northwardness, but your 1337 skillz will let you continue?

    131. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by dajak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't even like the term transitional form. It seems to imply that there is a set goal of evolution, that the species is making the transition from this form to that form.

      Evolution is not teleological, but the search for fossils by scientists guided by the theory of evolution is. History depends on retrodiction to prove the validity of theories, and retrodiction always uses this teleological perspective. As science understands evolution better it is able to predict the existence of more 'missing links', and if most fossils that scientists find are either known or classifiable as a 'missing link' between known species this is very strong evidence for the validity of the theory of evolution.

      The same is true for history in general: the big story creates 'missing links' to search for. Which culture(s) is/are the original source(s) of the Indogermanic languages? Why are there no texts about Jesus that bridge the time of Jesus and the second century? Why are there no records of the early Islamic state in Medina, even though the town has been unharmed and inhabited by Muslims since the days of Mohammed?

      Creationists abuse this teleological terminology to their own ends to misrepresent the status of evolution as a scientific theory, just like they misrepresent the meaning of theory itself (as in 'it is just a theory'). They can get away with it because too many people don't understand scientific method. Scientists should resist the temptation to let ID influence scientific method and terminology, because doing so will only seem to validate the credibility of the Intelligent Design lobby.

    132. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by AlexV · · Score: 1

      Important to whom, or what? I don't see how something can be objectively 'important' without it having a subject.

      I think that, implied in your post, you mean that human beings are important to a God that created them. While this may be 'more satisfying' to you, it is circular to argue that humans must be purposefully created (through evolution or otherwise) as they are important to the thing that purposefully created them.

      Your difficulty with the contingency of history stems from the assumption that there is something special about humans as an endpoint of it all. I can't see any reason to believe that there is.

    133. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone assumes that our next evolutionary step will be superior. But since stupid people are reproducing faster, according to natural selection you should say...

      If anything is, I am a transitional form between apes and stupid-humans.

    134. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      In other words, I think the only thing stoping us from vacationing on the moon is the fact that too many people think that if governments had a safe place to escape the effects of nukes, they would be used more then they have been.

      Actually, nuking a bas on the moon is probably an even easier task than nuking a target on the other side of the earth. The results would also make for a prettier light show.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    135. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mapkinase · · Score: 2, Insightful
      right on the money man. My 2 cents: There are experimental sciences that are based on observations that are repeatable in controlled environment eliminating artefacts. There are sciences which are not experimental in the above sense: the hypothesis of macroevolution and Darwin theory are not experimental. History is not experimental. Zoology, botany is not experimental. Any classification study is not experimental. That leaves us pretty much with physical sciences: physics, chemistry and partially biology (mostly molecular biology, less cell biology, physical and chemical biology are ok, of course). Discussing ancient bones won't give much to a religious person (which I am) or to a scientist (which I am too, by education, by profession and by habit). Continuous discussion about evolutionary hypothesis is an exercise in vanity and near-sitedness. Isaac Newton said:
      "I frame no hypotheses."
      . He was also a religious man, as many great scientists before and after him. The science nowadays shifted from universal things to applications not because we know so much about universal things, but because we are too arrogant to humble ourself in the face of unknown and too materialistic not to chase "stuff that matters": laptop cases, free downloads of noise called music, etc., etc., etc.
      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    136. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by meringuoid · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Which, ironically, doesn't make the question any less valid.

      Or any more meaningful. Or in any way relevant to the topic at hand, which is evolution, not cosmology.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    137. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by DrXym · · Score: 1
      The thing that bothers me about your post is you do not attempt to answer his questions but you attack him for asking such questions. First off good science is done not by trying to always prove a theory but by trying to disprove it. Much like a good programmer will always look for bugs and do unit testing.

      Creationists ask idiotic questions in rotation. How could the eye be formed, where is the transitional between X & Y, how can you reduce ? etc. Each idiotic question has been answered multiple times, often with copious, detailed, cross-referenced essays. These can be found in books, on the web and even at a single source - talkorigins.org.

      I guess as to why the GP chose to answer the way he did is perhaps because it is pointless providing links to these sources since creationists don't listen. They are immune to reason. They are so convinced of their own beliefs that they're not going to let piffling trifles like overwhelming evidence change their minds. Sometimes you just have to say it and say it in such a forceful way that no one is in any doubt otherwise.

    138. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Fractal+Dice · · Score: 1

      In these situations you have a critter at point A and a critter at point B and what you're trying to figure out is what path did things take to get there: how did the transition happen?

      As you say, it's as simple as A having a bone of length 1 and B having a bone of length 2 and we find a fossil that has a bone of length 1.5, that's boring - it doesn't really tell you anything. What's interesting is where you have two bones on A of length 1,1 and on B of length 2,2. When you find a new fossil, is it 1,2 or 2,1 or 1.5,1.5 or 1,3? That starts to tell you something about what was the pressure point that caused A to change, leading eventually to B.

      The term "transitional" has this polite punctuated equilibrium bias that comes from having a big collection of fossils. If your collection already consists of a lot of critter A fossils and a lot of critter B type fossils, then any find not in your collection is probably something that didn't last long, thus it was "transitional".

    139. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They were compelled by nature to seek land: to lay eggs, to find food, to mate safely.

                Most likley they weren't compelled but forced.

      Look up the definition of compel. In some dictionaries, it even includes 'forced' in the definition.

    140. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      Actually his answer to 1 is dead on. I'm guessing you aren't a physicist. And that you have no training what so ever in general relativity, so let me see if I can enlighten you. Imagine the universe as a surface, parameterised by some co-ordinates. This surface is 4D and the forth dimension is time. The Big Bang represents a boundary on the t co-ordinate. That is the co-ordinate associated with time. No experiment can be affected by what structure we put at negative t. Our theory is pretty precise about what could go there, but it is supremely irrelevant since not experiment could tell the difference.
      Now there are some modern attempts to extrapolate back beyound t=0. One method what one does is one assumes that the universe has such a configuration that it cycles through big crunch->Big Bang->big crunch. Then at the big crunch on calculates the transition probability using an approximation to your favourite string theory. As it turns out this idea is rather crude and so far doesn't work, since so far the predictions are that the universe doesn't oscillate like the researchers would like.
      The singluarity is seen as a problem. But certainly not in the way you suggest. It is perfectly rational to suggest that at the Big Bang had no cause, because the question is as meaningless as asking what on a sphere is more north than the north pole. You might want to ask the more valid question "why is the universe here at all". That would be a valid question. But you are confusing temporal ordering with cause and effect. The fact that the universe has a cusp at t=0 is no more a problem that the fact there is a universe here today at all. The theory has told us that these two questions are equivilant because these are both just points on the same manifold.
      As for 2, you are simply dismissing evidence because you don't like it. Your combination of Ad Hominem Attack, Argumentum ad ignorantiam, and from the looks of things a Non-sequitur and borderline Straw Man, are not impressive. Not to mention your false dichotomy "If evolution cant explain everything, it cant explain anything". I'm guessing where you come from logical fallacies are considered good debate (are you a politician?).
      For 3, see 2.

    141. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Informative
      Time was created during the Big Bang so "before" is meaningless. There is no "before" or "after" or "cause" and "effect" if there is no Time.

      So you're saying that because your belief system cannot conceive of anything before time t, therefore all times before t are meaningless?

      No. Others have used the 'north pole' analogy. 'Before the Big Bang' is akin to 'north of the north pole': it's simply an empty statement. Not part of the coordinate system. Undefined.

      Here's another puzzle for you: what part of England is a thousand miles from the sea? What do you mean, there's no such place? You mean that just because your belief system can't conceive of places in England further from the sea than distance d, therefore such places are meaningless? Same goes with "external." The whole universe was contained in this ball of energy so there is no "internal" or "external." So the whole question is absurd and moot.

      The moment you posit a ball you also have to admit a bounding surface (to wit, a 3-sphere). And when you admit a bounding surface, shying away from what is on the other side of that boundary is intellectual cowardice.

      A 3-sphere? No, no, no. Nothing of the sort. A 4-sphere, possibly, in which case the 3-surface would be the space of our universe and the radial directions would correspond to the forward and backward time directions (btw, another analogy for you, what's below the centre of the earth? You mean that because your belief system can't imagine locations > r kilometres down, means all depths below r are meaningless?). An infinite flat expanse of 4-space, also quite plausible. And there are other interesting geometries proposed based on quirks of the microwave background; it's still an open problem in cosmology.

      The trouble with these discussions is that it's rather hard to speak meaningfully about these things without using general relativity. Thus you get these rather woolly analogies, translating the clear and precise equations into ambiguous and inaccurate English.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    142. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Errtu76 · · Score: 1

      or "what's the meaning of life?"

      oh wait, we already have an answer for that one ...

    143. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by rahrens · · Score: 1

      One could argue that evolution being random, and humanity's existance being a result of that, doesn't that make the initial design of creation much more elegant? How much more cool can it be to say that God created the universe in such a way that, while random in it's apparant action, the result has been the development of an intelligent species such as humanity? I think that speaks volumes more about His ability to intelligently design this universe than if He just created things as they are today, just - BANG - there we were. THAT idea always smacked to me as being very unimaginative - very crude.

      --
      "Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
    144. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, here's the "thumbnail":

      http://www.nature.com/news/2006/060403/full/060403 -7.html

      The cited article does mention that the paper is in Nature. If you subscribe to it, or the institution where you work does, you can get the full paper.

      Dang, even from the thumbnail-sized picture it is a rather fishy-looking tetrapod, or a tetrapod-looking fish. Either way, it is a beautiful fossil specimen that looks as "transitional" as fossils already known, such as Acanthostega .

    145. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fundamentalist Jews also widely cite the 5k+ yr. age of creation.

      But many Jews who still hold to the literal accuracy of the Torah explain this away by citing commentators who were of the opinion that "year" during the various events of the Torah might not have denoted the same absolute period of time as now.

    146. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Moby+Cock · · Score: 3, Funny

      who created god?

      Easy! Man.

      Heh

    147. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right. There is no missing link. There is no transitional species . There is no evolution. The proof is alive today. Called Snakehead Fish. The Snakehead Fish have invaded Maryland. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/07/07 02_020702_snakehead.html The are originally from Asia and Africa. This fish is air-breathing, land-crawling, voracious predator. It will eat almost anything and some snakehead fish species have been known to attack humans. This snakehead fish proves that air-breathing and land-crawling fish exist but it disproves evolution.

    148. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Every time I read some religious person trying to put a religious spin on a science discovery or story, it makes me think of the sci-fi geeks as typified by the Simpson's Comic Book Shop Guy, who hound their favorite authors with continuity problems and science and math gaffes.

      Since what's been produced in print (or video, as the case may be) is canonical, we cannot deny what we have seen or read, but must either re-interpret it in the light of hard scientific objections to the possibility of what was depicted, or else come to a different understanding of science.

      Because, obviously, the fundamental foundation of all human experience is storytelling, not physics. I've never understood this.

      As Shatner said in a Saturday Night Live skit many years ago, "It's not real; it's just a story! Get a life!"

      I'd love it if we could see scientists' work being used by Classics scholars to "prove" that the River Styx really does cause people to become invulnerable when dipped in it, or that man-bull genetic hybirds would have extraordinary senses and memory which would serve them in keeping their bearings in mazes.

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    149. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by spikesahead · · Score: 1

      I did my best to visualize the way the universe works when I was a bit younger and I had gobs of time on my hands to devote to it, and once I decided that relative velocity of mass created gravity in the the same kind of 'wake' that the relative velocity of electrons creates electromagnetism things grew a bit simpler when visualizing black holes. If you have a black hole then you have a large amount of mass in a small volume of space, and if there was any net rotation to that mass it would be magnified greatly by virtue of the very small volume, generating lots of gravity. Gravity would be greatest at the equator and less at the poles, due to the less relative velocity of matter along the axis of the poles, and that slight dip in gravity would allow for the nearly light speed jets of matter that often squirt out the ends of actively feeding black holes. However, if all net rotation was canceled out of a black hole to leave it completely at rest in relation to itself, at absolute zero so to speak, gravity would snap from extreme to none in an instant. And in that instant the volume would expand as quickly as possible in every direction at once, each point inside growing further away from every other point simultaneously in a delightfully energetic expansion. That would leave a rapidly expanding set of mass with a zero net velocity and zero net rotation, for every right spin there is an equal and opposite left spin, for every left there's a right, and while pockets collect in black holes here and there, not until all the matter is once again coalesced will there be another zero motion condition and therefore another big expansion. IANAP, I am not a physicist.

    150. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    151. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1
      And anyway, everytime we find another transitional fossil the creationists are just going to point to the two gaps on either side of the new transitional and say, "Now there's two missing links! Nyah nyah nyah!" They already don't believe evolution is possible anyway.

      No kidding! I don't know who my great-great-great grandparents are, but that doesn't mean they didn't exist or this shows a "lack of transitional fossils." Seriously, how refined in terms of generations do we have to get here?

    152. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by iainl · · Score: 1

      "Better to silence the heretics then heaven forbid try to respond to them."

      Just because he called the fucking supercilious moron a fucking supercilious moron doesn't mean he didn't explain precisely why his questions were so totally stupid. All of them have been answered by at least 7 other people and on about 1500 websites that are quickly and easily Googled, as well.

      The only question is if he is just really, really dumb, or just trolling for kicks. I strongly suspect the latter.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    153. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by NearlyHeadless · · Score: 1

      Science writer Carl Zimmer (author of At the Water's Edge : Fish with Fingers, Whales with Legs, and How Life Came Ashore but Then Went Back to Sea) has an excellent blog post about how this new find fits in with the larger picture.

    154. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by tgv · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Playing with words is what it is. One writer uses a different meaning of the word "time" than the other. The fact that physics cannot define time without a universe, has no meaning for a normal person who experiences time as a given, a priori, absolute. Saying that it is undefined doesn't take away the legimitate question what existed before the Big Bang. "No idea" would have been a better answer than "it didn't exist".

      All other arguments, such as "what is north of the north pole", are not related to this problem. They describe other definition problems.

      I think the original poster would be happy if you could answer him why the big bang occurred when there was no time. If you can distangle cause and effect from time, he might concur.

    155. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by artson · · Score: 1
      "I'm guessing you aren't a physicist. And that you have no training what so ever in general relativity, so let me see if I can enlighten you. Imagine the universe as a surface, parameterised by some co-ordinates.
      From there on it gets a bit muddy, buddy. If that was intended as a joke, it took too long to get to the punch line. If it was intended as a rational, understandable explanation, it failed by a wide margin. If it was an exercise in masturbation, I hope it was good for you. Wanna smoke?

      This is your cue to reply in very patronising tones, belittling my intelligence and inability to comprehend even the simplest English. Fire away.

      --
      In times of trouble, the smell of frying onions usually gives confidence and comfort.
    156. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      I don't even like the term transitional form. It seems to imply that there is a set goal of evolution, that the species is making the transition from this form to that form. In reality, going all the way back to our earliest ancestors you won't find a parent which was a different species than its offspring (some very special cases exist though, but typically never). Everything is a transitional form, from what its ancestors were to what its progeny will become.

      It makes sense in the context that (presumably) this critter was probably living during a time of rapid evolution, in which it had sprung strong morphological differences from a rather stable group of animals (fish). It had not yet developed a form that was well-adapted to a stable environment (land animals) that would allow its evolution to slow down. This is probably because its environment was also rapidly changing. From the articles, it sounds like it was living in shallow seas or lakes, which dry up pretty frequently. That's part of the reason these so-called "transitional forms" are so hard to find - they generally don't exist for long.

    157. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      the obvious answer is that land represented a huge unexploited ecological niche, with tons of food and no predators

      How did they know they were there then? That's almost as obvious as God told them to.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    158. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by frankengeek · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I like this part.... "learning how to breathe air". I want live in the water like a fish so I will try to convince my offspring and some how, couple million years from now we'll be back in the water! These so called scientists think they are being rational? So if this is true, Why aren't penises 3-4ft long by now - or at least 3-4 in longer than they were 1000-2000 years ago. Wouldn't that suggest something, God , creator pushing them/us to change because left to our own desires, how could we all want the same thing? Call evolution for what it is, a religion, because I see no hint of rational thought. And they call me crazy for believing a God. Who's crazier, because some, including myself knows God loves us and want to have a relationship with us - even though we can't see him but feel his presence or an evolutionist that thinks a bunch of fish - jut HAD to get out of the water so they can evolve? my 2c Rocky the squirrel must be a evolutionary left over.

    159. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by OneSmartFellow · · Score: 1
      I don't even like the term species.

      Mating across the species boundary - the axiom at the heart of the concept of species - is clearly possible, just look at Arnold Schwarzenegger.

      The whole Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species thing is outdated anyway. There concept of a 'Tree of Life' is awkward at best. All living things are in the throws of evolving and the tree concept doesn't reflect this at all.

    160. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by swillden · · Score: 1

      First, a disclaimer to make my point of view clear: I have no doubts about the reality of evolution, nor that it's primarily based on the simple yet extremely powerful process of the survival of the fittest. I'm a firm believer in the value and importance of the scientific method.

      what is so aggravating to me is the classic creationist arrogance. You assume that your questions are great traps to confound scientists and educated people, when in fact they are literally so foolish that a child could answer them. Do you really think that you know better than specialists who have spent their entire adult lives studying the field? Do you really think that they will be unable to answer your questions?

      I think it's funny how very common it is for scientifically-minded and non-religious people to arrogate in precisely the same manner when it comes to religious issues. Time and time again I see posts on slashdot that ask rather simplistic theological questions and then, because the poster doesn't know the answers, imply that religious beliefs are therefore silly and stupid. These trivial questions, which have been considered and addressed by countless great minds for centuries and often millenia, are thought by the theologically clueless to be great traps to counfound believers and prove them muddleheaded and wrong.

      I discovered the attractiveness of this sort of arrogance years ago as a missionary of one faith, talking to people of other faiths. Given my own logical and scientific bent, it seemed so obvious to me that there were gaping logical holes and even outright contradictions in the others' beliefs. I was at first confused as to why my logic seemed to confuse rather than convince, but then I encountered a few people who both deeply understood their own faiths and were willing to spend the time with me to debate the issues thoroughly enough to get at the root of the disagreements (in other words, intelligent, logical believers of the other faiths who likewise thought to be able to expose my belief system's inadequacies).

      What I learned is something that should have been obvious to anyone not blinded by their own perceived brilliance (and yet somehow isn't obvious): Any set of ideas that has existed for a long time, and been mulled over by many thoughtful and intelligent people and has survived will, at the very least, have come up with answers to all the questions obvious enough to be posed by someone without extensive training.

      In the case of the theological discussions, scripture that I believed would poke holes in the others' theology did not, because their interpretations of the same passages differed reasonably and consistently from mine. Often it came down to subtle distinctions in the definitions of key terms. But in every case, I found the other point of view to be rigorously logical, given the appropriate definitions and interpretations. I still believe that my definitions and interpretations are the correct ones, but that belief arises from specific religious experiences. My debate partners didn't have any analogous experiences upon which to base their own beliefs, but neither did they have any particular reason to believe my claims about my experiences.

      Similarly, discussions of faith with non-believers ultimately founder on the same rock: we can both be rigorously logical, but we're arguing from different data sets. I have data non-believers don't, while they refuse to accept my data because I can't show it to them and are unwilling to gather it for themselves, believing that my experiences are self-delusion.

      Getting back to my point, one would think it should be obvious that simplistic questions in any area of human thought haven't the remotest chance of confounding the students of that area. Experience, however, shows that it's not obvious at all, because smart people so frequently think that others must never have considered the obvious questions. And for some unfathomable reason, the ridiculousness of that point of view simply

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    161. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by meringuoid · · Score: 2, Informative
      The fact that physics cannot define time without a universe, has no meaning for a normal person who experiences time as a given, a priori, absolute.

      That's just too bad for the normal person. Time doesn't work like you think, that's just a plain fact. Read up on your relativity. Time really does vary in just the way Einstein described. Time is not a given, a priori, absolute, it's just one more feature of the universe. All other arguments, such as "what is north of the north pole", are not related to this problem. They describe other definition problems.

      They describe definition problems that are quite closely analogous to the one at question. Someone with a naive idea of a flat, x-y Cartesian coordinate system would be confused by the idea that there is no 'north of the North Pole': is there a wall there? A barrier followed by some kind of unplace? What's beyond the North Pole?

      Similarly, someone with a pre-Einsteinian notion of how time works has a problem. They think - as your 'normal person' does - that time just is. But that doesn't make it so. In the geometry of the classical Big Bang, the zero point - the singularity - really is very similar to that of the North Pole.

      However, all this is somewhat academic, since quantum effects come into play before we get to that point. Instead of the smooth curvature of spacetime Einstein gives us, we have a boiling froth; quite what that does to causality near the zero point is not well understood at all.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    162. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      Once again in with the Ad Hominem attacks. This is why people wont debate with people like you. If you couldn't understand my explanation, how could you tell if it was rational or not? Here is an idea, get a physics degree, then come back and debate the virtues and vices of the Big Bang Theory.

    163. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      I'd like to add to the other (quite good) reply.

      "However, it seems like the evolution of photocells with light-detecting pigments and the development of the proper neural pathways to interpret signals from the eye would be considerably more substantial achievements"

      Any small mutation in the genes that produce the pigment, assuming that it still mostly works, will yeild a pigment that has a different color response. All that is required for humans to go from 3 to 4 color vision (and obslete RGB color space...) is for this mutation to be active in some, but not all cells. This could happen for instance if the gene gets doubled (two copies) and then one copy mutates. Both of these steps are common occurances.

      Once there are cells with this different color range in the eye, the neurons will detect this different signal and will wire themselves to make some use of this new information with no genetic changes in the neurons themselves. That is just how neurons do things. Any random mutations that do make better use of this new color vision can now be selected for. This is basically the same process that the brain that got hooked up to the first eye would have gone through.

      There is actually some speculation that this is in the process of happening in humans now. Some women have 4 color pigments. (search for tetrachromat for more info)

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    164. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by bheer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So you're saying that if we both keep walking north, and we reach the north pole, I'll be compelled to stop by the fact that there's no further northwardness

      You will be compelled to stop because your frame of reference is the planet surface. For anyone with interplanetary or interstellar transport, North would be quite relative (of course, such a being would also not use ambiguous terms like 'North').

      Similarly, I'm quite willing to concede that time 'started' at the big bang[1] -- for the three-dimensional universe we observe. However, to say that this makes the concept of 'before the big bang' meaningless is quite silly. Beyond comprehension? yes. Meaningless? no.

      For example, did the indirectly observed energy->matter conversion we call the big bang create only one closed system (our universe) or did it create several, each with its own particle zoo and physical constants? How can we be certain of the answer either way (short of communication with a parallel universe, which would be impossible if the universe is a closed system)? If it did, what frames of reference will allow us to discuss multiple universes intelligently?

      Another one: Where did this 'ball of energy' come from? Did we just replace Genesis with a "In the beginning was the void/And ${Unknown_Entity} said lo/And a superdense ball of energy came into being/and promptly exploded into a particle zoo"?

      _Why_ does this 'ball of energy' exist at all?

      I believe it was Feinman who once said that to do Physics, you must have the curiousity of a child, because a child will ask the most fundamental questions, and the more fundamental the questions get, the harder the answers!

      [1] although IMHO our understanding of time is too elementary for this assumption. However it seems a reasonable assumption to make for the purposes of this discussion.

    165. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1
      but that Man is a divinely created being who is outside of evolution as a process, or at least did not evolve from any "lower" animal.

      To which my reply always is: if man is not evolved from another animal then why do we share 88%-95% of our DNA with the great apes? If we're not related to any other creature there shouldn't be ANY similarity between us and other creatures. But there is.

      Usually after I ask that question I get the deer-in-the-headlights look as they try to reconcile that thought with their own beliefs.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    166. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Johnny5000 · · Score: 1

      the obvious answer is that land represented a huge unexploited ecological niche, with tons of food and no predators

      How did they know they were there then? That's almost as obvious as God told them to.


      They didn't need to "know" anything.
      Any organisms that somehow ended up on land and survived were able to exploit the resources of dry land and reproduce.

      --
      The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
    167. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are quite frankly any number of ways to preform the experiment. I sugesst something painless. Now after your heart has beat it's last, you will have your answer. Rock solid.

      You need to be educated in the concept of falsifiability. What you proposed is not scientific in any sense of the word and he cannot prove you wrong because when he has the answer, he's dead. To make it even simpler to grasp, let's flip the coin shall we? You go kill yourself and deliver the "evidence" to us. And yes, you have to do it because the goal is not to prove something to yourself, but to us.

      (Just to be on the safe side - No, you should NOT kill yourself, I was just making a point)

    168. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by bheer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > Time doesn't work like you think, that's just a plain fact.

      Stop telling me how I think :-)

      Yes, I understand that 'time' has interesting properties in this universe. And I understand how the Big Bang implies the beginning of time (call it t0, or t-nought). However those who say 'before t0 is meaningless' either do not understand English semantics, are being misleading or are the victims (or perpetrators) of Big Bang Dogma, as I explain below.

      > A barrier followed by some kind of unplace? What's beyond the North Pole?

      As I said in another post, North of the North Pole is meaningless only if you are planet-bound. (And if you are not, North is an ambiguous term anyway.)

      Similarly, when someone asks about 'before t0', _semantically_ it is clear he is shifting the frame of reference to _outside_ our universe. This is something our minds can do easily, even though Physics has very little to say on the subject because it has no data to prove or disprove anything outside our universe's frame of reference[1]. So with today's technology and scientific understanding, 'before t0' is a question better left for philosophers.

      [1] One could argue that there is nothing outside our universe, hence it is meaningless to shift our frame of reference to outside our universe. To which I say, the fact that there is nothing outside our universe is unprovable either way, hence its meaningless-ness is easily disputable.

      To summarize: In our universe, time began at the big bang. This does make 'What happened before the big bang' a meaningless question, it merely forces you to re-consider your frames of reference.

      Honestly, early 21st century science hubris is just as amusing as the 18th or 19th centuries, when they ran about smug and satisfied about there theory of phlogistons and corpuscular light.

    169. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by alas_anon · · Score: 1
      > Can we please stop using this "missing link" terminology? It's
      >one of those terms often bandied about by creationists,

      Get used to it. The term is a permanent part of common language. A tip to handling creationists is to ignore them. They are not part of the scientific process and are just jeering from the peanut gallery.

      Paleontologist use the term "missing link" only when they are pretty excited by a find. It's a vulgar buzz word that the common Joe can understand.

      If you feel forced to change terminology because of what creationists say, then you are letting them control you. The creationists are not worth even listening to. I've never met a creationist who has done any in-depth study of paleontology, biology, or geology. Why even consider their opinion?

      Science marches on, with or without support of the belief of the masses.

      You are right that this is a nice find based on predictions. Another great thing is that it wasn't found in Mongolia. All the recent great finds have been coming from there and it's nice to see a new hot spot to investigate.

    170. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by prlewis0 · · Score: 1

      why is the missing link always in the last place you look?

    171. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 2, Informative

      You're thinking of the fundies. Catholics don't subscribe to a literal read of the bible.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    172. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      Here you're wrong. It's the bug report that is invalid.

      The problem with ID (from a scientific perspective) is that it is not actually a 'bug report'. You can't submit a bug report claiming that you don't like the color of the bits that make up the executable file.

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    173. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Shihar · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The question is certainly valid. Just because we lack an answer doesn't mean that we automatically assume OMFG it was GOD and JESUS!

      400 years ago we couldn't explain lightening either. That doesn't make lightening mystical either. Hell, we couldn't explain germ theory or even a basic rough approximation of gravity. The lack of an explanation RIGHT NOW isn't proof of anything other then that we don't know the answer yet.

      That said, if you are dying for a scientific answer, string theory has thrown out some tantalizing theories involving other exotic realities crashing together. I can't do much justice explaining them. The Elegant Universe offers up some musings from theoretical physics much better then I can.

      In my opinion, building up a "God of Holes" is a rather sad and pathetic way to conduct religion. Religion should be something that you take on faith that describes how you should live in this world and prepare for the next. Religion shouldn't be something that you use to plug every and any gap in your preexisting knowledge. As history has shown very succinctly, a "God of Holes" tends to find itself quickly getting amputated by science on a regular basis.

      If nothing else, your "God of Holes" is likely insulting to God himself. You have a brain, use it. Maybe God did create the universe, or maybe a god created something more ancient and fundamental that goes back farther then even the big bang. If God set in forth a motion of events to lead to this precise outcome, instead of trying to crudely plug the gaps in YOUR understanding of His universe by simply declaring it mysticism, try and understand how he built the universe.

      More then one theoretical physicist has taken a look at how our universe has been put together and found it so elegant and beautiful that it has left them with a belief that at the very end there exists a higher power. That sure as shit doesn't mean that every time they run into a question they can't instantly answer they throw their hands up and declare that God did it. Instead, they press forward and trying and truly understand God's universe and its deepest inner working.

      Ironically enough, if God did create the universe, a theoretical physicist is probably much closer to understanding the mind of God then your average bible thumping nut job whose eyes bleed every time evolution is mentioned. While the bible thumping nut job runs around like an idiot declaring the world a couple thousand years old and turning their mind off completely to understanding the universe, a physicist is carefully studying the most basic rules and laws of the universe. In a sense, the physicist is studying God's work and perhaps gaining some insight into the mind of God.

    174. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes I'm a creationist so I like to be sceptical

      I'm really laughing at this line.

    175. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i contest this. i myself am a missing link, at some point in the past there was a slightly different person quite like me and in the future they will be another. I am the missing link between my past and future selves. ha, put that in your science pipe and smoke it.
       
      if i keep posting before my morning coffee things are going to look a little weird here.

    176. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by PyrotekNX · · Score: 1
      Ideologies like ID/Creation, evolution, natural selection, spontaneous generation, etc. cloud the minds of young people which makes it that much more difficult to think critically.

      Ideologies take any branch of science and turn it on it's head. Science should be able to look at what they are studying objectively, not subjectively. Automatically they say it's a missing link, a missing link to what?

      Evolution has flaws, unfortunately most are too short sighted to see them. The more we study, the less evidence there is to support evolution. If we are evolving, why are we sicker than ever before? Why are people with disabilities surviving and reproducing? Why are there so many birth defects?

      Evolution cannot answer those questions. We are always dealing with the uncertainty principle. Even if we are 99.999% sure that something is true doesn't mean that it is true.

      There was a report several years ago about a man finding one of the creatures alive as described in the article. It was an aligator or crocodile with a tail like a fish and no hind legs. He claimed to have taken several pictures of the animal, but only a couple actually developed.

      We cannot rule out that this animal is still alive today. There are a myriad of cryptids out there. New species of animals are being discovered all the time. Just because we found a fossil of it, doesn't mean they aren't still around today. Evolutionary science cannot prove that a fossil is millions of years old. They, instead look it up on a chart to see where it fits in their theory and give it an arbitrary number. These numbers are subject to change and often do.

      Evolution has been wrong before. There are many scientific blunders and hoaxes dealing with the theory of evolution. Scientists thought the coelacanth died out millions of years ago like dinosaurs. Of course now we know that they live today. People's judgement was so clouded that they called it a living fossil instead of calling it what it really is, a fish.

    177. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The fact that physics cannot define time without a universe, has no meaning for a normal person who experiences time as a given, a priori, absolute."

      That is a fairly convoluted set of terms to ascribe to personal experience of time. First of all, if a thing is known a priori then it is not "given". A priori knowledge is, literally, knowledge that exists logically prior to any experience. But time is not like that. Time seems rather to be a way in which our minds shape "givens" into things that we can have a posteriori knowledge of.

      Neither is a priori knowlege absolute, at least not in the way you want it to be. I can know that I will never experience no-time, because I am not capable of it. But it does not follow that no-time is objectively meaningless and cannot ever exist. On the contrary, the fact that my mind "creates" time as it goes along seems to guarantee that other kinds of time are experienced by other beings. And in fact it is, all of the time. Time is different for you and I... we are traveling slightly different speeds. Even at 1mph relativity is in play. You and I are aging at different rates even as I type.

    178. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Besides, as long as human beings continue to kill other human beings, and employ coercion in general (including organized coercion, i.e. government), the "zenith of evolution" isn't even in sight. As it stands, human beings are killing just as many human beings, and employing just as much coercion as they were 1000 years ago, perhaps even 10,000 years ago. We are very much still beasts, barely more civilized than the animals.

      In other words, we still have a long, long way to go. As long as coercion trumps voluntary association, we aren't even close.

    179. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by brettlbecker · · Score: 1

      Just want to say thank you for your post.

      If only people would take what you say into consideration instead of maintaining their arrogant cluelessness.

      Anyway, thanks for your effot. We need more of it, more often. :)

      B

      --
      "We must still have chaos within in order to be able to give birth to a dancing star." --Friedrich Nietzsche
    180. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

      The same reason humans explore the universe; to see what is there.

    181. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by jc42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      History depends on retrodiction to prove the validity of theories, and retrodiction always uses this teleological perspective.

      One picky point: The terms "retrodiction" and "postdiction" seem to be in competition. The paired prefixes "pre-" and "post-" would say that "prediction" and "postdiction" are the better pair. And "postdiction" is one char shorter, which will probably save you several seconds of typing over your lifetime. ;-)

      Anyway, whichever you call it, this is a good example. One of the creationists bogus claims is that paleontology can't make predictions, because they can't find fossils from the future. This is a parody, of course, but it's the essence of the logical fallacy.

      The answer to this, as with other non-experimental sciences such as astronomy, is that evolutionary biology can't make predictions per se, but it can make postdictions. And in this case, that's what the scientists did.

      They had a pretty good estimate of when the first vertebrates moved onto land, roughly between 350 and 400 million years. They made the "prediction" that if we could find strata that date to the middle of that period, where the original terrain was shallow water along shorelines, we should find fossils of the intermediate forms. The fossils should look like lobe-finned fish, but the lobes should be extended into limbs that could function somewhat poorly on land. This would allow the critters to crawl out of the water to escape predators, at a time when there weren't any large predators on land.

      Consulting with geologists turned up just such strata, unfortunately on Ellesmere Island. The biologists went there during the brief only-slightly-horrible summer, and found just the sort of transitional fossils that they expected, before the weather returned to its normal deep freeze.

      This is a classical "postdiction", i.e., a prediction of what you'll find if you dig in such-and-such a place. As such, it's goood support for the biologists' understanding of how vertebrates colonized the land. It's not proof, of course, because scientists generally don't do proof. Rather, it's a demo of the predictive power of evolutionary theory.

      And there's really no teleology here. Tiktaalik wasn't trying to evolve into us. It was probably just trying to get out of the reach of large predators. The ones that did this the best survived to leave offspring. Maybe they were our ancestors, though these particular individuals probably weren't.

      Also, media hype aside, it's not any sort of startling discovery. We already had other fossils of fragments of transitional forms. But these are some of the best such fossils that we have. Some of them are nearly complete. And they're pretty much what we expected, based on the earlier partial fossils of similar critters.

      These fossils are destined to be textbook illustrations for the next couple decades. And some paleontologists are destined to spend many of their future Junes on Ellesmere Island. They'll probably be making jokes about how global warming isn't happening fast enough for them.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    182. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      A barrier followed by some kind of unplace? What's beyond the North Pole?

      As I said in another post, North of the North Pole is meaningless only if you are planet-bound. (And if you are not, North is an ambiguous term anyway.)

      Yes, I believe I replied to that one already... at the risk of repeating myself, I would say that once you leave the planet you stop speaking in terms of north / south and switch to a description in terms of a quite different set of parameters. Similarly, I doubt that any hypothetical multiverse, or other reality beyond the spacetime Universe, could be meaningfully described in terms of before / after. Even in our own Universe these concepts are only well defined for some pairs of events, those separated by a timelike rather than a spacelike interval. To summarize: In our universe, time began at the big bang. This does make 'What happened before the big bang' a meaningless question, it merely forces you to re-consider your frames of reference.

      At best, then, 'What happened before the Big Bang' is a badly posed question. It's the word before that's objectionable, because it implies the before / after frame of reference, which is only well-defined within the universe, just as north / south are only well-defined on a planet's surface.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    183. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by KarateExplosions · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What caused the big bang?

      Last night I was almost asleep when I heard a loud crashing noise from downstairs. I went down to see what had happened, and a window was broken. But there was no evidence of what had caused the broken window.

      Therefore, I came to the only logical ID conclusion: The window had always been broken, and flying unicorns exist.

    184. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by at_slashdot · · Score: 2, Funny

      [i]If anything is, I am a transitional form between apes and super-humans.[/i]

      Since you are on Slashdot most likely you are just an evolutionary dead-end.

      --
      "It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." -- Prof. Dumbledore
    185. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Kyeo · · Score: 1

      [Frink]: Yes, over here, m-hay, m-haven... in episode BF12, you were battling Barbarians while riding a winged appaloosa yet in the very next scene my dear, you're clearly atop a winged arabian! Please do explain it!
      [Lucy Lawless]: Uh, yeah, well whenever you notice something like that.. a wizard did it.
      [Frink]: Yes, alright, yes, in episode AG04...
      [Lucy Lawless]: Wizard!

    186. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by alas_anon · · Score: 1
      >>2. Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

      > Well, putting the loaded word "decide" aside, the obvious
      > answer is that land represented a huge unexploited ecological niche,
      > with tons of food and no predators.

      But there is nothing for this creature to eat on land! Take a look at these timelines :

      http://www.intergate.com/~tmaier/fossils/timelines /timelines.html

      There are land plants at 375 mya, but no insects. The fossils that were found were of meat eaters (probably large prey; look at the mouth). There are vascular plants on land, but no large prey. If there were large insects on land at that time it might be likely they were pursuing those as food, but insects don't come along for another 50 million years.

      It seems more likely that the evolution of limbs for land animals was driven by the need for freshwater fish to easily move about from pond to pond. Later on they started to prey on eachother when they had adapted to life on land.

    187. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by blikksem · · Score: 1
      Death is unavoidable - you will know the truth.

      I hope, for your all of you , that the last "Oh my God" you utter, is not when you discover the awesome and yet terrible truth.

    188. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by itchy92 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm not trying to start a flamewar, but I'd like to reply to your post. The views expressed are mine, and may not conform to any predefined set of views.

      The reason that I favor evolution to creationism is that it demands explanation. My understanding of creationism (admittedly very basic, but unbiased)-- and indeed, most religious perspectives-- is that there is no answer to be found. A higher power did whatever it did, and we can never know its nature, so let's just accept it. This is not the attitude that has brought forth all the technological advancement over the span of human history. Why would a higher power "create" us with such a disposition for logic, and then expect us to deny it?

      Evolution keeps us looking for that "missing link", to further solidify the theory with each new example. It isn't satisfied to say, "well, life originated in water, and moved to land, and now here we are"; it constantly refines itself, seeks new possibilities, and attempts to prove or disprove those possibilities.

      and wondering how that is actually going to cause a new species, rather than just a more specialised version within the same species

      You should extend that idea over a few thousand or million iterations, and see what you end up with. Most evolution is attributed to mutations, so a drastic change may have occured in one generation, or in 500... a stray group of cells (a prehistoric cancer of sorts) may have had the ability to process air and extract oxygen, and eventually beget a set of lungs for the creature. The creatures emerge from water, and those with larger fins survive, as they have greater motility and can eat more food. Those fins gain strength, and can eventually propel them forward consistently, eventually begetting legs. And so on, and so on...

      I concede that evolution may not be correct. Perhaps a creator just created everything to look like it could have evolved from other things. But given our species' great capacity for reason, our defining characteristic, doesn't it seem more logical to follow the path of evidence, rather than of belief?

      --
      Slashdot: News for nerds. Stuff tha-- MICRO$OFT IS THE DEVIL!!1
    189. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Bob3141592 · · Score: 1

      "What caused the big bang? or What external force was there that caused the big bang?"

      Nothing. And I mean that literally. The whole universe is made up of nothing. It's just that is some places there's more nothing than there is in other places, where there's less nothing.

      Once you understand that, the rest of cosmology becomes downright easy. :-)

      --
      In theory, there's no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is.
    190. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Bob3141592 · · Score: 1

      2. Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

      They didn't "decide" to do anything. They were compelled by nature to seek land: to lay eggs, to find food, to mate safely.


      A minor quibble. They weren't "compelled" to do anything. Possibly, some were living in a borderline niche, a wetlands that in some places would dry out more often than not, and since other creatures couldn't survive in that environment, it created an underexploited ecological niche for some creatures with a variation to thrive in. Over time, variations accummulate and the creature diverges from the rest of the population to form it's own species. Even if the rest of the origional population is doing quite well in the domain of their original environment. No compulsion, just the luck of the draw.

      This doesn't even require the kind of mutations creationists so like to deride as impossible. Every population has normal variations, which in a typical environment are neutral and immaterial. But in a fringe environment, they can become critical. And there are always fringe environments, since the environment is neither uniform nor stable. That's another point creationists love to ignore (or aren't capable of grasping) -- that environments change and that organisms could have adapted to a series of different requirements in the random walk to the present. As in "What good is half an eye"? Not much in today's world, but when everything else is completely blind, even a rudimentary optic sensor would be a major advantage.

      --
      In theory, there's no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is.
    191. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by steveo777 · · Score: 1
      Hey moderators. Parent poster isn't flamebate. It's a genuine question. From the pictures, it looks like a frog-gator or a croca-toad. Perhaps, even the earliest ninja turtle.

      Lighten up, it's not like he said evolution was a croc... no pun intended.

      --
      This sig isn't original enough, it's time to come up with something witty...
    192. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The World Question Center posed the question: "What do you believe is true even though you cannot prove it?"

      Richard Dawkins, albeit not the be-all end-all of Darwinian evolution, but he is so often quoted and cited here, replied:

      "I believe that all life, all intelligence, all creativity and all 'design' anywhere in the universe, is the direct or indirect product of Darwinian natural selection. It follows that design comes late in the universe, after a period of Darwinian evolution. Design cannot precede evolution and therefore cannot underlie the universe."

      The fact that even HE admits to not being able to prove evolution mean a lot. Should you be so nasty and condescending to those who don't prescribe to your unproven ideas of the origin of life?

      Laugh as you will that we all descended from Adam and Eve. You belive that we all came from a rock.

      Jason

    193. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by geordieboy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      evolution does have some merits, though basically the only proof that you can give for it is that it's so 'obvious' (and I find it sad that people just accept it's true because it just feels like it should work, rather than thinking about the individual little changes that would have to occur, and wondering how that is actually going to cause a new species, rather than just a more specialised version within the same species)

      It's not necessarily obvious, but the only mechanism you need for evolution to occur is for small heritable variations to occur at some rate, some fraction of which are slightly (even infinitesimally) beneficial given the animal's environment (in the sense that they increase, even infinitesimally, the probability of the animal passing on its genes, after all effects of the variation are taken into account). It's not hard to see that if this occurs, the frequency of the beneficial genes will increase with time, leading to adaptation to the environment. It's also not hard to see that this mechanism certainly exists in nature, as we know from genetics.

      I just think the fundamental "aha" moment of evolutionary theory is realizing that this leads inevitably to adaptation over time, to an arbitrary extent. There is no problem with new species arising, this happens when the some subgroup evolves its reproductive machinery to such an extent that it can no longer mate with other groups in the population. (Reading Dawkins is possibly the best way to initiate the "aha" moment if you haven't already experienced it).

      I think the creationists are either too confused or lacking in logical faculties to grasp the basic mechanism, or in some kind of denial like the ID people where they postulate imagined barriers like irreducible complexity.

      --
      The world is everything that is the case
    194. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by tgv · · Score: 1

      A priori refers to Kant. In "Kritik der reinen Vernunft", he comes to the conclusion that time and space are a priori. That is not the modern cognitive way of describing how our mind works, but it closely connects to it: we are pre-wired for experiencing time and space and we do not learn it. It is innate, so it is a given.

      A priori does indeed not equal absolute, but that is the way time is experienced. Time paradoxes are contradictions for most people. If I would tell the average student here that time goes slower when you go faster, he/she would not understand, because he/she does not have the concept of time that you have. That's what's causing all the havoc in this discussion.

    195. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You do have beliefs, even if you dont think you do, that's your belief that you don't have a belief. Stop being so childish.

      I dont just believe in God because of the odds, though I dont just believe in Him because I think it's a nice idea either. I can see the evidence and likelihoods, and know that there could be alternative explanations, but those explanations seem poor to me. You dont seem to know anything about what constitutes an offense that can send you to hell (which is almost exclusively a Christian thing, though hey if God isn't the God I believe in, then maybe he will send me to his hell for believing in the Christian God - but most other 'gods' seem to just want you to either be a nice person, or sacrifice your children, so either I'll probably count as a nice person, or I'll go to hell because I dont want to murder people.. hmm), so you should maybe try a little research before talking about it. Also, why else should I believe something is likely to be true, other than the odds and evidence point towards it being so? I don't subsrcribe to the notion of 'blind faith'.

      Why exactly don't you think I have a grasp of english? I dont actually feel the need to have an 'argument' for my beliefs, since obviously when it comes to belief, arguments are usually pointless. It appears to be you that doesnt understand english - being a sceptic has nothing at all to do with your religious beliefs, and you can be sceptical of anything. I have considered why I believe what I believe, and just because I have 'ways' to be set in doesnt mean that I dont assess those ways also. I accept evidence from the world around me, and also have read the bible completely, dont know any 'inconsistencies' that are not explained from a lack of actually knowing the bible. What am I denying that I see right in front of me?

      Also I like your little "dear" and "my friend" bollocks, very patronising, yet somehow I dont feel that things aren't looking good for me - what exactly isn't "good" about having faith, and what things are going to be good if I decide that I'm just a clever little monkey who has no aim in life but to further science, or get rich/have a family/whatever. Life is meaningless if all there is to it is what we see. If there is no higher purpose or power, then life has no value other than what we assign to it. You may choose to assign a high value to the little curious mechanism of life that came to be on our planet, but personally, if there's no God then what I believe doesn't matter, and you should just let me believe it, unless you have some kind of altruistic purpose to getting me to believe that evolution is the basis of our existence (though science has yet to come up with an explanation on how to spontaneously create life). Do you just accept that we 'are', and that is all there is to it? If so, why are you so interested in evolution, and why dont you seem to be interested in why matter even exists.

      "You don't exactly have a strong enough grasp of the english language to debate this fairly" - my mind still boggles as to why you think this, especially considering you didnt pick up on the fact that I spelled sceptical wrong (and I had my inklings, but just checked just now). I used to read a lot of books, not even including having read the bible (which, yes, OMGZ0RZ it was written by more than one person, in fact many people across many generations, kind of like a history book! and it's old!! :o it must be obsolete!), and I can safely say that I have a sturdy enough grasp of the english language to know that your tone of speaking is arrogant and also just uninformed (I doubt you could point out any of these 'inconsistencies' which you assume to exist, without actually reading or understanding the bible/history/jewish culture). I love all this liberal/PC/free speech that people bandy about these days, because it allows me to point out to people that Christians are entitled to their own beliefs too, and also it's quite funny how people get so defensive and blatantly dont e

      --
      which is totally what she said
    196. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by tgv · · Score: 1

      And it is precisely the causility at t=0 that causes the problems for the normal person, as I wrote in my post. If you can separate time from cause and effect or change, then fine, otherwise you haven't got a leg to stand on. How did a change occur in a timeless, static, total void? If you cannot answer that question satisfyingly, it's your problem. It's the age old question: Who created God? The result is that either you stop believing in God (aka. give up the notion that all of the Big Bang theory is correct), or you stop believing in logic (which is the foundation of the Big Bang theory). So there you are.

      Now I'll prove that black is white.

    197. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by frankengeek · · Score: 0

      I'm glad I'm flamebate, just shows that nobody like to hear the TRUTH!

    198. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      Your post reminds me of the arrogant programmer who will quickly dismiss a bug report....Instead of thinking objectively this programmer will attack the bug reporter for being misinformed.

      Yeah, well those questions have been asked over and over and over again. And they've been answered over and over and over again. Yet they still get asked again.

      To use your bug report analogy...when the bug has been reported 100 times, thoroughly investigated, proven that the bug is not in fact a bug but a misunderstanding about how the process works, and been documented in 100 different places, then of course the bug report is going to be dismissed. If I were to tell you I observed a problem with the known laws of gravity because the water from the sprinkler is going up into the air, how much investigation would you put into it?

    199. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1
      I don't expect him to report a thing. If you sum his post it works out to be something along the lines of "There is no way to prove the existence of God". My response was simply "Sure there is, you can even take the short road to do it." Sure it is an odd experiment with results that only one person can see, but it is still going to be proof for that one person. I can toss analogies out all day long but what little coherant writing I have done has gotten me nothing but troll mods and insults from ACs. My background is in biology. I understant evolution, hell I have tought it before. What ends up happening here is not support of science but anti-organized religeous zealotry. As it happens, I actually converted from atheism to theism *because* of my college evolutionary biology courses. But that is another story.

      Sera

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    200. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      That's an admirable view, and I dont contradict it - as I've said, I dont believe in 'blind faith' - God gave us the ability to think logically for a reason. He doesnt expect us to just accept everything without question. It may seem like a copout to assume that some all powerful being created everything, but hey, if that's the answer, then why should we spend so much time trying to fabricate an alternative? By all means, scientific research and exploration is good; we've learned a lot about our world, we continue to develope useful technology and just enjoy what we have been given.. but just because accepting God made the world seems like an easy answer doesn't mean it's not the answer - and neither would I say it's 'easy', since if you believe you have to answer to a higher power, then life becomes a lot less 'easy'.

      I also see that if evolution worked like that, then maybe an entirely new species (and I would tend to think of something as a different species once it can no longer breed with its ancient ancestors) could form, though also it seems to me that we only see 'complete' species in the world today, and why the old species are left behind while their fellows evolve, leaving us a little trail of species that we can see in the world today and say "oh look! this evolved from that" etc.

      As I say, I do respect your attitude, and in fact agree with it, but to me, the more I learn about the world (scientifically, psychologically, in fact in any way), it just tends to affirm things that I have already learned about in the bible. It's quite amazing really how texts written thousands of years ago could still apply so readily to the world today - when it comes to human life, not much has changed (though we like to think we're smarter or more advanced than before, we still face all the same problems).

      --
      which is totally what she said
    201. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by SilentReproach · · Score: 1

      That's funny. I thought the "Zombie" post was perhaps the most idiotic one I've ever seen on Slashdot. I guess it depends on your point of view.

      Not all who subscribe to a different theory are uneducated:

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,542 150,00.html

      Just because evolutionists are better denigrators doesn't make them superior intellects.

      --
      Religion is the opium of the people. Evolution is the opium of scientists.
    202. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by stud9920 · · Score: 2, Informative
      The question is certainly valid. Just because we lack an answer doesn't mean that we automatically assume OMFG it was GOD and JESUS!

      400 years ago we couldn't explain lightening either. That doesn't make lightening mystical either. Hell, we couldn't explain germ theory or even a basic rough approximation of gravity. The lack of an explanation RIGHT NOW isn't proof of anything other than that we don't know the answer yet.

      That said, if you are dying for a scientific answer, string theory has thrown out some tantalizing theories involving other exotic realities crashing together. I can't do much justice explaining them. The Elegant Universe offers up some musings from theoretical physics much better than I can.

      In my opinion, building up a "God of Holes" is a rather sad and pathetic way to conduct religion. Religion should be something that you take on faith that describes how you should live in this world and prepare for the next. Religion shouldn't be something that you use to plug every and any gap in your preexisting knowledge. As history has shown very succinctly, a "God of Holes" tends to find itself quickly getting amputated by science on a regular basis.

      If nothing else, your "God of Holes" is likely insulting to God himself. You have a brain, use it. Maybe God did create the universe, or maybe a god created something more ancient and fundamental that goes back farther than even the big bang. If God set in forth a motion of events to lead to this precise outcome, instead of trying to crudely plug the gaps in YOUR understanding of His universe by simply declaring it mysticism, try and understand how he built the universe.

      More than one theoretical physicist has taken a look at how our universe has been put together and found it so elegant and beautiful that it has left them with a belief that at the very end there exists a higher power. That sure as shit doesn't mean that every time they run into a question they can't instantly answer they throw their hands up and declare that God did it. Instead, they press forward and trying and truly understand God's universe and its deepest inner working.

      Ironically enough, if God did create the universe, a theoretical physicist is probably much closer to understanding the mind of God than your average bible thumping nut job whose eyes bleed every time evolution is mentioned. While the bible thumping nut job runs around like an idiot declaring the world a couple thousand years old and turning their mind off completely to understanding the universe, a physicist is carefully studying the most basic rules and laws of the universe. In a sense, the physicist is studying God's work and perhaps gaining some insight into the mind of God.
      Repeat after me :
      Then: causation or event chronology
      Than: comparison
    203. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Evolution has flaws, unfortunately most are too short sighted to see them. The more we study, the less evidence there is to support evolution. If we are evolving, why are we sicker than ever before? Why are people with disabilities surviving and reproducing? Why are there so many birth defects?

      References? We've always had a shitload of defects going around. However, instead of seeing these people die off before reproduction, now we're at the point where modern medicine can ensure their survival.

    204. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by aprilsound · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Then do you also believe that Homosapien is the final product of Creation? Are we the zenith of Evolution?
      I wouldn't be surpirised if humans in millions of years (assuming we survive this long), are nearly identical to humans today. Society kind of puts a stick in the spokes of naturual selection after all. There is probably a little bit of genetic variation to be gained from inter-racial breeding, but for the most part, humans are going to resist bredding with any significant genetic-variants and society will continue to allow the 'non-fittest' to continue breeding and intermingling with the 'fittest'.

      I'm not trying to be a class warrior here or claim that we should prevent the 'less fit' from breeding. I'm just guessing that the larger part of the human evolution will be societal evolution from this point forward.

    205. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      Either that or those who believe in evolution could just be in denial that they are not the most intelligent beings in the universe (or at least the world, for those who believe in aliens :p ). I think irreducible complexity is actually quite a good argument, haven't debated this kind of thing for a while, and had forgotten all about the arguments for and against evolution, tbh. You'll actually find plenty of intelligent creationists, just as you'll find plenty of not too bright people who believe in evolution. I know some people just accept Christianity blindly as they're being brought up, but those people later in life will either think about it and decide they dont believe, or think about it and affirm why they do believe. There are maybe some people who wont question their beliefs, but I can hardly even comprehend how someone could do that.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    206. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the key problems I have with the approach many "scientists" use towards evolution is that they are much like the prosecutors in a case against an alleged criminal.

      The prosecutor has to ensure there is sufficient evidence to convict the accused in that particular case. The problem is that the evidence can be matched carefully and a beautiful timeline chart shows how they belive the crime occured along with support evidence and so one to the point of completing the trial with a conviction. all is well and fine, just and truth have prevailed.

      Fast forward years later and DNA tests are conducted which prove the person who has done the time was NOT the person who actually committed the crime. So while in the context of the known situation the prosecutors (scientists) illustrate a substantiated timeline complete with supporting evidence, yet underneath it all, they are dead wrong on the conclusion.

      And so it is with science....

    207. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I need a drink. You need a book. Let's hope we both get what we need.

      I think the book he's already got will work much better than your drink.

    208. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1
      If you are speaking of the great-great? grandfathers original post and "Where did the eye come from?" crap then yes, indeed, it is crap. As a religeous person originally trained as a biologist (raised by a biologist as well) this ID stuff makes my teeth hurt(crappy "designed" wisdom tooth anyway). The part that bothers me almost as much is the amount of bile that gets spewn on anyone avowing any sort of religeous belief as well. Everytime this comes up on slashdot I see people that make seasoned well thought out posts that essentially boil down to "my faith is my own, not all of us are nutjobs" struggle to get moderated to +3 While posts that regularly boil down to "your magic man in the sky is bullshit, and you are an idiot" get modded to +5 every time in response. Though I agree that the ID'ers need to take a much harder look at what the heck they are talking about. I am just glad they have never hit on some of the actual things in biology that you can point a finger at and say "Jeez, how the heck did that evolve?"

      Sera

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    209. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by rhendershot · · Score: 1

      and yur father chased after missing links :)

    210. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      How did a change occur in a timeless, static, total void?

      What do you mean by 'change'?

      What I understand by 'change' is that at time T, condition A holds, and that at time T + t, condition B holds.

      In the case of the Big Bang, at time T = 0, the Universe exists, and at all subsequent times T + t, the Universe still exists. You cannot say that something changed at T = 0 without implicitly assuming that there exist values of T 0.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    211. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mjeffers · · Score: 1

      If you were meaning to post the article as an example of how one can be both religious and a (non-ID believing crackpot) scientist I completely agree. If you were posting the article to show that ID proponents (e.g, those "who subscribe to a different theory") can be educated I'd point you to this quote:

      "The big theories of science - like evolution and Big Bang cosmology - tend to become encrusted with all kinds of religious and scientific barnacles. But these should be scraped off to let the theories do what they are good at doing - and no more. For the Christian, God can bring about his intentions any way he chooses, and all that scientists can do is try to describe how he did it."

      I have no problem with religious people who can see that science and religion are trying to do different things and answer different questions. The quote above is a great example of that. Intellegent Design as a science, however, is the equivalent of the flat earth theory. It's not science and we do a disservice to science to elevate it to the level of an equal argument with real scientific theory.

    212. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > 2. Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

      they were following the chicken?

    213. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by fbjon · · Score: 2, Interesting
      it seems to me that we only see 'complete' species in the world today
      That's because you're not old enough. I see that the stars in the sky never move significantly. Perhaps it's just a facade, or should I wait a few thousand years and see what happens first?

      Also, the Bible is certainly not the only old book that still applies to humans and society. In fact, there's no divine power needed for its survival: it's a popular book/story, therefore it can last for 8000 years, because it keeps getting passed around. It's not magic or coincidence, its relevance is the only way you could be reading it in this day and age!

      'Relevance' can be highly subjective, though.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    214. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never said I didn't have beliefs. Again, you are assigning things to me that I never said, and then attacking them. This doesn't help your arguement. I'ts not me being childish, sir.

      You seem to take great offence to the fact that I found it funny that you're skeptical of this, while claiming to be a creationist. I always wonder if people who are skeptical of a fossil (not just this one, all of them, and all the other evidence of evolution), something you can see, touch, and taste, I wonder if they apply the same skepticism to the bible?

      You dont seem to know anything about what constitutes an offense that can send you to hell

      Actually yes, I do. I was brought up Catholic, my mother is a religion teacher at a Catholic school. When I do see her, I like to debate religion with her. I'm well versed in Catholic and Christian dogma, as well as several other religions. Call it a hobby of mine.

      why else should I believe something is likely to be true, other than the odds and evidence point towards it being so? I don't subsrcribe to the notion of 'blind faith'.

      You do not subscribe to the notion of blind faith, yet you are capitalizing god. Why is this? You appear to believe in a god. Which god and why?

      what exactly isn't "good" about having faith

      I never said anything was wrong with having faith. It is a source of strength for a lot of people. It can also be a weakness though. Often it is a crutch used by the people to explain things they cannot understand, and have no desire to seek 'why?'.

      Life is meaningless if all there is to it is what we see

      Life is never meaningless. You did touch on the meaning of life though. Life's meaing is the meaning we assign to it, on an individual basis. Your life's meaning may be different then others. Religion gives us a way to assign meaning to our lives, but we don't need religion for that. I can happily give my life meaning without believeing in a higher power.

      though science has yet to come up with an explanation on how to spontaneously create life

      This is outside of the realm of evolution, therefore really outside of the realm of this discussion. The shortcomings of abiogenesis do not equal the shortcoming of evolution. Abiogenesis is also just one possible explination, but the search for an answer is not helped by throwing up your hands, saying I don't know, and then attributing it all to god. Even if god did do it, how did he do it? That's what abiogenesis and science seek to answer. You seem to think science is attackign religion. IF it helps you sleep better at night, think of science as asking 'how did god do it?'? Then you'll see there is no real attack on religion from science, just a made up war that some religous nuts made up to increase church attendance and therefore get more money.

      dont know any 'inconsistencies' that are not explained from a lack of actually knowing the bible. What am I denying that I see right in front of me?Here's a start.
      Here's more.

      my mind still boggles as to why you think this

      I'm sorry, have you read your writing? I assumed you were from another country, honestly. It's like you know the words, just stringing them together properly is hard. This is a common in people who's first language is not english. Here's some examples just so you don't think I'm crazy.

      I used to read a lot of books, not even including having read the bible It's not a pretty sentence to say the least.
      You do have beliefs, even if you dont think you do, that's your belief that you don't have a belief Again, just plain ugly. It could stand to be made two sentences.

      Many of your sentences are really three or four sentences that you joined together into one multi-lined atrocity. Your grammar is just.. wow. Also, just because I do not point out a mistake, do not assume I missed it.

      Again, I apologize, I really as

    215. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, we know creationists are the nadir.

    216. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by shawb · · Score: 1

      irreducible complexity is not as watertight as you may think. The situations described as "irreducible" could be achieved through other methods. The general examples of irreducible complexity are proteins which only work together in a group of, we'll say 3 for this example. According to IC, if you remove one of the proteins then the whole system does not work. The chance of the three proteins spontaneously evolving to fill the use is so infintessimal that it could not have happened naturally.

      However what IC fails to see is that these "irreducibly complex" situations could arise in a different manner: the system could have arisen at first with one protein, then another protein eventually comes about which makes the system more effective, and then another, then another protein. Eventually a protein arises which works so well with, say proteins 2 and 5 that none of the other proteins are needed anymore. Since making proteins is costly both resource wise and energetically, there is an evolutionary pressure to stop making those proteins which are essentially redundant. Eventually, you are left with a number of proteins which work very efficiently TOGETHER but would be worthless on their own. The situation could be more of a REDUCED complexity than an irreducible complexity.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    217. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Skreems · · Score: 1

      The reason that we don't see examples of all stages in a species evolution alive today is that frequently the "old" versions die out or breed with the "new" and the entire species becomes the "new" version. If all members of a species are free to interbreed, a new mutation that is advantageous over the old genome will spread through the entire population in very short order (on an evolutionary time scale). Only if a population is separated from each other will you sometimes see an "earlier" form exist at the same time as a "later" form. For example, if a species evolves in a certain type of forest, and eventually some of the population moves onto the plains and stops going into the forest. The population in the forest, if they are already well adapted, will likely not change much, while the population on the plains may change drastically. That's a pretty uncommon scenario though, and you have to remember that BOTH sets might evolve. If a new predator appears in the forest, that group will start changing as well. So you're not going to see "first version" and "second version", but rather two species that evolved from a common ancestor.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    218. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Catholics don't subscribe to a literal read of the bible.

      Not only that, but (speaking as an ex-Catholic) they also subscribe to a bunch of stuff that isn't even written in the Bible. Not making a judgment on it, just trying to dispel a falsehood.

    219. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot.

    220. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      I do appreciate that, and maybe one day I'll believe in evolution. I can easily grasp the concept, though in a way it doesnt even matter whether I do or not, since evolution itself is not an explanation for how life began, and it just seems to be a function of life that we adapt - doesnt mean that we all had to start from single celled organisms. I was thinking more about this, and any non 'logical' reasons I had to believe in God - I'm not a supersticious kind of person, but I did remember the night that my dad died (and I hadn't found out yet), I was driving home (from church actually..) with my mum, and commented on how 'peaceful' the world seemed - usually I dont say things that are quite so cheesy, and I felt stupid after I said it, but it was interesting to remember that I thought that a few days later, and realise that was around the time my dad died. The world has far too many coincidences and things such as the moon being in the sky at night, etc. I know it overlaps into the day as well, but just there are loads of things like that in life that seem too thought out/coincidental for God not to exist. I have a habit of rambling, will just stop now before I've written 3000 words >_>

      --
      which is totally what she said
    221. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mating across the species boundary - the axiom at the heart of the concept of species - is clearly possible...

      More proof of this here

    222. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Follier · · Score: 1

      ...to be supplanted by the homo-superior....

      Hehe.. no such thing, right? Since evolution is non-directional, there is no zenith or superior. We are pretty lame compared to cockroaches and crocodiles, evolutionarily speaking.

    223. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      the example I saw was some kind of rotary propulsion mechanism for a really small organism. Your idea it rather good, though it is talking about proteins rather than a purely mechanical system, in which case you could likely still apply the same argument, that being able to simplify the system from a more complex one, to one that has less pieces, but still work together, isn't likely (though if you apply the argument of millions of years, then who can say what is really going to be possible or not possible in that time, when you include the occasional mutation and advance by natural selection-like processes).

      --
      which is totally what she said
    224. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, remember that religion didn't always look kindly on physics either. In fact an obscure scientist by the name of Galileo was sent to his room for it for the rest of his life.

    225. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by shawb · · Score: 1

      It seems to me to be more satisfying to see the evolution of human beings not as contingent and accidental but as a contingent and purposeful miracle, ie as the creative act of God.

      It seems to me that it would be more satisfying to never die.
      It seems to me that it would be more satisfying if it were warm enough outside for me to go outside in shorts and a t-shirt.
      It seems to me that it would be more satisfying if I had won the $174million powerball lottery last night.
      It seems to me that it would be more satisfying if there was a gorgeous readheaded woman giving me a massage at this very moment.

      Doesn't mean that any of this is true. Guess what... there is no inherent meaning to life. Your desire for their to be meaning doesn't automatically make God exist. The only meaning is that which you make inside of yourself.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    226. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      I'm just thinking for example of all the different breeds of monkeys that you get - if the 'newer' species breeds with the old and wipes them out, then why are there still some species left that are considered lower down on the evolutionary chain?

      Given the whole millions of years argument again, I guess you could say for every distinct subspecies of monkey (or any species in the world, for example zebras as opposed to horses, lions as opposed to tigers and so on), that some were just left behind when one group of that species moved to a different area, and the old group never needed to evolve. It is all vaguely plausible, but not very well defined at all.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    227. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by frankengeek · · Score: 0

      Thanks, I appreciate the complement.

    228. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by myth_of_sisyphus · · Score: 1

      "Thus you get these rather woolly analogies, translating the clear and precise equations into ambiguous and inaccurate English."

      Exactly.

      He was positing these questions as if they are unanswerable, whereas I, an amateur, can attempt an answer in one sentence. Of course I know that people much smarter than I have devoted their whole lives to these subjects: I was being pithy and flip.

      And when I said "close enough for slashdot" I meant "close enough for government work."

    229. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      I think that I agree with you that my argument must be circular in some fundamental way. However, we can learn things from circular thinking. Mathematics is full of circular definitions, although I confess I can't think of a good simple one right now. And all of modern science has an element of circular thinking in it: to be able to observe the electron of our physics theories, we must believe that we understand the measuring apparatus with those same physics theories. Now, I don't believe my statement that evolution is a creative act of God is as certain as the electron. I think the existence of the electron is far too grounded in experience for that. However, I do think my statement could be the same type (except for the intelligence of its advocate) as Maxwell's conviction that the electromagnetic field lines are real, or Einstein's conviction that the intillegibility of the universe will allow us to find a fundamental equation of nature, or the common belief among physicists that quantum mechanics genuinely shows that the world is not deterministic as Newton had supposed. I am not trying to prove the existence of God. I am simply trying to understand known scientific theories in a way that is consistent with the rest of my life experience. Part of that experience is the deep conviction that human beings each have intrinsic worth in this world. I hope that this means human beings do not simply appear to me to have such value, but actually do.

    230. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by fbjon · · Score: 1
      Coincidences can be comforting, but there are many more situations where there is nothing strange at all happening. The thing with coincidences is that they stand out from the crowd, and one only remembers them, instead of all the surrounding fluff. It's a very useful technique employed by the brain to cut down on the information flow, but it can lead to wrong conclusions.

      Now, how all this started may be a mysterious thing for some, but evolution is a different issue, evolution is what happened after that. So you're right, it doesn't matter that much in terms of the origin of life.

      I know that calm feeling though. I've had it a few times, sometimes very suddenly without warning. And yet, no-one had died, there was no natural disaster somewhere... When you look for them, coincidences are legion. Perhaps similar to numerology, actually.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    231. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by fferreres · · Score: 1

      We should have waited a few more millions years, and computers could have created themselves. What I find interesting is that everything creates itself in biology. There manufacturing process is evolved, not a sum of parts. And at every moment the growing creature must do increadible things untill everithing is up and working as intended. I don't care about evolution or inteligent design...but from observation of species, nature looks more like an art contest than pure crude chance.

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    232. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by kmcrober · · Score: 1

      You need to work on your reading comprehension. I did not criticize organized religion, nor religion in general. I have no qualms about religious scientists, or religious people, or people that believe that God created all reality. My criticisms are reserved solely for those who seek to suppress scientific research and understanding based on their religious inclinations, which is a small minority of religious persons.

      I agree that science and faith are not exclusive areas of human experience. They not only coexist in peace, they are very often complementary. If you're looking to fight with someone about that, look for another post; you're reading criticisms that I didn't write.

    233. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      Of course I mean satisfying in the sense that it is more consistent with the rest of my experience. So I think I am a little more sophisticated than you seem to give me credit for. That said, at this stage of my life, at least, I do think the basic thrust of your post that I may be biased towards what I want to be true may be valid, and this is always deeply troubling to me. However, you (and part of me) may be equally biased towards the idea that life is absurd. Since both statements are so vague and so emotionally charged, I think it is very difficult to talk about them with the same amount of objectivity we talk about, say, quantum mechanics, which of course will still involve some bias incidentally. Maybe the statements are supposed to reflect in part some subjective nature of our experience so that we can never talk about them without a large amount of bias. We are still compelled to wrestle with them, and ultimately believe our conclusions all the same, and I think the process is a good one.

    234. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by shawb · · Score: 1

      All that is required for humans to go from 3 to 4 color vision (and obslete RGB color space...) is for this mutation to be active in some, but not all cells.

      For this to be a heritable trait, the mutation pretty much has to happen in a gamete (egg or sperm) cell or reproductive stem cell which eventually produces gametes. I believe the female tetrachromacy is a not exactly related to direct inheritance, but a fluke of the difference between men and women. Females have inherited two copies of the X chromosome which Males have one copy of the X and one copy of the Y. The X chromosome does not work when paired with another active X chromosome in the same cell (insert joke about women not able to work together.) So what happens is that fairly early on in life individual cells will either express the maternal X chromosome or the paternal X chromosome, and the other will be essentially never used again in that cell or any cell that descends from it. This is a fairly random pattern and so there will be patches of maternal X chromosome and patches of paternal X chromosome.

      The best visual image of this is a tortishell pattern in female cats which is a direct result of this phenomenon, in which one color is inherited on the maternal X chromosome while another color of the pattern is inherited from the paternal X chromosome. This is why the tortishell pattern is only found on female cats (except for the rare case of a polyploid XXY male, who is generally sterile.) The calico pattern is similar, except it is not so much an inherited color as an inherited pattern that is passed down in this "patchwork mosaic" style. A technically more accurate description is "a tortishell of orange and black/white" or some similar, but... on to the topic.

      This patchwork mosaic style of cell formation is likely what is causing the tetrachromacy, with a mutation in one of the inherited X chromosomes resonating with a slightly different frequency of light. If there happens to be patchwork in the eyes, then indeed it would be trivial to be able to be tetrachromatic. This probably also explains why red/green colorblindness is so much more prevalent in males: a disfunctioning receptor is the mutation rather than a different natural frequency. While if men inherit this dysfunctional receptor, they are red/green color blind. If one of the copies that a woman inherits is dysfunctionl, there is a chance that the other copy of the same gene will be active somewhere in an eye. So, there are probably a significant number of women who could be clumsilly described as "tetrachromatic, with the fourth color not functioning." Yeah... I'm going to stop now.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    235. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      to the creator a day is like a thousand years and a thousand years is but a day. To me that says God created things over time.

    236. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by shawb · · Score: 1

      Science comes in again with the score... there are many many animals with a very primative "eyespot" which can not actually form an image but only tell whether or not there is light (or maybe light level.) This is extremely useful evolutionarilly... it might help the organism get to the right depth in the water, help in predator avoidance and prey finding by knowing when something is passing over, and I suppose it helps to determine if it is day or night, which could be of some use.

      Going from this extremely simple eyespot to a human eye can be accomplished in many many litlle concrete steps which can be accounted for by evolution. The nervous system is plastic enough that there is probably very little genetic change that needs to occur on the brain in order to make some use of the finer and finer visual information that a more complex eye brings.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    237. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by fbjon · · Score: 1
      I'm fine with some God creating the Universe. And why not mess about setting the right genes for mankind to thrive while he's at it, but why the hell did he create so much evidence to prove the contrary?
      especially if we understand our existence as the product of an infinitely loving creator.
      Perhaps, but I find it much simpler to understand my own existence as a human being that enjoys being alive, with the power of logical thought and imagination. The universe made me, call it God if you wish.

      More importantly, how did the Universe come about? THAT is the critical question. Everything else is just petty details in comparison.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    238. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by shawb · · Score: 1

      I believe that by "meaningless" they mean it does not matter to human beings what happened before the big bang, as anything outside of this universe has no effect on us, and there is no way we can observe or affect anything outside of the universe. There may be multiverses, but we currently have no theories as to how to pass objects or even information between them.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    239. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by fbjon · · Score: 1

      It is crude. I think it's much more elegant to say that evolution is God's design process.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    240. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      I'm fine with some God creating the Universe. And why not mess about setting the right genes for mankind to thrive while he's at it, but why the hell did he create so much evidence to prove the contrary?

      I don't think that God in some sense "set the right genes". I am not a deist. The process of evolution itself is God's process of creation. Natural selection seems to tell us that our evolution is contingent. I think we can interpret that to imply that we are a genuine addition to the universe since its conception. In a sense, our existence was not written in the Big Bang. I don't think this is as consistent with your, and Einstein's, and Spinoza's God as Nature, because it is very strange to me to think of such a God randomly deciding to create us some time after the Big Bang.

    241. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Bezben · · Score: 1

      Why does it always seem to be creationism vs evolution? I don't believe in god myself, but isn't it possible to believe that god created evolution? Creating something dynamic like that would be far more impressive to me at least. The only reason I can think of is ego really, that people don't like to think they came from "lower" life?

    242. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by nilbog · · Score: 1
      "...they found what they were looking for exactly where they were looking for it!"

      You don't say...

      --
      or else!
    243. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1
      You need to work on your reading comprehension.
      Well then, we have something in common. You said it wasn't testable that someone created everything. I provided a thought experiment to show that though distasteful there is a way. while if you are refering to my quote of - "While posts that regularly boil down to "your magic man in the sky is bullshit, and you are an idiot" get modded to +5 every time in response." I am sorry, I didn't mean you, it was a generalization. If you read my other posts in this thread you will see that though less vehement than you we agree about ID'ers very much.

      Sera

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    244. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by AoT · · Score: 1

      6) Tiktaalik evolves, eats all the other fish and begins to grab little snippets from land now and then
      7) Tiktaalik runs out of fish and moves completely to land
      8) First land animals


      I highly doubt it was carnivorous if it was the first animal on land.

      I mean, what would it eat once it got there?

    245. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Bezben · · Score: 1

      "seems to me that we only see 'complete' species in the world today"

      Hmm, arrogance. Tell me, how could you tell how a specie is complete without having seen an end point? How can you tell the difference between a 'complete' animal and an 'incomplete' one?

              "It's quite amazing really how texts written thousands of years ago could still apply so readily to the world today"

      I'd be willing to put money on the fact that there are many, many examples of how these same texts do not apply readily at all to the world today.

    246. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by myth_of_sisyphus · · Score: 1

      First of all, I do not proclaim to be an expert on these subjects. That's why I prefaced the post with "as an amateur."

      You say "The funny thing is that beyond our universe something had to have existed". Really? I was summing up the Big Bang as I interpret it through books written for the layman. Science, as far as I know, does not speculate that our universe is an atom of a greater universe. (A stoned kid in "Animal House" posited this theory, as well as The Simpsons, but science doesn't.) Scientists have pretty well mapped out what happened after the Big Bang-- microseconds after. The moment before the Big Bang, as I understand it, is unknowable. One of the great questions of life. No time, no space, no inside, no outside. Blows your mind just to think about it. If you want to get poetic, you could say "... And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. And God said, Let there be light: and there was light."

      As for the second answer about evolution: "They were compelled by nature to seek land: to lay eggs, to find food, to mate safely." Trying to sum up an evolutionary milestone in a sentence is hard. You try it.

      My third answer regarding the evolution of the eye is for all the creationists who point to the eye's "irreducible complexity." Creationists say there are no intermediate eyes. But there are. They are documented. They say "What good is half-an-eye?" Well, half-an-eye is a whole lot better than no eye when competing for mates, food, and space--when everybody else is blind.

    247. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Bezben · · Score: 1

      Oh come on, I think it's likely that humans have killed more humans in wars this century than any other. The best among us get better, the worse get more efficient it seems.

    248. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by AoT · · Score: 3, Informative

      I think you've got a fundamental confusion with what evolution is, what the theory says and how it works.

      why are there still some species left that are considered lower down on the evolutionary chain?

      There is no lower or higher on the evolutionary chain, nor is there transitionary forms. There are species which exist now, species which have existed and those which may exist. There are species that are older, "lower", because they have proved fit for their environments. There are species that evolved later, normally not a direct line of decent, that are fit for *their* environment. I don't know if you've read a good book on evolution but it covers this, pretty basic stuff.

    249. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by natedubbya · · Score: 1
      Oh I'm pretty sure you intended that pun.


    250. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by natedubbya · · Score: 1
      3. Get them to explain the evolutionary path that lead to creatures having sight.

      Here goes: an eye spot that detects light and dark develops into a pit eye, which enables the creature to detect direction. This develops into a Pinhole Eye. This develops a protective layer. The layer develops fluid. Fluid turns into a protein lens. Cornea and Iris separate. Organism is perfected into what we have now. Totally simplified of course but good enough for slashdot!

      Is it just me, or is evolution the only area of science where people can produce such hand-wavey arguments and still pass as science? Oh! Now I see how it works, gosh, it's just so simple! Take a look at papers on bio-chemistry and you're hard pressed to find anything about evolution because that's where the nitty-gritty goes down and waving your hands just doesn't cut it.

      Now I'm not suggesting evolution is wrong, but rather, it usually gets by without doing any real science. A lot more work is needed...and explanations like this are more hokey than based on evidence.


    251. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by AoT · · Score: 1

      Imagine you and anyone of your environment don't know sight.
      Your being is without photosensitivity ENTIRELY. But suddenly there's something causing for something usefull to evolve


      You got this backwards, environment does not cause traits to come into being. Mutation causes traits to come into being and then environment causes the most useful to be spread.

    252. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by plunge · · Score: 1

      It's zero. Look, it's certainly understandable that a layperson looking at something is going to see a vaugely froglike/croclike creature. That's because you are trying to tie it back to something in your own experience. But when you sit down with a creature like this in an informed way, there are countless important differences that demonstrate that this fossil is pre-amphibian/reptilian (of course, amphibians and lizards are the groups that emerge from this particular branch of life). Morphology is a study all unto its own, and it's a lot more complicated than simpyl looking at a platypus can declaring "it's a bird/mammal!" when in fact none of its features are in any way bird-like (it's beak is not a birds beak, it's eggs are not like bird eggs, and so on).

    253. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by itchy92 · · Score: 1

      I appreciate your open-minded approach to this conversation.

      I don't assert anything in absolutes; I think it's both arrogant and ignorant. So I believe there's just as much chance that a god/God does exist, as there is that we are the end result of a chemical fluke billions of years ago. And certainly, Aristotle's "Priority of Act" and "Immovable Mover" arguments make it difficult to deny the existence of something greater.

      ...if that's the answer, then why should we spend so much time trying to fabricate an alternative

      Because we will likely never know if that is the answer. I think it's dismissive to call it 'fabricating an alternative' (even if that turns out to be the case); it's more of a quest for the truth. Of course, on both sides of the debate are people who have already determined the "truth" for themselves, and this is a quest for being proven right.

      The next part of your post is a little unclear to me, regarding the "complete species" thing. If you're asking why, for example, apes exist if humans evolved from them, the answer is simple: circumstance. Scientists believe apes diverged into two groups: jungle-dwellers and plains-dwellers. Those that lived in the jungle were suited for their environment, and did not drastically evolve. However, those that lived on the plains were not as suited for the environment, and adapted over time to bipedal motion, tool utilization, enhanced logic, and all the other stuff.

      I certainly do agree with your last sentiment. Reading literary and philosophical works from throughout the last two millenia shows how little people really have changed.

      --
      Slashdot: News for nerds. Stuff tha-- MICRO$OFT IS THE DEVIL!!1
    254. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by daddymac · · Score: 1
      What IS surprising, is that there is no image - not even the obligatory 100-pixel-across thumbnail, which links to a lame-ass 200-pixel-across "Large Picture". I am very interested in seeing this thing - so where the bloody hell is it?
      Here, provided by google image search "Tiktaalik".
      And the cut'n'paste version:
      http://images.google.com/images?q=%22Tiktaalik%22& svnum=10&hl=en&lr=&safe=off&sa=N&tab=wi
      --
      If something I said can be interpreted two ways, and one of the ways makes you sad or angry, I meant the other one.
    255. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by plunge · · Score: 1

      Well, for starters, insects.

    256. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by plunge · · Score: 1

      The only reason it seems like handwaving is because most people know that their audience wouldn't stick around if they went into detail. There's a lot of evidential support for just this very pathway. Furthremore, since the original challenge was one of plausibility, not history, a response based on possibility is certainly acceptable, and hardly cause for complaint.

    257. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by zippthorne · · Score: 2, Insightful

      C-14 dating is not used on samples expected to be millions of years old. it is good for pegging ages in the thousands or tens of thousands of years range. There are other isotopic dating schemes which are more accurate over the longer terms (and able to compensate for the "how much of element X was in the original sample" problem) which are used in the millions to billions of years range.

      You carbon-date mummies, pottery, and mastodon bones. You wouldn't carbon-date fossils.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    258. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by AoT · · Score: 1

      That would make it *not* the first animal on land.

    259. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by dajak · · Score: 1

      One of the key problems I have with the approach many "scientists" use towards evolution is that they are much like the prosecutors in a case against an alleged criminal.

      The prosecutor has to ensure there is sufficient evidence to convict the accused in that particular case. The problem is that the evidence can be matched carefully and a beautiful timeline chart shows how they belive the crime occured along with support evidence and so one to the point of completing the trial with a conviction. all is well and fine, just and truth have prevailed.

      Fast forward years later and DNA tests are conducted which prove the person who has done the time was NOT the person who actually committed the crime. So while in the context of the known situation the prosecutors (scientists) illustrate a substantiated timeline complete with supporting evidence, yet underneath it all, they are dead wrong on the conclusion.

      And so it is with science....


      This is the "teleological" aspect in the way science (and specifically the media) look for evidence. As I already stated it is not only important to look for missing links, but also to account for the fossils you find that don't fit into an existing "gap" in your story. You have to be willing classify all of them without prejudice.

      This is the problem for the prosecution in criminal law: out of all the things that could be evidence of some story, they select just those things that fit into one of the stories they have in mind. Their search space is too large, and their theories very hard to prove.

      Scientific publishing creates another problem: it is very hard to get your failed experiment or your unclassifiable observation published. The lesson should not be that you should randomly gather data without a theory (impossible, because you can't describe and classify it in a useful way for future reference without a theory), but that you should look equally hard for data that confirms and disconfirms your theory even though nobody is going to appreciate the negatives.

      The "missing link" is of course only meaningful if you trust the scientists to not throw away the skeletons of giants, dragons, and whatever else they find that doesn't fit their story.

    260. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by rebelcan · · Score: 1

      I do believe the you two deserve a medal. No, really. That was one of the best discussions I've heard ( online or in person ) between two people of mostly opposing viewpoints.

      Bravo. Slashdot ( and the web in general ) need more level headed people like you.

      --
      God is dead -- Nietzsche
      Nietzsche is dead -- God
      Zombie Nietzsche lives! -- Zombie Nietzsche
    261. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course you find it in the last place you look. Why would you keep looking after you find something?

    262. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by plunge · · Score: 1

      Well, if you understand anthropods to be animals too, then yes, it definately was not. The protosomes got there first!

    263. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by natedubbya · · Score: 1
      I disagree, even when you read the actual papers about evolution, they read very much like this post. That was my point on bio-chemistry...when you get down into the actual details of biology where it blends with chemistry, very few people are talking about. Evolution opponents have capitalized on this notion, even publishing a book called "Darwin's black box" that addresses just this problem...hand waving.

      It may be a matter of audience in a slashdot forum, but when the actual scientific papers speak the same language, there is a serious deficiency. Reading this actual news report, you see the same thing when it talks about the gills disappearing...no explanation for how an alternative method of air developed as one waned... No explanation of how oxygen is pulled through a non-existent trachea, etc.


    264. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by dajak · · Score: 1

      One picky point: The terms "retrodiction" and "postdiction" seem to be in competition. The paired prefixes "pre-" and "post-" would say that "prediction" and "postdiction" are the better pair. And "postdiction" is one char shorter, which will probably save you several seconds of typing over your lifetime. ;-)

      Anyway, whichever you call it, this is a good example. One of the creationists bogus claims is that paleontology can't make predictions, because they can't find fossils from the future. This is a parody, of course, but it's the essence of the logical fallacy.


      I also prefer the natural pair pre-/post-, but since I am not a native speaker of English I checked wikipedia to see whether the word exists in English and was referred to retrodiction.

      I have more affinity with law than with paleontology. The paleontologist 'postdicts' the existence of creature X and 'predicts' that therefore there might be a fossil to be found in some place, just like the police officer 'postdicts' that person X was at some spot, and 'predicts' that a footprint matching one of his pairs of shoes might be found in that spot. The difference is that the paleontologist has a much better case for considering the fossil evidence of the existence of the creature, which is the only thing he is trying to prove.

      This is a classical "postdiction", i.e., a prediction of what you'll find if you dig in such-and-such a place. As such, it's goood support for the biologists' understanding of how vertebrates colonized the land. It's not proof, of course, because scientists generally don't do proof. Rather, it's a demo of the predictive power of evolutionary theory.

      It's proof beyond a reasonable doubt for the existence of the creature and clear and convincing evidence of the predictive power of evolution theory. Some countries put people on electric chairs based on less 'proof' than that. ;)

    265. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by manifoldronin · · Score: 1
      Saying that it is undefined doesn't take away the legimitate question what existed before the Big Bang.
      You are still missing the point - what the GP is saying is exactly that the question is not a legitimate one (or "moot", more properly put). So, restating that it is a "legitimate question" does not make it one.
      --
      Tyranny isn't the worst enemy of a democracy. Cynicism is.
    266. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, sorry. I was reading "given" in the Kantian sense. His verb for how the raw stimulus from the world of things-in-themselves come to us is that they are "given" to us. As opposed to generated from within our own minds.

    267. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by RandomPrecision · · Score: 1

      I'd like to add my two pennies, late as they are.

      "It's a theory, not a science."

      Eh, what?

      It's not like there's something past a theory. That's the highest that evolution could be, according to the scientific method. Note that the conjecture that the world revolves around the sun is called the heliocentric theory. Theories and science are not mutually exclusive, as you proclaim -- they are one and the same.

    268. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Frozen+Void · · Score: 1

      Looks like crocodile hydridized with dolphins.

    269. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      > If you think "what caused the big bang" is such a brilliant question to prove the existance of a god, try this one: what created god?

      One is an arbitrary necessity and the other isn't?

    270. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by plunge · · Score: 1

      I very much doubt you've ever read any actual papers, because that's simply not how they are "all" like. Perhaps you are thinking of summary articles, lit reviews, or prelim articles (and if you aren't familiar with what those are, then you REALLY don't know what you are talking about), which are written already assuming the readers have a fair bit of knowledge already, and yet which most laypeople end up reading instead of the technical or debate papers.

      "Reading this actual news report, you see the same thing when it talks about the gills disappearing...no explanation for how an alternative method of air developed as one waned... No explanation of how oxygen is pulled through a non-existent trachea, etc."

      That's because those are subjects already dealt with at great great length elsewhere. You're expecting a single introductory paper to discuss every single issue relating to an evolutionary sequence? It's not even really the right journal for that!

      I think your misconception is based on the idea that every sceintific paper is like a polemic trying to re-prove evolution. But they're not: the article is trying to present the key general morphological elements and some speculation to inform other scientists and get them started. That's its primary interest and objective. The introduction of this fossil is the very start of a process of productive work being done on it. It's not going to restate the findings or evidence of every other paper right there at the beginning.

      "That was my point on bio-chemistry...when you get down into the actual details of biology where it blends with chemistry, very few people are talking about. Evolution opponents have capitalized on this notion, even publishing a book called "Darwin's black box" that addresses just this problem...hand waving."

      This is what Behe claims, but he was wrong when he wrote, and he's even more wrong now: there's plenty of research into and discussion about evolutionary biochemistry. Of course, most of his claims were goofy in the first place. Sure, we don't have a full idea of how flagella evolved: this happened far before any fossil record or genetic study could "see" backwards. More importantly, we STILL don't know entirely how flagella even work: it's a bit premature to worry about how they evolved if we don't even yet know that.

    271. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      if man is not evolved from another animal then why do we share 88%-95% of our DNA with the great apes? If we're not related to any other creature there shouldn't be ANY similarity between us and other creatures.

      Why shouldn't there be any similarity? If God created us, and God created animals (through evolution or not), presumably there were some answers to problems that were simply "correct", and he'd use the same fundamental pieces of DNA to create both man and the beasts.

      Christians don't claim that having hair or lactating is what makes us special, it is the soul that makes us unique, and that is not contained in our DNA. 98% similarity in DNA simply has nothing whatsoever to do with whether God could or couldn't have created things separately. Of course, to a scientist it is pretty compelling evidence of common origin.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    272. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by plunge · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what mean about "complete" species in the world today vs. in the past. Transitional species are just as "complete" as any other. Indeed, they only are transitional relative to hindsight: nothing is special about them in the here and now.

      New species are splitting off as we speak. Speciation has not stopped in the modern world. No species has been "left behind": everything has just developed in different directions. Evolution is branching, not linear.

      I think you have a lot of misconceptions about evolution.

    273. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by plunge · · Score: 2, Informative

      Dawkins acn't be blamed for not covering every concievable single subject in one book, especially one written for laypeople. Discussing bio-chemistry is pretty hard when you can't guarantee that your audience knows much about chemistry, cell cycles, genetics, etc.

      However, I must say that I find the incredulity a bit weird. It would be strange if light sensitivity _wasn't_ part of the nervous system. After all, lots of organic chemicals are sensitive to, and react differently to light. Those reactions would be a quite and predictable natural trait to select for.

      "Also, Dawkins never really gets around to addressing the issue of how complicated protein molecules like hemoglobin could have come into being through only random mutations and non-random natural selection, an question which, as Dawkins himself mentions, a number of people have some problems with."

      Again, you expect him to explain every single issue you can think of in a popular book, without using chemistry? The evolution of hemoglobin has been discussed extensively, but since it's a chemically complex protein, understanding it takes a heck of a lot prior knowledge of things like protein folding and interactive bio-chem.

    274. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by maraist · · Score: 1

      Oh come on, I think it's likely that humans have killed more humans in wars this century than any other. The best among us get better, the worse get more efficient it seems.

      Talk about old school thinking.. You're still using associating yourself with the 20th century. :)

      Secondly, as a percentage of military deaths of one's own country, I don't think we compare to ancient times. "Ethnic" cleansing is an ancient tradition. Look at the Crusades, Roman wars, Alexander the great.

      --
      -Michael
    275. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Skreems · · Score: 1

      It is very well defined, though. Even higher primates live what, maybe 10 years or so in the wild? Assuming they produce offspring at 5 years old (likely much sooner than that) you have 500,000 generations of a species in 1 million years alone. Humans breed at a generously low average of 15 years, so all of recorded human history (6000 years) only amounts to 400 generations, and that's a high estimate. It's not "vaguely plausible" that groups would seperate due to some climatic, geographical, or other change in their living areas... it's a completely reasonable explanation.

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      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    276. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1
      Death is unavoidable - you will know the truth.

      I hope, for your all of you , that the last "Oh my God" you utter, is not when you discover the awesome and yet terrible truth.

      Thank you (?) for trying to be nice to us heathens.

      I don't need to hope something equally nice for you, since when you die you won't be conscious to be disappointed.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    277. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by jc42 · · Score: 1

      It's proof beyond a reasonable doubt for the existence of the creature and clear and convincing evidence of the predictive power of evolution theory. Some countries put people on electric chairs based on less 'proof' than that. ;)

      Heh. You're right there. And I guess it just shows that the religious and right-wing political folks hold science to a much higher standard of proof than scientists (or lawyers) do.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    278. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by killjoe · · Score: 1

      sounds like taoism to me.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    279. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by maraist · · Score: 1

      How do you know?

      He looked it up.. Why don't you.

      But I might be assuming too much. He might have just heard someone that he respected mention it, and thus assumed that it was correct. Very similar to most religious people.

      There are many compelling reasons to believe in the Big Bang. But as to the question of "time", most people are at a loss to define it. Sufficient to say that without |entropy|>0 there can be no time. And entropy only ever increases. I won't get into the philosophy of imaginary numbers here though.

      --
      -Michael
    280. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1
      Why shouldn't there be any similarity?

      If you talk to anyone who doesn't believe in evolution their usual remark is, "I'm not related to/descended from no ape." Thus my question: if we're not related then why do we share any DNA? If we're not related to/descended from there shouldn't be any relationship (as I stated above).

      In other words, if God created us in his likeness we shouldn't share any genetic similarities with any other creature on the planet. If, however, we do share genetic similarities with other creatures, then we must be related to them. Which of course means we're not special and which in turn horrifies creationists. To suggest that we're not special in some way is anathema to their thought process and belief system.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    281. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      I understand what you're saying completely, but you seem to think there is some requirement for how God must work, and no Christian is going to agree with you on that.

      Just because God made both apes and Man with DNA doesn't mean Man MUST have a common ancestry with apes. It is the logical conclusion for a scientist, but if God wants to wink Man into being independently, he certainly is capable of doing so, and your argument doesn't change that.

      Both bridges and house foundations can be made with concrete, but that doesn't mean they are related, it means the builders used the same materials to accomplish similar functions because those are the best materials. That's the argument I would make, were I a creationist worried about common DNA.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    282. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Pseudonym · · Score: 1
      Every time I read some religious person trying to put a religious spin on a science discovery or story, it makes me think of the sci-fi geeks as typified by the Simpson's Comic Book Shop Guy, who hound their favorite authors with continuity problems and science and math gaffes.

      I'm not trying to put a religious spin on a science discovery. I don't even claim that the points of view that I put (which aren't necessarily mine) are doing that. If it helps, you might want to think about this not as religion, but as philosophy. Theology is really philosophy which just happens to be religious in nature.

      Science does affect philosophy and vice versa. From one point of view: Philosophy is having an effect on how theoretical physicists understand things like causality and time. Moral philosophy has an effect on what biological and medical experiments we consider "ethical".

      From the othe point of view, to pick a couple of extreme examples: Die-hard Ayn-Randian Capitalists can only really keep their "what tragedy of the commons?" philosophy going by believing that climate change isn't caused by humans, despite scientific evidence to the contrary. Some have even going to the extent of claiming a liberal scientific conspiracy. (This from a philosophy supposedly based on rationalism!) Similarly, animal liberation-type philosophies are affected by scientific discoveries about how sentient or self-aware animals are, and so on.

      So you can consider this as an example of how science is having an effect on Christian philosophy. Yeah, it's wankery, just like the finer points of any highly-developed philosophical system seems like wankery to a non-proponent. And the geeks in The Simpson's spotting science gaffes is the same kind of wankery. Christianity is hardly alone here.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    283. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      The more we study, the less evidence there is to support evolution.

      No, the more evidence we find, the more well-supported refined the theory becomes.

      Evolution has been wrong before.

      As far as I know, there has never been any evidence obtained or obsevation made that would suggest that the basic tenets of evolution are incorrect.

      If we are evolving, why are we sicker than ever before? Why are people with disabilities surviving and reproducing? Why are there so many birth defects?

      All of these have obvious explanations, none of which suggest that evolution does not occur. And from the other side, evolution doesn't suggest that we should get sick less often, that new technology and social change can't help the disabled, or that birth defects can't happen.

      New species of animals are being discovered all the time. Just because we found a fossil of it, doesn't mean they aren't still around today.

      True. When we make new discoveries like those they give us details about how evolution worked. Evolution even suggests that there will be creatures that are common and others that are rare, some that are around now and others that are extinct. Other ideas about which ones are which might be wrong, but that doesn't mean that evolution is bunk.

      Evolutionary science cannot prove that a fossil is millions of years old. They, instead look it up on a chart to see where it fits in their theory and give it an arbitrary number.

      The dates given by palentologist are in no way arbitrary, we knew roughly how old the earth was long before we developed the theory of evolution. To say what you did is just silly.

      I know you're trying to be objective and "above the conflict", but you're trying so hard that you're discarding common sense. Evolution is complex, weird, hard to understand, and very solidly supported, just like quantum mechanics and cosmology. Treating those subjects as being equal to their more mystical alternatives is to discard rationality in favor of fantasy.

    284. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      Close. Tetrachromatic women usually have color-blind male relatives. And it is related to the two sets of genes in the X chromosomes.

      What I remember reading about implied that in each X chromosome the genes that produce the pigments have already been duplicated. they just aren't different yet.

      Also tetrachromatic women do indeed see the world differently. The rainbow has more distinct colors than normal people see. So their brains are picking up on the different receptors and making use of that info - apparently without any genetic differences expressed in the neurons themselves.

      "I believe the female tetrachromacy is a not exactly related to direct inheritance, ... Females have inherited two copies of the X chromosome..."

      How is that not direct inheritance? - granted, it is unlikely to lead to tetrachromatic males, but it is inheritance.

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    285. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Tatarize · · Score: 1

      I must admit. Under the light of punctuated equalibrium it the term seems much more reasonable.

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    286. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Tatarize · · Score: 1

      I honestly have to agree with the poster. You want to feel special and find it "more satisfying" to believe something. This has no bearing on the truth of any issue.

      Also, the invocation of QM seems a little weak. As if the absurdity of claiming I want X to be true, X is true is on par with Quantum Mechanics. If God were as predictable as QM, we would have shrunk him and put him in a digital watch.

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    287. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by shawb · · Score: 1

      I should probably explain what I meant by direct inheritance. It probably was not the correct term. I was referring to a "true breeding" trait which all descendants of an individual with the trait would carry. This particular trait can only be expressed in the heterozygous condition. Heterozygous only traits follow an erratic path of inheritance. True, many types have been well documented and studied. I just can't think of many where the heterozygous condition is more beneficial than either homozygous state, without one of the homozygous states being crippling. Things like the malaria/sickle cell anemia connection, etc. Hmm... actually now that I think of it there are some traits involving the immune system which produce more fit offspring in the heterozygous state (I.E. genes which allow for the coding to fight off certain types of infection. The individual gene can be for agent A or agent a. A homozygous AA would be susceptible to agent a, and a homozygous aa would be susceptible to agent A. A heterozygote with Aa would not be susceptible to either A or a.

      I guess what I was trying to say is that this is a different pattern of inheritance than those most studied (or at least taught in undergraduate biology classes) such as classic dominant/recessive traits or the occasional continuum traits (such as in labrador retrievers, where chocolate coat color is the heterozygous condition between yellow and black alleles.)

      Yes, tetrachromacy is heritable to some extent, but it follows a different path of inheritance than most of the well studied traits that I am personally familiar with.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    288. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by cahalsall · · Score: 1

      Transitional form to super human? You need to read Kurt Vonegut's Galapagos.

    289. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by identity0 · · Score: 1

      I have taken an introdctory Anthropology class, and I should note that Dawkins quote uses the term 'cultural relativism' in a way different from what Anthropologists mean. A bit ironic, since IDers often misuse scientific terminology to suit their ends.

      An anthropologist would say that the story of Icarus is equivalent to other cultural mythologies of flying people, not to actual airplanes.

    290. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If life on Earth has existed for three billion years and our 100-billion-cell neurological system began with a single cell, it would have required an average of 33 new and different neurons to be added every year. Each neuron would also have to have been a perfect fit for many hundreds of connections. Three billion years, however, is probably not the correct length of time. Six hundred millions years may be closer - and if so, that would have required the addition of a thousand perfectly functioning nerve cells per year to reach mans' present brain size." Geoffrey Simmons, M.D.

      (1000 cells in a year is approx. 3 per day [and that's only talking about the neurological system mind you]...we, as individuals, are undeniably incapapable of procreating every day. Actually, not many organisms past the microscopic are able to, are they? Even if we ["we" as in all forms of us throughout this assumed evolution from a single cell] did, you must also remember that mutations etc. are random occurances...you'd have to be a lunatic to think that without fail there could be an average 3 cells a day or even of 1 cell every 10 days (if you go with the 3 billion year theory) that randomly mutated while maintaining their compatability for life [as in not a fatal mutation], surviving in their environment, ability to procreate with the unmutated species [as they would need to start doing once they stopped asexual reproduction], any traits would have to be dominant or else repeated in at least one of the same randomly mutated species close by [otherwise genetically it would just disappear from the genepool again] et cetera et cetera. The odds are so very unlikely even when only considering the neurological system. That's only mentioning one small portion of the problems with evolution. Even if we were to believe that this could all happen so randomly perfect to get us where we are now I think most would have to believe in at least a little bit of divine intervention making it all proceed as such.)

    291. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You won't find the age of the earth in the bible. so a strict interpretation isn't neccesary. That age was taken by adding the supposed ages and generations of charectors of the bible beguning with addam and eve.

      There are more interpretations then just 6000 years too. You can find more about it here and here. Ussher was an Evangelical (church of england) but lived after Romes rule. I believe the roman catholics at one time bought this interpretation of time and declared it true. For some reason I was under the impression he was a roman catholic but seem to be mistaken.

    292. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Generally, carnivorous sea-dwellers (especially at this size) are both predators and prey. It is not uncommon at all for sea creatures such as sea turtles to come ashore for short periods for activities like breeding, where it is safer to do so, while returning to the water for most or all of their food. If there was little or no life on land at this time, breeding on land would have been a huge evolutionary advantage.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    293. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Monty_Lovering · · Score: 1

      I have to agree it's an awful term and is a misconception.

      Transitional species are difficult to find and classify for very good reasons.

      As there are geographically transitional species alive today we can see this and apply the knowledge to chronologically transitional species.

      Geographic transitionals are called 'Ring Species'.

      A classic example is the Herring and Lesser black-backed gull.

      In Europe these exist as non-interbreeding separate species. Go East and you find the niche exclusively occupied by black-backs... go far enough East and they start getting lighter in colour. By the time you're in North America they are Herring Gulls. It is ONE species that has become TWO species through a geographical transition to the extent when one end of the creature's range reaches the other end, circling the globe, it no longer interbreeds.

      Where does it stop being a Herring gull and start becoming a black-backed? There IS no transitional species, as at each geographical locus a gull is capable of breeding with gulls from the next few adjacent loci.

      Chronological transitionals are just the same in time as geographical are in distance. The 'where' becomes a 'when' and is equally unanswerable.

    294. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      Why would only part of the group move if it was due to a climate change? Maybe because the stubborn grandpa likes his burrow too much? (watched Ice Age 2 last night). I was thinking last night that you get much more accelerated replication in viruses/bacteria, etc, I wonder if anyone has noticed a process of change from one species to another in these cases, and why aren't arguments using fast-replicating cells like these thrown around more? Surely this would be one of the simplest ways to try to validate evolutionary theory more easily than pointing to fossil records. While I still think evolution 'appears' to work at first glance, which is why so many people believe it, my gf pointed out last night about male and female reproductive systems having do duplicate their changes - then I realised, how do people explain the change from asexual to sexual reproduction in the evolutionary theory? Do they just think, oh the rest of it makes sense, so there must be some explanation for that? If so, how are they any different from someone placing a blind faith in religion (ie without putting any effort into learning about it).

      --
      which is totally what she said
    295. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      It is actually obvious that we're dynamic from generation to generation, and that traits persist. It is also possible that God has created us such that 'evolution' into a completely incompatible species, though the 'vs' part comes in, in Christianity at least, simply because the bible states that God made man, and not from animals, but simply from the 'dust of the earth', ie just made him freshly out of the individual elements. I also think that not wanting to believe that God created you could be a result of ego, and not wanting to accept that there is something higher than you.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    296. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by iainl · · Score: 1

      I'll mostly agree with you. I'm agnostic myself, but there are a LOT of hardline atheists on this site that annoy me with their teenage insults to anyone who considers the possibility of there being a God.

      I think that's what annoys me most about the ID argument, though. If there _is_ a God, and I'm open to the possibility, then I credit Him with the intelligence to create something as astoundingly clever as evolution. Would you rather sit around designing half a million different species of beetle by hand, when your much-acclaimed omniscience gives you the tools to automate the process?

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    297. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      I have learned about evolution in psychology classes, and other places, it's just been a while since I thought about it. So you dont consider humans higher on the chain, considering they can adapt to new environments without requiring any biological changes. The ability to reason and manufacture tools to the degree that we can, seems to indicate we're higher than most species that can't adapt fast enough to sudden environmental changes. Maybe smarter humans will develop if we stop leading such physical lives, and start spending all our lives hooked up to computers, as a lot of people do now (though not quite hooked up to a Matrix degree).

      --
      which is totally what she said
    298. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      You can tell if a species is 'complete' if like the Shark apparently has, it is no longer evolving, one that is perfectly adapted to its environment you may say. Are there any species of monkey that can breed with humans, or monkies that can breed with whatever was meant to come before them, etc? That's the sort of thing I mean - most species seem to be 'complete' in the regards that they dont have any relatives that can mix with them, and another species that is meant to be a direct ancestor. I can think of reasons why that would be the case, but I think we should at least have a few examples. I'm not sure how you'd explain lion/tiger mixes, or how you'd view lions and tigers as species, how closely related you'd say they were and so on. Ligers are infertile though, so you could say that lions and tigers are related, but different species. I can see a lot of things that appear to support macro evolution as being a basis for all life on earth, but I can also see them supporting basic 'natural selection' among species that already exist (including species that are related like big cats, which doesnt have to show that they are not creatures)

      It is obvious that texts even written in this day in other cultures may have no relevance in the west, but then again, those texts will have a lot of relevance even to people thousands of years ago. We're not really any smarter than we used to be, even though people like to think we are, though we do have a larger knowledge base. If you read the bible then you'd many find a few examples of things that just don't apply anymore (though I can't think of many candidates apart from maybe the amount of physical fighting that went on in Old Testament times, though that still comes through in economics and politics today), but hardly 'many, many examples'.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    299. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Xiaran · · Score: 1

      If you are honestly curious about these questions I politely point you to

      http://www.talkorigins.org/

      I was thinking last night that you get much more accelerated replication in viruses/bacteria, etc, I wonder if anyone has noticed a process of change from one species to another in these cases, and why aren't arguments using fast-replicating cells like these thrown around more?

      They are. See here

      male and female reproductive systems having do duplicate their changes - then I realised, how do people explain the change from asexual to sexual reproduction in the evolutionary theory?

      They do again

      Also try readign and posting in the usenet group talk.origins. People *always* come up with these arguments.... saying "well evolution cant be right cause no ones thought of xyz". Problem is we have. Biologist and others have been debating/arguing/exploring the ideas of evolutionary biology for a few hundred years now. I can understand why a biologist would get frustrated and annoyed when someone outside the field come along questioning a evolution based on something that has been long settled. I can only imaging it like being a software developer(which I am) and having to deal with the dreaded "user who thinks they know something about development and IT but in fact causes more trouble than they help".

    300. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Xiaran · · Score: 1

      I can think of reasons why that would be the case, but I think we should at least have a few examples.

      The short answer to this question is quite depressing. 99% of all species, or what we artifically call species, go extinct. The human fate is almost certainly the same. You point out that shark have lastest quite a long time with little change. This is because there has been no need to. If soem environmental change occurred that endangered shark lifestyles then they would have to adapt as a population or go extinct. Natures not very nice over the long term... nor that fair... just like life :)

    301. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      "# The variety of life cycles is very great. It is not simply a matter of being sexual or asexual. There are many intermediate stages. A gradual origin, with each step favored by natural selection, is possible (Kondrashov 1997). The earliest steps involve single-celled organisms exchanging genetic information; they need not be distinct sexes. Males and females most emphatically would not evolve independently. Sex, by definition, depends on both male and female acting together. As sex evolved, there would have been some incompatibilities causing sterility (just as there are today), but these would affect individuals, not whole populations, and the genes that cause such incompatibility would rapidly be selected against. "

      How is that an answer? I know that the male and female would have to evolve at the same time. It doesnt definte the 'exchanging genetic information' of this apparent first step towards sex, and neither does it detail in the least any kind of process towards a species developing sexual reproductive abilities/specialisations. Evolution takes natural selection to extremes, where everything is just assumed to be possible given enough time - if it really takes thousands/millions of years for one little adaptation/specialisation, then why not at least list some broad steps that are needed to go from being asexual to sexual, rather than giving some vague possible beginning of sex, and assuming that if you put it in a little black box called 'evolution', out will pop a male and female. I have not studied genetics in any great detail, since I never took biology and found it dull, yet I have done courses on it as part of my AI studies, and have learned about evolution as part of 2 years of psychology studies. It's not that I dont understand what people are trying to say is the case, and I usually agree that it sounds plausible in an 'obvious' way, but you cant always just say that evolution finds a way, it's a poor excuse. Maybe saying that God created everything is as much of an excuse, but I have no reason to especially 'want' to believe in God if it means that I could go to hell because I'm a sinner - I believe in him because of my experience in life, and the perfect way in which the bible describes the human condition, and everything that I see in the world. The bible is as complex as you want it to be - yes you can understand it without being able to understand science, but also if you are blessed with good understanding and intelligence, the more you learn of the bible, the better it applies to life. I do occasionally become worried, "oh no, what if I'm just believing a lie" - but (as Proverbs says actually), whoever presents their argument first always seems right, until someone tells their side of the story. Arguments over evolution are the same. You may have an explanation for a way in which an eye could develope from a single photovoltaic cell, and somehow manage to convince me that a proper colour, focusing optical system is going to develope from that, but there will always be things that can be pointed out, and in the end your large mishmash of explanations of how things evolved is probably going to be quite shaky - while after thousands of years, and not from a lack of trying (you think this is the only generation that didnt want to believe there is a God?), nobody has proved that God doesnt exist, or given any good reason why He couldn't. It's easy to see that evolutionary theory is grasping at straws, and that people dont understand it half as well as they like to think they do. Stop just saying 'over time, this developed into this, blah blah', give some proper scientific proofs of it, rather than just assume it's possible with natural selection. Someone will likely have tried to go into more detail explaining how a sexual organism can develop from an asexual one (well I certainly hope so), but that link you provided was a load of bollocks.. well actually it didnt explain bollocks very well at all :s

      --
      which is totally what she said
    302. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Xiaran · · Score: 1

      I wasnt saying that they were explainations about the origin of sexual development. There were links there on speculations on how the sexes could have evolved. The simple answer is that we just dont really know exactly how it happened. We *might* one day know but we may never know clear and specific reason as to why certain things evolved for whatever reasons. All we seem to know is that the mechanisms of natural selection seem to apply within our ecosystem to evolve orgaisms in groups. When you say that evolution seem "obvious" I would ask you, if its so obvious why did it take so long to occur to anybody. You and I stand here with hindsight and much more knowledge of the universe than any other in the history of man.

      What you seem to be after is the answer to the question Why? Why are there two sexes... why did this organism evolve this way. The answer is basically... because... thats how it happened. You could ask "Why does the general theory of relativity seem to describe reality". The answer is agai is again... just because. That seems to be the way reality is. Is evolution the Truth? No of course not. Its a model trying to reflect the reality of what we observe, just like everything else. Its just science.

      Considerign your backgroud in psych Id recommend this book. It focuses on the evolutionary background on the human mind... and even touches on how evolutionary biology can explain the evolution of not just things like our eye(the simple bit of our visual system... just the camera) but how these changes are integrated into our mind.

    303. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I get a bit worked up over this, but I like how you've just put everything there. It is a model that appears to explain things, and sometimes obvious things can be overlooked, but when I say obvious I mean things like monkeys being similar to us. Once you start applying natural selection, and look at the similarities in our brains, it seems 'obvious' that we are related, and that if monkeys were given time, and increased their brain mass, they could become as 'smart' as us.

      But the case looks to be that since you can only show how things 'could have' evolved, then it's also possible that they could have simply been made that way. Why is really an important question to me - if the universe just 'is', then it seems to be a waste of time.. I know that's kind of trite, but that's how I feel, and how lots of people likely feel, and why we look for God - though again I'd attribute the ability/desire to ask the question Why, is given by God. It could be that it's just the result of us having bigger brains, but if that's all it is, then there's nothing even wrong with me wanting to believe in a God, or us creating systems of morality and questioning the nature of our existence.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    304. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by Skreems · · Score: 1

      Of course everything *could* have just been created 100 years ago in the exact form we know today. Or the world *could* have been created 6000 years ago, or 6 billion and God directed genetic mutation which wasn't really random at all. We would never know, because if that's the case the creator has gone to the trouble of making it look like something completely different happened instead. Even if you can show exactly how things evolved, with photographic evidence and eyewitness accounts, it's still not proof that God wasn't acting behind the scenes to make it all happen the way it did. It's Descarte's "Deceiver" problem. If the creator wants to fuck with you, there's really nothing we can do to know that it's happening, let alone work around it.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    305. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      I wasn't trying to say that X is on par with Quantum Mechanics. The equations of Quantum Mechanics are empirically verified, and that puts them in another class all together. I was simply saying that we can never completely remove our personal bias, even when talking about something as objective as the equations of quantum mechanics.

      To refer to something that I didn't refer to in the last post, the interpretation of those QM equations, on the other hand, which I think is necessary to really understand them in any sort of satisfying way as more than number crunching machinery- this is going to involve at least some amount of inevitable bias. However, to advance physics, this has to be done all the same. For example, the current quest in elementary particle physics for a single fundamental equation of nature is motivated ultimately by Einstein, who himself was motivated in the belief of Spinoza's God as Nature. So this quest for a fundamental equation, which has been so fruitful for physics, can be understood to be religiously motivated. I don't think most physicists would use that language, and Einstein's God was not a personal one. All the same, I think this illustrates that in any sort of creative endeavor involves bias, which in my experience is any endeavor except perhaps for mechanically checking the validity of a mathematical proof, or that, after it is done, a scientific experiment agrees with theory. However, we do it anyway, and often we are right.

      Also, again, there is bias in believe that life is absurd as well.

    306. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by AoT · · Score: 1

      I have learned about evolution in psychology classes

      That's probably the problem.

      So you dont consider humans higher on the chain, considering they can adapt to new environments without requiring any biological changes.

      Again, there is no higher and lower and there is no chain. I do think that, from an evolutionary point off view, humans are incredibly well adapted for the world we have created; little suprise there.

      The ability to reason and manufacture tools to the degree that we can, seems to indicate we're higher than most species that can't adapt fast enough to sudden environmental changes.

      You seem to insist on imposing value judgements on evolved traits. That's fine, I guess, but ultimately useless.

    307. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      While I don't disagree with you from a natural perspective, I'm guessing that humans even 200 years from now will be almost unrecognizeable to us (and vice-versa) because of the biotech explosion. Already, plastic surgery is so common as to escape notice. If you went back in time 100 years you'd be startled and appalled at the number of people with disfiguring features: hare-lips, birthmarks, horrible teeth, blindness-from-birth. We'd recognize them as human, and being very much like us, but a walk through New York City in 1890 would give you a significantly different idea than a walk through Beverly Hills today. I think that's going to be vastly exaggerated in the frighteningly near future and we're going to routinely see people who look like pro body builders, seven feet tall, with perfect teeth, on every street, and people living into their 120's on a regular basis. In the next 40 years I think that'll be mostly from childhood drugs and treatments, but in the next 40 a lot of it will be genetic -- people will be designing their children to only vaguely reflect their own genes, and in large part reflect genes of whatever they consider successful.

      I know a lot of people are saying stuff like this, and a lot of people are scoffing, but consider coyotes and wolves, that have remained the same for tens of thousands of years. Now look at a chihuahua and a st. bernard and a dalmation. That's what people will do if they get a chance to mess with something's genetics even in a limited way. Imagine what they'll do when A: they can put in any genes they want, and B: it's their children, whose future success might hinge on their appearance or height or basketball-throwing ability.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    308. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by stonecypher · · Score: 1

      Can we please stop using this "missing link" terminology? It's one of those terms often bandied about by creationists, but it has very little meaning in science.

      Nonsense. Creationism would preclude the notion of a missing link, because creationism denies that there's anything to link from. The Missing Link is in fact an intensely evolutionary perspective - it's simply an observation that there is a part of the human evolutionary record of which we do not yet have evidence. It's the link, which is currently missing. How is that creationism? Actually, the term was coined by Darwin in response to creationists: they insisted that cromagnon man must not be part of the human family tree because the leap was huge according to Darwin's own classification system. Darwin said "no, there are just some missing links in the path; I am sure they will be found with time."

      Unsurprisingly, he was right.

      By the way, as long as you're playing amateur semantician, you're making a pretty egregious error of your own. There has never been a challenge to evolution by the creationists or the intelligent designers; evolution is a simple physical process, and can be observed in (for example) crystallization, fire and the weather. What they're decrying is called "natural selection," and is the supposition that the evolutionary process combined with a fitness dynamic can account for speciation.

      Next time you want to correct someone, please be correct yourself.

      --
      StoneCypher is Full of BS
    309. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by tgv · · Score: 1

      That's the problem, yes. Logic seems to dictate that either you assume you've got no idea what existed at T 0 and stop claiming there was nothing; otherwise, you have to separate the ideas "change" and "time", i.e. define timeless change (since going from nothing to something constitutes a change).

    310. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      So they didn't leave the sea for the land becaue of the resources, they must have left so some other reason. (well unless the resources were plants on a river bank)

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    311. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by tgv · · Score: 1

      And I'm saying his/her argument why it isn't legitimate isn't convincing. He/she should explain how a change can happen when there is no time, otherwise there is no Big Bang.

    312. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      Logic seems to dictate that either you assume you've got no idea what existed at T 0 and stop claiming there was nothing

      Who's claiming there was nothing? As I understand it, there never was a time when the Universe didn't exist. otherwise, you have to separate the ideas "change" and "time", i.e. define timeless change (since going from nothing to something constitutes a change).

      Again, what changed? At time t=0, there was the entire Universe, in a very hot and dense state. At times t > 0, there is still the entire Universe, in progressively cooler and sparser states.

      I don't see where we've gone from 'nothing' to 'something'. I think you're implicitly assuming a time t 0 where there is 'nothing', and from which there's been a change. But there's no such time, and so there's no prior state 'nothing' to change from... To define the concept of 'change' you really need a framework of time, or at least of some continuous parameter, in which it can happen. And that just isn't there with the beginning of time itself.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    313. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by tgv · · Score: 1
      To define the concept of 'change' you really need a framework of time, or at least of some continuous parameter, in which it can happen.


      Still something happened at t = 0. If this wasn't caused by something that happened before that moment (since you claim there is no before), how did it happen? What caused it? These are the questions that boggle the normal mind and need an answer before accepting a theory as wild as the Big Bang.


      At time t=0, there was the entire Universe, in a very hot and dense state.


      Excuse me, but doesn't being "hot" imply (potential) movement and therefore the existence of time?

    314. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by somersault · · Score: 1

      Well in that case, everything is ultimately useless (which is broadly true). Other species may have adapted to their environment, but we haven't just adapted, we've taken over, and as you say in some ways 'created' our own evironment. Why isn't there any surprise there?

      --
      which is totally what she said
    315. Re:It's not a missing link, and nice predictions by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      Still something happened at t = 0. If this wasn't caused by something that happened before that moment (since you claim there is no before), how did it happen? What caused it?

      There you go again with 'caused'... Why? The principle of causality is just one more law of physics, closely related to relativity and the lightspeed limit. You wouldn't expect gravity as we know it to apply in a hypothetical domain outside the Universe, or Maxwell's equations to hold true. What's so special about cause and effect?

      These are the questions that boggle the normal mind and need an answer before accepting a theory as wild as the Big Bang.

      The normal mind ought to read up on relativity, then.

      A better way to pose the question is 'why does the Universe exist?' - rather than 'what caused the Big Bang?'. Asking in terms of why doesn't assume an extension of the timeline past the singularity; however, it still won't get you any good answers... Even the speculative results of string theory (braneworld, multiverse, bubbles, whatever) aren't too useful here, because you might ask why that should exist. In the end, the general question 'why is there anything at all?' is probably not scientifically answerable. We might discover the laws that run the Universe, but still we likely couldn't say why there should be a Universe for them to run. Unless the equations are somehow so utterly compelling that the universe just had to be - which is hard to envisage.

      Excuse me, but doesn't being "hot" imply (potential) movement and therefore the existence of time?

      A reasonable point: what I should have said is that the density and temperature of the Universe increase asymptotically towards infinity as the time approaches zero. At the singularity itself several quantities become undefined. In addition, once the density and temperature reach sufficiently high values we enter the domain of quantum gravity, which is currently very poorly understood.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  4. Remain strong! by scapermoya · · Score: 5, Funny

    Clearly, His Noodliness is testing us.

    --
    Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch.
    1. Re:Remain strong! by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      While that fish-o-gator is tasting the Noodliness.

    2. Re:Remain strong! by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1
      Clearly, His Noodliness is testing us.

      You know, there is an old saying that even the best joke will not bear infinite repetition. Give it a friggin' rest, already! The spaghetti jokes are lamer than Yakov Smirnov and more painful than a Yoko Ono music fest.

    3. Re:Remain strong! by Attrition_cp · · Score: 1

      To some, they are not jokes.

      And I could say the same about normal religious meanderings.

      --
      Touched By His Noodley Appendage.
  5. Please, don't use "missing link". by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The fossil record is (and always will be) full of holes for the simple reason that not everything gets preserved (and some environments make preservation extremely unlikely), and there's no "magic fossil" that's needed in order to make the big puzzle fall together.

    For the most part, the big puzzle is already together. Yeah, there are lots of areas where we'd like to have more detail, but "missing link" implies that we're looking for some sort of Holy Grail, and are in a jam without it.

    That simply ain't the way it is.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:Please, don't use "missing link". by kmcrober · · Score: 0, Troll

      "Flame mod me. I dare you moderators. Flame me for injecting my life encounters with higher education and fraudulent teachings"

      Flame? No way! Your rambling, inarticulate anecdote that goes nowhere is clearly a troll, not a flame.

    2. Re:Please, don't use "missing link". by Sique · · Score: 1

      So you got hit by a bicycle. This proves for now and everytime and everyone, that the invention of the wheel was a mistake.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
  6. Re:AWESOME! by dteichman2 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I smell burning Karma...

    --


    Silence is golden... and duct tape is silver.
  7. Re:God vs Darwin by Ignorant+Aardvark · · Score: 0, Troll

    A Darwinian? Other than in the context of the computer game "Darwinians", I have no idea what in the hell you're trying to say.

  8. The thing most interesting to me about this by mcc · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This was a predicted, sought find. This wasn't just like, some people found a fossil and was like "wow! this fills the gap in a missing link between reptiles and fish!". They set out to find something like this, targeted the most likely places in which to find it, and actually found what they were looking for. A quote of a Ahlberg and Clack article from the Pharyngula blog (lots of information there):
    First, it demonstrates the predictive capacity of palaeontology. The Nunavut field project had the express aim of finding an intermediate between Panderichthys and tetrapods, by searching in sediments from the most probable environment (rivers) and time (early Late Devonian). Second, Tiktaalik adds enormously to our understanding of the fish-tetrapod transition because of its position on the tree and the combination of characters it displays.
    I think that's just neat.
    1. Re: The thing most interesting to me about this by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5, Interesting

      > This was a predicted, sought find. This wasn't just like, some people found a fossil and was like "wow! this fills the gap in a missing link between reptiles and fish!". They set out to find something like this, targeted the most likely places in which to find it, and actually found what they were looking for.

      A similar thing can be seen on a NOVA episode that they air now and then, where a palentologist used existing fossils in the sequence of whale ancestry to estimate the date of an intermediate form, consulted geologists re where to find exposed land that was the bottom of a shallow sea at that date, visited the site (now a desert) recommended by the geologists, and found vertebrae for the predicted species lying exposed in the sand. Excavations uncovered more complete specimins showing the predicted features of "nose" and legs.

      > I think that's just neat.

      Way neat.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re: The thing most interesting to me about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure which one you are talking about, but this episode is pretty interesting as well as this one for anyone interested (not that I condone downloading it).

  9. IANAEB by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 5, Funny

    I Am Not An Evolutionary Biologist -- So talking about this makes me feel a bit like a fish out of water.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    1. Re:IANAEB by dteichman2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      How can you be a non-evolutionary biologist? To be a biologist, one must understand say... DNA, which then has the whole "gene thing." Organisms with DNA that codes for beneficial traits live on, and the rest die. Evolution.

      --


      Silence is golden... and duct tape is silver.
    2. Re:IANAEB by Eideewt · · Score: 1

      Maybe he's not a biologist at all.

    3. Re:IANAEB by aichpvee · · Score: 1

      Maybe he got a biology degree from Bob Jones.

      --
      The Farewell Tour II
    4. Re:IANAEB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. There are microorganisms (controversial label!) without DNA, such as RNA viruses, which definitely mutate into strains with different responses to selection pressures. That is, they evolve.

      2. Successful adaptation to or merely survival of selection pressures are measured in terms of organisms who produce viable offspring. "Beneficial traits" often aren't enough.

      3. Evolutionary biology is a subfield of the study of life; it looks at the mechanisms of reproduction and inheritance, and the origins and lines of descent of species. "Evolutionary" describes an area of work, not a system of beliefs or biases.

    5. Re:IANAEB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's okay. Because all land vertebrates are fish out of water, your feeling is entirely appropriate.

    6. Re:IANAEB by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      So talking about this makes me feel a bit like a fish out of water.

      Don't worry, it gets easier over time...

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
  10. Sounds like a gar by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    First, it's entirely unreasonable to entertain questions and concerns from unscientific proponents of so-called Intelligent Design. The debate ought not revolve around disproving Intelligent Design. Giving audience to those idiots is like teaching retarded children calculus: perhaps a noble endeavor, but ultimately pointless and frustrating.

    Second, from the description, it sounds like gars and other crocodile-like fish. The pathway from gills to lungs needs to be fleshed out more, but from the description, this is a very interesting fish.

    1. Re:Sounds like a gar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, it's entirely unreasonable to entertain questions and concerns from scientific proponents of so-called Evolution. The debate ought not revolve around disproving Evolution. Giving audience to those idiots is like teaching retarded children calculus: perhaps a noble endeavor, but ultimately pointless and frustrating.

      *Edited for correctness

    2. Re:Sounds like a gar by DesireCampbell · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Trying to teach IDers evolution isn't like teaching retarded children calculus, it's like trying to teach Nazis Hebrew.

      The first group might want to learn, the other group doesn't.

      --
      Whoo, signature!
      DesireCampbell.com
    3. Re:Sounds like a gar by gluteus · · Score: 1

      Calculus? You rate them too highly...

    4. Re:Sounds like a gar by ettlz · · Score: 1
      The first group might want to learn, the other group doesn't.
      Or, both groups want to learn, the second for all the wrong reasons.
    5. Re:Sounds like a gar by alas_anon · · Score: 1
      >The pathway from gills to lungs needs to be fleshed out more,

      That has already been determined long ago. The swim bladder of fish was the precursor to lungs. You can still see this in the lung fish and other fish.

    6. Re:Sounds like a gar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was a pun.

  11. Intelligent Design or Creationists? by quantaman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "As such, it will be a blow to proponents of intelligent design, who claim that the many gaps in the fossil record show evidence of some higher power."

    This certainly goes against creationism but afaik the only difference between evolution and intelligent design is that intelligent design claims statistics is insufficient and a divine guiding hand was required, wouldn't this missing link be required for either model as both need to go from water to land?

    --
    I stole this Sig
    1. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by Knara · · Score: 1
      Well, that's part of the problem of ID. Really, a very small number of people have thought through ID to its logical (or illogical) conclusion. They do, however, say that there's a problem in the fossil record in that there's "no transitional fossils" (see previous comments about this fallacious argument). This is just the sort of thing that such folks were mockingly certain did not exist.

      Guess they do.

    2. Re: Intelligent Design or Creationists? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > "As such, it will be a blow to proponents of intelligent design, who claim that the many gaps in the fossil record show evidence of some higher power."

      > This certainly goes against creationism but afaik the only difference between evolution and intelligent design is that intelligent design claims [...]

      The proponents of ID are all over the spectrum with respect to their views on evolution. Some are YECs of the most narrow sort; others think biologists basically have things right except for an occasional event of intelligent intervention.

      > wouldn't this missing link be required for either model as both need to go from water to land?

      No, intelligent design is such a handwave that it fits any model and any observation, so long as you preserve the claim that "somebody" had a hand in things somewhere along the way. Since it doesn't put any constraints on what that "somebody" can or would do, you can't make any predictions. For example, the YEC subset of IDers wouldn't accept that anything went "from water to land" -- they think all species were created pretty much as is.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by Barkmullz · · Score: 1


      Very good point.

      Additionally, I never understood the big controversy between intelligent design and creation. Why can't there be both? Why can't creation be the result of intelligent design? Even though I do not worship a particular deity, I am not arrogant enough to claim with certainty that creation was not influenced by some external force - be it sentient or not. Kinda like the last episode of STTNG (All Good Things...), but inverted.

      --
      Ronald said nothing. He flung himself from the room, flung himself upon his horse, and rode madly off in all directions.
    4. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by misleb · · Score: 1
      This certainly goes against creationism but afaik the only difference between evolution and intelligent design is that intelligent design claims statistics is insufficient and a divine guiding hand was required, wouldn't this missing link be required for either model as both need to go from water to land?
      Depends on the ID proponent that you talk to. Most just happen to be Creationists also. ID doesn't have any official stance on evolution and certainly has no stance on how the "designer" implemented its designs. This is one of most annoying parts about ID. It doesn't say anything except "we detect design." Because of this, ID doesn't "require" anything. Species coudl have been created fully formed or they could have evolved with the guidance of a designer. Both are compatable with ID. ID isn't necessarily wrong, it is just too vague to be useful. If every possible observation fits your "theory," the theory is useless.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    5. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think you'll find that there is no controversy between creation and intelligent design. For example Abrahimic Creation asserts that a supernatural entity known as Jehovah created everything, Intelligent Design asserts that an unknown supernatural entity created everything.

      Since Intelligent Design makes no theological claims, it is bad theology, and since both Creation and Intelligent Design are contradicted by the facts, they both make bad science.

    6. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by StoatBringer · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      afaik the only difference between evolution and intelligent design is that intelligent design claims statistics is insufficient and a divine guiding hand was required

      Absolutely incorrect, sorry. ID is nothing more than creationism, and invariably young-earth creationism at that. When pressed, IDers will tell you the usual creationist nonsense, like the Earth only being 6000 years old and even that the entire planet was flooded recently. The sole purpose of ID is to disguise creationism enough to try to get it into science classes, as they realise that evolution is a direct threat to their particular brand of Christianity.

      It's enormously amusing listening to IDers being interviewed and squirming to avoid the question of who this "Designer" might be. "Why yes, Jesus is my Personal Lord And Saviour, but as to who the Designer is... Oh, I couldn't possibly imagine!"

      --
      Cress, cress, lovely lovely cress
    7. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Depends on the ID proponent that you talk to. Most just happen to be Creationists also. ID doesn't have any official stance on evolution

      Bullshit. Because the US Constitution mandates separation of Church and State, Creationism, explicitly Genesis-six-days creationism, was excluded from schools. So the SAME PEOPLE who had been thwarted in replacing teaching of evolution with creationsm did a search and replace on their tracts and came back with "intelligent design". Evidence of this (early editions of ID books used "Creation" where later editions used "ID", eg) was one of the reasons cited in the recent Dover decision. As Leonard Krishtalka, director of the Natural History Museum at the University of Kansas remarked, "ID is just creationism in a cheap tuxedo".

    8. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by misleb · · Score: 1

      What do you mean, "bullshit?" YOu agree with me. Most IDist are creationist. Isn't that what I said? Are you suggesting that there aren't some IDist out there who accept at least most of current evolutionary theory? Michael Behe, a very high profile ID guy, doesn't seem to have much of problem with evolution. He even accepts common decent.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Behe

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    9. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Most IDist are creationist. Isn't that what I said?

      You said most just happen to be creationists. As if it was a coincidence. Maybe you can name some people who believe in ID but who aren't Creationists; I can't imagine how an intelligent person could believe in ID unless religion was behind it. And that's basically what judges have found whenever it has come to court.

    10. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by Ginnungagap42 · · Score: 1

      Michael Behe is an embarassment to Lehigh University, and the only reason he is still employed there is because he has tenure.

    11. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by misleb · · Score: 1
      You said most just happen to be creationists. As if it was a coincidence. Maybe you can name some people who believe in ID but who aren't Creationists; I can't imagine how an intelligent person could believe in ID unless religion was behind it. And that's basically what judges have found whenever it has come to court.
      Ok, so now you have switched from Creationism is behind it to just "religion." I never said ID was good (or any) science. Just that it isn't necessarily related to (young Earth) Creationism.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    12. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by misleb · · Score: 1

      And your point is?

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    13. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Ok, so now you have switched from Creationism is behind it to just "religion."

      No, I didn't switch. I assumed that Creationists were religious. I didn't know there was a non-religious form of Creationism. Is there? If you believe in a Creator, that's religion, I think by definition.

    14. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by Ginnungagap42 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I was multitasking and looking at a different thread where someone was expounding the virtues of Michael Behe. I accidentally responded to your post instead.

    15. Re:Intelligent Design or Creationists? by misleb · · Score: 1

      To simplify: All Creationists are religious. But not all religious people are Creationists. Similarly, practically all IDists are religious, but not all IDists are Creationists and can therefore accept evolution.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
  12. Re:God vs Darwin by dteichman2 · · Score: 2, Funny
    --


    Silence is golden... and duct tape is silver.
  13. A better missing link by corngrower · · Score: 5, Informative

    This link to bbc news includes a picture of the fossil.

    1. Re:A better missing link by mapkinase · · Score: 0
      If you compare the picture of the fossil and the artist drawing called "TRANSITION BETWEEN FISH AND LAND VERTEBRATES, you could easily see why opponents of macroevolutionary hypothesis dismiss many claims of evolutionists: open desire of the latter to present facts as they wanted them to look like, not as they actually look.

      See for yourself

      1. Look at the nose tip of the fossil and the artist drawing of Tiktaalik. The drawing has an elevated crocodile-like nose, while there is nothing in the fossil indicating that. Compare the fossil of Tiktaalik with the skeletons of modern crocodiles: this or just google it up for yourself

      2. There is no indication to crocodile-like grin pictured by the artist. The mouth line on the fossil is as straight as it can be.

      3. Generally, the head drawn by the artist is just a copy of a crocodile head.

      4. The most funny thing in this drawing is that it is not even needed for their conclusions. The next species in the chain, Acanthostega, have a scull more similar to the scull of Panderichthys, not Tiktaalik. What the heck they were thinking?

      Given that mass media almost always misrepresents the science, I am going to read the Nature article.

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    2. Re:A better missing link by mapkinase · · Score: 2, Informative

      More links:

      Another drawing, significantly different from the one at BBC site (see parent post).

      A "News" article in Nature, featuring the mentioned picture. Disclaimer: by the content and style, Nature News did not go far beyond BBC News.

      And finally, the couple of articles that should have been referenced in the top message in the first place.

      The only excuse the samzenpus has is that he probably did not have access to those articles or decided not to give the links out of fear of being called "exclusive snob". :-) Well, the academy scientists and subscribers will see the links.

      I have to confess that my assessment that was based on the picture of the fossil in BBC was wrong. I jumped the gun out of my personal bias against macroevolutionary hypothesis. I apologize. I wrongfully assumed that fossil does not indicate to the elevated nose or the jawline. Indeed, the scull has a remarkable similarity to a crocodile scull.

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
  14. Pictures by lifeisgreat · · Score: 5, Informative
    Since the write-up lacked anything flashy, here's an article from the Nature journal about the find.

    Doesn't look very tasty.

    1. Re:Pictures by whitehatlurker · · Score: 3, Informative

      Also Scientific American's article has a couple of pictures. AND National Geographic has a write-up on it.

      --
      .. paranoid crackpot leftover from the days of Amiga.
    2. Re:Pictures by ithaqua23 · · Score: 1

      More information and pictures on the fossil on the museums homepage http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/antenna/fishfinger s/ Also a nice model of the fossil.

    3. Re:Pictures by Limbo+Socrates · · Score: 1
      Doesn't look very tasty.

      Yeah, but would it say the same thing about you?

  15. Misunderstanding by AnonymousCactus · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Intelligent Design is wrong for so many reasons, why do so many comment on it while not understanding it?

    "As such, it will be a blow to proponents of intelligent design, who claim that the many gaps in the fossil record show evidence of some higher power."

    It's like saying evolution isn't true because my dad isn't a monkey.
    And we're supposed to be the intellectuals...


    Intelligent Design
    1. Re:Misunderstanding by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      I would blame it on the ID proponent's inability to communicate their beliefs in a coherent manner.

    2. Re:Misunderstanding by the_womble · · Score: 1
      we're supposed to be the intellectuals...


      On Slashdot. Its the first I have heard of it.

    3. Re:Misunderstanding by KnightStalker · · Score: 1

      There was an intellectual here, briefly, in 1997, I think.

      --
      * And remember, it's spelled N-e-t-s-c-a-p-e, but it's pronounced "Mozilla."
    4. Re:Misunderstanding by plunge · · Score: 1

      You're playing fast and loose here. Sure, ID as a movement makes it bread and butter about being coy, and not actually stating anything at all positive about their beliefs or expectations. But in practice, most of its major proponents have gone on record doubting this or that aspect of common descent or the fossil record. Even Behe, who purports to accept common descent, has made claims about how certain fossils would never be found... ironically just a year before they WERE found.

  16. The Great Transmogrification by craXORjack · · Score: 1
    Clearly, His Noodliness is testing us.

    Oops. Sorry, but I think I ate his noodliness last night. He's not a vengeful god, is he?

    --
    Liberals call everyone Nazis yet they are the closest thing to it.
    1. Re:The Great Transmogrification by scapermoya · · Score: 1, Funny

      it wouldnt surprise me in the least if you were found dead tomorrow, with signs of pirate related injuries

      --
      Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch.
    2. Re:The Great Transmogrification by Attrition_cp · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually eating spaghetti and noodles in general is approved, sort of like going to communion.

      --
      Touched By His Noodley Appendage.
    3. Re:The Great Transmogrification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take this noodle, it is my body. Take this tangy maranara, it is my blood.

      Hell, I am hungry now.

    4. Re:The Great Transmogrification by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      The preisthood -- programmers, that is -- are encouraged to consume pizza on high holy days, such as the seven (thou shalt not count six, or eight) holy days of the week we must program. We can also consume spaghetti in His Noodly Honor. At the same time. And spill it on the keyboard. Lasagnia is OK too. It's hard to explain. In fact, it's pasta all understanding.

      Those Christian people have simply distorted history. The well-known pasta-maker, Cheeses of Nazereth, somehow got involved when wine was called for from his famous Bottomless Barrel(tm), and also, he catered the bread. Next thing you know, there's a book, they're writing about the "Last" supper, where they were listening to Judas Preist and having a merry old tyme.

      Well. Anyway, don't take noodles in vein. You gotta chew 'em to get the best effect, m'kay? That mainlining stuff is for the gluten-intolerant, and no one wants those apostate sons-of-rice-eaters in their neighborhood, savvy? Pretty soon, you're riding innocent pasta-makers out of town on a rail, there are hippies and drum circles everywhere, and life's gone right to the crumbs.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  17. Missing link by irish_spic · · Score: 5, Funny

    Heh, there's lots of missing links here in canada - calling each other hosers and swilling cheap beer, eh.

    --
    A truth that's told with bad intent, Beats all the lies you can invent. -- William Blake
    1. Re:Missing link by pedalman · · Score: 1

      That's no missing link. That's my 10th-grade geometry teacher.

      --
      Friends don't let friends line-dance.
  18. What I really want to know... by jamrock · · Score: 0

    ..is what they tasted like. There's a Surf and Turf joke in there somewhere. Any takers?

  19. Re:All wet by carrett · · Score: 0

    Kyle: Aw no...

    Towlie: When you're playin' sports, the sweat can get in your face. That's why Towlie says "Always keep an extra towel in your duffle bag."

    Stan: OK...we will...

    Towlie: All right! ......You wanna get high?

    Kyle: No we don't want to get high!

    Towlie: OK...you sure?

    Cartman: Yes, go away you stupid towel!

    Stan: Oh dude, did you see that? I cut off your face and ate it!

    Cartman: That's so...kewl!

    --
    I'm against picketing but I don't know how to show it.
  20. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by 1984 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have a question that I've never really understood the answer to: why is creationism as a belief incompatible with science (including evolution)? Whatever science comes up with, one can always back out and say that the system as a whole was created by an omnipotent external creator. So what I don't get terribly well is why all the fuss about evolution in the first place, unless it's only dogma that's important?

    (For me anyway, it's the notion that dogma, existing power structures and beliefs which are important -- rather than any serious notion of consistent broader philosophy -- that's scary.)

  21. Intellectuals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    FYI: Most slashdotters are really niggers.

  22. Re: Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > I can hear the naturalists clacking away at their keyboards in glee with the "smoking gun" that evolution has finally been "proven" and that the creationists will have to sit in stunned silence under the weight of the evidence finally presented.

    To the extent that anything is ever "proven" in the natural sciences, evolution was "proven" well over 100 years ago.

    And of course, nobody expects creationists to sit in stunned (or any other kind of) silence, regardless of what evidence is presented.

    > Let's not oversimplify this discussion. Thoughtful, intelligent people on both sides of this debate have passion, and conviction.

    Yes, but one side has facts and a theory, whereas the other has a well-funded propaganda machine and a lot of self-appointed spiritual advisors telling the ignorant masses that they'll be tortured for all eternity if they let the facts affect their conclusions.

    > As a creationist, I welcome advances in knowledge that arise from investigation of the physical realm. I respect men (and women) of science, and applaud this new discovery - but that changes not my conviction that a creator made the planet as it is.

    To paraphrase the old saying, facts won't dissuade anyone from a position that isn't built on facts to begin with.

    > There are enough complexities and challenges with the idea of evolution as a means of speciation that one more discovery does not put a nail in the coffin of creationism.

    Except as a religious/social/political issue, creatinism was nailed back in the nineteenth century.

    > I'm not looking to start a debate on this issue, but I am hoping to raise the level of discussion by respectfully asking those who would use this occasion to ridicule people with whom they disagree to please refrain. This is a complex issue and cheap shots are not productive. I will refrain from ridicule as well. Deal?

    For my money, people who express ridiculous views are entitled to all the ridicule they reap. (Unless they're insane, in which case we should show a little sympathy for their plight.)

    If you would care to identify any of the creationism evangelists who are insane, it would help things alone.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  23. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by fleaboy · · Score: 1

    Maybe holding your views in peace could be a solution? Jumping on the defensive on a site that is generally pro-science gives the appearance of being righteous yet unsure to some degree. Maybe living your truth is all that is required. Foaming and frothing at the mouth from either side of the issue is ridiculous.

    --
    Life is a gift. And my Karma couldn't possibly be 'Positive'
  24. Doesn't prove evolution by MarkByers · · Score: 2, Funny

    The Flying Spaghetti Monster just put it there to confuse us.

    --
    I'll probably be modded down for this...
    1. Re:Doesn't prove evolution by Darby · · Score: 1

      The Flying Spaghetti Monster just put it there to confuse us.

      Fine, I'll admit it. I'm confused:

      Would it or would it not make tasty meatballs?

  25. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not looking to start a debate on this issue, but I am hoping to raise the level of discussion by respectfully asking those who would use this occasion to ridicule people with whom they disagree to please refrain.

    In other words: "I can't win a creationism vs science argument, so I hope nobody starts one."

  26. His noodliness gave us the ability to reason by Falcon040 · · Score: 1

    The best thing his noodly mightiness gave us was the ability to reason and think for ourselves.

    I would say it is a test of if we follow others like sheep without reasoning and thinking individually, or if we use our god given minds to understand the objects provided by the natural environment around us to discover the truths for ourselves.

    PS. God == Nature.

    Try reading anything about god with that in mind! And then you can understand its true meaning...

    1. Re:His noodliness gave us the ability to reason by scapermoya · · Score: 1

      Well, unfortunately human knowledge is so expansive and wide-ranging that we can't go through and think for ourselves at every step of the way if we want to build on the work of those before us. There is room for skeptics on both sides, but it should never be deconstructive skepticism. Are you espousing the pantheistic "God is literally everything" or the Franciscan "God is mirrored in everything"?

      --
      Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch.
    2. Re:His noodliness gave us the ability to reason by Falcon040 · · Score: 1

      Indeed it is great to build on the work before us - so not everything can be questioned in infinitesimal detail from infinite directions, that certainly would stop anyone from getting anywhere (except those using Calculus).

      However, Some thought is required by each individual to question the truthfulness of what other people state as 'obvious' or 'clear' or 'righteous' or when stating that 'God certainly wouldn't have design a world as/like...'. Questioning those statements and step by step individual reasoning will help to come to the truth much more quickly.

      Doing this is certainly not deconstructive skeptisms right?

      Regarding God and Nature... I think of it more along the lines of 'the way things flow' in this Universe. The Universe of course including everything - hence 'Uni-'. In this way it could be interpreted by some as saying 'God has a hand in everything'. (Also that 'Nature has a hand in everything', equating God == Nature).

      Of course, regarding 'Interpretation', one can use reasoning to say that roughly: Interpretation = Opinion = Bias

    3. Re:His noodliness gave us the ability to reason by scapermoya · · Score: 1

      Well, since I don't believe in a god of any sort, I avoid a lot of that wishwash. The problem with many people who advocate things like ID is that their agenda isn't to spread truth about science everywhere, or else they would be scientists with peer-reviewed articles. The "debate" over evolution isn't really a debate, it only exists because some people choose to call their refuting of a basic scientific principle a "debate". Sadly, evolution doesn't have equations that one could print out on a peice of paper and staple to every ID proponent. Can you imagine if gravity was like evolution, in the sense that it couldn't be boiled down to a constant or simple equation? The Onion ran a peice about intelligent falling, which is exactly what would be out there if this was the case. The way in which things flow is a process, not an object. Do you believe that god is reflected in nature or that he/she/it is actually present in rocks and trees and shrubbery?

      --
      Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch.
    4. Re:His noodliness gave us the ability to reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, you realise that 'Intelligent Falling' is an almost precise re-capitulation of Aristotelian Physics?

      This approach to dynamics held sway for over one thousand years; untik the Enlightenment.

      Don't knock it - it may be true!

  27. Open mouth, insert foot by JetJaguar · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Has it occurred to you that in making this very statement, that you are, in fact, doing exactly what you accuse your opponents of? You implore posters from taking cheap shots, and yet your first sentence is exactly that. Right off the bat you are assasinating the character of those who disagree with you with statements like this:

    I can hear the naturalists clacking away at their keyboards in glee with the "smoking gun" that evolution has finally been "proven" and that the creationists will have to sit in stunned silence under the weight of the evidence finally presented.

    As a scientist, creationism isn't on my radar at all, and quite frankly, I don't give a rat's ass whether or not you believe it. What I do care about, is people such as yourself misrepresenting both science and religion as something that they are not, claiming you know things that you clearly do not. And then blaming good scientists for your own ignorance and lack of insight.

    The fact is, evolution has been satisfactorily proven to work. Creationism and intelligent design are DOA, and the only open question about these idiotic ideas, is how much damage are they going to do to both science and religion before they finally go down for good.

    --

    Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

    1. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would very much like to see this "proof" of evolution, where, in short, humans came 'round from bits of inorganic matter.

      The origins of life are so far from being _proven_ that it boggles the mind to hear someone who isn't obviously mentally retarded make such claims.

    2. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Mistshadow2k4 · · Score: 1

      Nevertheless, his post wasn't even half as flamey as yours -- and no, before you strike, I don't believe in creationism. But back on topic, to quote you: "As a scientist, creationism isn't on my radar at all, and quite frankly, I don't give a rat's ass whether or not you believe it. What I do care about, is people such as yourself misrepresenting both science and religion as something that they are not, claiming you know things that you clearly do not. And then blaming good scientists for your own ignorance and lack of insight." Where, exactly, did he do that? And his post, more polite than yours, was modded flamebait but yours hasn't been yet. On top of that, another post to this article where all slashdotters were called "niggers" was modded up too.

      I've had enough /. for a while. I just ate and all the bullshit is making me queasy.

      --
      I dream of a better world... one in which chickens can cross roads without their motives being questioned.
    3. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Capt_Morgan · · Score: 1

      You really should learn the difference between Abiogenesis and Evolution

      --
      It takes a big man to cry, but it takes a bigger man to laugh at that man.
    4. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by JetJaguar · · Score: 1

      And his post, more polite than yours, was modded flamebait but yours hasn't been yet.

      If you think his post was more polite than mine, then you haven't had much contact with people that think like him. I didn't intend my response to be particularly polite in the first place. The original post was a feint, a bit of misdirection, intended to appear reasonable, when in fact it is nothing of the sort, and I called him on it.

      As for where in his post did he blame others? He didn't, but it is implicit in the creationist/intelligent design school of thought. I've studied the way these guys operate for quite a while now, and I know how they think, and I know the sorts of games they try to play. The fact is, their misunderstandings go far beyond the realm of science, and into their own religion, and it is there that they are actually doing the most damage, which was the point I was making in my previous post.

      --

      Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

    5. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by JetJaguar · · Score: 1
      As the previous poster said, you need to learn the difference between abiogenesis and evolution.

      However, on the topic of abiogenesis, you should note that some very interesting findings have been made in the field over the last decade. Some very interesting findings. The groundwork for being able to make the leap from simple, self-replicating organic molecules to the first cell is making good progess. Mind you, there's still a big leap to be made and we don't have all the pieces of the puzzle, but we're starting to get enough of the pieces together that we can begin to see how it might have happened.

      --

      Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

    6. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sigh. Abiogenesis is the logical precursor to evolution. "(New) novel traits passed from one organism to another" don't just happen when a bunch of chunks of granite are hanging out on a hillside chilling out.

      On top of that...
      The groundwork for being able to make the leap from simple, self-replicating organic molecules to the first cell is making good progess.

      I have a very hard time comprehending how a "scientist" can make such a claim, unless you're heavily emphesising the 'groundwork' in lieu of everything else. The difference between organic molecules and a single-celled organism is astronomical... a cell has working, complex infrastructures, working DNA/RNA, etc., as opposed to a dollop of amino acids which has... just about jack.

      Of course, getting the organic molecules from inorganic matter is quite a feat in and of itself, but not directly related.

      Mind you, there's still a big leap to be made and we don't have all the pieces of the puzzle, but we're starting to get enough of the pieces together that we can begin to see how it might have happened.
      ... is sure a far cry from
      The fact is, evolution has been satisfactorily proven to work.


      -
      StupidKatz
    7. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1
      Abiogenesis is the logical precursor to evolution
      Actually, not really. It's the naturalistic precursor. It's entirely possible that the first bit of matter to be endowed with the ability to replicate had life breathed into it by the Creator, or whoever. Evolution takes no position on the origin of life at all. Even if you could prove that the origin of life was by God, evolution would still apply, since it took effect from the moment a self-replicating, mutating organism came into existance.

      Arguing against abiogenesis does nothing to harm evolutionary theory.
    8. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if you could prove that the origin of life was by God, evolution would still apply, since it took effect from the moment a self-replicating, mutating organism came into existance.

      I'm also interested in this angle and the logic behind it, as well. I'll have to use an easy example like the human eye or a bacterial flagellum, as I've not really studied how something as horrifically complicated as, say, the mammalian reproductive system could evolve, though the same basic logic applies.
      Given that, in any competitive environment, any mutation or new trait which does not serve an immediate purpose to that specific organism, as well as the means to take advantage of that purpose being efficient enough to offset whatever extra demands the mutation or new trait may serve, is at an immediate disadvantage when it comes to its own survival. In short, if the creature has to support a new yet useless mutation or new trait, it is expending resources better used by more efficient creatures it is in direct competition with for survival. There was no Americans with Disabilities Act back then.
      We then turn to a single example of one of the more complex systems, realizing that until the system in question is complete, ergo providing an advantage, the creature is burdened with ever-increasing disadvantages to support worthless "new traits". Then, for the final straw, take a look around what we can see with the study of biology and find all the examples of incomplete new traits. The result should prove enlightening.

      Arguing against abiogenesis does nothing to harm evolutionary theory.

      We'll have to agree to disagree. I do see your viewpoint on this, and it is correct, but can see no sense in arbitrarily starting the evolutionary clock after life has already been formed, when viewed in light of the above.

      -
      StupidKatz

    9. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1
      Creationism and intelligent design are DOA
      Dave Grohl just sued you for slander... or libel... or whatever the crap Slashdot is.
      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    10. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1
      Any trait that was burdensome on the bearer of that trait and offered no advantage to offset that burden would indeed be heavily selected against. Which is indeed why we don't find such traits in the wild or in fossil record. Evolution predicts that any mutation must be beneficial for it to be selected for.

      You see the problem for creationists is that "half an eye" does provide an advantage, at least more of one than having no eye. As an example, consider an animal that has some light-sensing patches, but cannot "see". Thos light-sensing patches provide an advantage. They can help the animal navigate, and if it suddenly goes dark, they can scurry around trying to hide, assuming that the shadow could have been caused by some predator.

      There have been in fact simulations of the evolution of any eye from a patch of light-sensing skin. These simulations have shown very clear possibilities for the evolution of an eye where every step was more advantageous than the one before. Now, we don't know what steps were actually taken, since the eye is soft and squishy and doesn't fossilize well, but we have several pathways. Even more importantly, there are many, many animals who would have, compared to us, "half an eye", and they do fine. Compare our eye with the simplicity of the nautiloids, or the distance vision of an eagle, and it quickly becomes aparrent that we too do not have 100% of an eye.

      The bacterial flagellum, and the blood clotting cascade have also been shown to have clear evolutionary pathways where each additional step was advantageous. Interestingly, the bacterial flagellum started off life not as a means of propulsion, but a means of attack, and was co-opted to movement.

      can see no sense in arbitrarily starting the evolutionary clock after life has already been formed
      Since evolution deals only with replicating life, and nothing else, how exactly do you expect to set the clock any earlier? It is a limitation of the theory. What it describes was not in existance before life began, therefore the theory has no applicability. Hardly arbitrary. The theory of plate tectonics doesn't apply to the Moon which doesn't have them, nor does it apply to the Earth just as it was forming. This is not a weakness of the theory, merely that it doesn't apply in those circumstances. Similarly, gravity doesn't explain nuclear fission, but that doesn't make gravity or atomic bombs any less real.
    11. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by JetJaguar · · Score: 1

      Sigh. Abiogenesis is the logical precursor to evolution. "(New) novel traits passed from one organism to another" don't just happen when a bunch of chunks of granite are hanging out on a hillside chilling out.

      That may be true. But abiogenesis is not evolution. It also raises the question of just exactly what constitutes life? Are self replicating molecules alive? Are viruses alive? And by the way, what claim am I making? I didn't say that everything was understood and that we know how it all works. I did say that we are starting get a picture of how it might have happened.

      The difference between organic molecules and a single-celled organism is astronomical... a cell has working, complex infrastructures, working DNA/RNA, etc., as opposed to a dollop of amino acids which has... just about jack.

      Yes, the difference between organic molecules and modern single celled organisms is very large. However, where is the requirement that the first single celled organism must have more in common with modern ones than something much more primitive? I didn't say that we were close to making a leap from molecules to modern bacteria. I'm talking about something that is much more primitive. Algae, the simplest celled organisms that we know of, are light years ahead of what I'm talking about. And yes, I admit that I don't know what this primitive single celled organism really looks like, however, I would bet big money that it won't look very much like modern single celled organisms.

      Of course, getting the organic molecules from inorganic matter is quite a feat in and of itself, but not directly related.

      Getting organic molecules is easy. You do realize that organic molecules are found everywhere. Not just here on earth, but throughout the universe. In addtion, we have already discovered molecules that could very well be precursors to DNA/RNA that are easy to make naturally, that can self replicate under the right conditions, and are susceptible to non-destructive mutations. Those are all pretty big jumps don't ya think? I find these findings to be pretty compelling, and they most certainly do lay the ground work for what comes next.

      --

      Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

    12. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      I'm well aware of the argument that the eye began as a wad of light-sensitive cells, but the problem is that such cells would not survive exposure to the environment as-is. The lastest word I'd heard on that was that the cells formed inside the creature, with varying degrees of success.
      One major problem with your argument, though, is that you try to classify "the eye" as an identical system that all forms of life are working to perfect. Conversely, the different types of eyes seen today are all highly specialized. You can't very well expect much of a benefit for a prairie dog to have supreme distance vision any more than you'd expect an eagle to have much use for highly sensitive yet short-distance vision. This also holds true for deep-sea creatures - not much chance of getting a tan down there. Insect eyes are even crazier.

      The arguments for the flagellum as a weapon don't make sense, either, as I explicitly mentioned: the additional *multiple* parts needed to make it function as a propultion device are specialized and useless on their own, extremely strong arguments against its usefulness as an incomplete system. I've also wondered where that poison injection system was supposed to have gone, as well as what they did with it before they had the "needle".

      By the way, I wasn't expecting to find incomplete systems in the the fossil record - I was referring to creatures existing now. Humans are a good start, whereas the only good "useless" body part that I have not ever found a good answer for is the bit of tissue at the inside corner of each eye (can't recall the name at the moment). Every other system, even the appendix (a sort of immunological booster) serves a specific purpose... or shows signs of design efficiency (male nipples).

      I'll drop the bit about abiogenesis and evolution - just a pet peeve of mine. Evolution attempts to explain how life we know of started at the same point and drew on chaos and chance to form all the diverse and fascinating forms we see... while implicitly suggesting that life, itself, started in that same way, even if that angle, when presented, is explicitly denied.

    13. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      You're right - defining life is tricky. The grey zone is fairly narrow, though.

      The problem is that, while folks are always in pursuit of that (forgive me) magical JELL-O(tm) creature, the "living blob", every single new thing we've learned about life builds on the idea that it is all incredibly complicated. Self-replicating molecules and viruses are neat (or at least when my immune system can easily subdue the latter), but one is obviously not alive (any more than any other chemical reaction) while the latter is only present when a complicated living form (with the requisite DNA) is also present.
      All that is to say that getting from point A to point B is, by far, far from being a solved problem when using evolution to explain it.

      Yes, being able to build self-replicating molecules is neat, and the progress we've made (and are making!) is fascinating... but evolution has a long way to go before it can even be called a scientific hypothesis, let alone "proven".

    14. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1
      you try to classify "the eye" as an identical system that all forms of life are working to perfect
      Sorry if that is the impression I did give. I did deliberately put "half an eye" in quotes to try and point out that it isn't my concept I was attacking but rather a simplistic creationist strawman. Obviously I wasn't clear enough ;-D

      The arguments for the flagellum work fine. Read a model for the origin of the bacterial flagellum. From the conclusion:
      Only one major shift of function occurred at the system level, the transition from a pilus to a protoflagellum. All of the other changes in system function can be seen as minor modifications of a basic function; if these are enumerated (export --> secretion --> adhesion --> pilus, and dispersal --> taxis), then four minor shifts of function occurred. In all cases a "shift" in function is actually more accurately described as an addition of function at the system level, as previous functions are maintained.
      BTW, really interested here, how exactly do male nipples show design efficiency? I always thought they were bloody superfluous ;-D

      If you're looking for "incomplete systems", have a look at Ocelli, Stemmata. Of course, the standard response to things like this is that they are not incomplete since they do fine for the animals concerned. This in fact is disingenuous at best, since the question was to show "incomplete systems" in existance now. Excluding by definition all organisms in existance now would make giving you examples impossible. However, personally, I don't believe that there are or ever were any incomplete systems. Then again I wasn't the one asking the question, was I?
      If we were to have a time-machine, and were able to travel back to any time in the evolution of earth, we would likely never find an "incomplete system", certainly not one that survived. We would instead find many very complete systems, some of which gradually became coopted into different functions whilst still being "complete" in the sense that they made perfect sense for the organism involved at the time.

      Well, a pet peeve of mine is people mischaracterising evolution ;-D
      Evolution does not at all, implicitly or explicitly say anything about the origin of life. In fact it explicitly limits itself to replicating organisms. Anything before that is explicitly beyond it's purview. Now, many abiogenesis researchers are coming up with ways in which very simple pre-cell based replicators may have come into play. If these replicators fit the requirements for evolution, then in those circumstances, yes evolution would have something useful to say, and yes we would then be able to push the "starting point" of evolution back a bit. But I can't see that happenning any time soon.

    15. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      Hm, from the references you cite regarding the stemma and ocellus, I don't think they could be considered incomplete systems nor complete systems, but developing systems. Note that they are specific to insect larvae, an early stage in an insect's life-cycle.

      I'll have to look over that paper on the flagellum in detail, but frankly, it still seems to overreach on a quick skim - parts such as the "u-joint" and rings are claimed as having developed separately... with the problem of natural selection's "non-useful traits don't survive" coming back to poke holes in that angle.

      No evolutionist claims that systems such as the (easy examples, again) eye and flagellum came about from a single beneficial mutation, which is what you seem to be implying by saying there never were any incomplete systems?

    16. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1
      Oh dear. I am certainly, most definately, not implying that such complex systems arise from a single beneficial mutation. Nonetheless I stand by my statement that there are no "incomplete systems". Every successful mutation cannot harm the organism, and as such must be beneficial, or at worst, neutral. Thus each such mutation results in a complete system, in that the system works. If it didn't it would be selected against, and the mutation would not long survive.

      So, at no stage would one expect to find an organism with an "incomplete system", however one would expect to find many organisms with, as you put it "developing systems". You see, the question I have to ask, is what the hell is an "incomplete system"? If the stemma and ocellus don't qualify, what would? Oh, and BTW, the ocellus is found on adult insects. As for the article on the evolution of the flagellum, I'm not qualified enough to dissect its claims to a huge detail, but I certainly found the line of thought plausible at least. Your complaints about it seem to be based on a rather limited understanding of evolution, so if you don't mind, I think I'll stick with the authors expertise.

      natural selection's "non-useful traits don't survive"
      This is a complete mischaracterisation. Natural selection implies nothing of the sort. Useful traits survive better than their lack, sure. But neutral traits can survive, and many non-useful traits do too. Just have a look at the sheer idiocy of the pharynx as an example. However, at each step, each mutation was either beneficial or neutral. That does not mean that the overall design is good, but that's what we'd expect, because there was no design, merely a succession of small steps.

      Still waiting to find out about the design efficiency of male nipples BTW.
    17. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      Male nipples: a trait arising from the use of "common code" for both male and female. Fairly simple, minor point.

      You're implying that insect larvae undergo evolution, benefitial mutations, within a single organism's lifespan, and more vexingly, so does every other organism of the same type, with the same results! Lunacy! The examples you cited were of developing systems in the same way that a human baby develops systems in utero. They are not and have not ever been examples of beneficial mutations ala evolution/natural selection.

      I stated the following point before: any mutation which does not provide some sort of immediate benefit to outweigh its additional biological cost to the host organism is, by definition, harmful to the organism's chance for suvival in a contentious environment. A "neutral" mutation is one where the benefits just ofset the disadvantages, but it *must* provide a direct benefit. It's easy to see this logic when you deal with simpler organisms, but still holds true in complex ones.

    18. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1
      Okay, let's dial back the crap-o-meter here. I was not talking about insect larvae at all. I mentioned the ocellus in adult insects, I discussed the flagellum, I discussed your complete refusal to define an "incomplete system". I also pointed out the non-useful trait of having an airway that crosses the eating tube (found in you, not larvae), which BTW means that you can choke while eating, which is just stupid design.

      A neutral mutation, by the way, can be one where the mutation does not express. A simple example is in indels. As such it has no biological cost, and as such cannot be selected for or against, at least immediately. Alternatively, it can be a slightly different way of doing the same thing. Where's the "cost" to the organism?

      Male nipples: a trait arising from the use of "common code" for both male and female
      *blinks in disbelief*

      And that's an example of efficiency? In one breath you're raving about how every mutation must provide benefit. In another you're telling me that a structure on the male body, which offers no direct benefit whatsoever to the organism, or it's offspring, is an example of design efficiency? Those nipples cost resources to make, and maintain (not many, admittedly). They're not an example of design efficiency at all. A much better design would be to place the "genetic template" for nipples on the X-chromosome, and to place an instruction on the Y not to have them express at all.

      In fact male nipples would be my idea of a typical "neutral" mutation.
    19. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      Your thoughts on efficiency do not coincide with mine. Your viewpoint appears to promote that life has arrived at this point due to sheer chance and beneficial mutations. I do not share this viewpoint. Hence, trying to use an argument for my viewpoint as a contradiction against yours is ... confusing.

      Very well: an incomplete system would perhaps be a biological component of an organism which has limited usefulness, but with the potential to be extremely useful if another arbitrary change was made to the system in question.
      Given that we've had billions of years to develop on this planet, one would expect to find *many* such systems in almost all forms of life, instead of what we find in that most organisms are extremely specialized. There is no "finish line" for evolution.

      I don't recall you mentioning the airway/esophagus issue before. Regardless, it is an extremely common design, found in the vast majority of land animals - in fact, the only exceptions I can think of off-hand involve critters which live in water. A lot of things are dangerous to an organism, but do we need to teach a human baby to stop breathing in order to drink? Since another hole in the head would mean an approximate ~14% increase in infection vectors, would be of any great benefit to have an alternate opening dedicated to eating/drinking?
      I don't have any good figures for this, nor know of any decent studies off-hand; can't really comment much on that.

      As for the ocellus in adult insects, is it in debate that they are simply just another sense organ to detect possible predators? Human hairs serve a similar function, albeit with the size scales reversed.

      As for the flagellum, you'd pointed to a paper which appears to claim that the flagellum was assembled in a particular manner over a period of time, but still appears to either depend on multiple beneficial mutations happening at the same time, or else providing no useful purpose in the meantime. There's still that problem of natural selection.

      The cost for a mutation, as small at is might seem in today's era (my own mutated eyeballs, for example, sadly not beneficial), does indeed have a cost. That genetic code was produced to serve a purpose, a purpose which it no longer fulfills. It is now using resources to live and replicate, resources oft best used by working, complete code. So, unless it provides a useful benefit, it is a detriment. This is much easier to see in simpler organisms, but still applies to all.

    20. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1
      BTW, the pharynx I mentioned in an earlier post is in fact the join point between the mammallian airway and gullet.

      So, let's get this straight. You think that an "incomplete system" would be one where there's limited usefulness, but with potential for usefulness in future. In fact such a system would be contrary to evolution, since there is no plan of what may or may not be useful. So, let's just look at limited usefulness. How about the male nipple then?

      As for the ocellus, you're completely missing the point. Whether there are other mechanisms to detect predators/prey is besides the point. The ocellus provides an additional, albeit limited assistence to that task. At the same time, it is exactly the kind of limited eye that creationists claim does not exist. It is, at most, 10% of an eye. Yet it provides an evolutionary advantage. So, the evolution argument that there would be numerous "transitional" features is met, and the creationist argument that there would not be is debunked. You don't get much simpler than that.

      As for the flagellum, let's just get one thing straight: evolutionary theory is not your fake strawman of evolution. It does not have any problems with "neutral" mutations. I know this is a difficult concept to grasp, but when evolution talks about selection, "neutral" mutations are not selected against because, um, they're neutral.

      Costs of mutation are cheap. Costs of expression of those mutations might be very expensive. Since a huge amount of the DNA sequence is indels, either the Creator was a blithering idiot, or there's something else going on.

      Your viewpoint appears to promote that life has arrived at this point due to sheer chance and beneficial mutations. I do not share this viewpoint.
      And this is why you don't get evolution. Where have I said that sheer chance is the cause of life as we know it? Anyone who says something like that betrays a complete lack of the slightest understanding of evolution. Chance does have a role to play, but it is not the overriding role. The overriding role is natural selection, which is most certainly not random.

      Oh, and BTW, it's not a viewpoint. It's a fact. We've seen the evidence in the fossil record, we've seen the occurance in the laboratory, we've seen it in the wild. We have the mechanisms, we have the details. We know how the "modification" in "descent with modification" occurs. We've run simulations. We've checked the results against all the other sciences. They're all in agreement. There's no disputing it. You might as well say that the Sun revolves around the Earth.

      I feel a certain sympathy for the Creationist position, perhaps why I've bothered this long. You see, you're stuck in a bind. Either the Bible is fallible or the world is a lie. Since God created the world, and inspired the Bible, you're faced with a dichotomy. The Bible is very clear that God created the world, and not so clear on His direct authorship of the Bible. Technically, if the world and the Bible are in contradiction, then the world should take precedence, being a direct creation and all.

      Instead, you've decided that the work of men (perhaps inspired by God, but men nonetheless) takes higher priority than His work as revealed in His creation. As such, you're idolators, putting a book above God. The only way you can reconcile that is to claim that the book and the world are not in conflict, no matter what evidence shows you to be wrong. As such, you're not just idolators, but dishonest idolaters. If not dishonest to others, then at the very least to yourselves.
  28. FYI by prof_peabody · · Score: 4, Funny

    m = milli = 10^-3
    M = mega = 10^6

    325m years = ~ 118.6 days

    Missing link may be a bit young don't you think?

    1. Re: FYI by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Funny
      m = milli = 10^-3
      M = mega = 10^6

      325m years = ~ 118.6 days

      Missing link may be a bit young don't you think?
      That's the difference between a "Missing link" and a "missing link".

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re:FYI by Davey+McDave · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that notation only works if you're using standard SI units, which years clearly aren't (for example there's no such thing as a millidegree.. you have 60 minutes in a degree, and then 60 seconds in a minute). The m doesn't stand for mega OR milli, it stands for million.

      Pedantic humour is best when you're actually correct.

      --
      I've got the spirit, lose the feeling.
    3. Re:FYI by brian0918 · · Score: 1

      "Missing link may be a bit young don't you think?"

      This actually fits perfectly in the timeline of XYECs (extremely young earth creationists), while the UYECs (ultra...) are now in trouble, as they predicted this creature to have existed about 24 minutes ago (after the story came out).

    4. Re:FYI by njh · · Score: 1

      for example there's no such thing as a millidegree..

      millidegrees are used all the time in cryogenics. http://www.google.com/search?q=millidegree+Kelvin& ie=UTF8

      Pedantic humour is best when you're actually correct.

    5. Re:FYI by Davey+McDave · · Score: 0

      Go and read my comment again, I was talking about the other type of degree, as in to do with angles. To make it worse, you can't have a degree of temperature, either, you say degrees CELSIUS or degrees FAHRENHEIT. I think we can both agree they're different temperature scales, non?

      (note: Kelvin is always on its own, and to be fair I'd imagine they'd use that in cryogenics, being easily converted into energy, but this is only a guess after doing some basic thermo)

      --
      I've got the spirit, lose the feeling.
    6. Re:FYI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In geology, 100 million years is written as 100 Ma or 100 M years. All your points about temperature scales are meaningless to this discussion.

      Geologists also use kA, Ga, etc.

    7. Re:FYI by njh · · Score: 1

      yeah, I know. It was just an opportunity too good to miss :)

      millidegrees kelvin is standard terminology. Anyway, why can't we have millidegrees arc? My calculator can work out degrees in decimal. I bet you've said something like 'it's warmed up 5 degrees already!' too. I'd rather people got that wrong and got energy and power, temperature and heat, weight and mass, and power and current right.

      Kelvin is on its own, except when talking about millidegrees :) millikelvin is also valid. As you said, it's mainly a question of hysterical raisons. (And one does not normally write the UNITS IN ALL CAPS :)

    8. Re:FYI by Davey+McDave · · Score: 0

      I'm sure we probably can use millidegrees in terms of angles, but historically speaking, minutes and seconds are the correct terminology. It's like talking about megayards instead of miles, yeah? Standard SI prefixes are generally used on SI units only. We do use minutes/seconds in modern physics too - I'm taking you've heard of arcseconds? True, it's a measure of distance, but it is based on a second of an arc.

      --
      I've got the spirit, lose the feeling.
    9. Re:FYI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Geologists use SI prefixes on ages. All refereed geological journals demand this.

  29. Only being silly by aussie_a · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It's amazing what you can find if you have a preconception. Religious people do this every day of their lives, constantly finding proof of God being alive (and I of course am talking about the Christian God, that is the God that the Church of Latter Day Saints believe in, because there is no other god in existence), and yet scientists constantly dismiss their evidence, because they were found be people who had a prior belief. And yet when scientists do this, looking for evidence in a THEORY they believe in, and miraculously finding it, the scientists hold it up as the greatest achievement of mankind. They're just so hypocritical, and I am flabbergasted at why they hate God and America so much.

    1. Re:Only being silly by Capt_Morgan · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      HAHAHA, mormonism? You mean the scam religion? Dude, that is just sad that you buy into that scam. Joseph Smith was nothing more than a con-man. And why do people seeking to better the knowledge and learning of the human race hate america? I think the people taat really hate america are the people using their pseudo-religions to hold back our position of scientific prominence

      --
      It takes a big man to cry, but it takes a bigger man to laugh at that man.
    2. Re:Only being silly by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Go outside. See a cloud? That's how far above your head the joke went.

  30. Why does this "god" need/like to be worshipped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why does this "god" creature/slave-master/pet(human)-owner need/like to be worshipped. Is that really the best use of its and our time? And why does it only want to be worshipped by the superstitious? This mythology is quite silly.

    1. Re:Why does this "god" need/like to be worshipped by Warg!+The+Orcs!! · · Score: 1

      It's not that God needs to be worshipped its that WE need to worship whether it's God, George Clooney or a Bugatti Veyron.

      It's one of the fundemental aspects of humanity. I personally think its root lies in unswerving obedience to the Alpha Male or Alpha Female in our primitive past. None of us want to be cast out like Lucifer or Adam.

      --
      Travelling forward in time at a rate of 1 second per second.
  31. Link is useless without pictures. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what about dolphins, regular crocodiles, crabs, tree-climbing catfish, platapi etc? What's to say this find is a spectacular missing link, when other bizzare creatures already exist, but prove little to nothing?

    1. Re:Link is useless without pictures. by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1

      Perhaps because it's smack bang in a time period where our ancestor species came out of the water onto land, and happens to be coming our of water onto land?

  32. Wish granted! by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3, Funny

    > Flame away diephobic moderators...flame away.

    You're a fookin returd.

    Oh, and your post was really stupid too.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:Wish granted! by Fookin · · Score: 3, Funny

      Hey now, don't bring me into this. I was just minding my business, watching the circus from the sidelines.

  33. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by aussie_a · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are enough complexities and challenges with the idea of evolution as a means of speciation that one more discovery does not put a nail in the coffin of creationism.

    Actually, it is impossible for any nails to be placed in the coffin of creationism, because it isn't a theory that is able to be proven or disproven. However creationist proponents have placed creationism in opposition to evolution, so this can place a nail in the coffin of that use of creationism.

    Oh, and creationists who claim that evolution and creationism have equal evidence backing up each theory (or even better, that there is more evidence to back up creationism then there is to back up evolution) ARE idiots. I'm always happy to hear evidence that helps prove creationism, but I've yet to actually see any. I've seen logical thoughts (as in "but how could it have happened? it's all so complex" although they do rely on premises that can be neither proven nor disproven themselves), but no direct real evidence (for instance, evolution was just a thought, a theory, until fossil records were discovered that helped prove it).

    Respectfully
    aussie_a

  34. Sorry, not a missing link by DumbSwede · · Score: 5, Funny

    You can only find a "link", not a "missing link." Once found it is no longer missing.
    In much the same way as a hot water heater is unneeded since hot water is already hot.
    /attempted humor

    1. Re:Sorry, not a missing link by mvdw · · Score: 1

      Heh, reminds me of when I buy a loaf of "Raisin Toast", that is actually raisin bread. To make it raisin toast, one has to toast it...

  35. Evolution is not gradual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Darwinian view of evolution as a smooth and gradual transition has been depreciated by even modern evolutionists.

    90% of you don't realize that. Modern evolution is about leaps and bounds... there is never a gradiant. This can be seen in the geologic fossil records and the fact that there are never any "missing links" discovered that are believed by anyone credible.

    You guys need to jump off the "I don't believe in God, so therefore I follow Darwin" and get a clue. You don't even know what he said, published, or retracted, much less the theory advancment of his successors.

    If you want to believe in evolution fine. But at least make a reasonable attempt to read up on it before you start reciting century-year-old beliefs that you vaguely remember from middle-school Science History as if you are experts on the modern theory.

    1. Re:Evolution is not gradual by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think you'll find that evolution is a lot more gradual than you give it credit for. The main reason that we expect to find "jumps" in the fossil record is precisely because it is gradual. To simplify, speciation is theorised to be "faster" for isolated species, since their smaller population allows for swifter distribution of advantageous genes. Once they expand beyond their range, if they have evolved enough advantages, they very quickly expand even further.

      So, if we look everywhere on earth, except for at that original range, we will find a "sudden" appearance of that species. Even if speciation was not "swifter" in isolated populations, we would expect to find this. However, if we did ever find the original range (a VERY unlikely proposition), we would find the gradual fossil record for that species.

    2. Re:Evolution is not gradual by plunge · · Score: 1

      Uh, no, we don't realize that because you are wrong. You are confusing a debate over the pace of evolution with its "tiny steps at a time" nature. Punk Eek was only ever about whether change was constant and steady (it's not), not over whether evolution works by and large via small gradual changes (it does).

      YOU clearly don't know what Darwin said either. Darwin stated several times in origin that he didn't expect transitions to be steady, but to change and then remain in balance for long periods of time unchanged. Punk Eek was arguging against a view known as phyletic gradualism: which many have suggested was a bit of a straw man anyway.

      Presenting yourself as an expert correcting the rest of us when you are clearly misinformed is, to put it mildly, ironic.

  36. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by intheory · · Score: 1

    The problem with a millions-of-years evolution theory for Christians is that if you accept millions-of-years, and the existance and extinction of dinosoaurs prior to mankind, then you accept death, disease, and suffering prior to the fall of Adam. This doesn't fit into the belief structure of Christianity which states that prior to sin the world was without corruption, disease or pain.

    This of course, applies most specifically to "literalist" Christians, who believe in a literal creation account in Genesis. Many Christians sway on this point, and say "okay, well yeah I believe God uses evolution as part of his system," which personally I feel is an unfortunate decision, because it erodes the basic tenants of our faith and negates the entire sin->separation->sacrifice->salvation foundation of Christ.

    Anyway, as you can see in some of my previous posts on /., I try to be level-headed and not an ignorant Christian/creationist about the whole thing. I only hope, as other posters have mentioned, that these conversations don't devolve into name-colling or derogatory slug-fests. But that is sort of inevitable I suppose....

    Anyway, in regards to this specific fossil, interesting stuff. I would tend to agree that the gill/breathing thing is pretty lacking--that part needs some flesh put on it (ha ha) before I think the at large community will see this as truly "transitionary" in nature. Bone structure etc... is a pretty major change, but if the primary biologic functions of the creature aren't changed (i.e. how it handles CO2/O2 exchange) then I wonder how big of a deal it is? I didn't major in bio though...(neither did I major in Christianity...but whatever).

  37. Re:What's the big deal? by fireman+sam · · Score: 1

    That is amazing, but I consider the frog almost as amazing. It starts off as something that looks like a fish, and ends up as a tetrapod.

    --
    it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
  38. You give yourself away by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 1

    the true origin of the universe

    No one said anything about the origin of the universe. That is a mistake that Creationists make when trying to impute religious meaning into biological processes. "If evolution is true, it must explain the entire history of the universe." Wrong. Evolution describes the process of speciation. It says, "over time, species X will undergo genetic changes to such an extent that after n generations the resulting offspring will be a distinct species." The method of speciation is debatable, but the process of speciation is not.

    If you have a problem with physicists and cosmologists about the origin of the Universe, that's something to take up with them.

    1. Re:You give yourself away by Jsutton1027w · · Score: 1

      The method of speciation is debatable, but the process of speciation is not.

      I don't quite understand what you mean. I thought everything in science was debatable. I guess I don't know how you distinguish method (definition: "Orderly arrangement of parts or steps to accomplish an end") from process (definition: "A series of actions, changes, or functions bringing about a result").

      And, yes, I should have said 'origin of species' rather than universe.

    2. Re:You give yourself away by zpok · · Score: 1

      He means you can debate it as much as you like but other than in bible studies, you are required to bring some evidence if you publish and want to be called a scientist.
      It doesn't need to be 100% conclusive evidence since that doesn't exist, but without any, you're just a man with an opinion. That alone doesn't make for interesting debate. But no worries, a man with an opinion can still become tv preacher, politician or any other thing he fancies.

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    3. Re:You give yourself away by servognome · · Score: 1

      It doesn't need to be 100% conclusive evidence since that doesn't exist, but without any, you're just a man with an opinion

      You don't need to have evidence to be right, since "truth" and what is "widely accepted true" are completely different. You can also give alternate explainations to existing evidence to make it less conclusive in support of the theory. And all scientists are men with opinions, as many "answers" can be derived from the same set of facts.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    4. Re:You give yourself away by zpok · · Score: 1

      True, but it takes a leap of faith to conclude there is no real evidence to support evolution theory.

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    5. Re:You give yourself away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No... He specifically said that the process itself is not debatable. This is true. We can SEE this process. Most evolutions are slow, but, some have happened within reasonable times to be properly recorded even if you do insist on doubting all teh relevant parts of written history. It's inconceivable that it could be untrue really. How could animals NOT change over time? In other words, you can't debate that they change if you are sane, you can only debate how they change -- whether it is an intelligent being controlling these changes or perhaps even causing them or just simple natural selection of random minor genetic mutations. Heck, we've inadvertantly caused some such as the domestication of some various animals (ok, you can say God did that if you like, but, the point is it has happened under the eyes of humans.)

      Science does require that we accept some things as absolute though. For example, we must assume that this world is real and thus its physical laws are set (even if largely unknown.) Actually, I like to joke that science is a religion of itself because we must take a large number of things on faith. Not blind faith, but, faith nonetheless. If you wish to get anywhere, you can't keep starting over from the very beginning but must start from previous works that have been "proven" to be true. Even if you set out to disprove one, you must start from others to do so. To start over from the beginning would require more than one person's lifetime obviously.

    6. Re:You give yourself away by zpok · · Score: 1

      I don't entirely agree. You still can doubt that for instance mammals change over time without the interference of humans. It takes more than a bit of idiocy and stubborn refusal to at least entertain the possibility that you're a pea brain, but there is still room for a sliver of doubt. And debate. Whatever others say, that's my opinion, the proof is in every good book on science, and every scientific conference you care to visit. There's always room for doubt. As there is always opportunity to make a bloody fool of yourself.

      Whether it's evolution or intelligent design however is not something to contemplate. Intelligent design is a stupid idea, as stupid ideas go, people are welcome to them. But to weigh it against evolution theory, even for the sake of discussion is one bridge too far.

      Evolution theory is a sound scientific theory that so far holds its own against everything *scientific* you want to throw at it. Sure, it gets revised now and then. Just like bibles, but not for the sake of political correctness. That's the whole point, the process of science at work.

      I think God and intelligent design belong in the the other corner, namely, religious philosophies that don't need, let me rephrase, that can't stand the burden of proof. So... if you want, you can say that evolution is the preferred method of doing intelligent design for God. If you like you can say anything at all.

      What you can't in all seriousness say is that intelligent design is an alternative for evolution theory. An alternative for evolution theory is another scientific theory, not religious supposition. The difference is that one is subject to a set of rules, and is subject to - and NEEDS - scrutiny of the scientific community. The other is basically a free for all game of opinions that everybody can entertain without never EVER having to prove anything.

      The need to prove something means you have doubts. Doubt has no place in religion. You may doubt in yourself, but not in God. Or so I'm told. Anyway, that's up to religious people to figure out. Their game, not mine.

      Of course, when you joke that science is almost religion, I do see your point. At the basis of all philosophy and science lay some fundamentals that you must accept, if only for the sake of discussion.

      They are not absolutes however. It's OK to doubt - or to set other - premises as long as you are perfectly clear about it. And its always refreshing to absurdly doubt all observational "truths" if only to see what happens if you do.

      For instance, Plato can safely do deformed rabbit and talk about illusions, the real reality as opposed to the one we live in, and still be considered sane. He had some instructional examples of illusions and anyway, he was a philosopher, not a scientist, at least not as we define one today. So, truth and beauty, wonderful stuff...

      If we like we can do mathematics on the basis that 1 + 1 does not equal 2. And surprise surprise still come to results that are extremely useful to some people. And even fit some observations better than you know, straight forward no nonsense honest to god manly math.

      My point, don't confuse science with religion. They can safely (or embarrassingly uncomfortably) live together in the same universe, but the one has nothing much to do with the other.

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    7. Re:You give yourself away by ajs318 · · Score: 1
      Science does require that we accept some things as absolute though. For example, we must assume that this world is real and thus its physical laws are set (even if largely unknown.) Actually, I like to joke that science is a religion of itself because we must take a large number of things on faith. Not blind faith, but, faith nonetheless.
      Scientists take exactly two things on faith.
      1. The Laws of Nature are Unchangeable.
      2. The Laws of Nature apply to everything in the Universe without prejudice.
      Falsifying either of these tenets would undermine a great deal of Science.

      The experimental method generally involves studying a small, contrived system and applying the discoveries thus made to a larger system, so is dependent upon (2) for its validity. The knowledge we have accumulated over the years is dependent upon (1) for its continued validity.

      Everyday observation continuously reinforces these tenets: we can see incidental evidence all the time for the inverse square law, gravity, pressure in a fluid acting equally in all directions, Newton's third law and many more.
      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    8. Re:You give yourself away by x2A · · Score: 1

      Um, no... we had the chance to test how fast large objects distort space, by watching a distant STAR as JUPITOR passed between us and it.

      We're testing the effects of a large rotating object on space by placing observational satalites in space, locking them onto distant stars, and measuring rotation on different objects.

      These are not "small contrived experiments" that we're applying results to the rest of the universe. We're looking out into the universe.

      If you're going to argue about science, you better keep up.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    9. Re:You give yourself away by x2A · · Score: 1

      "You don't need to have evidence to be right"

      No but you at least need a reason for making the assertion in the first place, beyond "I read in a book, and I believed it"!

      Do you have any idea how many fictional books there are out there? Why pick one to believe over the rest? There's no reason for it.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    10. Re:You give yourself away by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      I think you missed a word somewhere between "method" and "involves".

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    11. Re:You give yourself away by servognome · · Score: 1

      Um, no... we had the chance to test how fast large objects distort space, by watching a distant STAR as JUPITOR passed between us and it.
      We're testing the effects of a large rotating object on space by placing observational satalites in space, locking them onto distant stars, and measuring rotation on different objects.
      These are not "small contrived experiments" that we're applying results to the rest of the universe. We're looking out into the universe.
      If you're going to argue about science, you better keep up.


      These are still "small contrived experiments." We will never find truth, at best we can have a high level of confidence about something, but our level of observation is infinately small compared to the size (both physical and temporal) of the universe. Every observation is extremely limited, and all facts have a number of caveats involved. If you are going to argue about science, understand that at it is fundamentally a philosphy.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
  39. Re:"the" missing link? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    Evolution approaches theories by assuming a HUGE number of assertions are true, trying to find evidence to back them up (all the time skewing your interpretations of the evidence based on your assumptions), and teaching those assumptions as facts to the unknowing masses in the mean time.

    What assertions does evolution assume to be true? Be specific, and provide as many as you can.

    I'm not saying that we need to _assume_ that God made the universe either (that happens to be my opinion, but that's beside the point),

    Such an assumption has no bearing on evolution, as evolution says nothing regarding the origin of the universe, nor does it say anything regarding the existence of any deities. It does, however, beg the question of why the specfic deity God is being assumed to the exclusion of all other deities worshipped and/or acknowledged throughout human history.

    but why can't we at least accept the fact that we don't have enough scientific evidence to make even an educated guess as to what the true origin of the universe is?

    I do not understand the relevance of this question. The theory of evolution says nothing whatsoever regarding the origin of the universe.

  40. Oh, how nice of them by thetelepath · · Score: 2

    I like how the first thing on their minds is giving us a blow-by-blow play of evolution vs. intelligent design. (See third paragraph) Is it too much to ask for a story that just says, "Hey look, we found this cool fossil that seems to coincide properly with the theory of evolution in a way that we haven't seen before" without bringing up how stupid intelligent design is? Hasn't it crossed anyone's mind that the existence of evolutionary changes might not play any role whatsoever in the proving or disproving of the existence of a higher power? I mean, it's God we're talking about here. He could've created the birds from the fish, then the land creatures from the birds by means of evolution like he created woman from man, if he wanted to. Or we could be trapped in a strange time loop and the fossils we keep digging up are really genetic experiments of creatures that couldn't survive and died out in the future. Actually, I'd better claim copyright on that idea so I can write a crappy mini-series for the sci-fi channel. Anyway, the point is that evolution really is still a theory. Granted, it seems like a pretty good one so far, but it's not exactly provable without either time travel or the witnessing of the generation of a new species in our midst.

    Okay, so I get that you're just trying to "save" all of those crazy fundamentalists from believing in something that doesn't seem scientifically viable. Just thought I'd let you know that making fun of them doesn't really help your case. Though what really annoys me are the people who are into Christianity for purely political reasons and make the rest look like fools when they go up to bat for some foolhardy idea (a la Kansas), but that's a whole other discussion.

    --
    Because it's about grace. It really is about grace.
    1. Re:Oh, how nice of them by D3m3rz3l · · Score: 1

      "Just a theory". "Provable". "Higher power". sigh.

    2. Re:Oh, how nice of them by zpok · · Score: 1

      At least they're not making cartoons...
      But read post above yours and you get why intelligent design gets a mention. And will deservedly get one for years to come as long as it's around.
      And um, how funny that God doesn't need any proof of existence, but evolution theory could still be us caught in a time loop.

      That proves there is room for both science and religion. After all, even scientists need to switch off their brains once in a while...

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    3. Re:Oh, how nice of them by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Is it too much to ask for a story that just says, "Hey look, we found this cool fossil

      Is it too much to ask that people comment on the ACTUAL ARTICLE and not rerun the same 800-reply threads that we get here EVERY TIME the word "evolution" is mentioned in a story? Would that moderators would mod all such off topic instead of joining in the flame war and modding up those they agree with.

    4. Re:Oh, how nice of them by thetelepath · · Score: 1

      Alright, so I guess that next time I'll just post the shortened version: "Stop bickering, children!"

      --
      Because it's about grace. It really is about grace.
    5. Re:Oh, how nice of them by 1u3hr · · Score: 1

      Sorry, though I followed on from your post I wasn't intending to directly criticise you.

    6. Re:Oh, how nice of them by superyooser · · Score: 1
      Is it too much to ask for a story that just says, "Hey look, we found this cool fossil that seems to coincide properly with the theory of evolution in a way that we haven't seen before" without bringing up how stupid intelligent design is?

      Better yet, is it too much to ask for a story that just says, "Hey look, we found this new fossil."? Just the facts, ma'am. Got an opinion on the implications of the facts? That's what the op-ed page is for.

  41. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's incompatible in the sense that Creationism is based on faith where evolution is based on factual evidence. Also, the idea of an all-powerful God was a logical hypothesis of our existence thousands of years ago. The need for a supreme creator has diminished as our understanding of life, the universe, and everything else has progressed. God may still be in the gaps of our knowledge, or he may not. I find it interesting that such a pervasive character like God who is supposed to be responsible for literally everything in the universe, and expects to be worshiped for that fact, has left no conclusive traces of his handiwork. In other words: "Crazy theories one, regular theories a billion."

  42. Re:"the" missing link? by mantar · · Score: 1

    I would have worded it a bit differently, but I think you have a valid point. There is simply no way for us to know whether this creature is a member of a transitional species or just another species that at one time became extinct and until recently has been hidden from the eyes of science.

    --
    # man tar
  43. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    I have a question that I've never really understood the answer to: why is creationism as a belief incompatible with science (including evolution)?

    When speaking of "creationism" in the context of evolution, the reference is typically to "special creationism", which postulates that a deity, God, created all species individually, rather than species emerging from common descent through evolution. Such a claim is inconsistent with observed reality.

  44. Too many gaps by cartel · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    For me personally, there are just too many gaps. To convince me at least, one fossil/species is not enough - this species they found could be similar in nature to the duckbill platypus. And where is the fossil evidence that the duckbill platypus evolved from another species? If macroevolution were true, then I would think there would be numerous fossils comparable to this one all over the place, but I do not see evidence of this. True there are numerous species in existence today, but we cannot identify DIRECT parent and child species of any particular species, respectively. If evolution, as they say, takes so long, there WOULD be fossils that we COULD conclusively show are directly linked to other species - without missing links - and they would be found just as easily as dinosaur fossils are.

    1. Re: Too many gaps by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > If evolution, as they say, takes so long, there WOULD be fossils that we COULD conclusively show are directly linked to other species - without missing links - and they would be found just as easily as dinosaur fossils are.

      What makes you think that?

      What is the probability that an organism will become fossilized, survive erosion and other hazards for millions of years, and then actually be found by someone? I.e., how good a sample do you think the fossil record is.

      How easy would it be for you to find your own ancestors' bones going back 100 generations? Or just 10. What do you conclude from any gaps in that record?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re: Too many gaps by cartel · · Score: 1

      > What is the probability that an organism will become fossilized, survive erosion and other hazards for > > millions of years, and then actually be found by someone? I.e., how good a sample do you think the fossil > record is. What about dinosaur fossils? What about this fossil they found in this article?

    3. Re: Too many gaps by Hannah+E.+Davis · · Score: 2, Informative

      The probability of a fossil forming is actually pretty slim. First of all, the organism needs to be at least partially solid -- bones do the trick, or a nice big shell, but squishy invertebrates, for example, are extremely unlikely to leave any trace of their passing. The organism also needs to die under the correct conditions and stay there relatively undisturbed for millions of years until human scientists get around to digging it up.

      Given that billions and billions of species have existed on this planet, it's not surprising that we've found some fossils, most notably those of the dinosaurs (ie. big, numerous boney things that lived at a time when Earth was conveniently swampy), but that doesn't mean that there's even the slightest possiblity that we'll ever find the remains of everything that ever existed.

      Also, I've read about scientists observing evolution in action. Sure, they're only going to be able to observe relatively small changes in their lifetimes, but that doesn't mean that the changes didn't happen... though they obviously don't have a complete fossil record to go along with their notes :)

    4. Re:Too many gaps by kmcrober · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "If evolution, as they say, takes so long, there WOULD be fossils that we COULD conclusively show are directly linked to other species - without missing links - and they would be found just as easily as dinosaur fossils are."

      Really? Because the biologists--you know, the guys who actually do the math to figure that sort of thing out--say otherwise. I don't mean to suggest that your casual inference is somehow not as persuasive as the life labors of scientists who waste their time with experiments, observations, professional collaborations, and measly testable predictions. Your unsupported hand-waving is certainly good enough for me. But just in case anyone reading your comment thinks that it in any way represents an educated opinion, you might want to read the FAQ.

      I've already said it once in these comments, but it bears repeating. The ignorance required to be a creationist is stunning in its own right. But it's the arrogance that really knocks my socks off. It's one thing to just not know how a complicated science works - very few people do. It's quite another to assume that the well-educated, hard-working specialists who unanimously disagree with you also don't know anything, simply because you don't like the facts they discover.

    5. Re:Too many gaps by CrankyOldBastard · · Score: 1
      And where is the fossil evidence that the duckbill platypus evolved from another species?

      There is a very complete collection of fossils of proto-monotremes. In fact the oldest mammal fossil ever found is a direct ancestor of the modern platypus. Monotremes have this habit of living in holes in the ground, with the entrances either under water or temporarily closed for protection. This tends to make it easier to end up as a fossil rather than as a meal.

      I suggest you read almost any credible book on paleo-biology and you'll see how we know more about the extinct predecessors of the platypus than we do about most other creatures.

    6. Re:Too many gaps by cartel · · Score: 1

      Let me ask you a question that is kind of OT. The link you sent is interesting - maybe you know of another that could provide a plausible answer to the following: have scientists observed genetic mutations (which is a foundation of evolution) that have produced positive outcomes? Every time I've seen a person or a creature of any kind with such a genetic defect, the defect has been an inhibitor to the person or creature's functioning. Has it ever been witnessed otherwise?

    7. Re:Too many gaps by kmcrober · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes, beneficial mutations are often observed.

      The Talk Origins FAQ I've linked to is comprehensive, easily searched, and quite objective. Even better, it points the way to more in depth books, articles, and sources--you can, if you choose, go from a one-page FAQ summary all the way to the primary evidence. Otherwise, I would recommend a book such as Ernst Mayr's "What Evolution Is." Much more difficult than the FAQ, and a tiny bit dated, but also much more rewarding.

    8. Re:Too many gaps by cartel · · Score: 1

      Thanks. Don't take me wrong - I don't mean to be an ass or to flame. I posted like that not really to debate; rather, I want to learn and gather knowledge of both sides of the argument so I can make a choice myself.

    9. Re:Too many gaps by kmcrober · · Score: 1

      Then I apologize if I was rude or unduly confrontational. The best advice I can give you is not to trust creationist sources; intelligent design was constructed from first principles as a way to deceive people without a solid grounding in biology and advance a particular religious perspective rather than an objective scientific conclusion. Always double check any fact or assertion made by creationists (or anyone else, of course). You will be amazed at how many creationist tropes, especially the underlying tenets of Intelligent Design, are unsupported by any legitimate research or are just flat-out lies. Again, the FAQ is an excellent resource.

    10. Re:Too many gaps by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      Let me add that if you EVER hear the laws of thermodynamics used to justify anything more complicated than "you can't heat up a this piece of thing to 100 F with a piece of thing thats 99 F", but not so complicated that you don't need a PhD in science or engineering to really understand what the conclusion is saying, it is most probably a wrong conclusion. That has been my experience, anyway :-) (Maybe that should be the 4th law of thermodynamics...)

    11. Re: Too many gaps by nalfeshnee · · Score: 1

      Nice analogy with human ancestors!

      I would tentatively suggest that populations of "in-between" creatures (whether land-to-water or water-to-land, or between two other environments) would probably have worse survival rates anyway. Such populations would be subjected to predators in *two* environments, as well as being as-yet not so well adapted to survive and breed under these new conditions, etc., etc. Just enough of a population to survive, but not enough to contribute significantly to the fossil record.

      And of course, fossils of in-between creatures that successfully made the transition from land-to-water are going to be quite hard to find.

      Cheers,

      Nalfy

      --

      -- Despair is an operating system that ANY human being can run, sort of a psychological JAVA --

    12. Re: Too many gaps by Gat0r30y · · Score: 1

      I conclude that the cartel is not the result of GOD's direct intervention but instead a back seat grope fest and a broken prophalactic.

      --
      Prediction: The real iPhone killer is going to be sex robots from Japan. Think about it.
    13. Re:Too many gaps by plunge · · Score: 1

      "And where is the fossil evidence that the duckbill platypus evolved from another species?"

      You aren't that same person who was claiming that platypi were crosses between birds and mammals, are you?

      Platypi are monotremes, one of three different sorts of therians. Like all fossil records, their fossil record is skimpy, but not a mystery.
      http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/mammal/monotremefr.ht ml

      At one time, before evolution or cladistics were really understood, laypeople found them quite weird. However, there is nothing evolutionarily inexplicable about them today. Nothing about them is really birdlike: from egg-laying to the bill, all their features are characteristically therian, the group from which monotremes, placental, and marsupials descended.

      "True there are numerous species in existence today, but we cannot identify DIRECT parent and child species of any particular species, respectively."

      Correct! Evolution works by branching. That means there are almost an infinite number more distantly related _cousins_ in the fossil record than there are direct ancestors of any living creature. Given how rare fossilization is (even for the dinos), there's no reason at all to expect every single creature that ever lived to fossilize, which is basically what you're asking for. You need to learn a lot more about how fossilization works.

    14. Re:Too many gaps by cartel · · Score: 1

      Nope, I wasn't the one that was claiming that about platypi - I don't know what platypi are.

      > You need to learn a lot more about how fossilization works.

      True. I am realizing that I've been arrogant. I think I am searching for answers in the wrong place - I'll inevitably come up with more and more questions and never come to a real conclusion.

      Thanks everyone for putting up with my posts on Slashdot.

    15. Re:Too many gaps by plunge · · Score: 1

      Platypi are multiple, er, platypus...es.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platypus

    16. Re:Too many gaps by cartel · · Score: 1

      The last post was from April 6th, but oh well.

      The matter for the big bang had to have come from somewhere, so I don't see how the 1st law could be misused in that respect.

    17. Re:Too many gaps by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      In general, the laws of thermodynamics that I know about state something along the lines of "given system A, that system A must now do this, or that, etc." In general science has to take the 'initial conditions" as a given, although we can keep pushing back farther and farther in time. So if science were to understand a universe before the big bang with less energy or more entropy than the big bang had, then the laws of thermodynamics would have something to say, namely that there would be a lot of explanation needed for how the universe increased its energy or decreased its entropy. However, right now, we more or less take the big bang as the first thing in the universe we can explain, and maybe the beginning of time itself (not that I understand what Hawking really means by that...), so thermodynamics only has something to say about what happened after the big bang.

      Throughout history, philosophers and theologians have recognized that every cause must have a prior cause, and that cause a prior, etc, all the way back to infinity, or to some first cause (God). I believe Aquinas also claimed that even if time had no beginning, so the universe would be infinite, there would STILL need to be a "cause" of the entire infinite timeline, and we would still need God. What I think you are saying echoes that, so you are in good company. However, I personally was quite convinced by Kant's argument against the validity of arguments like this for proving God's existence. Essentially (and I'm not doing him very much justice here), Kant said that we must assume in our thinking that every cause has a prior cause, which is why the argument is so compelling, but that doesn't mean that this assumption is true. It may simply reflect the nature of our thought. Then this argument doesn't show that God exists, but only that as a practical matter, we must assume that he does.

  45. Where's the missing link between Windows 3.11 & by GnoWay · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Has anybody wondered what the missing link is between Windows 3.11 and 95? There is a very wide gulf there, both in the OS and the version number. They have to be related, though, because the have so much common DNA (dos).

    1. Re:Where's the missing link between Windows 3.11 & by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Has anybody wondered what the missing link is between Windows 3.11 and 95? There is a very wide gulf there, both in the OS and the version number. They have to be related, though, because the have so much common DNA (dos).

      I believe that you are attempting to make an analogy to suggest that common features does not suggest common descent. Your analogy, however, is faulty, as you are entites that replicate imperfectly -- biological life forms -- to entities that do not replicate at all. As such, your analogy demonstrates nothing.

    2. Re:Where's the missing link between Windows 3.11 & by GnoWay · · Score: 1

      No. No analogy attempted. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. I was reading through the fray and just thought I'd use the moment to pick on the creaky dos underpinnings which should have been gone long before 1995. I have been an 'evolutionist' for my whole life. I find the offered alternatives so banal that I don't waste my breath on arguing the point with anyone.

    3. Re:Where's the missing link between Windows 3.11 & by GnoWay · · Score: 1

      ....a good hint that I was joking (even though it might have been lame) was the mention of something as inconsequential as version number (particularly since the 3.11 was of the old style and the '95 was of the new type).

    4. Re:Where's the missing link between Windows 3.11 & by ettlz · · Score: 1

      So where the fuck did NT come from?

    5. Re:Where's the missing link between Windows 3.11 & by alas_anon · · Score: 1
      > So where the fuck did NT come from?

      It's a degenerate subspecies of unix.

    6. Re:Where's the missing link between Windows 3.11 & by ettlz · · Score: 1

      Really? I thought CTLR, He Whose Name Should Not Be Spoken, took a rib from VMS and from that created the Image of NT.

    7. Re:Where's the missing link between Windows 3.11 & by GnoWay · · Score: 1

      Modded "Off-Topic"??? Like nobody else here posts off-topic for a joke.

      This was probably modded by the person who thought I was serious and posted a smug reply only to delete it (and my reply to his/her reply) after I pointed out that it was a (perhaps bad) joke. Note the reference to the version numbers which seems not to realize that they are from different versioning methods.

  46. Re:"the" missing link? by Capt_Morgan · · Score: 1

    Wrong, wrong, wrong. Evolution is built on hard evidence... no assumptions. Things like cladistics, morphology and genetics. i suggest you read up on www.talkorigins.com before commenting on evolution any further

    --
    It takes a big man to cry, but it takes a bigger man to laugh at that man.
  47. Re:"the" missing link? by Jsutton1027w · · Score: 1

    I'd love to see this hard evidence you speak of. Just contradiction of my point doesn't help very much. :)

  48. First thing that came to mind. by Slaytanic213 · · Score: 0

    "I know that the human being and the fish can coexist."
    -Governor Bush
    Friday, 29 September 2000 in Saginaw, Michigan

    Funny?

    --
    *Satan Laughs As You Eternally Rot*
  49. An elaboration. by Descalzo · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Since I didn't bring it up, and you didn't ask me, I can't really answer for that other guy, but here's a thought: We take what we know: God exists, evolution happens, etc., and try to put it together in a way that works. Not being a scientist, I wouldn't know how to do that. But without a prophet to tell us how it went down, we have to make inferences and assumptions using imperfect tools such as the Bible and the fossil record. That sounds like a cop-out answer to me, but I don't know what else to say. I guess when it comes down to it, without any authority, modern-day religion can't really add anything to what was revealed thousands of years ago, so I guess religion doesn't really have anything new to add right now, just try to reconcile what they know with what they are discovering.

    I think one of the effects of this is that it is making religious people stop and ask themselves what they really believe, and why they believe it.

    As for what I think, I like to think that He put it together personally, in a way that is portrayed symbolically in Genesis. But, like I say, without some more revelation, we will never have anything more to add to what the scriptures say.

    I just realized: without revelation, creationists are in the same place as the evolutionists would be if they stopped finding fossils long ago. All the creationists can do is reinterpret the data (scriptures) they already have.

    Note: Please forgive my generalized language (creationists, evolutionists, etc.). I kind of did it on purpose, because I think most of us have the tendency to lump people into one extreme or another.

    --
    I cried real tears when Li Mu Bai died.
    1. Re:An elaboration. by Sique · · Score: 3, Funny

      So you are saying, that evolution researchers have an unfair advantage, because they not only have a theory (evolution), but also facts (fossil record) to prove the theory is sound?

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    2. Re:An elaboration. by deong · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I just realized: without revelation, creationists are in the same place as the evolutionists would be if they stopped finding fossils long ago. All the creationists can do is reinterpret the data (scriptures) they already have.

      The fossil record is a nice benefit for evolutionary biologists, but the molecular record is sufficient to infer evolution beyond the level of doubt considered scientifically insignificant. So even without fossils, the fact that the DNA of all living organisms appears to fit so beautifully into a tree structure provides powerful evidence for a common ancestor.

    3. Re:An elaboration. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      We take what we know: God exists, evolution happens, etc., and try to put it together in a way that works.

      This is interesting. Except for the fact that nobody knows God exists. Nobody ever has. There are an absolute crap load of people who think God exists, but they are choosing to beleive in the option (not really an option) that makes them feel better about a lot of things, including that biggie, death.

      I guess religion doesn't really have anything new to add right now, just try to reconcile what they know with what they are discovering.

      Make that...

      I guess religion doesn't really have anything new to add right now, just try to reconcile what they think with what they don't want to discover or accept.

      As for what I think, I like to think that He put it together personally, in a way that is portrayed symbolically in Genesis.

      Yes, you do don't you.

      Here's an idea. Life is frightening, death is frightening, where we came from and where we are going is frightening. Religion provides a great numbing effect to soothe those fears and remove the burdens they bring. It's easier to just give in to religion. Kind of like being held by your mother and she's saying everything will be okay. Well everything is NOT going to be okay. You and I are going to die and either be ash or worm food and nothing more. We won't even get eternal blackness, because we'd have to be capable of experience blackness for it to be blackness to us.

      Make the most of the ONE SHOT we get and respect each other so that everyone can make the most of the one shot they get. All this killing in the name of religion is nuts.

    4. Re:An elaboration. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      But wouldn't the anti evolution guy just claim that the DNA and RNA would have to fit in order for it to be animal or plant and alive? Actualy i think that is one of the ID statments but i'm not sure.

      The problem as I see it is evolution is driven by some event that endangers the lives of living creatures. The differences in enviroment, preditors, radiation in the enviroment, or whatever else seems to trigure it. Now the question i have is what effects happened that changed the DNA enough to consider this creature totaly seperate form this other creature. Has this happened on more then one occasion and could what we belive to be cousins actualy be creatures subjected to simular situations durring different times to produce the changes neccesary to form the common ancestor theory.

      I say this not to discredit evolution. I just seem to find it odd that when everythign was right to make life out of whatever wasn't there, that it would only happen once or that it happened many time and they all followed the same evolutionary path before branching out. I tend to think the conditions were just right and several simular but different forms of life happened. These different forms of life eventualy evolved into the different animals we see today. The only real thing common is the raw materials/energy needed for the life to begin.

    5. Re:An elaboration. by karolo · · Score: 1

      I know this is now way off topic, but I like your comment and I thought this, the worst part of there not being anything after death is that you can't go and tell the religious guys: told ya!

    6. Re:An elaboration. by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      So you are saying, that evolution researchers have an unfair advantage, because they not only have a theory (evolution), but also facts (fossil record) to prove the theory is sound?

      Creationists have facts, too. Just look at humanity as it exists today. How could pedophiles have evolved (there's no evolutionary advantage to having sex with someone who is too young to bear offspring). How can the fetish of stomping small creatures to death have come into being through evolution? No, humans as they exist today could only have been the product of a cruel and twisted god.

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    7. Re:An elaboration. by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      There are an absolute crap load of people who think God exists ... I like to think that He put it together personally

      Really, the word believe would be a better fit than think in these cases. Look at the most used noun form; these are beliefs, not thoughts, that people hold.

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    8. Re:An elaboration. by Sique · · Score: 1

      Call it a 'behavioural reserve'. :) It might not have an advantage right now, but it isn't too much of an disadvantage either. It might come in handy if there will ever be new types of small, but very dangerous animals :) (Same goes for all types of sexual behaviour. You never know if they once will prove to produce offspring in completely different circumstances, or if they will work as social adhesive...)

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    9. Re:An elaboration. by Descalzo · · Score: 1

      I had heard that about the DNA record. Interestingly, I heard it from a professor at Brigham Young University, a very religious school.

      --
      I cried real tears when Li Mu Bai died.
    10. Re:An elaboration. by Descalzo · · Score: 1
      That's a lot of assertions you're making. How do you know no one knows God exists? I'll grant you there are a lot of people who think he exists, but how do you know no one has ever seen him? And are there other ways to know besides seeing?

      Anyway, you seem to know that we think God exists, but what makes you so sure? Have you had some kind of experience that we should know about? Plus, don't you sound audacious to yourself when you tell me I don't know something that I do in fact know? Maybe you've just figured it out. It's possible you're smarter than me, and you've just thought it through a little more thouroughly. That may be true, but a who's smarter contest is not a very objective way to establish the existence of God. It always reduces to some kind of "You're a jerk," saying match.

      --
      I cried real tears when Li Mu Bai died.
    11. Re:An elaboration. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a jerk.

    12. Re:An elaboration. by AoT · · Score: 1

      You're making the assumption that pedophilia is an evolved behavior and not one that rises from certain social contexts.

    13. Re:An elaboration. by dajak · · Score: 2, Informative

      Creationists have facts, too. Just look at humanity as it exists today. How could pedophiles have evolved (there's no evolutionary advantage to having sex with someone who is too young to bear offspring). How can the fetish of stomping small creatures to death have come into being through evolution? No, humans as they exist today could only have been the product of a cruel and twisted god.

      Do you seriously not see the reproductive advantage of killing any rat, mouse, spider, scorpion, ant etc. on sight? I have delegated that task to my cat, because I am smarter than my ancestors, but I think it's a good instinct to have for a relatively stupid species with very vulnerable offspring and a habit of storing food.

      I don't really see how trying to impregnate unsuitable candidates would be a disadvantage. Since we are not very good at judging sexual maturity the pedophile might get lucky, certainly if he is a low ranking male in a chimp-like hierarchy. Many animals (dogs, rabbits) also mate with everything that moves.

      More generally: evolution selects genes, and morality is not the criterium for selection. "Fitness" is also a moving target in a changing environment. There is no way we can make a connection between genes and complex behaviours like pedophilia or killing. We don't know whether there is a specific genetic factor at all, and we can't judge how this genetic factor works out positively in other circumstances.

  50. Missing link found??! by TubaJon · · Score: 1

    The missing link was found???? Hey, it's not April 1st..

    --
    "The Matrix has you."
  51. Re:"the" missing link? by Stormmind · · Score: 1

    >that happens to be my opinion, but that's beside the point

    Apparently, not, because you seem to have missed the point of article.

    >A: aquatic animals that exist today don't have arms
    >B: land animals that exist today do have arms
    >C: this animal appears to be aquatic and it also has arms
    >Conclusion: THIS MUST BE THE MISSING LINK!!!!11!!11

    If you really read the article unbiased, it would be:

    A: aquatic animals that existed 420M years ago didn't have arms, didn't had a strong enough sceleton to support their weight and didn't have lungs, so they couldn't function on land.
    B: land animals that existed 350M years ago had arms to walk the land, could support their weight and had lungs, so they could function on land
    C: There should be an animal between 420M and 350M years ago that would have a little bit of this and that so it could be function both in water and on land
    D: To find that timeperiod and that environment we would have to dig over there, so let's go and dig
    E: Woopsie-daisies! Here it lies! Has arms to walk the land, supports its weight and apparently had lungs, but still looks a lot like a fish!
    F: This must be the missing link we were looking for! Hooray! And what a wonderfull thing that we could predict not only the existens of it but also the timeperiod and location? This most certainly supports the evolution theory! Hooray again!

    Cheers!

    / Storm

  52. Need faith for this one by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 1

    There are daily versions of Windows from Win3.11 through Win95 all the way through WinME and probably slightly beyond.

    They exist. They are burned onto CDs deep in Microsoft's campus. And they will never see the light of day. You'll have to take it on faith that Win95 didn't just spring into existence on August 24th, 1995.

    1. Re:Need faith for this one by nalfeshnee · · Score: 1

      This is a neat analogy, mod it up someone.

      --

      -- Despair is an operating system that ANY human being can run, sort of a psychological JAVA --

  53. Re:"the" missing link? by wall0159 · · Score: 1

    "Evolution approaches theories by assuming a HUGE number of assertions" (sic)

    I'm not quite sure what you mean by this, but I think you're trying to say that evolution makes unfounded assumptions. Probably the only real 'assumption' evolution makes that can never be tested, is that chemical processes have always worked the way they work today. This seems quite reasonable, since we have no reason to believe that the laws of the universe behaved differently in the past.

    "next generation of 'scientists' will think that these assumptions have been proven"

    This line shows that you do not understand the scientific method. One cannot *prove* evolution. It is a theory, and like all theories, can *never* be proven. People talk about the 'law' of gravity - but it's not a law. It's likely in the future it will be replaced by a better and deeper understanding of the universe.

    How many times must it be said?!?
    Evolution is a theory that can never be proved - it can only be disproved. Just like *every* other scientific theory. Despite a hundred or more years' research, it has not been disproved. In fact, the theory of evolution has been used to make predictions that scientists have validated. This means that evolution is likely an accurate description of how life on Earth has developed. It's called a 'falsifiable hypothesis' - one can design experiments that could potentially disprove evolution. NONE HAVE.

    Compare this to 'intelligent design', where any inconsistancy between reality and the theory can be glossed over by saying 'God did it that way'. THAT's why ID is NOT science.

  54. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

    Whatever science comes up with, one can always back out and say that the system as a whole was created by an omnipotent external creator.

    You just hit the nail on the head. No matter what evidence appears, you can always say 'goddidit'. There is no evidence that could ever come up that might possibly damage the 'goddidit' explanation. It is inherently unfalsifiable, which make it scientifically worthless. One of the conditions that an explanation must pass in order to be considered a scientific theory is that there must be some way to disprove it. If cats suddenly started giving birth to iguanas or if we didn't find fossils in nice layers grouped by time period (excepting when the layers get shuffled around by geological activity), that would disprove evolution pretty damn fast.

  55. Big Bang in the transistor cloud. by nofsinga · · Score: 1
    In short, it's a load of crap. Giving God credit for evolution is about as effective as giving fish credit for plate tectonics. In fact... it requires no intelligence at all to create something fantastic. Caltech has a program called Avida which shows exactly this, evolution is extremely effective when simulated by a computer. A number of programs have been written to use evolution to do the designing.

    Hmmm... I'm curious. Is this Caltech program the result of a big bang in the transistor clouds?

    When people (like Caltech) want an elegant, simple, highly functional piece of software, they get a Software Engineer (like me! :-) to do some intelligent design.

    Then again, I could probably point to quite a few examples to disprove ID in the software industry. ;-P

  56. Re:"the" missing link? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this post is true. i find it funny that so many people here making a big deal about finding what they expected find... ever heard of paradigm paralysis?

    people went looking for the "nebraska man", too (what an evolutionary orgy that must've been). they found him, too. in a pig's tooth.

    in any case, there seems to be three types of folks.

    1. those hell bent on proving god exists (only he can do that - nobody else can).
    2. those hell bent on proving god doesn't exist.
    3. everyone else.

    while i *know* god exists, i DO NOT know the mechanics by which he operated to create all that is. as such, i have no comment on the truth or falsehood of this particular find.

    i will ask one question, though, i expect a thorough and scientific answer.

    how an you prove this animal just didn't go extinct and wasn't transitional to anything at all.

    i expect a cogent argument full of *evidence* to remove any reasonable doubt from an UNBIASED observer.

    i see an awful lot of paradigm paralysis (the terminal disease of certainty) in the evolutionary world.

    i'm honest, i don't know the mechanics of how everything came about. i'm reasonably convinced that simple life forms existed prior to more complex life forms, though.

    i think the record is clear on that issue.

    ps - i'd also be interested in the ear structure of this animal. does it have an aqua ear or a land based ear structure? it sounded like it had an aqua ear.

    what advantage would an aqua based ear structure provide on land?

    no hybrid ears have ever been observed in the fossil record, so far as i have been able to tell.

    i find this interesting information.

  57. Jumping to conclusions by nealfunkbass · · Score: 0

    Now that I have put on my flameproof suit and tinfoil hat, I have a question to ask.

    What makes this a "missing link," and not just a species of animal that is now extinct?

    How do we know that it eventually became something else with better legs?

    --
    - Donny was a good bowler, and a good man.
    1. Re:Jumping to conclusions by Col+Bat+Guano · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We don't, that's why you won't find the term "missing link" used scientifically. It could have been one of many species that subsequently became extinct. However it's an example of a fish that developed features that we find in land based animals so it's at least an existance proof.

    2. Re:Jumping to conclusions by nealfunkbass · · Score: 0

      I guess I should rephrase my question.

      How do we know it "developed" these features? What makes us think that this wasn't a species of animal that just always had these features?

      I can definitely see the line of thinking if you begin with the assumption that there is no God, or Supreme Being, or external creative force, because that would fall into place very nicely.

      But if you begin with the assumption that there is indeed a supreme being that created life, then I don't think this holds up as proof. If I believed in intelligent design, then I would assume that this being was created with these features, and just became extinct somewhere along the way.

      --
      - Donny was a good bowler, and a good man.
  58. big find by Robowally · · Score: 0

    How much did they find this time? More than a tooth I hope.

    --
    Karma? Sorry, i don't believe in superstition. http://talk.thinkingmatters.org.nz
  59. Re:"the" missing link? by wall0159 · · Score: 1

    one other thing...

    "aquatic animals that exist today don't have arms"

    Wrong.

    Dolphins and whales have arms (just not really as we know them). They are mammals, and don't have gills. They breathe air. The reason for this is that they are descended from land animals and over time their 'hands/arms' became fins.

    If you don't believe me, look at an xray of a dolphin's fin, and compare it to an xray of a human hand - the bone structure is *very* similar.

  60. The really big question is... by edwardpickman · · Score: 0

    The Japanese are currently trying to clone them the answer the most important question of all, how they would taste with rice.

  61. teleology by Stalyn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Assume this animal uses oxygen as an energy source for chemical reactions. Traditionally it retrieved oxygen through the water. Yet after some time its lungs grew the capacity to retrieve oxygen through the air. It would seem that there would have to be some sort of informational exchange in order to determine air was a candidate source for oxygen. How did this happen?

    The ancestors of this animal most likely lived in shallow water and perhaps came into contact with air all the time. It might have been able to jump out of the water for a very short period of time. Yet in order to evolve lungs that could take advantage of oxygen in the atmosphere there must have been some informational exchange.

    I think some will argue that there doesn't have to be any information involved because random genetic change and natural selection will over time evolve a lung that can retrieve oxygen through the air. The major presupposition is that the genetic code that allows for breathing on land is implicit in genetic change. The group of possible genetic alterations included at least one genetic sequence which would result in land breathing capabilities.

    If genetic change is truly random then it could have possibly happened somewhere that was not close to land. Therefore such a change would have not been selected. Then either the space of possible genetic changes is rather small (unlikely) or there is an informational element to evolution.

    --
    The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    1. Re:teleology by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1
      The major presupposition is that the genetic code that allows for breathing on land is implicit in genetic change. The group of possible genetic alterations included at least one genetic sequence which would result in land breathing capabilities.
      Umm, the genetic code before the fish started evolving lungs would likely have had nothing explicit or implicit about breathing on land. The genetic code after the evolution of lungs would have had quite a lot about it, very explicitly.

      Keep in mind that possible genetic sequences are not "baked-in" prior to the event, but are generated as a result of evolutionary pressures and mutations.
    2. Re:teleology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever gone fishing? Did you stick your catch in a bucket?

      If you did you may have noticed that by the time the beer was finished the fish were gasping for air at the surface.

      Gills are pretty much the same as lungs. You run a buch of blood through a membrane that is permable to gases. The CO2 passes from the blood out through the membrane, O2 goes the other way.

      Gills are obviously not ideal for use as lungs, but they might have been good enough that gasping at the air would give a small advantage in stagnant O2 poor water. From there natural selection would take hold and favor designs that could take greater and greater advantage of O2 in the air.

      You seem to be under the same mistaken assumtion ID people always make, that there was a sudden jump from one form to another (gills to lungs). If you would just take the time to understand what you are attacking in ignorance you might just realize that's not the case.

    3. Re:teleology by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      Well if that was the case then this kind of evolution would be more frequent. But it only happened a few times in history. Btw I always catch and release.

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    4. Re:teleology by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      see group

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    5. Re:teleology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sucks to be you, I love a good fish fry.

    6. Re:teleology by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      Well it depends if we are talking about freshwater or saltwater. I only do freshwater fishing and fried bass doesn't appeal to me. Of course freshwater trout is nice but the area which I live has very little trout fishing. Also I like to keep my fishing holes well stocked and not overfished which does suck.

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    7. Re: teleology by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > It would seem that there would have to be some sort of informational exchange in order to determine air was a candidate source for oxygen. How did this happen?

      For an intuitive notion of "information exchange", evolution extracts "information" from the environment by trial and error.

      Crudely put, if evolution tries A and B, and discovers that A works and B doesn't, it has extracted one bit of information from the environment. (Actually not always a whole bit due to redundancies between A and B, and redundant trials, and the fact that "works" is often a matter of degree rather than a boolean predicate. But you get the idea.)

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    8. Re:teleology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck me sideways, what a bunch of shit. Can't we just round up religious idiots and burn them? After all that's what they used to do to us?

    9. Re:teleology by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      "Yet in order to evolve lungs that could take advantage of oxygen in the atmosphere there must have been some informational exchange." 1. Animal can be out of water for a short duration. 2. Through random variation, some can stay out of water longer than others. 3. Ones who could stay out of water longer reproduce more successfully. 4. Repeat. Remember, this is a process that takes millions of years. Humans have a hard time grasping exactly how long a time that is. No information exchange necessary (other than transmitting genetic material). In fact, there is a whole branch of computer science that emulates this called genetic algorithms. Evolution is little more than a genetic algorithm, with the most succesful generations reproducing and passing on their succesful changes to the next generation. A more recent bilogical example (that we actually caused), anti-biotic resistant bacteria. Through random mutations, some bacteria were not killed with anti-biotic A. The survivors reproduce. The survivors get hit with anti-biotic A. Fewer are killed of due to random mutation. Pretty soon you have a bacteria that is completly resistant to anti-biotic A. With bacteria, these changes happen faster because a million generations can happen over a short time period. But there isn't any information exchange. There are DNA mutations that alter the protien structures of the organism. Unless you count the genetic mutation itself, that is. ~X~

      --
      ~X~
    10. Re:teleology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Fish jumps into air (Action) ==>> Mutation (Reaction)
      2) ???
      3) Profit!! (breathe dammit!)

      After a couple of zillion jumps into the air across a couple of thousand generations of fishy-squishy and we get - THE LUNG. Now all we need is legs.

    11. Re:teleology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Btw I always catch and release.

      So do the aliens, but that's little consolation if you're the one getting the anal probe.

    12. Re: teleology by plunge · · Score: 1

      Yep. While "information" doesn't really have a good single definition space in biology (what exactly IS the information in biology? The functions? the code? expressed or unexpressed? Gene pools? Single creatures?), one good way to think about evolution is as an information imprinting process. Information about the environment is being imprinted onto an otherwise somewhat random walk through the space of traits in a gene pool.

    13. Re:teleology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Through random mutations, some bacteria were not killed with anti-biotic A. The survivors reproduce. The survivors get hit with anti-biotic A. Fewer are killed of due to random mutation. Pretty soon you have a bacteria that is completly resistant to anti-biotic A. With bacteria, these changes happen faster because a million generations can happen over a short time period. But there isn't any information exchange. There are DNA mutations that alter the protien structures of the organism. Unless you count the genetic mutation itself, that is"

      So because a bacteria becomes resistant to it, does that mean it's evolved? Or, is it still the same "species" of bacteria, just a different strain? I'm thinking that by this way of thinking, we should have seen bacteria evolve into something else a long time ago because it can regenerate millions of generations so quickly.

      We also see this in cockroaches, they become resistant to a lot of things we try to kill it with. But for some odd reason they are still cochroaches. Or should we be labelling them as super-cochroaches, a superior and incompatible species to the millions of generations before it?

  62. Re:"the" missing link? by zpok · · Score: 1

    You happily state your opinion, one that hasn't a shread of proof. But that's different of course...
    Scientific proof is stuff that strenghtens a theory. There's plenty of that around, look at the nice land-water fossils on whales. It's not proof like scriptures, meaning there is room for doubt, you don't have to switch off your brain, but it's pretty damned good stuff.

    It seems to say to me and a lot of people "Ook".

    That it doesn't speak to your imagination but makes you go all, well, sceptical and scientifically indignified, is not surprising. Let me just say "Eek eek eek eek".

    (sorry, I just thought, let's have some faith here, but you can google for yourself if you need to read up on those stupid doubting whales)

    --
    I think, therefore I am...I think.
  63. Proof by nofsinga · · Score: 0

    Always remember this: In this world there is only one thing I can prove, and that is that I exist.

    1. Re:Proof by mvdw · · Score: 1
      Descartes stated "I think, therefore I am", however you haven't yet shown the ability to do the former to prove the latter...

      On a less pithy note, how does one go about proving one's own existence? Is it indeed even possible to prove to oneself, let alone to others, that one exists? If indeed you can prove that you exist, and even better provide a methodology for doing the same, you are in danger of putting a whole lot of philosophers out of a job...

    2. Re:Proof by nofsinga · · Score: 1

      You are on to something there. I guess I can only "prove" to myself that I exist. I mean, to me it seems quite obvious that I exist. However, I can't prove that you exist, and I certainly can't prove to you that I exist. And, for all I know, it is 1000% more obvious to me that I exist than it is apparent to you that you exist, if you exist that is.

  64. Can we stop with the stupid comments? by a.d.trick · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I know there was no harm meant, but I see comments like this all the time, and they're no more helpful than all the adolecent slashdoters who go on about MS being teh (sic) gay.

    The myth that christianity and science are at odds is really unfortunate, particularly because it is being propogated by people who really ought to know better (both on the christian and the secular side). I don't really what the arguing is about. Evolution on a cosmic level has never been observed and it's not much more than an educated guess. Even if it was, evolution isn't contrary to the Christian belief (this is where those 'Creation Scientists' are wrong). The Genesis creation story is a story, it's not an historical account, it was never meant to be*. You won't really understand Genesis 1-2 unless you understand the historical context they were written in.

    * note: I didn't say it was nessicarily false. The the historical accuracy this this case is not relevant to the story. There are deeper messages there, ones that can not be proved by scientific measurements.

    1. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by scapermoya · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Stupid comments? The MS bashers do what they do in all seriousness, my comment was a joke.
      I don't know of many real scientists that believe that there is actually a debate, they know religion and science are completely seperate issues. However, when Christians inject their beliefs into public education systems that serve everyone's children, thats where the "at odds" comes in. I don't know what you mean by evolution on the "cosmic level", but there is absolutely no debate when it comes to evolution being the means by which each species arose from those before it. If you are one of those people that buys into the "it's only a theory!!!1111", then you arent a scientist. Science is a whole lot of "theories", but theories in a scientific sense are not the same as theories in a conventional layman sense. If evolution was a "hypothesis", then there would be room to argue, but in science if something is a theory, there is a lot of evidence to support it.
      Anyone who takes any part of the Bible or any other religious text, especially those written before, oh lets say soap, was invented, has no place in science and especially no place in public educational policy. If you want your kid taught that the Earth is 6,000 years old, Noah put T. Rex on his ark, and that people who carbon date fossils have an agenda, there are plenty of private schools for you.

      --
      Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch.
    2. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by scapermoya · · Score: 1

      By the way, judge people based on their comments, not their age. I'm 17, and I am sure that many of the MS bashes on here are a lot older than I am

      --
      Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch.
    3. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by 2short · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Evolution on a cosmic level has never been observed and it's not much more than an educated guess"

      Horseshit. It's a well constructed theory supported by vast mountains of evidence. It is the foundation of the entire science of biology. Every biologist in modern times has spent their career testing it, and found it solid. If it's an "educated guess" then plate tectonics is a wild shot in the dark.

    4. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by kmcrober · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Evolution on a cosmic level has never been observed and it's not much more than an educated guess."

      Two serious mistakes in one sentence. Evolution has been observed, and is much, much more than an 'educated guess.'

      (And, incidentally, "Evolution on a cosmic level"? What does that even mean?)

    5. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
      (/me puts on size 12 waders)

      He said evolution on a cosmic level in other words, whatever we may think we know about the origins of life on Earth, there are billions of years of cosmic history that we can really only make educated guesses about. Biology has nothing to do with that.

      In fact, we're not even sure about the origins of life on earth (note that I said origins, not development). All beginning of life experiments have failed, i.e. we have so far not been able to demonstrate the the emergence of the necessary proteins to form a simple cell in the projected conditions of the early Earth - all we have are the 'primordial soup' experiments which (outside of a sort of common folklore belief) really haven't shown how simple life can emerge from nonlife.

    6. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by bloodredsun · · Score: 1

      Deep waters indeed! I have two points

      evolution on a cosmic level: This is meaningless, I don't think the poster knows what he is talking about. What does evolution have to do with the cosmos? You are right in saying that biology has nothing to do with it, this is pure physics.

      the origins of life on earth: You're talking about Abiogenesis here rather than evolution aren't you. Unlike evolution, abiogenesis is one of the those areas of science which we have little evidence supporting any of the hypotheses. All current indications are that this happened just the once, several billion years ago making this one of the most difficult theories to deal with.

      And before any religeous cranks start jumping up and down saying this this is proof of a creator, the theory of abiogensis applies equally to creators too. That would be a "God of the Gaps" arguement and is as valid as saying it's turtles all the way down. I am always amazed that those with (maybe) a high school understanding of science feel confident enough to argue their "ideas" with people who have spent years actively researching subjects like evolution and cosmology. I can't imagine how many people stopped thinking because they were given an answer, without stopping to check whether it was the right one.

    7. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
      Yes, you're quite right, he should have said "origins on a cosmic level" or something similar. And you're right, abiogenesis is really a separate thing from evolution. Although, despite terminilogy abuse, I think the grand-grandparent does have a point - when we are talking about origins, there is no certainty about where the universe in general and life in particular came from.

      I find it interesting that at both the very big, and the very small, there is a great deal of uncertainty. I know I'm opening a can of worms here, but after reading a lot of these threads (and being very reluctant to wade in) the points that are raised by the Intelligent Design people are nothing to do with fossil links and everything to do with the very small, i.e. the contention that there are certain biochemical features of organisms for which it is very difficult to demonstrate a plausible mechanism of an evolutionary origin, let alone demonstrate that any such mechanism actually occured. (I feel the worms wriggling now...) At the very big end of things, it took a long time for the 'Big Bang' hypothesis to become scientific orthodoxy because it flew in the face of the generally accepted idea that the universe has no beginning and is infinite in time and space. It's now become accepted that the universe is expandind and has a definite beginning. I wonder whether the body of evidence will grow that our understanding of the origins of the very small is also flawed.

    8. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by adyus · · Score: 1


      Well, have you ever *seen* a tectonic plate with your own eyes?

      :)

    9. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by bloodredsun · · Score: 1

      I find it interesting that at both the very big, and the very small, there is a great deal of uncertainty.

      I do too, but I've always felt that it comes from the fact that humans aren't good at dealing with anything that isn't at the everyday scale - larger than an ant and smaller than a whale (do we see those everyday?!). We've evolved (and I deliberately use that term) to deal with this intermediate scale where seeing is believing, so a bacterium and the curve of the earth are contentious issues as it involves either indirect proof or blind trust.

      I think that you opened the can when you mention "Intelligent Design"! ID is the bastard child of those who cannot stand the athestic property of science where God/god is not disproven, but actually not involved at all. As someone who writes clearly, deliberately and not overstating unproven ideas, I think you do yourself an injustice even mentioning ID. These biochemical features you mentioned, presumably Michael Behe's biochemical cascades, now have fairly established roots in other more "primitive" mechanisms, demonstrating how they may have "micro-evolved" (aweful word, sorry). Again, it's a "God of the Gaps" argument who people believe that gaps in scienctific knowledge equates to proof that science has failed, as opposed to knowledge that science doesn't have yet.

      An adult conversation on /. , what is the world coming too!

    10. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by scapermoya · · Score: 1

      Yes

      --
      Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch.
    11. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, people who carbon date fossils probably don't have an agenda, but they are very stupid, because carbon dating is only accurate to a tens of thousands of years and only when organic material is present. These conditions do not apply to fossils. Other methods, like K-Ar or Ar-Ar dating are used for determining the age of rocks in which fossils are found.

      Yeah, the creationists call everything carbon dating, but it just ain't so. Read the real science so you don't let them confuse you.

    12. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by khallow · · Score: 1
      Evolution on a cosmic level has never been observed and it's not much more than an educated guess.

      As far as I know, there's no scientific evidence of anything to evolve at the "cosmic level" which I interprete to mean universe-scale phenomena. Nor, aside from some cranks, does anyone claim that anything on that scale has evolved in the sense of the theory of evolution. On the other hand, if you're talking about Earth and life observed on Earth, then there's plenty of evidence of evolution in action.

      * note: I didn't say it was nessicarily false. The the historical accuracy this this case is not relevant to the story. There are deeper messages there, ones that can not be proved by scientific measurements.

      Indeed, there would have to be a testable hypothesis based on well-defined concepts first.

    13. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by 2short · · Score: 1

      That's not a tectonic plate, that's a crack in the ground, that we have observed moving every once in a while. I could come up with dozens of (mostly silly) explanations for it. In casse it's not clear, I beleive Plate Tectonics is real. My point is, nobody spends much time doubting plate tectonics, though is is just as indirectly discovered as evolution.

    14. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by scapermoya · · Score: 1

      I get your point, I thought it would be funny to show that picture. Can you imagine if part of genesis said "And Lo, God spoke and the Earth's crust came to be, a continuous, stationary mass. And it was good."

      --
      Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch.
    15. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by 2short · · Score: 1

      "He said evolution on a cosmic level"

      Yes, but that's meaningless, so I ignored that part in an effort to be charitable. I was taking issue with the "educated guess" part. The theory of evolution does not address the origins of life, or attempt to. Any attack on evolution based on origins is pointless, except as an unwitting admission of ignorance by the attacker.

    16. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
      ID is the bastard child of those who cannot stand the athestic property of science where God/god is not disproven, but actually not involved at all.

      Thanks for your intelligent and interesting replies - I was waiting for a bunch of flames and for my comment to be moderated to oblivion so I'm pleasantly surprised.

      I do think Behe's arguments are flawed (I've just read Darwin's Black Box) and I understand why so many get angry with him. His attempts to explain biochemistry to the layperson are actually incredibly confusing, and he does often effectively argue 'I don't understand this so there must be no evolutionary solution'. What's interesting - and why I'm not afraid to mention ID - is that a more important idea arises out of his book, which is to turn the question on its head and ask whether it's possible for science to detect design (regardless of the mechanism, which could be evolutionary). It's a shame that much of the discussion around ID focuses on evolution-bashing, rather than on really looking at this question. (See the article this story refers to where it says ID proponents will be upset by the 'missing link').

      I've also just read William Dembski's The Design Revolution. This book is much better written, and really focuses on the question of design detection. He uses the illustration of SETI to establish precedent for a scientific framework for the detection of the actions of an intelligent agent and looks at the philosophical and mathematical implications of applying this to origins of life.

      I am a theist, and that is the main reason why I am interested in the above. I certainly agree with you that I "cannot stand the athestic property of science" - but I have no desire to put up with bad science just because it might chime in with my religious beliefs. It's worth noting that understanding motivation tells us nothing about the validity or otherwise of a scientific theory. Richard Dawkins is probably the most 'evangelical' atheist I have come across, but his science must be judged on its own merits.

      I don't think there's yet a coherent 'theory' of Intelligent Design, but I do think there are important questions being raised - unfortunately amongst a muddle of half-baked ideas and theories, many of which at best count as pseudoscience, and the Creationist people have jumped on the bandwagon because it adds some credibility to their science.

      I would compare the current situation to the work of Lamarck - at a big picture level he was really along the right lines, (and those who wanted a naturalistic origins story were prepared to accept his theories) but the actual science was profoundly wrong, which anyone who has studied basic science can appreciate. I hope there's a 'Darwin' for ID. But I'm also willing to accept that it may all come to nothing.

      Thanks for a good conversation - hope you don't mind my long reply.

    17. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by bloodredsun · · Score: 1

      I agree with you on several points. I think you are spot on regarding Behe's attitude. Saying "I don't understand it so it must be God" is nothing more than "arguing from ignorance". Some biochemists have been offended by this and resolved to proove that his "irreducible complexity" arguments are just ignorance, with the result that one of the biochemical pathways that he descirbed as being irreducibly complex has been found in a simpler form doing another job.

      I'm not all that knowledgable about Dembski's work as I'm not a maths fiend but I distrust a scientist who has publically stated that Religion should supplant Science. You mention motivation earlier and his is obviously theistic, to the detriment of his scientific work (he has never published an article in a peer reviewed journal supporting ID, the one he did get published that is often said that was has no mention of ID in it).

      The Lamarck comment was interesting as most people don't even know of it. Saying that the current situation is the same as his is not correct, I am afraid. Lamarckism lasted only a short time as the central underlying principle of aquired characteristics being passed on can easily be shown to be wrong. A pig with a missing leg does not give birth to piglets with missing legs. Darwinian evolution is very different. The supporting evidence is very strong (q.v. this new fossil species) with no conflicting evidence (like a homo sapien fossil in the stomach of a T.Rex). That's not to say that there is no ambiguous data, but this is data that could be interpreted in different ways, rather then data that is definitively supporting/conflicting.

      ID is an awful philosophical construct. It has neither the neccesary credentials to be a science (no supernatural influences allowed) and nor does it make any predictions about future discoveries (such as what features would be expected in a transition species - a job that evolution did very accurately in this case). Different people have different definitions of it but in every case, the only purpose is to attempt to discredit evolution, not further our understanding of the world.

    18. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
      The Lamarck comment was interesting as most people don't even know of it. Saying that the current situation is the same as his is not correct, I am afraid.

      Thanks for your reply. I think you misunderstood me with regard to Lamarckism - I was comparing the state of ID to him, not of evolution or origins science in general. In other words, I'm admitting that the science behind ID has serious problems, but I believe (as a theist) that it is heading in the right direction; just as Lamarckism was right (big picture - inherited characteristics, gradual changes etc.) but wrong in pretty much all the details, I think that the thrust of ID is right (looking for real evidence of design in biological systems) whilst many of the details (e.g. the human blood clotting cascade cannot have evolved) are wrong.

      Where I differ from you is that I don't think "no supernatural influences allowed" is a reasonable criterion for what constitutes a scientific theory. As an example, cosmology was held up for years because the 'Big Bang' implied a definite start to the universe, and a definite start was thought to imply a cause ('who lit the fuse?'). Only as the evidence became compelling was the thoery accepted. Attempts have been made to exclude the possibility of a first cause by postulating an expanding and eventually contracting universe ('big crunch') - but really there is no answer to this because we can't know what happened before the bang.

      I understand your viewpoint that ID is just an attempt to discredit evolution, but I don't think that's true based on what the ID people are saying (i.e. those that have published real books and papers - not 'Creationists' jumping on the bandwagon). Both Behe and Dembski state frequently that they have no problem with evolution being the general mechanism of species development. Again, I think there's confusion between motivation and the actual ideas that are being thrown around. I'm quite certain that Dawkin's motivation is to eradicate theism (he recently made a TV show entitled The Root of all Evil that attemps to show that religion is just that). But this has nothing really to do with his scientific theories and research (although he was trading on his name and reputation as a scientist when he made that programme). As a theist, I find myself suspicious of a man who is openly anti-religion, but I am compelled to examine his scientific works on their own merit.

      The peer review issue is often cited as a reason for regarding ID as pseudoscience; I think there's a chicken and egg issue there. It's worth noting that The Origin of Species was published as a book. There are plenty of ID books in print that can be pulled apart and tested - as many biochemists have done with Behe's work. Papers that are explicit about ID will not get published in mainstream peer-reviewed journals until the ideas that are proposed are acceptable to the peer reviewers. I think this is a shame, because the sort of work that Dembski is doing (is it possible to determine if there is design in biological systems?) is important - the answer might be 'yes it is, and there isn't any'. I believe science can both ask and answer this question (but that is just a belief) and I hope that the forum to do that will emerge and all the nonsense of young-earth creationists bashing evolution will stop.

      I do understand and appreciate that ID is distasteful for a number of reasons. I've just read Behe's Darwin's Black Box and if that is all I had read I would agree with you 100%. But I've also just read Dembski's The Design Revolution and it's really, really good stuff. If you've enjoyed this discussion then I would really recommend reading Dembski's book. You probably won't agree with its conclusions, but I think you will find that it does give some promise of adding to our understanding of the world, and I would put it in that category of books that give a stimulating intellectual experience even if many would disagree with it overall.

    19. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by bloodredsun · · Score: 1

      Oh, okay. Now I get the Larmarck comment.

      What I struggle with is that people look at science with a view to include a supreme being as you mention "I believe (as a theist) that it is heading in the right direction". Science doesn't care about deities, it is neither for or against their existence. It only cares about what can be shown from data, this is why the definition of science does not allow supernatural involvement as this by definition is outside of science. When you allow this, all scientific studies stop. Why is the sky blue? God made it blue. Why do we breathe air? God made us that way. Real scientific endevour comes from seeking out answers from experimental data. Evolution is a product of this, where the data suggested a theory which has then shown to be in agreement and indeed predictive of future findings.

      I can't see how the Big Bang theory requires supernatural involvement. It is dragged into theses debates because of it's implications, not the science behind it. There is no real logical difference between asking what created the Big Bang and what created the (undetectable) Supreme Being that created the Big Bang. At no point do you increase your level of knowledge, all you are doing is adding a unproven and undetected element to your theory which the data does not support.

      Your comment on Richard Dawkins is a valid one. You say that you "find myself suspicious of a man who is openly anti-religion, but I am compelled to examine his scientific works on their own merit". I would argue that religion is not his area of expertise and his views on it should be seen as such, views. In the same vein, I could say that " I find myself suspicious of a man who is openly anti-science, but I am compelled to examine his religous works on their own merit". Dembski falls into this category, a man who has sacrificed his objectivity for a theistic crusade against "methodological naturalism" (the explaination of observable events in nature as a result of natural causes, rejecting supernatural notions)

      Peer reviewed journals are the gold standard of scienctific work. Origins of a Species was published as a book because peer-reviewed journals did not exists at that time. Books were the method in which you distributed your finding: Pricipia Mathmatica and Descent of Man being two of the greatest of these. Peer reveiwed journals were created as scientists realised that anybody could publish a book and the mere fact that you had your work printed gave no validation of your work. Peer reviewed journals ensured a mechanism where all printed articles passed a high standard of scientific method and also meant that people could not make unproven claims. That is why all new science is published in journals and all scientific books cite these journal articles when they are published.

      It's common for the Creationists/ID'ers to complain that their work is not published as it goes against the scientific establishment, but the truth is they are not published as they are bad and often lazy science. If some work was done, that followed the scientific method and shown evidence for ID or creationism or the existance of God, all the scientific journals would be clamoring to publish your work. The scientific acclaim would be massive and a Nobel prize would be guaranteed along with fame and fortune. True revolutions in science such as quantum physics are published as they are good science. People might not like what is written, but this work will always be published.

      If I come across the Demski book, I will give it a try but I find it difficult to give much credence to a book which has been so roundly critised by other Mathmaticians, especially those who are the originators of the theories he uses (No Free Lunch Theorems - Wolpert) but I will read it given your recommendation.

    20. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
      Thanks for your many replies. I've been enjoying this conversation, but I'm aware that the story is getting older (although knowing Slashdot they'll probably post it again in a couple of days/weeks).

      I do totally understand where you're coming from, and I agree with most of what you're saying. My point about the Big Bang is that it was originally seen as implying a first cause, so was avoided rather than considering it on its own merits - until the weight of evidence became too great for it to be ignored. The mass of knowledge that was added to cosmology by this theory was held up for a long time because of religious (atheistic) beliefs. It never required a supreme being, but my perception is that it left a bad taste in the mouth for many scientists because a 'god' was an obvious candidate. ID does not require a supreme being either - if a designer is demonstrated then it could be space aliens - but obviously theists would be quick to point to a god/God as the answer. I hope that we can get a coherent framework to determine design (or lack of) in biological systems so that the issue can be settled.

      Thanks again. Since you're willing to read Dembski if you get the chance, I think perhaps I should reciprocate by reading a Dawkins book - I've been wanting to read The Blind Watchmaker for a while so I'll pop over to Amazon!

    21. Re:Can we stop with the stupid comments? by bloodredsun · · Score: 1

      I've enjoyed this too. This is the first thread on slashdot where I've managed to have this sort of intelligent conversation

      I see what you're saying about the Big Bang and can well believe it. Many scientists are wary of dealing with theories that COULD posite an external creator due to the very small (but incredibly vocal) minority of religous zealots who then take this possibility (possible in the scientific interpretation of "not impossible" rather than the everyday interpretation of "slightly probably") as hard proof. The scientists then have to spend all their time correcting people and defending their work rather then doing any new work.

      Design has not be shown in evolution. That is not to say that it is not there because as a former scientist, I feel that the correct mindset is to be open but skeptical of all possible explanations: that any theory that isn't known to be false is a possibly valid theory but I require proof for me to accept it as valid. One of the major problems with ID is that for it to be a theory, one would have to change the definition of science to the point at which astrology and the like woulld become a science. This cannot be.

      I predict that the next battle of science and religion will be one of the biggest. After Big Bang/Genesis, Evolution/Creation & Design the third one will the the neurophysiological basis of conciousness against the religious idea of the soul. I think that this will have more greater implications than the other likely one of Artificial Intelligence.

      By the way, the best Dawkins book is "The Selfish Gene" rather than "The blinfd watchmaker".

  65. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by apocalypse76 · · Score: 1

    There's not really a contradiction like it seems. Take a look at the time before Noah:

    "There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown." Genesis 6:4.

    That also goes along with the reason we don't live hundreds of years like Methuselah. Everything changed after the flood.

  66. Re:"the" missing link? by Capt_Morgan · · Score: 1

    Since you were too lazy to hit the link yourself try this: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/ Ok, that's done... I assume there will be no more questions.

    --
    It takes a big man to cry, but it takes a bigger man to laugh at that man.
  67. Re:"the" missing link? by Jsutton1027w · · Score: 1

    The whole article assumes several things... 1. Macro-evolution occurs. A quote: "Our emergence on to the land is one of the more significant rites of passage in our evolutionary history." This quote (and specifically the use of the term "history") shows that he had a pre-conceived belief about what happened, and he was going to interpret whatever evidence he found in that light. As I said in my first post, there's no way that it can be shown that this fossil is a stage of development between two (or more) species. The only thing we know is that this is an animal that we haven't seen before. 2. The time ranges that are being used. A quote: "We knew that the rocks on Ellesmere Island offered a glimpse into the right time period." They assumed the time period, and then you say that from the newly discovered animal they could "predict ... the timeperiod." How did finding that animal in that area tell anything about the time period? One more thing...you said in your logic steps: "but still looks a lot like a fish." It seems like quite a logic leap to say that one animal that resembles some other animal must have been a descendent of that second animal.

  68. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by mvdw · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I can hear the naturalists clacking away at their keyboards in glee with the "smoking gun" that evolution has finally been "proven" and that the creationists will have to sit in stunned silence under the weight of the evidence finally presented.

    And this sentence just goes to show that you don't get it. Evolution can never be "proved". Like any scientific theory, it can only be falsified or strengthened by further evidence. A scientific theory of anything physical (ie, not abstract) can never be proved to be true - that is one of the essences of science. Even the most seemingly elementary of scientific theories over the years have been falsified, and subsequently modified to accommodate new evidence, and even the qualification of physical vs abstract theories isn't strictly true (there are whole branches of mathematics dealing with whether or not the rest of mathematics is based on sound foundations).

    Neither true Creationism nor its bastard cousin Intelligent Design can be falsified. They are not scientific theory.

  69. evidence for creationism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "I'm always happy to hear evidence that helps prove creationism, but I've yet to actually see any."

    Any evidence to back up creationism (as I understand it) would have to be sought elsewhere. One would have to actually seek revelation, try to get to know God, change personal behaviour, open oneself up to the ridicule of your old intellectual buddies, and other stuff like that. I notice that atheists are very careful not to look in the places that believers say the evidence is found.

    1. Re:evidence for creationism by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1

      Hmm, dunno, I'm an athiest. I was brought up in a religious background, went to Church regularly, read the Bible several times over, and got Reborn. The ridicule from "buddies" I had to face came from Christians, and yes many of them were intellectuals.

      So tell me, where exactly didn't I look?

    2. Re:evidence for creationism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't know. Did you pray? Did you ask God if He exists, being willing to give it all up if He would let you know? Did you really live the lifestyle that He would ask you to live?

      If I were a God and someone asked me if I were there, but didn't act like they were going to do anything about it, I wouldn't waste my time answering them.

    3. Re:evidence for creationism by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1

      Yes, yes, and yes. Getting back to the point, I did "look in the places that believers say the evidence is found", and the fact of the matter is the evidence for creationism isn't found there. All that you will find there is evidence that most of the people involved have not the slightest clue what they're talking about when they discuss science.

      It's actually funny, because creationism to some degree kicked off my questioning. You see, I'd been brought up in RC, which has no real problems with evolution or science. It was only after I got involved with a bunch of reborns that I got exposed to creationism. It didn't sit well with me, so I started looking into it further and discovered that they were peddling worn-out, discredited old lies.

      Not to say that something as simple as that was the cause of my rejecting religion, but it was one of the catalysts. I think your post exemplifies another catalyst pretty well too.

    4. Re:evidence for creationism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh. I wasn't talking about looking for evidence of creationism, but looking for evidence of the existence of God. Sorry for the misunderstanding.

  70. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by mark-t · · Score: 1
    The problem with proving creationism is that it requires proving the existence of God. And the problem with proving the existence of God is this nasty prerequisite that the scientific method has of repeatability.

    Since proof of the existence of God is not repeatable (personal, first hand experience by people who claim to have have some sort of encounter with said deity) is always chalked up to coincidence, delusion, or even outright deliberate lying, at least by the scientific method.

    So the scientific method discounts the very possibility that God exists right from the starting gate, even if it _were_ true.

    Not that it matters any... people who believe in God will continue to believe such. The most the discovery of this creature will accomplish is make believers in creationism that happen to have an otherwise rational mind think that it was an example of yet another creature that God made in the first place that has suffered extinction (while the other extreme end of believers will probably think this announcement is a fraud or hoax).

  71. Another missing link by shird · · Score: 1

    This appears to be yet another missing link

    --
    I.O.U One Sig.
  72. Simple explanation of the difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Method == How
    Process == What

    What happened? Speciation. If you deny this, then you must explain the existence of different species without invoking speciation. One possible scenario is that God created the world 6,000 years ago. Unfortunately for that theory, there is much evidence against it.

    If you admit that Speciation occurs (and you must if you subscribe to a Naturalistic view of biology), then the next question is "How?"

    How did Speciation occur? What are the methods by which the process of Speciation is borne out? Natural Selection? Punctuated equilibrium? God's interference? These are all debatable theories as to the method by which things evolve.

    If you don't accept that things evolve, you need to have a theory that can supplant evolution as a process. If you only say, "we don't know everything," then you have no theory to present and do no damage to Evolutionary theory. If you say, "Evolutionists have fudged evidence to prove claims," then you have only impeached those claims, not the whole of Evolutionary theory. When you say, "an extra-natural power caused these changes," you have at last presented a theory, but it is only another (dubious) method in the pantheon of Evolutionary models. The instant you say, "God did it," you disqualify yourself from the entire argument.

  73. Not direct ancestor by Envall · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to Swedish radio this is not a direct ancestor to us. However this find is important since it is close to the trunk from which the mamals is derived.

    1. Re:Not direct ancestor by Limbo+Socrates · · Score: 1
      Don't think of evolutionary history as a linear process, it's more like a tree...or perhaps a shrubbery. Most of the fossils, and animals today for that matter, are like the leaves or little branches on the edges.

      While you can trace any leaf back to the trunk, the vast majority of the branches do not lie along this path. Not only is it unlikely that you will find a fossil that is a "direct ancestor" of any other animal, there is no way to know for sure whether one is or not.

      Evolution tends to occur in relatively small sub-populations of a species. So if you found, say an ancient iguana skeleton on the Galapagos, you can't know if this was part of the population that would later adapt to life in the ocean or the population that would later adapt to life on land.

  74. So where's the stinkin picture? by IDontLinkMondays · · Score: 1

    I see a whole lot of text in the article, but frankly, until I see whether it's some gag (especially this close to Apr 1.) I don't care to read articles like this. At the moment I'm picturing a stone with the imprints of the stomach of a fish and 6 little shoes with a Nike Swoosh.

  75. Huh, apparently it's old news. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, it was news to me, but, if you note the BBC article someone else links to (the one with the picture,) Tiktaalik's fossil was apparently discovered back in 2004.

    I'm dissapointed that I didn't know about it sooner and grateful that Slashdot posted it nonetheless. It may be a dupe or something though. I wasn't a slashdotter back in 2004, but, surely they would have had an article back then too?

  76. Some Logic Errors.... by raalynthslair · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There's some serious erroneous logic in this article's summarization of the find and of it's importance...

    First, they compare it to the "reptile-to-bird" fraud (and yes, it's been proven by NON-CREATIONIST scientists to have been known to be WRONG and NOT what it was said to have represented, yet was displayed and proclaimed as such anyhow - that's fraud, it's a lie... BUT that's not the point here...); This comparison claims to be on the same level of importance and uses that earlier finding as justification for the assumption of this one being relevant to what they are claiming it is. Basically "that one was a link, and since that's one, this has to be another." Well, not really. It COULD be something totally unique.

    Second, the assumption that this thing lived and died, therefore had offspring of another type of animal is just plain silly. We breed dogs with all sorts of other types of dogs, sometimes wolves, coyotes, and even Jackals and Hyenas (all in the "canis" family) and we always get offspring that are DOGS! If we suddenly found a skeleton of a St. Bernard no one would think to claim it's a rabbit's ancestor in a transitional period of evolution. It's just not logical. A fossil/remains can tell you ONE THING and only one thing... that the creature to which those remains belonged to LIVED AND DIED. It can't tell you how many offspring it had (it's suspect whether most can tell you if they had ANY - forget that half (give or take) of most all species is of a non-childbearing gender)), whether those off spring survived or not, and certainly not what those off spring looked like - other than to assume that in the "millions of years" of human record of the animals of our world that the off spring would be just like the parents; as we've seen billions of times in humans alone (much less the thousands of variants of animals and all their offspring!)

    Third, they simply claim that this previously undiscovered creature is something "in transition" from one being to another when this is the first one found. How do they know that it's not just a unique creature that died out (ie: gone extinct). We've seen entire animal groups wiped out by over-hunting or poaching (the Dodo bird comes to mind), if this happened many years ago and it was not recorded by someone for us to know today, how would we know?! We're always finding new information about animals that have been long since extinct... And we're finding new ones once in a while too...

    Fourth, they seem to ignore the fact that we have aquatic animals today that have feet-like appendages, fin-like appendages, and live in the water more of their life than not. Most are reptilian, but there are mammals too. That is a problem... Reptiles are cold-blooded and egg-laying. Mammals are warm-blooded and bear live young... There's no way to prove that this was an "adaption" to moving from water to land - else, why do animals like ducks still lay eggs (or the platypus, et al) and some mammals (whales, dolphins, seals, etc) live entirely in the water (but not breathe in the water like fish and some reptiles) bear live young like mammals if this is indeed an evolutionary change... Frogs are reptilian but they live more of their life on land than in water (so it's believed currently, this has been a back-and-forth debate for years)... and look at gators or crocs- reptilian, breathe oxygen without gills, and still are cold-blooded and not mammalian breeding...

    There's too much speculation along the lines of "this is what we expect to see therefore it's what we see, and what was/is" thinking in these types of articles.

    The sad and simple truth is that you have to take it on faith that "this must have happened" to truly make the evolution theory work. That's fine, and that's ok... but it's not scientifically sound. You can not test it, it can not be duplicated to ensure the theories hold out true, and the scientific principles of the methodology of study can not be applied to the evolution. When you take this into account and say "well we're here

    --
    -- "You must be the change you desire to see in the world." Mahatma Gandhi --
    1. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by mrpeebles · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The sad and simple truth is that you have to take it on faith that "this must have happened" to truly make the evolution theory work. That's fine, and that's ok... but it's not scientifically sound.

      I think that all modern science, and probably all science through history as well, has to make assumptions for the sort "this must have happened." Science has an element of circular thinking in it. Evolutionary theory is nothing special in that regard.

    2. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by arevos · · Score: 1

      As mrpeebles has already noted, evolution is no different from any scientific theory. The Theory of Evolution is just as scientific as the Theory of Relativity, or electromagnetism, or Atomic Theory. Indeed, it's one of the most well-established scientific theories we have, having come under heavy fire, yet surviving unscathed for over a century.

      We breed dogs with all sorts of other types of dogs, sometimes wolves, coyotes, and even Jackals and Hyenas (all in the "canis" family) and we always get offspring that are DOGS!

      Speciation is the technical term for one species diverging into two, and it has been observed to have happened to macroscopic animals a number of times. It's a fact that one species can diverge into two, so the argument that the offspring of a dog can never be anything but a dog is an argument that has been put to rest some time ago.

      Generally speaking, all convincing arguments against evolution have already been voice, and have already been invalidated. The arguments in your post are no exception.

    3. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by kronocide · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid you have the process backward. The theory of biological evolution predicts that there must have lived a creature with features that are morphologically "halfway" between those of a fish and those of a land-living animal. So when precisely such a creature is found, it is of course of immense importance for the theory. Every scientist today is also perfectly aware that this does not "prove" the theory (there is no such thing as proving a theory), it merely "corroborates" it, as Popper called it.

      Our evolutionary theory also predicts that whenever you find a fossil, you can be certain that it will not be of an animal that is morphologically halfway between a bird and a mammal (because reptiles are according to the theory the common early ancestor). This prediction has also come true so far, and that is yet more corroborating evidence for the theory.

      There is of course a lot more. Biological evolution declares that intermediate forms must be abundant, that in fact every form is intermediate in the long perspective. As far as I know it is the only theory of the development of life on this planet that predicts the existence of intermediate forms, and the kind of relationships that we constantly find in nature. Just look at this:
      Transitional forms

    4. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by SilentReproach · · Score: 2, Informative

      I would have to agree that if this find is as important as Archaeopteryx, it's not all that important.

      It used to be that evolutionists believed Archaeopteryx (fancy word for "ancient wing" or "ancient bird"), was a link between reptiles and birds. Many evolutionists no longer believe this. Closer examination of its fossilized remains revealed perfectly formed feathers on aerodynamically designed wings capable of flight. Its leg and wing bones were thin and hollow. Its supposed "reptilian features" are found in birds today. And it does not predate birds. Fossils of other birds have been found to have lived in the same period as Archaeopteryx.

      --
      Religion is the opium of the people. Evolution is the opium of scientists.
    5. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      First, they compare it to the "reptile-to-bird" fraud (and yes, it's been proven by NON-CREATIONIST scientists to have been known to be WRONG and NOT what it was said to have represented, yet was displayed and proclaimed as such anyhow - that's fraud, it's a lie... BUT that's not the point here...);

      Please provide a citation for this claim. I have never seen any documentation to show that Archeopteryx is a fraud.

    6. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      It used to be that evolutionists believed Archaeopteryx (fancy word for "ancient wing" or "ancient bird"), was a link between reptiles and birds. Many evolutionists no longer believe this. Closer examination of its fossilized remains revealed perfectly formed feathers on aerodynamically designed wings capable of flight. Its leg and wing bones were thin and hollow. Its supposed "reptilian features" are found in birds today. And it does not predate birds. Fossils of other birds have been found to have lived in the same period as Archaeopteryx.

      Do you have a reference to support your claim that Archaeopteryx is no longer considered a transitional form? Please provide references. I have only heard this claim from creationists, many of whom fundamentally misrepresent the features of the find.

    7. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by SilentReproach · · Score: 1

      From the Wiki entry:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archeopteryx

      There's one reference to a book called "Feathers of the Archaeopteryx". I could find others if you need.

      Interestingly, the wiki also indicates that: "So far, Archaeopteryx has perhaps produced as many questions as answers, and the latest findings on this fossil are unlikely to be the last word."

      Thank you for a considerate reply.

      --
      Religion is the opium of the people. Evolution is the opium of scientists.
    8. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by cambro · · Score: 1

      Reptile-to-bird transition a fraud??? Are you kidding me?

      First of all, your use of the term "reptile" belies your ignorance in general (you really mean archosaur) but we'll let that one go and pretend you actually know what the word "reptile" means in the context of bird evolution.

      We now have dozens and dozens of feathered dinosaurs (not necessarily flying, but feathered nonetheless), transitional fossil feather types (e.g., down vs. assymetric flight), and birds with teeth and claws on their wings..oh, and they have tails.

      In other words, the dinosaur bird "transition" is incredibly clearly documented in the fossil record AND in the genes of modern birds (yes, we can make teeth in birds by selectively reactiving genes that they still carry with them).

      Your claim about "reptiles and birds" being a "fraud" is 100% bullcrap and either:

      1) you are purposefully spreading false information to advocate your religious views OR
      2) you have been duped into believing this FUD by somebody.

      If 2, please follow the advise of the great geologist Louis Agassiz:
      "Go to nature, take the facts into your own hands, look, see for youself."

      If 1, look yourself in the mirror and ask yourself where deceit falls within your doctrine.

    9. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by haapi · · Score: 1

      Agreed. This finding corroborates evolution theory, but does not "prove" it. Find a pre-Cambrian rabbit, now *that* would disprove it.

      --
      Well, apparently, you only have to fool the majority of people for a little while.
    10. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by plunge · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Well, not really. It COULD be something totally unique."

      Well, yes, except that morphologically it fits in at only one place and time into the tree of life. As you can read from the article, no one is saying that it is a direct ancestor of modern life, because we cannot know, as you note, it's particular future. But we CAN tell its past and from what orders of life it came, and its existence tells us all about what sorts of creatures were around and what they were like on this particular branch of the tree that led to modern land animals.

      "We breed dogs with all sorts of other types of dogs, sometimes wolves, coyotes, and even Jackals and Hyenas (all in the "canis" family) and we always get offspring that are DOGS!"

      I hate to break it to you, but if you think that evolution suggests something different, you are mistaken. Your exclamation is about as silly as saying "but if you breed two mammals together, we always get MAMMALS!"

      Evolution is cladistically conservative. New species branch out from old categories: they do not replace or exit them. Just as all the species that will descend from dogs can still be grouped as "dogs" (because they will all still share the same traits that distinguished dogs from all other forms of life).

      Of course, your statement is wrong anyway. There are plenty of canis that cannot interbreed already. It might even be the case with some domestic dogs: it's just that we've never really seriously tried.

      "Third, they simply claim that this previously undiscovered creature is something "in transition" from one being to another when this is the first one found. How do they know that it's not just a unique creature that died out (ie: gone extinct)."

      You're mixing up claims about this specific species with what a transitional fossil actually is. Transitionals are creatures that have the distinctive and otherwise unique features of both an earlier group (in this case lobed fishes) and a later group (in this case tetrapods). We know that this creature was related to the tetrapods because it has several features that are unique to tetrapods or otherwise related to tetrapods, while at the same time being identifiably Stegocephalian. As point of fact, you are also still a Stegocephalian. Just as you are: a tetrapod, an amniote, a synapsid, a therian, a eutherian (what you think of as a mammal), a primate, an ape, and a sapien sapien. If you mated with someone and produced offspring, I could scream "BUT THEIR BABY IS STILL A EUKARYOTE!" I would be right: but it wouldn't make a lick of difference in disproving evolution.

      The problem is that you misunderstand evolution.

      "There's no way to prove that this was an "adaption" to moving from water to land - else, why do animals like ducks still lay eggs"

      I don't know what you mean by why. They lay eggs because all descendants of the early amniotes have eggs with amniotic fluid. Including humans.

      "(or the platypus, et al)"

      Platypi are monotremes, a group of therians (one of three, the other two being the placentals and the marsupials). Therians as a rule lay eggs. But their "eggs" are not like bird eggs. They are almost as if someone gave birth without first breaking the placenta: the "egg" is thin and membranous like a placenta, and it hatches almost immediately.

      "and some mammals (whales, dolphins, seals, etc) live entirely in the water (but not breathe in the water like fish and some reptiles) bear live young like mammals if this is indeed an evolutionary change..."

      Cetaceans very obviously tetrapods returned to the water. As such, they bear all the distinctive features of their tetrapod, amniote, euthreian, and so on ancestry, but have modified these features for life in the water. The features they have are not some random grab bag of features. They are all mammal features. Even the fact that they've "lost" their back limbs is deceptive: in the embryonic stage they still grow back limbs (which are then reabsorbed!). Sometimes, they are actually born with limbs (an atavism: just like when humans are born with tails), which happen to be in just the right place and hooked up to their vestigial pelvic girdle in just the right way... to be a tetrapod.

    11. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by plunge · · Score: 1

      Eh? It also says: "Archaeopteryx is a powerful piece of evidence that birds evolved from dinosaurs. The skeleton is most similar to the dinosaurs of the families Dromaeosauridae and Troodontidae. "

      Your quote about "perhaps produced as many questions as answers" is taken out of context. This sentence doesn't describe the fossil's general understanding as a related to both dinosaurs and the line of modern birds: it's about the very particular place of the fossil in this branch of things and its particular lifestyle, which of course is far more of a speculative matter. It's really important not to confuse and conflate all the various things we know and do not know about evolution and various fossilized species. Some things we know very very well. Other things are a mystery. The parts pertaining to demonstrating evolution and common descent in general we often know very very well. Things like exactly what any given fossil was ancestral to we generally know less well, since it is very hard to tell.

      While its not fully certain, its pretty well accepted at this point that birds are descended from dinosaurs. They share too much in common in the way of otherwise unique features. The recent realization that there were many dinos that had feathers further clinches the connection, as well as the study of fossilized T-rex tissue: which turns out to have a tissue layer that, of all living animals, only birds have.

    12. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The sad and simple truth is that you have to take it on faith that "this must have happened" to truly make the evolution theory work. That's fine, and that's ok... but it's not scientifically sound.

      BS! Simple example: for evolution by natural selection to occur, a necessary condition is that individual can propagate its physiological traits to its descendants. To put it in the parent's words, "for evolution to occur, inheritance of physical traits must have happened". Did biologists take the antecedent on faith? Of course not! They started looking for a mechanism that would allow for inheritance of physical traits and by mid of XX century Watson and Crick found DNA. That is exactly the opposite of "taking on faith": it's continuing EMPIRICAL research until the assumption (the "this must have happened") is either disproved or shown to be consistent with ALL observed phenomena, including experimentation --not only scientifically sound, but in fact a brilliant application of the scientific method. That is, incidentally, a fundamental difference with non-scientific thought, which only can be "made work" by ignoring colosal amounts of facts in evidence.

      >I think that all modern science, and probably all science through history as well, has to make assumptions for the sort "this must have happened." Science has an element of circular thinking in it. Evolutionary theory is nothing special in that regard.

      More BS! Of course science has to make some fundamental assumptions, but they are of the type "the Universe is consistent" (e.g., given an observational statement it is not possible to empirically show it is simultaneously true AND false; another way of saying the same might be "not everything is possible"); "the laws of the universe don't change from one moment to the next" (so that, e.g., Galileo's experiments can be recreated today); "every phenomenon is a particular instance of a natural law" (as opposed to "some phenomena are miraculous" or "all phenomena are product of irreductible chaotic randomness), etc. From these, or similar assumptions AND EMPIRICAL OBSERVATION science is able to derive statements that are epistemologically and gnoseologically non-circular, non-tautological, i.e., that could be FALSE in some other Universes but happen to be true (or at least not-yet-falsified) in ours.

      You might be thinking about Mathematics, abstract logic or other FORMAL sciences where your claim that only tautologies can be derived has a better chance of being true (but see, e.g., Frege-Russell-Godel). That claim, however, is simply not true when referred to EMPIRICAL sciences.

    13. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by Gleemonex · · Score: 1
      I think that all modern science, and probably all science through history as well, has to make assumptions for the sort "this must have happened."

      Close. These scientific "assumptions" don't really take the form of "this must have happened". To paraphrase the scientific method: "this is what is most likely to have happened, and here is why, and here are several transparent, peer-reviewed and arbitrarily reproducible experiments that support the conclusion".

      Science has an element of circular thinking in it. Evolutionary theory is nothing special in that regard.

      Science isn't about "thinking about stuff", it's about hypotheses supported by factual findings. Read a book.

      -Glee
      --
      Many a true word hath been spoken in jest -- mod funny posts "Informative".
    14. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      I am in physics. I am also a realist. I believe that science describes real things. However, we can never prove our theories, only disprove them, but we need portions of certain theories to understand other theories. So when evaluating whether theory A is consistent with our latest experiment, we must assume theory B to be true, even when we don't necessarily know this to be the case. Ultimately, all we can do, roughly speaking, is to test our entire theory for self consistency. So to verify the existence of the electron, we must assume we understand the machine we use to detect it. This doesn't mean this is easy. This doesn't mean that science is all some language construct, or whatever that postmodern interpretation science says. However, it does mean it involves some degree of circular thinking all the same.

      Science isn't about "thinking about stuff", it's about hypotheses supported by factual findings. Read a book.
      This comment was just rude. You are part of the whole intelligent design problem. Most of the ID'ers are just ignorant, and they don't trust us, the scientific community, in part because they perceive us as elitists who want to tell them what religion to teach their children. Comments like this don't help. The IDers can't help it if they are ignorant, and don't have the judgement to know it. We can keep ourselves from being rude, however.

    15. Re:Some Logic Errors.... by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      Evidently, I wasn't clear enough in what I meant by "circular reasoning." I don't think that science is tautological. (Frankly, in my heart I don't even believe mathematics is tautological.) And I don't think scientistis take anything "on faith," exactly. However, I don't think that in practice, science is justified piece by piece, from the ground up, as like some kind of cartesian or mathematical enterprise, but grounded in experience. Please, see my other post, http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=182360&cid=150 82915 , except that you weren't rude, which I thank you for :-).

  77. Obviously by robla · · Score: 5, Funny

    What IS surprising, is that there is no image - not even the obligatory 100-pixel-across thumbnail, which links to a lame-ass 200-pixel-across "Large Picture".

    That qualifies as the missing link then, doesn't it.

    1. Re:Obviously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when i loose a link, it comes a missing link, and i just google for it :)

  78. Re: "...don't believe evolution is possible" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How do creationists explain the nice skin colour of children from black/white parents? That is evolution in one step visible to the naked eye.

  79. Re:"the" missing link? by dsci · · Score: 1

    If you don't believe me, look at an xray of a dolphin's fin, and compare it to an xray of a human hand - the bone structure is *very* similar.

    While interesting, this in and of itself does not indicate causality in one species being related to another.

    As an exercise, consider the notion commonly called Einstein's Watch. Suppose you had a watch that could not be opened. All you have is the observation of the hands' motion around the face.

    You assume there is a mechanism inside the watch causing the motion, and set out to model (or mimic) it. After years of research (trial and error), you devise a mechanism that mimics the motion of the hands (to within experimental error) and could also fit inside the watch body.

    Now comes the tricky part. Do you then loudly proclaim "I've solved it! I know how the watch operates!" How can you KNOW this? Einstein's Watch has led me to think that as scientists, we never 'know' anything - we can only mimic and interpret within the framework of our own perspective; this perspective may be individual, cultural or as a species. Certainly we have some limitations in the things we CAN imagine, visualize or comprehend.

    As a physical scientist, thoughts like these both frighten and excite me. But what frightens me even more is that segment of the scientific community that takes that leap from "I think" to "I know."

    Indeed, Einstein himself once said (paraphrasing) "when you know something, you cease all understanding."

    --
    Computational Chemistry products and services.
  80. Satan put it there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yous can say all yous want but I know Satan put it there

  81. Re:"the" missing link? by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 2, Informative

    1. There is a lot more about this just that it's "an animal that we haven't seen before". It's a tetrapod like we are. We've found aquatic tetrapod fossils, we've found land-based tetradpod fossils. This one is between the two. It has land-based features (i.e. lungs and strong limbs), and fish-based features (i.e. fins and scales). As such it falls between the two "groups" of tetrapods.

    2. They didn't "assume" the time period. They looked in riverine rocks which are dated to having been deposited between 417 mil and 354 mil years ago to find the animal. They knew the time period it should come from (from the dates of aquatic and land tetrapods fossils), and they knew the type of environment it would be found in (riverine). So, they went to an area dated to that time period, that was riverine in those days, and found the fossil.

    3. (Since you conflated two points in no 2), the point is that it doesn't resemble "some other animal", it resembles two other animals, a marine tetrapod and a land tetrapod. Ergo, transitional fossil.

  82. An excellent argument by jd · · Score: 1
    There's actually one very important consideration in what you said that gets missed by a lot of people (including talk.origins!) - and that is that evolution DOES make predictions that can be tested. Very often, you will hear arguments about the impossibility of testing evolution - including from evolutionary scientists. This is something I've attempted (in my own limited way) to counter, by pointing out that we can predict what intermediate fossils would look like and therefore have a hypothesis we can test.


    (Even though the events have "already occured", as we have not yet seen the fossils they are still "predictions", as the observation has NOT already occured, and when it comes to testing theories, it is when the observation is made that really matters.)


    This proves, once and for all, that this viewpoint is the correct one - that evolution is a "true" science. It DOES make testable hypotheses* and it CAN be invalidated through observation**.


    *These predictions are interpolations of the data set, rather than extrapolations, but they're still predictions. If the data was discontinuous or chaotic, it would be impossible to make predictions as it would be impossible to produce a coherent chain.


    **It's very important that a theory be subject to tests that could break the theory. In the case of evolution, finding an intermediate fossil in an impossible location (eg: in igneous rock, in completely the wrong location, etc) would falsify evolution. A trivial example of location - limestone is predominantly formed in shallow, warm oceans (although cold, deep-water coral does exist). If you were to find something that could never, ever reach such water, you'd have something that could potentially break the theory.


    If you were to find plant or animal life that could only occur in extremely deep oceans (megalodon springs to mind), the Arctic tundra, or in the middle of continents, excluding anything that could simply be very very lost (trees don't generally get lost a whole lot, for example), in any significant amount in limestone rock, you'd have a good argument that the predictions of evolution don't match observation.


    It is significant that whilst predictions demonstrably HAVE matched observation, no such falsifying observation has occured. (Claims of such observations are either known to be fakes or are so carefully protected against examination that they are usually seen as fakes by default.)

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  83. Re:"the" missing link? by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1
    Nebraska Man, afraid you're mistaken. Especially about the "people went looking for" part. It was a chance discovery

    As for your 3 camps, I'm firmly in 3, I don't believe in God myself, but I don't care whether you do. However, I do care when people egregiously misrepresent science.

    how an you prove this animal just didn't go extinct and wasn't transitional to anything at all.
    Truthfully, we can't. First off there's no proof of anything in science. Secondly, we may indeed be descended from a different tetrapod species that made the leap from sea to land. However, we can trace our lineage to this time period, and this fossil shares many characteristics with our more fully land-based ancestors. As such it is a possible ancestor. Importantly, it's the first such one so clearly making the move from sea to land.
    what advantage would an aqua based ear structure provide on land?
    It would certainly offer more advantage than no ear whatsoever.
    no hybrid ears have ever been observed in the fossil record, so far as i have been able to tell.
    And I'd be fairly surprised if we did find any such fossils. Firstly, it begs the question of what a "hybrid" ear actually is. Secondly, the ear is comprised of very small bones, the kind that do not last, since they easily get wiped out by the fossilization process.
  84. The real problem... by x2A · · Score: 1

    ...is that the the existance of those intelligent-design proponents is the number 1 piece of evidence that evolution cannot exist.

    --
    The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
  85. Argh this means we know less! by mlush · · Score: 1

    Before this fossel was found there was only one missing link between fish and land animals. Now we have to find a link between fish and Tiktaalik roseae and another between Tiktaalik roseae and Land animals. Every Fossel found makes us more ignorant!

    This is clearly why the creationists are right... by ignoring the facts they are clearly less ignorant about evolution than someone who has studied them and therefore must be closer to the truth

    1. Re:Argh this means we know less! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps, if you're trying to make it look like you know what you're talking about when it comes to fossils, you should learn how to spell "fossil" correctly.

    2. Re:Argh this means we know less! by mlush · · Score: 1
      Perhaps, if you're trying to make it look like you know what you're talking about when it comes to fossils, you should learn how to spell "fossil" correctly.

      Congrats!! your post it funnier than mine!

  86. aged technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "(...) most important fossil finds in history (...) showing how creatures first walked out of the water and on to dry land (...)"

    Image

  87. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you have a problem with it, no-one is insisting you believe it. You're welcome to your personal beliefs. However, you are (and have in your previous posts) disputing science based on those beliefs. No matter what evidence is put before you showing evolution to be correct, you would twist it or deny it because your faith does not allow for it. At least, unlike many Creationists, you seem to be willing to admit this. However, like many other Creationists you seem to feel that science must conform to your personal beliefs.

    Keep in mind that if you're a biblical literalist, it is not just evolution you must deny, but also physics, astronomy, geology, archeology, and many others. They all point to an old Earth and contradict a literal reading of Genesis.

    As I said before, you're welcome to your personal beliefs, but evangelising bad science based on those beliefs is not welcome.

  88. Re:"the" missing link? by jlarocco · · Score: 1
    The whole article assumes several things... 1. Macro-evolution occurs. A quote: "Our emergence on to the land is one of the more significant rites of passage in our evolutionary history." This quote (and specifically the use of the term "history") shows that he had a pre-conceived belief about what happened, and he was going to interpret whatever evidence he found in that light. As I said in my first post, there's no way that it can be shown that this fossil is a stage of development between two (or more) species. The only thing we know is that this is an animal that we haven't seen before.

    That's the whole point of the article, and part of the reason this is so significant. They did calculations, checked with some geologists, made some predictions (or "assumptions" as you want to call them), and looked into them. It's called science.

    Do you think the whole scientific community is a bunch of crazy people in lab coats, with weird hair, randomly mixing chemicals, occasionally shouting "Eureka"? He wouldn't have been on Ellesmere Island if he didn't have a good idea of what he might find and how it would show evidence for or against his hypothesis.

    As to whether anything actually evolved from this creature isn't relevant because nobody is claiming that. It's more of: "Look at this, a fish with small legs! So at some point fish with small legs existed, as evolution predicted." Not: "Look! This is THE creature we all evolved from."

    2. The time ranges that are being used. A quote: "We knew that the rocks on Ellesmere Island offered a glimpse into the right time period." They assumed the time period, and then you say that from the newly discovered animal they could "predict ... the timeperiod." How did finding that animal in that area tell anything about the time period?

    It's called "Carbon dating". Carbon dating is usually accurate to within a few hundred years. Hell, with a timeframe in the hundreds of millions of years, it'd only have to be accurate to a few tens of thousands of years to be useful.

    If you have one fossil from 420,000,000 ± 8000 years ago, another fossil from 350,000,000 ± 8000 years ago, and then find a new fossil from 375,000,000 ± 8000 years ago, you can be pretty sure of the order they occured. That's the main point of the time line.

    One more thing...you said in your logic steps: "but still looks a lot like a fish." It seems like quite a logic leap to say that one animal that resembles some other animal must have been a descendent of that second animal.

    Is it really? If an old man walks down the street and says "My son is coming", you could make the prediction, or assume, that in a few minutes, a younger person who looks similar to the old man will walk past. If such a person walks past five minutes later, you can be fairly confident it's the son, and that your assumption was probably correct. You can never be 100% sure it's the son, but you can be fairly confident.

    That's the point of science: using observations and previous knowledge to verify or disprove assumptions and predictions. Nobody will ever be able to say with 100% certainty that evolution happens, but so far, it meshes with reality a lot better than the alternative theories.

  89. Missing Link.. by ribo-bailey · · Score: 0

    For those of you who don't follow paleontology, archaeology, or paleo-anthropology; every new discovery touted by media (and unfortunately sometimes the academics as well) as the 'oldest' or the 'missing link'.

  90. Land Arthropods were Much Earlier. by giafly · · Score: 5, Informative

    Re: showing how creatures first walked out of the water and on to dry land more than 375m years ago

    Not so. Arthropods (millipedes and centipedes etc) first conquered the land around 500 million years ago and were walking around long before this newly-discovered beastie. Their fossilised footprints have been found. "The oldest body fossil of a land animal is a 430-million-year-old millipede."

    "Our own ancestors, fish-like amphibians, first lumbered ashore a mere 370 million years ago. There they found a world teeming with plants and giant creepy crawlies."

    --
    Reduce, reuse, cycle
    1. Re:Land Arthropods were Much Earlier. by alas_anon · · Score: 1
      Ahhh...

      This is news to me. I didn't realize the size and extent of these early terrestrial arthropods. I earlier made a post that stated there was nothing for early tetrapods to eat because insects came into the picture 50 million years later. If you look at the mouth on the fossil fish you will see it is for gulping down some large prey, so maybe it was chasing these large arthropods along the shoreline.

      Maybe the fish is not gulping down large prey, but rather has a large mouth to increase its prey catching chances on small, fast prey (e.g., a frog).

      See these time lines from fossil discoveries so far...
      http://www.intergate.com/~tmaier/fossils/timelines /timelines.html

      Notice that proper insects are not discovered until about 320 mya; long after the first amphibian fossils are found.

      Another good reason for the fish to develop legs is to migrate between ponds. This would enable it to find new habitats and also to avoid getting stuck in a pond that was drying out, similar to what lung fish do today.

  91. ass ume by isaacaho · · Score: 1

    why do people always assume the little bugger was coming ut of the water and not going in? everything else we see in the world tends to go toward chaos rather than order. although they say the whales are more advanced than us anyway. And by they I do me the hitchhikers guide.

    1. Re:ass ume by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Creationists always try to use the second law
      to disprove evolution, but their theory has a flaw:
      The second law is quite precise about where it applies,
      only in a closed system must the entropy count rise.
      The earth's not a closed system; it's powered by the sun.
      So fuck the damn creationists. Doomsday, get my gun!

      MC Hawking for the win.

  92. Re: Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by viking2000 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Let's assume the creationists are right, and that the creator built the earth in 7 days a few milennia ago.

    Then the creator camuflaged this work to perfection:
    1. Dinosuar bones
    2. Carbon dating
    3. Erosion and tektonic activites
    4. DNA evolution

    The allmighty obviously have _on-purpose_ misled us to find perfect support for evolution.

    This must be for a reason.

    Should we, his humble followers, try to reveal this perfect camuflage by shouting Creation?

    I say _no_. The Creator have obviously done a perfect job hiding the evidence of creation, and planted false evidence for evolution to perfection.

    He must obviously want us to conclude the evolution is the truth.

    And even if we know better, who are we to try to find flaws in His effort to hide the nature of His creation.

    It will at any rate be fruitless, for who think they can do better than the Allmighty, and find the evidence He has hidden to the ability of the Omnipotent?

    As a creationist one therefore faithfully should document and support the beauty of the evolution, while quietly in your soul know the true nature of the universe.

    So to the creationists I tell you: Abandon your blasphemic and arrogant ways. Preach Evolution!

  93. There will always be gaps for you by arcite · · Score: 1

    Because people such as yourself don't want to know the truth. My advice, don't even read the article, just go to your church instead. :/

    1. Re:There will always be gaps for you by cartel · · Score: 1

      Actually I don't believe everything creationists teach today. I think for myself. What I posted was derived from my own thoughts. I am seeking the truth just as much as you are.

  94. Difficult questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

    Does "Intelligent Design" have an answer for "Why did the chicken decide to cross the road?"?

  95. Should've used the BBC one... by Red+Samurai · · Score: 0
  96. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First off, it's 'cue' the posts, not 'queue.' 'Cue' as in 'stage cue.' Anyway, I actually don't care much about that part.

    Now, I agree with your 'live your truth' theory. It makes sense. Why? Because maybe my truth is THE truth, maybe your truth is THE truth, maybe the Dalai Lama's truth is THE truth. But we're never going to convince each other of the validities of said truths. (As a side note, who the heck is the Dalai Lama? Anybody actually know?)

    And let's look at it logically. What if creationism is right? Well, perhaps it goes hand in hand with evolution--what if God's seven days were actually innumerable millenia (ala Inherit the Wind) and His plan was to have humans 'evolve' into His image? If we're ready to believe God created the universe, why couldn't He have just taken his time about it? Surely the inventor of Time can toy with it a little bit. Sounds good to me.

    What if evolution is right? I won't cover this, because you can get the gist of it from about a thousand of the previous posts. But there's evidence to back it up, I'll admit. Go check that out in some of the other posts.

    And what IS the scientific theory? It's a road to the truth based on reasoning and observation (among other things). If I observe a chemical reaction, and reason it through, and conclude something, that conclusion was reached through the scientific method. Right? So, naturally, if I observed God, firsthand, and I reasoned that, for whatever reason, there must be something bigger than me out there to keep me out of harm's way, and I concluded that God exists, that conclusion was based on something *almost like* scientific method--we just call it Faith. The proof for Faith is in stories of miracles as much as it is in the perfect shade of red of my girlfriend's hair, or the light rustle of the wind through oaks on a cloudless day, or the night sky as viewed from a blanket at 2:00 AM.

    As I write this, I'm looking at a framed picture of the poster on Mulder's wall in The X-Files--you know the one. UFO above some trees, white letters: I WANT TO BELIEVE.

    Maybe I just want to believe God loves me. I'm okay if you want to stick to science. But I think religion can complement science if we work at it a little bit.

    Then again, maybe I just think that Apple's new marriage to the Intel chip absolutely has to be the product of a supreme deity.

    Either way, we're both after the same thing, right? The truth.

    --Aurora

  97. The first in a long line of mistakes by lobotomir · · Score: 1

    Life should have never walked out of the water.

  98. Boohoo, don't use "missing link". by Mulletproof · · Score: 1

    But you would think- at least I would -that for a lynchpin turn in the evolutionary progress of a species that one could dig up more than just one sample, look at it and point "missing link!". After all, it was a successful natural selection and should therefor be fairly wide spread.

    I guess my question is why aren't we tripping all over these damn things instead of busting our asses finding just ONE, especially given the copious amount of fossil record we do find. I find it hard to believe that preservation is THAT hostile.

    But then, I'm not the sort to hang all my Evolutionary hopes and dreams on exactly one sample either, like half the slashnot scientists here.

    --
    You need a FREE iPod Nano
    1. Re: Boohoo, don't use "missing link". by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > But you would think- at least I would -that for a lynchpin turn in the evolutionary progress of a species that one could dig up more than just one sample, look at it and point "missing link!". After all, it was a successful natural selection and should therefor be fairly wide spread.

      No, I don't think it follows that a species that fits into some position in the family tree that we happen to find interesting would necessarily be very populous or very long-lasting.

      > I guess my question is why aren't we tripping all over these damn things instead of busting our asses finding just ONE, especially given the copious amount of fossil record we do find. I find it hard to believe that preservation is THAT hostile.

      How many organisms have ever lived? How many fossils have we collected?

      Of the 50,000,000 people who lived in the Roman empire at any given time, how many can we find traces of? That was only a couple of thousand years ago.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  99. but there is an image of it by commodoresloat · · Score: 4, Funny

    right here.

  100. Re: Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    > I have a question that I've never really understood the answer to: why is creationism as a belief incompatible with science (including evolution)?

    Because its adherents want it to be.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  101. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by ajs318 · · Score: 1
    Everything changed after the flood
    Including the refractive index of water, no doubt .....
    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  102. Images by armb · · Score: 3, Informative

    > What IS surprising, is that there is no image

    Lots of other places covered the story, some do have pictures.
    http://news.google.com/news?q=Tiktaalik+roseae

    e.g. http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa003&arti cleID=000A040D-36A2-1434-B6A283414B7F0000

    --
    rant
  103. Perhaps I have a limited understanding... by nsmike · · Score: 1

    ...But isn't the principle behind the "steps" of evolution simply mutation? Couldn't it have been possible that there WAS no missing link, and that suddenly a fish was hatched with legs, capable of breathing air? Does there HAVE to be an intermediate stage? Or is the idea of an intermediate stage perhaps based upon observations of other species' evolutions'(in which case that sounds like bad science)?

    1. Re:Perhaps I have a limited understanding... by GimmeZeroZero · · Score: 1

      It certainly isn't probable. Incredibly improbable actually. It would require a huge amount of mutations, all of which were beneficial(for specific conditions, in this case, land.) to the creature, and also that the creature just happened to be near land. Not all mutations are good or beneficial. If you really want an in-depth explanation then I'd recommend The Blind Watchmaker by Richard Dawkins. Very interesting and enlightening.

    2. Re:Perhaps I have a limited understanding... by tweek · · Score: 1

      Someone's been reading Darwin's Radio.

      If you haven't, maybe you should. He extrapolates the idea of sudden mutations into two whole books.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    3. Re:Perhaps I have a limited understanding... by Romanpoet · · Score: 1

      > Couldn't it have been possible that there WAS no missing link, and that suddenly a
      > fish was hatched with legs, capable of breathing air?

      As someone who studies evolution in artificial life models, the answer is yes. However, it in general its a bad stragety to have large mutation step sizes.

      You are completely right that the "step" of evolution is a mutation. And steps of mutation can either be very large or very small. In general however, your ancestors are alive because of all the many many many possible genetic combinations their genes were the ones that worked. If you start doing massive random mutational deviations from your parents, you are more likely to end up someplace worse than your parents than someplace better.

      That said, it is entirely possible to have large step sizes, and you can see many evolutionary strageties that utilize different step sizes for mutation. But in general, as your stepsize of mutation rate increases, the liklihood of viable offspring decreases. However, if you can spit out 1,000,000 children no problem, then that low viability rate isn't an issue.

  104. Picture of fossil by xSauronx · · Score: 1
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/05/science/05cnd-fo ssil.html?hp&ex=1144296000&en=fe3427d67e965e46&ei= 5094&partner=homepage

    found this from anandtech forums, it didnt require me to register, has a pic and a model, interesting.

    --
    By and large, language is a tool for concealing the truth. -- George Carlin
  105. Re:"the" missing link? by bloodredsun · · Score: 1

    Sorry but there is a way of knowing if it's a "transitional species" (I dislike the term but I will use it in this context).

    If you have an animal, lets call it B, that is a descendant of animal A and an ancestor of animal C, what features would evolution predict versus what features would it posses if it were just another unrelated animal?

    Evolution would predict that animal B would possess intermediate features so that a progression can be seen from A to B to C. This can be seen in the skeletal structures of the limbs, not just the appearance of these structures but in their functional abilities. In this case, you are moving from a sea based fish to a land based animal, so this animal should possses the fin structure of a fish limb, but altered in such as way that a wrist exists (wrists are essential for land animals as it allows the support of a body out of water). That the animal is not a true land animal can easily be seen as it lacks the true features of land animals such as fingers and toes (phalanges). This is only one feature of the animal, there are many others. Crucially, all the predicted differences are seen. Where C differs from A, B has all these differences but not the the same extent as C

    An animal that has no relation would not show this. It would have any number of differences, from number of limbs to bone structures. It would not share common features and it would certainly not "split the difference" between the 2 creatures either side of it in the fossil record.

    This is basic science. One of the strengths of a good theory is that it should be supported by new data. Mantar, I'm curious as to your educational background, would you mind telling me why you believe what you do?

  106. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Many Christians sway on this point, and say "okay, well yeah I believe God uses evolution as part of his system," which personally I feel is an unfortunate decision, because it erodes the basic tenants of our faith and negates the entire sin->separation->sacrifice->salvation foundation of Christ.

    No, it erodes the tenets of your faith. Please don't try to argue that your views represent the one true Christian faith, it is simply the views of one particular denomination which, at present, has a large number of adherents in the United States. One of the good things about protestantism and the religious freedom on which the US was founded, is that it's up to everyone to make their own peace with God and Christ based upon a thoughtful reading of the Bible and their own experience of the world (and this interpretation should be your own, not imposed on you by preachers or other hierarchies). All that's really required to be a Christian is that Christ was the son of God and he died for our sins and was resurrected.

    If you think more is required then that's cool, but you must acknowledge that other people don't. If you want your faith to be treated with respect then you have to treat other peoples' faith with respect.

  107. You have some highly evolved eyes by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1
    Why not use the fucking things?
    The thing that bothers me about your post is you do not attempt to answer his questions
    He quite clearly does explain things. Sure, it's no dissertation but it's just a Slashdot post. He gives a quick overview and suggests where one might find more.
    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  108. Re:"the" missing link? by bloodredsun · · Score: 1

    Which physical science do you study/work in, dsci?

    While you philosophical analogy is interesting, I'm not sure that it applies to biology or evolutionary theory in the same way as it would apply to physics.

    You're correct in stating that a single feature does not indicate realtionships between species, and similar features have evolved separately (such as eyes) but I believe that this was a specific example rebutting an earlier argument (no water creatures having arms).

    Also, I'm not aware of einstein saying that. Surely deeper knowledge leads to better understanding

  109. I wrote about this a while back... by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Interesting
    First off, evolution actually fits better with Christian theology than young-earth creation

    I had some thoughts along these lines a while back: that by insisting on Biblical inerrancy, the fundamentalists are guilty of idolatry, and that by ignoring evolution they're missing one of God's finest works.

    Ah, here it is:

    It's a tragedy, because assuming for the sake of argument that there is a God, then they're missing some of his best tricks. Evolution is a brilliant hack - a system that you can set up and just let run, and all the work is done for you. It must give God some of the same kind of kick we hackers get when we replace a thousand lines of brutal code with a single concise iterative function... And as for nucleosynthesis, the means by which the heavy elements that constitute much of the Earth were made, if God came up with that then he has a sense of style that I really like. Seeding the universe with metals from supernovae - amazing.
    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    1. Re:I wrote about this a while back... by gronofer · · Score: 1
      Evolution is a brilliant hack - a system that you can set up and just let run, and all the work is done for you.

      Yes, it's very clever. It allows you to create life, the universe and everything without even needing to exist.

    2. Re:I wrote about this a while back... by AoT · · Score: 1

      I know that was a joke, but evolution does none of those things. It creates the diversity of species we see today, it does not create life.

    3. Re:I wrote about this a while back... by onion_joe · · Score: 1

      I was just outside and looking at the birds realized, "maybe there is hope for us..." Not really, but it does fit into what you are saying, a God with style. I mean, imagine a god whose system allows dinosaurs to take to the air...

      --
      sig sig sig siggy sig
  110. Eh by distilledprodigy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ya'll are just looking for reasons to blast the religious community... I think it's awesome that they found this evidence, but I don't think it gives me the right to go out trying to tear down people's beliefs.

    1. Re:Eh by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      I don't think it gives me the right to go out trying to tear down people's beliefs.

      No, it does not. I believe the right to go out trying to tear down people's beliefs comes under the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America (and similar provisions in the basic laws of most modern democracies.) The duty to go out trying to tear down people's beliefs, on the other hand, comes from being an intelligent life form with opinions of your own.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    2. Re:Eh by distilledprodigy · · Score: 1

      The word 'right' doesn't always point to the Constitution, nor is this website governed by said constitution. I was not calling to question people's right to say something, but rather stating that I don't think it gives me the right.

    3. Re:Eh by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      I was not calling to question people's right to say something, but rather stating that I don't think it gives me the right.

      Ah. Well, my point was that it doesn't have to give you the right. You already have that right, and, to my mind, you also have the duty.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    4. Re:Eh by distilledprodigy · · Score: 1

      So you're saying we have the duty to tear down the basis of religion? That is asinine. Put the information out there; let it be publicly known... if at that point Joe Sixpack decides to give up the idea of a creationist that's up to him. But to attack the religion directly just makes it even easier for the religious zealots to ignore you and to make you less believable.

    5. Re:Eh by jotok · · Score: 1

      From what exactly do you derive your obligation to tear down other people's beliefs? There is a serious is-ought problem in your thinking.

  111. Have sympathy for this very afraid guy by anandsr · · Score: 1

    You can see it in his post. He quivers in submission. He does not want to face the gods, and reason with them. Because he has been told and has known somewhere deep down that the gods are unreasonable. He is the tool by which the religious fanatics rule the world. He will bear arms for them. Will cause the destruction of another World Trade Center. There is no difference between men of any religion who cannot reason. If only reason was more common the world would be a better place, and maybe somewhere the entity that started it all would be happy. I say maybe because who has the time (even for the creators of the universe) to care for the happyness/unhappyness of the ape descendent people of this insignificant little planet which cannot be observed from just a few million light years.

  112. Proof? by Brainfuck+R00lz · · Score: 0

    I'm not saying I'm against darwinism, but where is the proof? A poorly written article on a no-name website? That dosn't exactly scream nobel prize winning work.

    See, from where I stand I'm not going to belive until I get pictures of the fossil and a computer generated image of what they think this thing looked like, oh, and I'd have to read all of that in some snooty scientific magazine.

    Allthough, I have to admit that it's a pretty awsome discovery... but I'm sceptical (sp?) if it's real, these things get hoaxed alot...

    1. Re:Proof? by kronocide · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying I'm against darwinism, but where is the proof? A poorly written article on a no-name website? That dosn't exactly scream nobel prize winning work.

      Huh? What no-name website? The Guardian is not exactly no-name, but more importantly, the source is Nature, as snooty a peer-reviewed science journal as you could wish for.

    2. Re:Proof? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sceptical is the correct British spelling. Skeptical is the correct American spelling.

  113. But... by caudron · · Score: 1

    ...I'm still on the wrong side of that evolutionary transition, you insensitive clod!

    /me flops back into the deep sea out of shame for posting this joke

    -Tom Caudron
      http://tom.digitalelite.com/science.html

    --
    -Tom
  114. What happens after? by Blackflip · · Score: 1

    I just can't wait until this Fossil turns out to be irrelevant or even false. like many other "missing link"s that have been discovered before. And all of a sudden all the Evolutionnists will change subject, talk about an other "missing link" that has been found. Its a nice pattern ;-)

    1. Re:What happens after? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me guess.. you're one of those people who give jesus blowjobs, am i right?

    2. Re:What happens after? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's one good thing about the Savior. Even after communion, He's always good for a Second Coming.

    3. Re:What happens after? by Blackflip · · Score: 1

      I didnt know 14 year old's were allowed to post on /. Did your mom forget to set a password on the Childnet filter? Found some dirty words out there have ya? huh? ;-) Let me guess... you're one of those people who thinks he's funny, am i right?

    4. Re:What happens after? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      I just can't wait until this Fossil turns out to be irrelevant or even false.

      Clearly you have studied the fossil and have insights that most of us do not. Please share your reasoning for this prediction.

      like many other "missing link"s that have been discovered before.

      I am not aware that such an event is a common occurence. Perhaps you have references to "many others" for which this has happened.

    5. Re:What happens after? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just can't wait until this Fossil turns out to be irrelevant or even false. like many other "missing link"s that have been discovered before.

      Really? Then name "many".

  115. Re:Queue (no it's cue) by DataCannibal · · Score: 1

    Let me respectfully point out that the word you are trying to use in your subject is "cue" and not "queue"

    --
    No but, yeah but, no but...
  116. 'One of many' missing links by digitaldc · · Score: 1

    I heard an interview with the scientist who helped find this and he said it was 'one of many' missing links to the evolution of land animals from fish, but certainly not the only one.

    That being said, this is a wonderful discovery.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
    1. Re:'One of many' missing links by jc42 · · Score: 2, Informative

      ... the scientist ... said it was 'one of many' missing links to the evolution of land animals from fish, but certainly not the only one.

      Yup. Much of the reason this one gets so much attention is that it is nearly complete. Other than not knowing how long its tail was (and what color its skin was ;-), a fairly accurate reconstruction is possible. This is more useful than a pile of fragments of different individuals who may have lived centuries apart.

      Plus, it's a species that wasn't known before. That's always useful information.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
  117. Hard to Believe by Aqua_boy17 · · Score: 1

    Humor on

    As a former lurker and long time /. reader, I for one find it hard to believe in evolution.
    Devolution, maybe but Evolution, no.

    Humor off

    --
    What if the Hokey Pokey really is what it's all about?
  118. Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why does this "god" creature/slave-master/pet(human)-owner need/like to be worshipped.

    Why does the need of "god" to be worshiped have any bearing on whether or not this "god" exists? It's really irrelavant to the central question of whether a super powerful being created most/all of what we know of the universe and humans.

    What I want to know is, why do most self-proclaimed "athiest" not smart enough to come up with more intelligent arguments that crap like the above or, my personal favourite, "if there is a god, why is there suffering on the earth". Lame. FWIW, I am an agnostic, not a christian (or any other religion/belief).

    1. Re:Why not? by ComaVN · · Score: 1

      If you think it's so lame, how would you rationalize the existence of suffering, given an benevolent, omnipotent being?

      --
      Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
    2. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think it's so lame, how would you rationalize the existence of suffering, given an benevolent, omnipotent being?

      So are you saying that the definition of benevolent is "will tolerate only 'good' acts and only allow good things to occur"? Benevolence only implies that one is not actively acting to subvert or harm and generally doing good. If "god" thinks that it is in our best interest to be allowed to screw up (as painful as that may be, literally) as long as we get "the bigger picture", then pain and suffering are all a part of this right? Even we as humans have a similar concept, if you're in a sucky relationship, sometimes it's better to suffer some pain up front and break it off for the greater good of the two participants. Benevolence in no way shape or form implies a lack of suffering.

    3. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But surely an omnipotent god does not need to resort to temporary misery for ultimate happiness? There must be a shortcut, for any reasonable definition of omnipotence?

    4. Re:Why not? by cloak42 · · Score: 1

      If you think it's so lame, how would you rationalize the existence of suffering, given an benevolent, omnipotent being?

      Because suffering teaches us to be more compassionate. How is that so hard to believe?

      A couple years ago, I had my coat stolen at a bar. I was pissed, and rightly so, because it was right around Christmas, and I had to use all my Christmas money to buy another one. My father said something about the situation that completely took the wind out of my sails: he said, "You know what your grandmother would've said?" (My grandmother is SUPER Catholic, for the record.) "She would have said, 'Maybe the person that took your coat just needed it more than you did.'"

      Hard enough to believe as it is, the entire world isn't about me me me all the time. Putting that in mind in reference to my coat, I didn't feel so angry about it anymore. I mean, after all, at least I HAD the money to buy another coat.

    5. Re:Why not? by AoT · · Score: 1

      If god requires us to suffer to make us compassionate then he isn't really omnipotent.

    6. Re:Why not? by cloak42 · · Score: 1

      If god requires us to suffer to make us compassionate then he isn't really omnipotent.

      One of the defining characteristics of being human, from a religious standpoint, is the concept of Free Will. If you give something Free Will and then you force it to do something (or believe something, or act in some way, etc.) then it doesn't really have Free Will. So in essence, these are God's set rules for Himself and he must then work within the confines of those rules.

      Personally, I think a world that was entirely perfect and all-pleasant, all-the-time... well, it would be really boring. We have conflict so that we can resolve it.

      The way I see it, omnipotence isn't about doing everything yourself. What would be the point of that, or the fun? Part of the "fun" of watching the world is to see what people do in certain circumstances.

    7. Re:Why not? by ComaVN · · Score: 1

      There's a big difference between having your coat stolen, and any number of examples of *actual* suffering (insert your favorite war, genocide or natural disaster)

      --
      Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
    8. Re:Why not? by cloak42 · · Score: 1

      Um, I fail to see how a MORE extreme example of suffering should affect whether I feel compassion in the coat story. If I feel compassion for the guy who stole my coat, doesn't that mean that I would, by logic, feel MORE compassion for a more extreme story?

    9. Re:Why not? by ComaVN · · Score: 1

      Your story hinged on the fact that the thief might need the coat more than you, and that some people might have it worse than you. How does that line of reasoning work with murder, genocide, war, etc.? Does someone need your life more than you do?

      --
      Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
    10. Re:Why not? by chrismcdirty · · Score: 1

      It's like playing the Sims. It's more fun when the people drown/set fires because of their own stupidity, instead of forcing it to happen.

      --
      It's like sex, except I'm having it!
    11. Re:Why not? by cloak42 · · Score: 1

      Yes, exactly!

      No, wait...

    12. Re:Why not? by cloak42 · · Score: 1

      Your story hinged on the fact that the thief might need the coat more than you, and that some people might have it worse than you. How does that line of reasoning work with murder, genocide, war, etc.? Does someone need your life more than you do?

      I'm not sure if you're actually trying to bait me or whether you're just refusing to understand what I was saying. I'll explain it as best I can:

      I wasn't implying that my coat getting stolen was in any way some huge measurement of suffering. In fact, it was quite the opposite: I was stating that by such a small value for "suffering" (e.g. getting a coat stolen), I was still able to feel compassion for the guy who stole my coat, because obviously he had it way worse off than I did. Thus, I felt compassion because despite my problems, they weren't nearly so bad as they seemed at the moment.

      To take the example to your extreme: My small inconveniences, such as a coat getting stolen, also help me to feel compassion for those who have it WAY worse off than me, such as those who are getting murdered or caught in a war.

      What's more, people who have experienced REAL suffering, unlike my ridiculously small amounts by comparison, are shown to have far more compassion than those who have not.

    13. Re:Why not? by ComaVN · · Score: 1

      What's more, people who have experienced REAL suffering, unlike my ridiculously small amounts by comparison, are shown to have far more compassion than those who have not.

      Shown by whom exactly? Sure, there are people who manage to forgive the killers of their children, their rapists, etc, but as far as I can tell, they're a minority.

      To imply that their compassion makes their suffering worthwhile is, for me at least, too far a stretch. Particularly since it's the very existence of misery that makes compassion a necessity.

      Don't get me wrong, I understand your argument, as long as it's applied to something as trivial as a coat being stolen or a scratch on a car. I just don't think it can be extended towards real issues. Particularly since it's hard to be compassionate when you're dead.

      --
      Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
  119. Exponentiation is key by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

    You're talking about Abiogenesis here rather than evolution aren't you. Unlike evolution, abiogenesis is one of the those areas of science which we have little evidence supporting any of the hypotheses. All current indications are that this happened just the once, several billion years ago making this one of the most difficult theories to deal with.

    The only difficulty here is out inability to produce an extremely unlikely event under laboratory conditions.

    Abiogenesis is not impossible. It is simply an extremely unlikely event. So why did it happen? Simple. Exponentiation.

    Let P= probability of abiogenesis occuring in a suitable region over a period of one second. This is a very small number. However, what is the likelihood of it not occuring at all in a multitude of regions and over a long period of time?

    Let N= number of locations. Let T=Numbers of seconds in period. Probability of abiogenesis not occurring in one region in one second is 1-P. This is a number which is very close to 1, but is less than one.

    Therefore, probability of abiogenesis not occurring in N regions over a period of T seconds is given by: (1-P)^NT

    1-P is a number which may be very, very close to one. But if N*T is large enough, the probability of abiogenesis not occuring will eventually drop to zero. Simple example: Let P=10^-10. Despite the extreme unlikelhood of P occuring, for N*T=10^12, (1-P)^NT ~ 3.72*10^44.

    In other words, given only one location; after ~31,709 years, the probability of abiogenesis having occured at some point is a virtual certainty. The expected time interval for actual abiogenesis is I belive of the order of 1 billion years. There's considerable "margin for error" here.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
    1. Re:Exponentiation is key by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
      In other words, given only one location; after ~31,709 years, the probability of abiogenesis having occured at some point is a virtual certainty.

      But only if we take your P=10^-10 which you arbitrarily set, as a reasonable assumption. As P gets smaller, we get to the stage where we have to ask the question as to whether there have been enough events in the universe to allow abiogenesis to occur.

      I've been keeping fairly quiet in this story (and I'm aware it will get stale as it drops off the front page) but as someone who's interested in Intelligent Design (note interested, not sold on it!) your comment sprung out at me. If you haven't read it, I would really recommend reasing William Dembski's The Design Revolution. You might not agree with it, but it's a very well-written book and I think you would find it very stimulating. He deals with just the kinds of questions that you raise. Is it possible to determine P? Abiogenesis would require a sequence of events such that a stable product is produced (presumably a protein) that would kick-start evolution, so there is some possibility of modeling what is required (which I know little about). If we start heading towards the point where we need to use up all of the events in the universe just to get evolution started, what do we say then? Is it reasonable to presume that someone or something intervened (space aliens, or... yes... god/God).

  120. They just found it? by jhml · · Score: 3, Funny

    You mean this sucker is important evidence of evolution, has been missing for who knows how long, they found it, and now they tell us about it? Where was all the hoopla when it was missing?

    Before they found it. I don't recall any scientists saying "This theory of evoution might be convincing if we could find a fish with toes, but until then...."

    Nor do I recall anyone saying "Well we had this link, but Mortimer apparently slipped it into his pants and took it out of the Smithsonian, and since then it has been missing..."

    What else are they missing and not telling us about?

    Whole thing just deepens my suspicion. I want an accounting of all the links they claim to have, but for all we know have also gone missing.

    1. Re:They just found it? by HolyCoitus · · Score: 1

      I didn't know science was a team sport.

      --
      That's scary.
    2. Re:They just found it? by alas_anon · · Score: 1
      A great book on "missing links" is
      "Vertebrate History, Problems in Evolution"
      by Barbara Stahl, ISBN 0-486-64850-8, Dover Books

      It is a bit dated now, having last been updated in 1985 (that I know of). It tracks through Chordata from the Burgess to hominids and points out all the areas that need some work done.

      Although this is a scientific book, both paleontologists and creationists would find this book a lot of fun. =-}

  121. Post Scriptum by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

    Despite the extreme unlikelhood of P occuring, for N*T=10^12, (1-P)^NT ~ 3.72*10^44.

    Whoops! That should have read:

    Despite the extreme unlikelhood of P occuring, for N*T=10^12, (1-P)^NT ~ 3.72*10^-44.

    (1-P)^NT is an extremely small number.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  122. Better link, to Nature article by kronocide · · Score: 2, Informative
  123. I thought this was a missing link by calibrate · · Score: 2, Funny
    <a href="#"></a>
    1. Re:I thought this was a missing link by ajs318 · · Score: 1
      Nah ..... that's most probably some tie-wearing d.h. trying to be clever {a link apparently to nowhere, but with an onclick attribute which calls some JavaScript function}, and failing it big-style. Those "links" can't be middle-clicked to open them in a new tab. And they mess up the links browser too}. FCOL, guys, if you're going to do something like that, you may as well use
      <span class="link1" onclick="loadpage('shoes.htm')">shoes</span>
      which at least doesn't even pretent to be a link.

      My preferred browsing style is always to middle-click links, never to overwrite anything straight away. Once I've got more than a dozen tabs on the go, then I'll think about closing some of the unused ones {before a SIGSEGV does it for me}.
      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  124. Re:God vs Darwin by albyrne5 · · Score: 1

    Why on earth is parent modded a troll? The GP makes absolutely no sense to me either ...

  125. Re:Open mouth, insert *your* foot by anomaly · · Score: 1

    I fully comprehend the difference between abiogenesis and speciation through evolution.

    It's vain of you to claim that you know how I think. In fact, you don't know me, or my thoughts. Lumping me in with the stereotype in your head of thoughtless religious nuts is really pretty small minded of you as well.

    Let me ask you this, smart guy. It seems to me that the problem is somewhat greater than spontaneous generation from existent matter.

    Where did the first matter come from?

    Science is about observability and repetition of the observed phenomenon.

    Scientists did not observe the initiation of the existence of matter, and were not present at the genesis of this universe. As such, they are limited to the facts that they can collect today. It is not possible to repeat the genesis of the universe, either. As such, it's not possible to follow the scientific method to evaluate the therories. Origins is not the stuff of science because it's really speculation. Note that I am not disputing that evidence can be collected, relationships between pieces of evidence can be noted, and explanations can be created, but not TESTED!

    WRT speciation, it's true that we see differentiation between members of the same species and it is demonstrable fact that an evolutionary process exists within a kind of creature. However, it is not conclusive that lots of adaptation leads directly to speciation given enough time, adaptation and mutation.

    We're not mindless religious zealots. We have the same evidence you have, and have differing theories about the activities behind the evidence. You don't have to like it, but it's pretty thoughtless of you to generalize our worldview as the province of morons or the deluded.

    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
  126. Re:AWESOME! by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1

    I love the smell of burning karma in the morning!

  127. Picture and more info by goonies · · Score: 2, Informative

    For anyone looking for more info plus a picture of Tiktaaaaaahtingy check:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiktaalik

    I'm always impressed how fast wiki is with its updates, whoot!

    --
    .sigh
    1. Re:Picture and more info by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for the link, but am I the only one who looks at some of these fossils and thinks, they can tell all of that, from that disfigured piece of rock.

      Just curiuos

  128. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by intheory · · Score: 1

    talk about OT..sheesh. Well I guess I participated.

    anyway, AC-
    "All that's really required to be a Christian is that Christ was the son of God and he died for our sins and was resurrected."

    Like I said in my post, if you (your denom, whatever), believe that, and believe that the sacrifice of Christ was the only acceptable and required sacrifice to atone for all of mankind's sin, then you must believe that there was one original sin that separated man from God. This would be Adam's sin.

    If we take a millions-of-years of evolution approach, then Adam came into the world (evolved from another species) with death/disease/corruption already present. IF this is the case, then as Christians, we must ask "Did Adam's sin really separate creation from God? Or has it always been separated? Was it created flawed?" Once you get into these questions, it really leads to "What good was Christ's sacrifice if there was no original sin to separate us from God?"

    So while you can talk about "my faith" and "my interpretation", it really is just a very basic interpretation of the Bible as a whole: If there was death prior to Adam's sin, then there was never such a thing as a perfect creation, never a fall, never a separation, and never a need for an atoning sacrifice; thus Christ is false. It doesn't have much to do with interpretation or denominations-no Christ=no Christianity.

  129. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by meringuoid · · Score: 1
    Actually, it is impossible for any nails to be placed in the coffin of creationism

    ... because it's coated in a thick layer of iron armour, which - when examined closely - turns out to be made of thousands and thousands of nails, accumulated over the course of 150-odd years, hammered in so hard that they've fused together into a single mass of metal.

    This is what creationists are referring to when they say they have an 'iron-clad case'.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  130. Heh, heh, heh, heh, heh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    APRIL FOOL!

  131. Well then... by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    "I think the original poster would be happy if you could answer him why the big bang occurred when there was no time"

    It didn't. Time didn't begin until the big bang occurred. That appears to be the part that you're having trouble with.

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
    1. Re:Well then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is really being asked is "Why did the Big Bang occur?" If the scientific answer is that there is not and cannot be an answer, fine, but don't expect that to be satisfying. One of the old questions that presses this point home is "Why is there something, rather than nothing?" There was an alternative to a Big Bang; NO Big Bang. Why did one happen and the other not? Or is that question non-sensical as well?

      Also I would note that asking a religious person "How did God come to exist?" is in the same category. If it is meaningful, so is the Big Bang question. If you can get out of your situation by denying the existence of time, cause and effect in one particular instance, then so can everyone else.

    2. Re:Well then... by tgv · · Score: 1

      Then you must answer the question how there can be an event when there is no time. How can you accept that from a total void without change (as change implies time) something jumps into existence?

      Until you can say how that is possible, the cause of the Big Bang is problematic. It's the same as answering "Who created God?"

  132. Now all we need... by jkaiser · · Score: 1

    Is to find the missing link between Firefox 1.5.0.1 and Bon Echo (2.0 Alpha).

  133. Resorting to insults? by SilentReproach · · Score: 1, Informative
    No need to do so. Let each one be convinced in their own mind of their favorite theory. Claiming there are "vast mountains of evidence" is like a magician waving his wand to distract the audience from the sleight of hand about to occur.

    There's always more to the story:
    http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html ?id=682079dc-6414-406f-9572-e46471a584ef&k=10250

    "I would argue it is not as earth-shattering as they make it out to be," says Robert Reisz of the University of Toronto at Mississauga, Ont., and senior editor of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

    Reisz says Tiktaalik is one of several interesting creatures that lived millions of years before the first animals walked the Earth. He doubts Tiktaalik ever actually left the water, and speculates it evolved its interesting features to cope with rapidly flowing water in. "It's an important find, there is no question about that," he says. "But it's being a little bit overblown."
    --
    Religion is the opium of the people. Evolution is the opium of scientists.
    1. Re:Resorting to insults? by scapermoya · · Score: 1

      I may be wrong, but I think I have heard a couple of peices of evidence to support evolution before Tiktaalik came along. You never know with those "scientists" though, they could just be trying to distract me.

      --
      Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch.
    2. Re:Resorting to insults? by plunge · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what your point is. Whether or not this particular creature left water or not, it's still something morphologically between the later tetrapods and lobed-fishes that clues us into what sort of developments were going on.

      If you aren't aware of the evidence for evolution, I could see how you might not think it vast. But once you look into it, into the twin nested heiarchy, into the convergence of an inumerable number of required evidential findings, it's pretty clear that what you're looking at has more and stronger evidential support than almost anything.

    3. Re:Resorting to insults? by 2short · · Score: 1

      "Claiming there are 'vast mountains of evidence' is like a magician waving his wand to distract the audience from the sleight of hand about to occur."

      It could be. In this case though it's shorthand; for the long version with all the evidence listed out, please go to a good library, find the biology section, and read everything there. That will get you started, after that, dive into all those books bibliographies. Next you'll no doubt have a list of a million or so experiments you'd like to reproduce yourself, and quite a few observations of the world to collect. The mountains of evidence are in fact, vast, and examining it all will take considerably longer than your lifetime, so you may at some point be tempted to rely on the opinions of others who have spent their entire lives figuring this stuff out. You'll find that they argue vehemently about all sorts of stuff, like whether a certain species evolved certain features to cope with living out of water or with living in rapidly flowing water. As to whether evolution is real, I beleive you'll find widespread agreement, but note you don't need to take their word for it; they are convinced of this because of evidence you can personally verify.

  134. Assuming Evolutionists are correct: by jschavey · · Score: 1

    According to the Evolutionary timeline the first fish "arise" 500 to 450 million years ago. According to that same timeline, land animals first "appeared" 420 million years ago. So how does a fossil aged at 375 million years show proof a "missing link?" Stop making stuff up to prove that you're right. Microevolution makes since, this is bogus.

    1. Re:Assuming Evolutionists are correct: by PigleT · · Score: 1

      Note how estimates vary for how long Neanderthals overlapped. I'd expect there to be a much larger overlap in cases of major diversion.

      As for microevolution... actually, I'd be more interested in a proof concentrating on errors-in-progress. If the general thesis of Natural Selection through Evolution is that mutations beneficial to an environment tend to stick, you'd expect there to be examples of species that are *behind the curve* in various ways - eg an eye slightly *less* well-developed than you might otherwise encounter. (Hard to prove, of course, but more interesting than a mere list of "look, this animal's equipement fits its environment just fine" many times over.)

      --
      ~Tim
      --
      .|` Clouds cross the black moonlight,
      Rushing on down to the circle of the turn
    2. Re:Assuming Evolutionists are correct: by ShavenYak · · Score: 1
      If the general thesis of Natural Selection through Evolution is that mutations beneficial to an environment tend to stick, you'd expect there to be examples of species that are *behind the curve* in various ways - eg an eye slightly *less* well-developed than you might otherwise encounter.


      You mean, like an eye where the retina was put in backward, with the nerves in front of it blocking some of the light, then exiting through a hole in the back corner? Like the kind that are looking back at you every morning when you wake up and look in the mirror?
      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    3. Re:Assuming Evolutionists are correct: by alas_anon · · Score: 1
      The other mutations that stick are the ones that "do no evil". These are neutral mutations, like the non-optimal eye of mammals that you mention. It is a bizarre, nonoptimal design, but we get by with it well enough so it stays.

      The world of biochemistry and their metabolic pathways is full of even more bizarre examples of nonsensical "design". In some pathways there are many degrees of freedom for mutations to happen and yet still end up with the same end product, so you see random and nonsensical changes. Other pathways are less free so they persist over hundreds of millions of years (like in histone production).

      Evolution is not a pretty process and things end up resembling Rube Goldberg contraptions.

    4. Re:Assuming Evolutionists are correct: by PigleT · · Score: 1

      > You mean, like an eye where the retina was put in backward,

      That sounds a very likely case. Thanks. Would you happen to know of a suitable phrase for which one might google to find more? (I ain't no biologist...)

      --
      ~Tim
      --
      .|` Clouds cross the black moonlight,
      Rushing on down to the circle of the turn
  135. Re: Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by swillden · · Score: 1

    Yes, but one side has facts and a theory, whereas the other has a well-funded propaganda machine and a lot of self-appointed spiritual advisors telling the ignorant masses that they'll be tortured for all eternity if they let the facts affect their conclusions.

    Hmm. Seems like both sides have their propaganda machines, whether funded or not.

    Seriously, if you want to keep the debate on a rigorous level, using deliberately inflammatory language is not helpful. Even if you think the characterizations are accurate.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  136. I cant believe what I am reading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here I am in Europe, looking at USA one of the most technologicly advanced nations in the world, with things like NASA, Apple, MIT, and even Microsoft (though I am not sure they have evolved) ...and there is a discussion going on about whether or not evolution is true.

    No serius man in Europe believes in creationism, or intelligent design.
    It leaves me baffled as to why these ideas have sprung up in USA in recent times.

    1. Re:I cant believe what I am reading by kronocide · · Score: 1

      It is a very intriguing phenomenon. Obviously religion has something to do with it. It is no friend of open-minded discovery, of course, rather considers it both unnecessary and hazardous, so not really recommended. One of the early church fathers, I don't remember his name, said that since we have the Bible, humanity has no need of any further knowledge. At least 30% of US citizens proclaim to be evangelical Christians. Is it so strange that they would advocate a dead-end alternative to science, that makes empirical investigation pointless?

    2. Re:I cant believe what I am reading by AnonGeek · · Score: 1

      Yeah and Bill Gates said 256K of memory should be plenty too!! Lets not be so sterotypical here in your comments! I would say I'm an evangelical christian. I love science. I think it just depends how you actually interpret it. Evolutionist are only looking at it w/ one objective, it must fit evolution and further its objectives. The fact of the matter is that this fossil proves absolutely nothing! In the same manner that christians can prove God, you can't prove evolution. Its a "theory" (some would say a poor one) on a past historical event. No one was there, no one can "prove" it. Just make some guesses, thats it!

    3. Re:I cant believe what I am reading by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      Thermodynamics is "just a theory" but I'm willing to bet you expect a fire to warm you up. Gravitation is "just a theory" but you haven't floated away yet. Electromagnetics is "just a theory" but it's keeping your computer going.

      Some things can't be proven, only disproven. It's very hard to prove for certain that somebody is a vegetarian ..... but you've only got to catch them eating meat once, to prove that they aren't one! But every time you see them eating anything that isn't meat, you get corroboration for the idea, and the more that happens, the more confidence you can have in it being true.

      The vast majority of the evidence favours evolution. Furthermore, the introduction of a creator adds needless complication {why couldn't the process that gave rise to a creator who then created the universe just have created a universe?} which tends to disfavour any such hypothesis.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    4. Re:I cant believe what I am reading by kronocide · · Score: 1

      Lets not be so sterotypical here in your comments! I would say I'm an evangelical christian. I love science.

      You are reinforcing the stereotype. If you are so fond of science, why don't you have a clue about how it works? Makes me suspect that your fondness is somewhat selective. Science never proved a thing. I thought everyone knew by now that the empirical sciences work with evidence, and proofs belong in formal systems such as math and logic. Claiming that a scientific theory is guesswork because it has not been proven is like claiming that Peter Forsberg is a poor athlete because he didn't make a single home-run last season. Wrong game.

      Evolutionist are only looking at it w/ one objective, it must fit evolution and further its objectives.

      Pot, meet kettle...

    5. Re:I cant believe what I am reading by chawly · · Score: 1

      I live in Europe too, and I may have the answer for you. I first of all noticed this bit

      "looking at USA one of the most technologicly advanced nations in the world, with things like NASA, Apple, MIT,....."
      and I find you simply left the missing link off of the list. The missing link is, of course, G.W.Bush - "one small twit for president represents a large step backwards for mankind" - to misquote a famous American.

      Then I came on this

      "and even Microsoft (though I am not sure they have evolved)"
      and, if I may give you my opinion, the words "Microsoft" and "evolution" should not be included in the same discussion.

      And then I came upon this

      "No serius man in Europe believes in creationism, or intelligent design"
      and I thought that surely you jest. Why do you exclude the many serious women and children (not to mention dogs, cats, and canaries) in Europe who have trouble to believe in creationism and/or intelligent design ? If it came to a push, you might even have the kindness to include non-serious people ( such as myself, for instance).
      --
      How many beans make five, anyhow ? ... Charles Walmsley
    6. Re:I cant believe what I am reading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh yeah dude. Thats what I'm saying. Neither side can prove it! Its useless for everyone to get so deffensive and upset. You believe what you want and I'll believe what I want. Why does everyone have to get so upset about it? I can show you my evidence and you can show yours but lets be mature about it! Maybe I didn't explain well enough. I'm at work, I can't write a book you know.

    7. Re:I cant believe what I am reading by kronocide · · Score: 1

      But that's not what I was saying. I was saying that people who think that everyone is a little bit right are simply ignorant and confused, and that things are little bit more certain than that. But to know how it is, you need to learn some things. That's the downside to it. You need to make an effort, read some books, take a course. Or, you could take another puff off your joint and settle on that everyone is a bit right, and let's stay friends and talk about something else. Up to you.

  137. I am missing Link too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  138. Kinda Old News by raides · · Score: 1

    The discovery of this croc is old, but the research and announcement is new. They finally have enough "evidence" to bring the case to light. Many scientists are upset with how science has been made a mockery lately. However whatever is told to us is what we will believe. Other scientists have found soft tissue in dinosaur fossils, coming up with evidence that dinosaurs aren't really that old and MAY have lived on the planet with man. Most scientists, have considered this a travesty of science, even after a year of study. (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7285683/) Either way what makes it to the history books is what our kids will believe and listen too. The endless debate between Creationism and Evolution will only result in the destruction of man. One side doesn't like what the other side thinks and vice versa, one will have bombs and one won't. I really wish that they could have open and realistic debates on this on television and radio. Sorta like C-Span but for science. If this is already happening, it should happen more.

    1. Re:Kinda Old News by OG · · Score: 1
      Other scientists have found soft tissue in dinosaur fossils, coming up with evidence that dinosaurs aren't really that old and MAY have lived on the planet with man.


      Last month's issue of Discover includes an interview with the scientist who discovered the soft tissue, who also happens to be a Christian. Her take, and that of other scientists, is that the soft tissue doesn't make the fossils younger than predicted, but that it changes our conceptions about fossilization. She suggests we have just taken it for granted that soft tissue could not survive for long periods of time, and she dismisses fundamentalists who try to use the soft tissue as a evidence for improper aging of fossils. Not being a paleontologist, I'm not one to comment on who may be correct here, but I thought that it was worth noting.
    2. Re:Kinda Old News by raides · · Score: 1

      Definitely, its a great article, one of the reasons I even referenced the controversy in the first post. She hasn't taken any side but science on the issue, which is great. Many scientists are giving her shit, no matter what her findings are saying. The article talks about how some scientists still don't believe it is possible for the tissue to have survived. Very cool article.

    3. Re:Kinda Old News by plunge · · Score: 1

      You are understating the case. This stuff was NOT, in fact, the preserved tissue itself, just sitting there but really really old. It was fossilized remains (which means, mostly being composed of othre materials that had leeched into and replaced what was there while retaining its structure) that happened to contain trace elements of the original chemical compounds when separated out in a centerfuge. Most people hear "T-Rex tissue" and they think of some barely decayed meat. This allows the creationists to fool them quite easily into thinking that it can't have been around for very long.

  139. Going beyond classical Big Bang... by meringuoid · · Score: 1
    You will be compelled to stop because your frame of reference is the planet surface. For anyone with interplanetary or interstellar transport, North would be quite relative (of course, such a being would also not use ambiguous terms like 'North'). Similarly, I'm quite willing to concede that time 'started' at the big bang[1] -- for the three-dimensional universe we observe. However, to say that this makes the concept of 'before the big bang' meaningless is quite silly. Beyond comprehension? yes. Meaningless? no.

    No, I think it remains meaningless. As you mention, though, our definition of 'time' is probably too limiting.

    If we do go on to deal with multiple universes, the braneworld, or whatever multiverse system turns out to be most realistic, then I doubt we'll be talking about it in terms of 'time'. Using 'time' beyond the universe would indeed be meaningless, as time is inextricably linked to space and mass and motion; going back to the North Pole analogy, it would be like mapping things out in terms of North and West, and then trying to determine in those terms how to get to Mars.

    I'd guess you'd use a more abstract parameter to describe such relationships; 'space' and 'time' are only useful within a universe, not between them.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  140. Go Go Google Images by neersign · · Score: 3, Informative
  141. No, not at all by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    "I think it's funny how very common it is for scientifically-minded and non-religious people to arrogate in precisely the same manner when it comes to religious issues."

    How can it be precisely the same when, in the case of science, there is evidence, and in the case of religion, only superstition and ignorance?

    You see, that's the problem. People like yourself seem to think that there is some equivalence between the conclusions reached by religion, and those reached by science.

    That is the worst kind of arrogance.

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
    1. Re:No, not at all by swillden · · Score: 1

      How can it be precisely the same when, in the case of science, there is evidence, and in the case of religion, only superstition and ignorance?

      First, you apparently missed the whole point. The arrogance in question is the supposition that questions that are obvious to the untrained can be expected to confound those who've dedicated their life to the subject. The tendency of people to hold such an arrogant opinion is a characteristic of human behavior that doesn't depend at all upon the topic being discussed.

      Your second error is to presume that there is no evidence of religious ideas. There is indeed evidence to be had, though (by design) it's not the sort of evidence that can be objectively measured outside the confines of one's own skull. I can acquire, and have acquired, compelling evidence, but I cannot show that evidence to you. You have to get your own. You'll almost certainly prefer to believe that I'm either lying or deluded but that, again, is by design.

      Finally, from your point of view, I won't argue with the characterization of religion as "only superstition", but to call it "ignorance" is further arrogance on your part, considering that there are and always have been brilliant and highly educated scientific and literary minds who you're claiming to be less knowledgeable than yourself.

      And thus you reaffirm my point. Thank you.

      People like yourself seem to think that there is some equivalence between the conclusions reached by religion, and those reached by science.

      As long as you're putting words in my mouth, you should at least do a thorough job of it. Just what equivalence is it that I claim?

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    2. Re:No, not at all by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      The tendency of people to hold such an arrogant opinion is a characteristic of human behavior that doesn't depend at all upon the topic being discussed.

      This is true. But I should point out that you can be arrogant and still be right.

      Your second error is to presume that there is no evidence of religious ideas.

      If you mean real evidence, there isn't any. Period. Sorry to be rude, but there isn't.

      There is indeed evidence to be had, though (by design) it's not the sort of evidence that can be objectively measured outside the confines of one's own skull. I can acquire, and have acquired, compelling evidence, but I cannot show that evidence to you. ... You'll almost certainly prefer to believe that I'm ... deluded but that, again, is by design.

      You believe that there is a vast part of reality that many poeple are can't see, that you have special knowledge of that part, you can't share you reasoning with the rest of us, and there's no way to test things one way or the other. That's textbook delutional thinking. If you don't want to me to think that you're delutional, try not sounding like you are.

      Also, you're accusing people of being arrogant while being arrogant yourself. You're literally saying "I know something you don't know, and God designed it that way.". If that isn't elitism, I don't know what is.

      ...there are and always have been brilliant and highly educated scientific and literary minds who you're claiming to be less knowledgeable than yourself.

      You're claiming exactly the same thing the same thing. Only in your case, your knowledge is special, unsharable and absolute, while your more rationalistic opponents only claim be less willing to allow emotion to compromise their thinking. Huge difference.

    3. Re:No, not at all by swillden · · Score: 1

      This is true. But I should point out that you can be arrogant and still be right.

      You can, certainly. The circumstances in which this particular form of arrogance are warranted are vanishingly rare, though. Even in the case of religion, and even if you believe it's all bunkum, it's still the height of arrogance to assume that the simple apparent conflicts you might find in religious ideas are going to give pause to, much less confound, intelligent, logical thinkers who've spend a lifetime studying religion.

      I'm sure it does occasionally happen in any field that a novice stumbles on a contradiction that has eluded serious students for decades, or centuries. I can't think of a single example outside of fiction, though.

      If you mean real evidence, there isn't any. Period. Sorry to be rude, but there isn't.

      You can define "real evidence" so that it excludes my evidence, if you like, but that doesn't change the fact that my evidence is plenty real to me, even if you can't see it.

      You believe that there is a vast part of reality that many poeple are can't see, that you have special knowledge of that part, you can't share you reasoning with the rest of us, and there's no way to test things one way or the other.

      No. It can be tested, and everyone is invited to test it. The test is inherently personal, however, and my results cannot be shown to you, nor vice versa.

      That's textbook delutional thinking. If you don't want to me to think that you're delutional, try not sounding like you are.

      It only looks that way to you because you chose to ignore the part of my post where I said you can get your own evidence.

      Also, you're accusing people of being arrogant while being arrogant yourself. You're literally saying "I know something you don't know, and God designed it that way.". If that isn't elitism, I don't know what is.

      It would be elitism if I were to say that you can't know, but you can if you want to. So it's more like saying "I know somthing you don't know, and think you should learn, but I can't teach it to you, you have to go learn it at the same school I did".

      You're claiming exactly the same thing the same thing. Only in your case, your knowledge is special, unsharable

      It's not special, not in the sense of being unique to me, anyway, and while it's unsharable it's independently repeatable.

      your more rationalistic opponents only claim be less willing to allow emotion to compromise their thinking. Huge difference.

      "Claim" being the key word... which in fact makes it a rather small difference, because emotion is the primary thing that drives people to so vehemently deny that religious ideas can be tested, while refusing to try it themselves.

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    4. Re:No, not at all by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      The circumstances in which this particular form of arrogance are warranted are vanishingly rare, though.

      And I would say that in an area of life where there's no real consensus of any kind is one of those areas where novices should be telling the experts that they don't know what they're doing. Religion is clearly one of those areas.

      You can define "real evidence" so that it excludes my evidence

      You have real evidence that your thinking can change how you feel and what you believe, which isn't what I was talking about. Whenever religion and science (or secular thinking, or rationality, or whatever you want to call it) have had a publicly testable dispute, science has always won, hands down, end of story.

      That's why I believe that your "intelligent, logical thinkers who've spend a lifetime studying religion" are just playing word games and pandering to emotion. For thousand of years they made claims about all sorts of things, and now that we're good at testing things they've been forced to only make claims about things that can't be openly (publicly) tested. That's a clear sign that they're just good at making things up.

      No. It can be tested, and everyone is invited to test it. ... It only looks that way to you because...

      My results came back: "This is bunk". Other, similar types of searching for enlightenment have lead to hundreds of different answers. That leads me to conclude that we can't trust that kind of internal search for knowledge. That's why I think the word "delusion" is apt.

      Isn't it weird that when people go on a search for spiritual knowledge, they almost always come back with the same answers their culture gave them? Isn't that a sign that this kind of search doesn't produce objective knowledge?

      So it's more like saying... [you can] learn it at the same school I did

      I know you're trying to be nice, and to share something that's made you happy, but it's a happiness based on pleasant fantasy.

      It would be elitism if I were to say that you can't know, but you can if you want to.

      It's the same condecending elitism that adults have when they tell kids "You'll understand when you get older". Even if they can get it later, you're still saying "I have it and you don't" and maybe even "I got it first".

    5. Re:No, not at all by swillden · · Score: 1

      And I would say that in an area of life where there's no real consensus of any kind is one of those areas where novices should be telling the experts that they don't know what they're doing. Religion is clearly one of those areas.

      Even if I were to grant that, it *still* doesn't change the fact that the questions the novices are going to come up with are not going to stump the experts -- whether you believe their answers or not, they'll have them -- and it's supremely arrogant on the part of the novices to really expect that their simplistic and obvious questions are going to stump anyone.

      And that form of arrogance is surprisingly common. Here on slashdot we continually see examples where some researchers perform a study and people with no training in the area jump all over the study and results -- often voicing complaints that are addressed in the article which the complainers, in their arrogance, didn't bother to read! There's a strange predilection of the young and intelligent to believe that everyone except themselves and their friends are stupid.

      Hmm. Come to look at it that way, perhaps that's a survival mechanism of our species... a societal equivalent to random-start hill climbing to perturb us away from local maxima. In any case, it's consistently true.

      That's why I believe that your "intelligent, logical thinkers who've spend a lifetime studying religion" are just playing word games and pandering to emotion. For thousand of years they made claims about all sorts of things, and now that we're good at testing things they've been forced to only make claims about things that can't be openly (publicly) tested. That's a clear sign that they're just good at making things up.

      Except that they haven't been making claims about all sorts of things. The specific claims and instructions have always been pretty focused. That some have always chosen to broaden them and infer a lot that wasn't said is unfortunate, but understandable given that earlier times didn't have the tools with which to approach the other questions.

      Isn't it weird that when people go on a search for spiritual knowledge, they almost always come back with the same answers their culture gave them? Isn't that a sign that this kind of search doesn't produce objective knowledge?

      It would be a sign if it were true. In fact, most people, even most religious people, never actually go searching at all. My experience is that the results of those who do go looking are extremely consistent. If you didn't get any, that's probably because you were looking in the wrong place, and asking the wrong questions. If you'd like to look in the right place and ask the right questions, let me know and I can help.

      I know you're trying to be nice, and to share something that's made you happy, but it's a happiness based on pleasant fantasy.

      You hope so, anyway :-)

      It's the same condecending elitism that adults have when they tell kids "You'll understand when you get older". Even if they can get it later, you're still saying "I have it and you don't" and maybe even "I got it first".

      But there is no condescension involved. Frustration is a better word. I *want* you to have it, and wish you would, and wish the same for everyone. That's definitely not any sort of elitism.

      As a parent, I should also point out that when (good) parents say "You'll understand when you get older", it's because it's also something that the parents can't explain. Dealing with my own kids, there are plenty of things that I tell them, but they don't understand. Things that I recall being told when I was young, and which I also didn't understand until many years later. Just like religion, there are many aspects of life that have to be experienced in order to be understood.

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    6. Re:No, not at all by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      Dealing with my own kids, there are plenty of things that I tell them, but they don't understand. ... Just like religion, there are many aspects of life that have to be experienced in order to be understood.

      But you and I have roughly the same amount of experience (etc), so casting yourself in the role of a parent, and me as a child, is being elitist. Keep in mind that I think everyone (including myself) has what can be called benign delusions about all sorts of things - "my wife would never cheat on me", "my boyfriend loves me and isn't just trying to get in my pants", "everything works out for the best". I just feel that in one area of life I have stumbled into a perspective where I can see things a little more clearly than others.

      Except that they haven't been making claims about all sorts of things. ... My experience is that the results of those who do go looking are extremely consistent.

      As for claims, sure they do - "prayer helps people heal", "blacks are immoral", "the earth is the center of the universe" - and almost all of the ones that can be tested were wrong. And every major disagreement has had religious teachers on both sides - crusades, slavery/abolition, abortion, democracy/monarchy, etc.

      As for the results, they are consistent, based on culture - that's why religions are mostly geographically separate, with the major exception being migration. For hundreds of years after the Crusifiction not even the most devout, open-minded Zen Master or Buddist Monk received the wisdom of Jesus dying for our sins.

      Both of these are examples of my main point - religious insight never seems any better than the secular insight around it, it hardly ever makes any unusual claims that have been verified as true, and when pushed it retreats to the shadows where we can't reach with science. All of these ideas, plus some others, have compelled me to believe that religion is based on quirks in the way people think, traditionalism and deep human desires, with a few other things to back it up. So, from my perspective, a person who is certain of the existance of God or ESP is depressingly like a person who is certain of the existance of Santa Clause or fairies. Their excuses for the lack of evidence sound the same, the strength of their commitment looks the same, and their intense emotions seem to feel the same.

      If you want to convince me that it's reasonable to believe in God, you'll have to use something that can't be just as easily explained by more mundane means. And if that seems close-minded, well, that's what the creationists, hippies, and UFO abductees tell me.

    7. Re:No, not at all by swillden · · Score: 1

      But you and I have roughly the same amount of experience (etc), so casting yourself in the role of a parent, and me as a child, is being elitist.

      That was a metaphor, not an attempt to cast you into the role of a child. Do you really consider everyone who knows something you don't an elitist?

      If you want to convince me that it's reasonable to believe in God, you'll have to use something that can't be just as easily explained by more mundane means.

      I find this comment very interesting, because I never set out to convince you of any such thing. As a matter of fact, I have repeatedly pointed out that it is *impossible* to convince you that belief in God is rational. I believe in God, for reasons that are very good to me, and am certain that if you wanted to find out about his existence, you would, but I'm also certain that he intends for there to be no way for me to provide any proof that "can't be just as easily explained by more mundane means."

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    8. Re:No, not at all by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      Do you really consider everyone who knows something you don't an elitist?

      You're still doing it! I don't have a problem with people who know more than me, just people who think they do when they might not. You're implicity stating that you know and that I don't, and that is elitist. You aren't treating me as an equal that you disagree with, you're treating me as someone who objectively lacks knowledge.

      I know I could be wrong about the supernatual, I know you might have knowledge that I don't have. But you don't seem to think it's possible that you could be mistaken. It's hard not to sound arrogant when you think that way.

      I... and am certain... I'm also certain...

      Again, what makes you sound arrogant is the fact that you're so frikkin certain that you're right. Doesn't God advocate humility? You jump from "I believe" to "I am certain" like there wasn't a vast difference between the two phrases.

      it's reasonable to believe in God

      I never set out to convince you of any such thing

      Both of us agree that (at present) noone can scientifically prove or disprove the existance of God, but that's quite different than thinking it's rational or not to believe in God. As far as I know, that's what we were discussing. You feel that you have clear evidence that God exists, while my experience tells me that that kind of evidence can't be trusted. I'm perfectly willing to leave it at that.

      I believe in God, for reasons that are very good to me, and am certain that if you wanted to find out about his existence, you would, but I'm also certain that he intends for there to be no way for me to provide any proof that "can't be just as easily explained by more mundane means."

      I do want to know about God's existance, but the kind of evidence you're offering isn't enough for me. I can't turn off my skepticism any more than you can turn off your faith.

    9. Re:No, not at all by swillden · · Score: 1

      But you don't seem to think it's possible that you could be mistaken. It's hard not to sound arrogant when you think that way.

      You're quite right that I don't think I could be mistaken. If you had experienced what I have, you wouldn't consider that a possibility either.

      I also don't think I can be mistaken when I say that a cloudless daytime sky seen from the surface of the earth appears blue. Or that mix-in programming using multiple virtual inheritance in C++ is a powerful tool for composing solutions to a variety of problems. Or... many other bits of knowledge with which I have personal experience, some more and some less easy for you to reproduce and independently experience.

      There is no arrogance there. You want to view it as arrogance because that lets you off the hook of having to seriously consider the notion that I might be right.

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    10. Re:No, not at all by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      I don't think I could be mistaken.

      Neither do most people. But John's wife really is cheating on him, Jill's friend isn't really that nice, and your God really isn't out there. (As far as I can tell.)

      You want to view it as arrogance because that lets you off the hook of having to seriously consider the notion that I might be right.

      On the contrary, I know you might be right - you're just not doing a good job of convincing me. Of course, you can't grant me the same courtesy, because you can't face the possiblity that I might be right. The idea that God isn't there is just to terrifying for you.

    11. Re:No, not at all by swillden · · Score: 1

      On the contrary, I know you might be right - you're just not doing a good job of convincing me.

      Once again, you claim I'm trying to convince you that God exists. Apparently I'm not even successful at convincing you that I'm not trying to convince you... Just in case you've forgotten, though, let me recap the course of the argument:

      1. I pointed out that the tendency of many atheistic slashdotters to come up with trivial theological conundrums and conclude that since they don't understand theology all believers in God must obviously be wrong is both arrogant and similar to the tendency of creationists to use their own lack of knowledge of evolutionary theory to prove that theory errroneous.
      2. You responded that those who believe in God are arrogant and/or delusional because they claim knowledge of something they can't prove to you.
      3. I responded that your argument that a claim of unprovable knowledge implies arrogance makes no sense and that I don't believe my experiences were delusions.
      4. You responded that I'm unsuccessful at convincing you to believe in God.

      I left a lot out, of course, and picked the main points in the flow as I saw them. I'm sure you saw different points as the important ones. I challenge you, however, to find anywhere that I have attempted to convince you that God exists. I wouldn't do that, because I know it's futile (by design). So please stop claiming that I'm trying to convince you.

      What's actually going on here is that you're trying to convince me to doubt my own knowledge and belief, and you're stymied by the fact that I have doubted it, and tried it, and been satisfied. Since you fail to convince me, you're turning the argument around and claiming that I'm failing to convince you.

      Of course, you can't grant me the same courtesy, because you can't face the possiblity that I might be right.

      I'm quite convinced that you're right that you don't know if God exists or not. Or are you now claiming that you know that God does not exist? No, because you said you know that he might. So just what are you trying to say here? What courtesy is it that you want me to grant? If you'd like me to hypothetically assume that God doesn't exist, I can do that, just as I can hypothetically assume that inertia doesn't exist. I'm a mathematician, I can assume whatever axioms you like and then proceed to draw inferences from them. I'm not, however, likely to assign any kind of non-hypothetical truth to an axiom that contradicts my experience. I can't imagine you would do that, either.

      The idea that God isn't there is just to terrifying for you.

      It is? That's news to me. I actually wouldn't be bothered by the notion that life ends with death, nor is there any other aspect of the hypothetical non-existence of God that would bother me. In some ways it would be convenient, even. However, I can't deny what I know. I don't mean to mislead: I actually find God's existence and nature to be a net positive in my life, but your allegation of terror isn't true. Are you projecting, perhaps?

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    12. Re:No, not at all by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      I challenge you, however, to find anywhere that I have attempted to convince you that God exists. So please stop claiming that I'm trying to convince you.

      You aren't trying to convince me that God exists, but you are trying to convince me that it's reasonable (not delusional) to believe in God. Right?

      No, because you said you know that he might. So just what are you trying to say here? What courtesy is it that you want me to grant?

      There could be aliens visiting the earth right now. I don't think there are, for several different reasons, but there could be - I could be reasoning poorly and I certainly don't know everything. But then there are people who are absolutly convinced that there are aliens here. What do I get when I look at their reasons?

      First, their testable evidence is non-existant - no publicly available alien beings, corpses, spaceships or technology - and the ones offered up are clearly faked or cases of mistaking normal things for alien. Second, the indirect evidence, (telepathic contact, abductions, etc) is all "fluffy", emotion-laden, and exactly the kind of thing that people are good at confabulating (subconciously tricking themselves into believing). Third, culture strongly influences the reports of aliens - they tend to look like the ones popular in the sci-fi of the place and era of the sighting.

      What are a UFO abductee and I supposed to get from each other? Well, if he's reasonable, I should be able to convince him that it's possible that his abduction experience was the result of falling asleep watching the X-Files and the power of suggestion. On the other hand, he might be able to convince me that some of his evidence isn't as untrustworthy as it first appeared.

      And that's all I'm asking of you. To admit that it's possible, however incredably unlikely it may be, that you could be mistaken.

      The idea that God isn't there is just to terrifying for you. Are you projecting, perhaps?

      You were making (somewhat insulting) assumptions about my motives, I was just replying in kind. I don't really think you're terrified, but you shouldn't think that "[I] want to view it as arrogance because that lets [me] off the hook", either.

    13. Re:No, not at all by swillden · · Score: 1

      You aren't trying to convince me that God exists, but you are trying to convince me that it's reasonable (not delusional) to believe in God. Right?

      Almost. What I'm actually trying to convince you is that it's possible that believers are not delusional. Obviously I can't convince you that believers are not delusional, because that would be the same as convincing you that God exists (or that believers who claim to have personal evidence are lying, rather than delusional).

      And that's all I'm asking of you. To admit that it's possible, however incredably unlikely it may be, that you could be mistaken.

      Well, I suppose it's possible that my apparently otherwise healty mind has had multiple severe delusional episodes, in a wide variety of circumstances -- none of them in mind-altered states -- and only relating to this particular topic. Hmm, that's actually insufficient to satisfy the requirement. I'd also have to accept the notion that my shared spiritual experiences were actually mass delusions.

      Skepticism is good, but there comes a point where skepticism becomes a different form of irrationality.

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  142. Developers! by Crouty · · Score: 1
    one of the most important fossil finds in history: a missing link between fish and land animals
    Was this fossil in the process of dancing (much like the later monkeys) or throwing chairs when it fossilized by any chance?
    --
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  143. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a question that I've never really understood the answer to: why is creationism as a belief incompatible with science (including evolution)?

    Good question to ask, grasshoper. The belief that a god created the universe is not incompatible with evolution. You'll find these beliefs commonly held in deism and the like. "Creationism", however, refers to the literal interpretation of the Bible. World in seven days, things a bit out of order, see the book of Genesis for the full details. Creationism doesn't even allow the universe enough time to exist for evolutionary processes to really get going and says man existed in the first week anyways by the direct action of God. As a result, the two are completely incompatible with each other.

  144. Re:"the" missing link? by dsci · · Score: 1

    Which physical science do you study/work in, dsci?

    Physical Chemistry, with recently a toe more in Chemical Physics.

    While you philosophical analogy is interesting, I'm not sure that it applies to biology or evolutionary theory in the same way as it would apply to physics.

    The Scientific Method is the Scientific Method, right? The point is simply that we have a set of data from which we seek to extract some meaningful insight about the world. Saying a fossil was found that has x, y or z characteristics is fair; arguing, with total certainty (one might be tempted to say arrogance) that it is a 'missing link' or transitional species and absolutely demonstrates evolution is a more of a leap of 'faith.'

    To me, the issue is, and I think this was one of Einstein's constant battles with Quantum Mechanics as another example, is there, CAN THERE be, an alternate theory, inconsistent with our current view of evolution, that equally explains all the data. I fear that unless we remain open to that possibility, and view tests of evolution as attempts to falsify it (not verify it), it has reached the level of dogma that other posters have mentioned.

    My 'problem' with evolution is not the theory itself, nor its success or current gaps. My issue is the process; have we placed this particular theory, so symbolic in the great Is There A God debate, on such a pedestal that we have lost/are losing objectivity?

    Also, I'm not aware of einstein saying that. Surely deeper knowledge leads to better understanding

    The point being made, as I understood it when I read it (I think in a biography), was that 'knowing' and 'understanding' are different. One tends to close one's mind when one 'knows.' Perhaps it is simply a semantic difference created to make the point, but I've observed it among many scientists (chemists, physicists and biologists, including myself).

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  145. gah!... by meringuoid · · Score: 1
    ... dammit, I will keep snarling up the quotes!

    I must use PREVIEW. I must use PREVIEW. I must use PREVIEW. I must use PREVIEW. I must use PREVIEW. I must use PREVIEW...

    --
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  146. Hmmm... by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    "you are in danger of putting a whole lot of philosophers out of a job..."

    There's a joke there, but I don't have it. Anyone?

    --
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    1. Re:Hmmm... by xevioso · · Score: 1

      I will assume your questions are serious and you aren't a troll. 1) Fossils are hard to find because they are hard tomake. Fossilization of a creature occurs very rarely today even when we can view it happenning...you have to have just the right type of environmental conditions in order for a creature to be preserved for a long period of time naturally. Also, remember, sediment continually gets laid down over time for menay reasons, but scientists are only looking at exposed layers, EXCEPT whent hey have reasont o think a fossil will be exactly 6 feet down at exactly this spot. This type of occurrence is rare. We will be finding fossils for a very long time to come. 2) Scientists say we are genetically close, not close in appearance. And no, the dumbest human is NOT more advanced than the smartest ape. I've met many people that are dumber than the smartest ape. Evolution is not a crock of shit. It's science. Go read a book.

    2. Re:Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Print is dead, go grow a brain. Here's a whopper of a follow-up for you, smart ass: if fossils are so rare, then why are we basing all these theories and predictions on them? Don't give me this "it's all we have" bullshit. If it's all we have, maybe we shouldn't be so sure of our assumptions then, hmm?

      But you still haven't answered my original question... Millions of years is an extremely long time--shouldn't fossils be less rare? Even if we assume 10 for each year over a million years, there should be at least 10 million fossils...maybe...it's...because...science...is... ...WRONG?!?!?

      Science is the only industry I can think of that is allowed to be wrong forever and gross inaccuracies can be corrected without any sort of penalty. I'm sick of it. Scientists (and weathermen) should be held accountable for their mistakes. If you're going to change the way we think about things regularly then I'm going to take your explanations with a grain of salt. I know it constantly changes, but it's never presented that way--global cooling is gonna happen, wait, no global warming is going to kill us all, no wait, beware of eggs, eggs are bad for you, well, okay eggs are actually good for you, seriously, just trust me on this, I'm a scientist... I don't know why most sheeple believe so many things without question.

  147. The most important discovery since sliced bread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Finally, the ultimate question in science has been answered: where is the missing link between fish and fish fingers

  148. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by GR1NCH · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When the Bible says that 'death' began with the original sin, I believe it is more accurate to not take death literally. Throughout the Bible 'life' and 'death' refer not to life and death here on Earth, but what happens to us in the hereafter. Hence Christ frequently discusses how through him we can achieve eternal life. He's not talking about living a mortal life forever, but that we will live forever in heaven with our Creator. Death on the other hand would be eternal seperation from our Creator, or eternal pain below. I believe mortal death existed before original sin, it was this spiritual death that Adam brought to us, and it was Jesus Christ that created a means for us to be redeemed of this death and live forever. This interpretation obviously is in keeping with evolution and old earth theory, and furthermore I think it makes more sense based on the teachings of Christ.

  149. Re: Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by GR1NCH · · Score: 1, Informative
    Yes, but one side has facts and a theory, whereas the other has a well-funded propaganda machine and a lot of self-appointed spiritual advisors telling the ignorant masses that they'll be tortured for all eternity if they let the facts affect their conclusions.
    This is a very misguided retort. Many people like to deny the historical accuracy of the Bible. I will grant that some of the Bible takes faith, but the majority of it is just a report of history. More importantly however, I think you need to realize that there is no science in the Bible. The Bible has and never will claim to be a scientific accounting, only a historical one. A historian would no sooner dismiss the Bible than you would dismiss the fossil record.
  150. Re:"the" missing link? by bloodredsun · · Score: 1

    Mine is Physiology, mainly Neuro-Physiology and Epileptology.

    Scientific Method is the Scientific Method, yes. We have a set of data from which we create a model but scientific progress comes from more data being obtained, it is not a case of examining a single watch and then declaring this area of science 'known'. We then compared our model to this new information to see whether it predicts this data or if this data breaks our model. If it does break it, then we need a new theory, however if it supports our model then our underlying theory can be regarded as being "stronger". This obviously does not equate to "more true" but "more certain that it is true".

    Saying a fossil was found that has x, y or z characteristics is fair; arguing, with total certainty (one might be tempted to say arrogance) that it is a 'missing link' or transitional species and absolutely demonstrates evolution is a more of a leap of 'faith.'

    Absolutely, but this is not just "a fossil". This is "yet another fossil". Numerous transition species have been found, and in each case their features matched the features predicted by evolution. This is only being reported as more newsworthy as it's a transitional species showing the transition from water dwelling to land dwelling animals, i.e. when animals first came on land. Other equally valid transition species would be pachycetis and ambulocetis which show the transition of large land based quadrapeds to sea based animals, in this case whales, but no farfare was attached to these as it's not as "sexy". And this is not including such things as molecular genetics that have increased the certainty in evolution (A new science, unthought of in Darwins day, that demonstrates the relationship between species in a manner predicted by evolution, how does that not prove it beyond reasonable doubt?).

    My 'problem' with evolution is not the theory itself, nor its success or current gaps. My issue is the process; have we placed this particular theory, so symbolic in the great Is There A God debate, on such a pedestal that we have lost/are losing objectivity?

    I understand what you are saying, that peoples views of evolution are polarised beyond the science due to the religous implications. Saying that you have a problem with the process of evolution is a little disingenous. I don't know of any evolutionary theorists who don't look at evolution as a product of the scientific method, gradualism and puntuated evolution theories highlighting this. What I do see are religous zealots lying (stating known falsehoods) in an attempt to preserve their world order by saying that evolution is wrong, not by scientific proof but by spin, hype and other machinations as shown by the Dover school trials. To a lesser extent, there are also atheists using evolution as prove that God does not exist.

    One of the frustrations with evolution is that despite there being no evidence against this theory and mountains of evidence supporting it (unlike lamarkism or ID), people will still refuse to believe it due to their 'faith'. I do not claim that evolution explains everything but it gets to a point where you realise that you are banging your head against a brick wall of prejudice.

    One tends to close one's mind when one 'knows.'

    Correct. We tend to disbelieve things that go against our inner beliefs. To a certain extent this is essential as it prevents us from credulously believing everything we are told, but I get your warning that long established theories should not be confused with dogma.

  151. Jumping ??? by AnonGeek · · Score: 1

    Lets not jump to too many conclusions here! One stupid fossil and the worlds belief system is supposed to be forever changed? Here is the image (in Jap but you get the idea) http://www.chosun.com/economy/news/200604/20060406 0131.html Lets face it, ID was a nice try but its a joke even to creationist. Look here for some more scientific evidence. http://www.answersingenesis.org/

    1. Re:Jumping ??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not one stupid fossil. It's one more fossil in addition to thousands upon thousands of other fossils.

      Scientific evidence. At a site called Answers in Genesis. Riiggghht.

  152. Muppet. by Farrside · · Score: 1

    That thing looks like one of those one-use Muppets from a musical number.

  153. Absence of Pictures by raygundan · · Score: 1

    Is it just me, or does this happen a lot? Clearly, this is an article that would be greatly improved by a picture of the thing in question. Not even a thumbnail. Ridiculous! If I was elected Supreme Chancellor of Teh Intarwebs, I would mandate high-resolution images for all news articles concerning things that it would be easy to take a picture of.

    This one isn't the worst I've seen, though-- the worst are articles *about pictures* that don't include the picture in question. Frequently, they don't even make it up to the 1000-word level that is proverbially regarded as equivalent to a picture.

    Note to reporters: if you write about a legged fish fossil, include a picture of the damn thing! How else am I supposed to get it made into some sort of bumper magnet?

  154. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by intheory · · Score: 1

    Hmm, well stated GR1NCH. I don't know that I agree, but you have presented a good thought. Thanks!

  155. missing link: chicken & egg by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    2. Why did the sea creatures decide to go on land?

    To get to the other side?

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  156. Re:"the" missing link? by dsci · · Score: 1

    it is not a case of examining a single watch and then declaring this area of science 'known'.

    We can consider the watch to be the entire body of scientific empirical data.

    Saying that you have a problem with the process of evolution is a little disingenous.

    Ooops. My bad. I did not mean the process of evolution, but the scientific process with which it is studied.

    --
    Computational Chemistry products and services.
  157. Let's address your own ignorance, shall we? by SilentReproach · · Score: 1

    Your assertion that intelligent design comes only from the ignorant is just that, an assertion. It never ceases to amaze me how a proponent of evolution can sound exactly as ignorant as they fantasize their detractors to be. One of my favorite archived stories about the growing number of educated and PhD.'d who subscribe to the notion of intelligent design:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2002/04/14/books/review/14H OLTLT.html?ex=1144468800&en=7edd724c54c5cc80&ei=50 70

    So, have another drink, while the rest of us continue reading our books.

    --
    Religion is the opium of the people. Evolution is the opium of scientists.
    1. Re:Let's address your own ignorance, shall we? by Some+Bitch · · Score: 1
      One of my favorite archived stories about the growing number of educated and PhD.'d who subscribe to the notion of intelligent design:

      All those PhDs, you will of course have noted that not one of them is a biologist.

    2. Re:Let's address your own ignorance, shall we? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be silly, where would our colleges be today without the practice of having Theology professors teach the BIO classes, Philosophy professors teaching CHEM, and the generous contributions of the Comp. Lit. professors in the PHYS track?

      Any why is my anti-bot check the word "vibrator"? Sounds like a lawsuit!

    3. Re:Let's address your own ignorance, shall we? by SilentReproach · · Score: 1

      All those PhDs, you will of course have noted that not one of them is a biologist.

      How many biologists would you like me to list? Will a molecular biologist suffice? Here's one:

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,542 150,00.html

      --
      Religion is the opium of the people. Evolution is the opium of scientists.
    4. Re:Let's address your own ignorance, shall we? by runderwo · · Score: 2, Funny

      Quite funny that the only reference that your struggle unearthed, while admittedly a Christian, is actually an ID critic

    5. Re:Let's address your own ignorance, shall we? by NialScorva · · Score: 2, Funny
      Did you read what you linked to?

      [...]evolution is an excellent theory to explain the origins of biological diversity, but it has little or no religious significance - it can be placed equally well within an atheistic or theistic context.


      Doesn't seem to me like this guy supports Intelligent Design, he's just giving his spin on Gould's Non-Overlapping Magisteria of Science and Religion.
    6. Re:Let's address your own ignorance, shall we? by kmcrober · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are, in fact, entirely ignorant of the issue. I am not surprised; Intelligent Design was created with the intention of deceiving people, and it is very successful. The vaunted list you're pimping suffers from two critical flaws. The first is that it is overwhelmingly made up of lay persons with no special training in biology, as another commenter made clear.

      Second, and more importantly, the list's statement is an expression of just the sort of ignorance that is characteristic of creationists. Any scientist could honestly sign the statement, because "it is well known that random mutation and natural selection are not the only mechanisms contributing to the complexity of life; other mechanisms such as genetic drift and symbiosis are important, too." Most scientists won't sign it, however, because they understand that it is a political tool used to attack objective science and support the suppression of scientific education. The DI list is a carefully constructed tool for deceiving laypeople, intended to create the false impression that there is a legitimate debate over the reality of evolution in scientific circles. There is not, and your belief that there is betrays colossol ignorance on your part.

      (Incidentally, the list is also dwarfed by "Project Steve," a list of professional scientists who support objective science and evolution, but only accepts signatories named "Steven" or "Stephanie" in honor of Steven J. Gould. When the DI's list is a little over half the size of JUST the scientists named Steve who understand and support objective science, it shows how poorly they are viewed by professionals.)

      In short, your criticism betrays just the sort of ignorance you don't want me pointing out in creationists generally. The problem is that it's not just a rhetorical claim; creationism really is dependent on ignorance. The list is a good example--it seems like a valid argument only as long as you don't know what you're talking about. Please do read up on the subject, but remember that you cannot get accurate information from creationists; the success of their theories depends on the suppression of information, not the dissemination of it.

    7. Re:Let's address your own ignorance, shall we? by plunge · · Score: 1

      This is false: some of them are biologists. That's irrelevant, of course, given the other problems with the statement, but it's worth not going too far and making false statements.

    8. Re:Let's address your own ignorance, shall we? by plunge · · Score: 1

      Creationists have been declaring that there are a "growing number" of doubters or biologists or what have you challenging evolution since the 1800s. That doesn't make it true. If anything, the numbe rhas declined over time.

    9. Re:Let's address your own ignorance, shall we? by manifoldronin · · Score: 1

      You realize this does not suffice to support your initial claim about "the growing number of educated and PhD.'d who subscribe to the notion of intelligent design", do you?

      --
      Tyranny isn't the worst enemy of a democracy. Cynicism is.
  158. Re:Queue (no it's cue) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, he could mean the verb form of queue, as in "Line them up!", but yes, traditionally it's cue as in a sound cue or mic cue.

  159. Be careful of definitions by TubeSteak · · Score: 1
    If you think "what caused the big bang" is such a brilliant question to prove the existance of a god, try this one: what created god?
    You're assuming that God is like anything else...

    He isn't. By definition, the Judeo-Christian-Muslim God just IS.
    If you think that everything must have been created, then you can't believe in a god that wasn't created. If, on the other hand, you believe that god can get away without being created, then how can you believe that the big bang can't?
    Because God != the big bang.
    God does not "get away without being created".
    Again, by definition, God was not created, he Is/Was/Always will be.

    When you're debating these issue, you have to make sure you're using the same definitions for specific words. Otherwise, you end up with asshats stating that a "scientific theory is just a theory".

    Your post is only semi-insightful, because it makes the same type of flawed argument that creationists and IDers do.

    The difference between the big bang and God, is that we hope someday to figure out what caused the big bang, religion already has a ready answer to "what created God", so they don't need to search any further.
    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:Be careful of definitions by x2A · · Score: 1

      "You're assuming that God is like anything else"

      The assumtion's all yours I'm afraid. The common view of the universe is exactly as you say for "God" - it was not created, nor will it be destroyed, it simply is. Therefore the big bang was not meant to be the creation of the universe, it's mearly what lies at one end of it.

      "The difference between the big bang and God, is that we hope someday to figure out what caused the big bang"

      Another flawed assumption there dude - it is believed that the big bang occured right at the tip of time - nothing created it, because there was nothing before it to create it, because there was no time for there to be a before it.

      God, however, IS created, in the minds of delusional men, and exists not outside of them.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    2. Re:Be careful of definitions by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      God, however, IS created, in the minds of delusional men, and exists not outside of them.

      I kinda like the "Stargate" theory of religion: most of the "gods" throughout history were actually real, but were really aliens masquerading as gods so they could use humans as slave labor or hosts for their parasitic forms.

      It would explain a lot. Primitive humans would be easily convinced of a person's god-status by simple technological tricks. The Bible itself has several passages, especially in Ezekiel, describing what sounds much like a spaceship.

    3. Re:Be careful of definitions by x2A · · Score: 1

      Or Vorlons ;-)

      Showing my age here, but many "gods" when I was young were things that are in fact very real, but just weren't understood, such as volcano's, the weather system, earthquakes, the sun and the moon (yeah I'm joking about the "when I was young" thing).

      Occasionally people still don't (or won't) recognise perfectly valid answers behind things.

      "In August 1951 (only 50 years ago), 'Pont St. Esprit' a small town in France, was struck by ergot poisoning, following a local bakery selling rye bread contaminated with ergot. Four people died, and a large number suffered 'possession' or 'bewitchment'. The bakery was actually believed to be possessed by the Devil and was exorcised by the local bishop" [http://www.hulford.co.uk/ergot.html] - for those not in the know, Ergot contains a precursor to LSD, this combined with blood vessel constriction, causes people to often hallucinate things like things crawling under their skin etc. When this has happened in the past, people (such as christians) would blame it on some random woman as being a witch, and a hanging/burning/drowning would entail.

      This is all that's going on here. These people will die out, unfortunately as they keep teaching others this crap, it will take a little longer than it needs to. Then the human race will finally be able to move forwards.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    4. Re:Be careful of definitions by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yep. Even aliens visiting from other planets (maybe for nefarious purposes) makes a lot more sense than this crap about gods, "miracles", etc. Didn't some of the European explorers try to pass themselves off as gods or something when they first met the Native Americans and wanted all their gold?

      I also find it interesting how all the major religions were started thousands of years ago, before any real technology was invented. And the ones that are newer, such as Mormonism and Scientology, have very questionable origins.

    5. Re:Be careful of definitions by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      Your post is only semi-insightful, because it makes the same type of flawed argument that creationists and IDers do.

      I thought that was the point. When one asks "What happened before the big bang?" one implys that there was a time before it when there wasn't, and since the other party can't answer the question in the framework provided, one can claim victory. The question "Where did God come from?" is a simlar question.

      The grandparent post made that point without a long, tedious explanation, like the one I've written.

  160. Re:Open mouth, insert *your* foot by Jugalator · · Score: 1

    Where did the first matter come from?

    If you're requesting an abiogenesis viewpoint, I think the Miller-Urey experiment is an interesting experiment made to replicate these circumstances on an early Earth and its present basic components, and they actually made some quite surprising discoveries.

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  161. Re:Open mouth, insert *your* foot by JetJaguar · · Score: 1

    It's vain of you to claim that you know how I think. In fact, you don't know me, or my thoughts. Lumping me in with the stereotype in your head of thoughtless religious nuts is really pretty small minded of you as well.

    Strike one. Your ad hominem response is typical. I'm not like those other ID/creationist proponents, how dare you lump me in with them. When you use the same logic and and misdirection as the usuall ID proponents, you are thinking just like the crowd. Further, by promoting a non-scientific claim promoted by a movement with a poor understanding of the nature of both science and religion, you are doing a disservice to both science and your religious beliefs.

    Where did the first matter come from?

    Strike two. Another typical reponse is to attempt to redirect the argument when things get sticky. Where did the first matter come from indeed. If you really knew any physics you'd know that this is a pretty rediculous question. Why not just ask what caused the big bang? At least then you would be asking a question that science hasn't answered to any satisfaction.

    We're not mindless religious zealots. We have the same evidence you have, and have differing theories about the activities behind the evidence. You don't have to like it, but it's pretty thoughtless of you to generalize our worldview as the province of morons or the deluded.

    Strike three. You're out. And finally the inferiority complex comes in. I didn't call you a mindless religious zealot. I said ID/creationism is an idiotic idea pushed by people that misunderstand both science and religion. That does not mean you are a mindless religious zealot. It doesn't even mean that you're stupid. Ignorant perhaps, but not stupid. I happen to think that William Dembski is a pretty bright guy. He's wrong on several levels, and I question his motivations, but he's not stupid.

    --

    Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

  162. Actually, evolution doesn't predict this..... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Ambulocetus was predicted by evolution

    Evolution doesn't predict this. Saying it does is a common mistake. Prediction involves things that haven't happened. The fact that creatures are on dry land and the assumption that life began in the sea (which I am not arguing against) requires some transition to get from water to land. Working backwards from what is observed today, creatures on dry land to what is believed about the past is what requires this required transitional creature (or missing link). Evolution doesn't predict it, it requires it.

    A creationist, which I am not, having a different origination belief, would not need to have the ambulocetus exist. The fact that abulocetus did exist is just one more creature that existed and is now extinct.

    Again, to restate my point, evolution doesn't predict a creature like ambulocetus, it requires it.

    1. Re:Actually, evolution doesn't predict this..... by shawb · · Score: 1

      The prediction part wasn't so much that we would find some creature that fits the age, the situation is more like this. Evolutionists realized this creature must have existed in order to get from water to land. The prediction comes in that, before we actually found the fossil, we had a good idea of what the fossil would look like, what type of stone it would be found in, what age it would be, etc etc etc. The predictions we had about the fossil helped us to find it. While evolution requires the fossil to exist, evolutionary science predicted where to find it.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    2. Re:Actually, evolution doesn't predict this..... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Actually, that is the point I was trying to make. Because evolution is an observed science (much like the expanding universe), by working backwards, we ultimately have to get from land creatures to earlier sea creatures, which requires, at some point a transitional creature (several of them, actually). That is what I meant when I said that evolution requires it.

      The fact that this fossil was found where it was expected to be and looked like it was hypothesized to look are very interesting, but not predictions in the sense the word was being used in the original post. Predictions imply probability and the possiblity for error. Those existed in the sense that the fossil might not have been found in the layer they thought or might not have had the features expected, but to say that evolution predicted such a creature is not true. Evolution, at least as we know it, required such a creature to exist, there is no room for chance. If it is possible that such a creature never existed, then there is just as much possibility that there is another explanation as to how creatures ended up on land (and the ID people might just be right).

      Whether we would ever find the fossil was in the realm of probability, whether such a creature ever existed wasn't.

    3. Re:Actually, evolution doesn't predict this..... by plunge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Prediction involves things that haven't happened."

      And the discovery of ambulocetus had not yet happened. Then, after it was not only predicted, but genetic studies purported to tell us where to look for it, we found it. What is that, if not predictive power?

      It both predicts AND requires it. They are of a kind.

    4. Re:Actually, evolution doesn't predict this..... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, prediction involves probabilities. To say that evolution predicts that a creature such as ambulocetus existed would imply that there is a probability that it did not exist. If a there is a possibility that such a transitional sea to land creature did not exist, no matter how remote that possibility, then evolution is just a hypothetical and there could be any number of other competing theories as to how we got here. That plays directly into the ID people's hands.

      However, evolution didn't predict anything. Evolution required ambulocetus or some other transitional creature(s) to exist to get from the sea to land. There is no room for probability or anything else. Now, some scientists may have predicted where to find a fossil of said creature based on extrapolating data backwards, but the theory of evolution itself has nothing to do with that. The probability of the scientist actually finding the fossil where they looked was extremely small, for a large number of reasons (none of which preclude the existance of ambulocetus, only the fossilization of ambulocetus and preservation of ambulocetus).

      We have to be careful about language we use. If the theory of evolution is a fact and not just any old theory as creationists and IDs want us to believe, then we have to use fact based language (nobody says driving 60mph predicts you will cover 100 miles in 100 minutes -- driving 60mph means that you will cover 100 miles in 100 minutes). The theory of evolution requires that a transitional creature existed and now scientists have found proof of such creature is much more accurate than stating it predicted such a creature (which implies that we are still testing the hypothesis of evolution).

  163. Re: Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by runderwo · · Score: 1

    Yes, that's great, it's a historical account of people telling the ignorant masses that they'll be tortured for all eternity if they let the facts affect their conclusions. I don't understand how being recorded in a book brings their claims any closer to truth?

  164. Atheism is self defeating. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An atheist believes that there is no God. The only way to know that is to have "perfect knowledge" or be God.

    1. Re:Atheism is self defeating. by x2A · · Score: 1

      You could say the same for santa clause and the easter bunny.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
  165. Re:Well then...Ok, slowly then by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    "Then you must answer the question how there can be an event when there is no time."

    No, I don't. Time did not exist until the big bang occurred. The big bang and the beginning of time happened simultaneously. There is no "before" the big bang.

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
  166. Not technology by OakDragon · · Score: 1
    meanwhile millions of people on this planet are still dying of things like diarrhea.

    That's not a technological issue. It's geo-political, socio-economic, but not technological.

    1. Re:Not technology by binarybum · · Score: 1

      maybe yes, maybe no. One of the greatest advances technology can make these days is in making things cheaper, easier, and quicker. If technology allowed for more affordable diagnosis and treatment of diseases I believe we would see less of them. I agree that for many simple diseases diagnosis and treatment could be fairly well executed on a nearly global scale if geo-political, and ethnic obstructions did not exist. However, take something like AIDS where the cost of an effective multi-drug treatment for and individual exceeds the net worth of entire African villages. Sure, some of that is drug company politics, but better technology could certainly make a big difference.

          Nevertheless, my point was just that technology is not likely a panacea for the woes of humanity, largely due to the factors like those you mentioned.

      --
      ôó
  167. Fsckin' HTML... by meringuoid · · Score: 1

    "without implicitly assuming that there exist values of T 0"

    should of course have read

    "without implicitly assuming that there exist values of T < 0."

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  168. Re:"the" missing link? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    It's called "Carbon dating". Carbon dating is usually accurate to within a few hundred years. Hell, with a timeframe in the hundreds of millions of years, it'd only have to be accurate to a few tens of thousands of years to be useful.

    Carbon dating is not used for time periods in excess of 50,000 years. When dating rocks surrounding fossils to determine the approximate age of the fossils, multiple radiometric dating methods are used.

  169. No, your "facts" are all nonsense. by Homestar+Breadmaker · · Score: 1

    "Evolution theory" is a science. Constantly repeating the same old rehashed "theories aren't scientific" nonsense is absurd.

    "It assumes that the half-life of C-14 remains constant"

    Yes it does. It makes this assumption based on massive amounts of hard evidence. The half life of EVERY radioactive isotope remains constant. We observed it over and over again with all sorts of different radioactive elements, with all sorts of different half lives. For the half life of carbon 14 to have changed, physics as we understand it must be seriously wrong.

    "It assumes the amount of carbon that was in the bones in the first place."

    No it doesn't. Its based on the amount of carbon 14 vs the amount of carbon 12. We know exactly how much carbon is there, cause we measure it. Its assuming the amount of carbon 14 vs carbon 12 is consistent. And there's mountains of evidence to support that.

  170. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Soothh · · Score: 0, Troll

    If you believe in creationism, you believe in a creator, and 1 big miracle.
    If you believe in evolution, you believe in millions of miracles.

    Which one is easier to believe? Its obvious.

    I also will say i recently saw the people from answersingenesis.org, and heard what they had to say.
    I highly recommend anyone, no matter your beliefs, take a look. They have many good points,
    especially when they talk about the distance of stars, how long it takes the light to reach us.

    The time it takes for some star light to reach earth may be thought to be millions or more of light years,
    many of them are also farther than the "4.6 billion" years mark that evolutionits use.. by alot.

    Id also like to point out, the bible does in fact say, that some people (like evolutionists that reject the word of God)
    are actually blinded from being able to understand or "see the light" so to speak.

    my 2 cents.

    P.S. The fosil layer can be replicated in a VERY short amount of time, think about it, the bones if they were sitting in the open air
    for even thousands of years, not packed in by dirt, would probably not fosilize. Remember grade school science class, a jar of junk and dirt and water, to see how the layers land... that took 5 minutes.

    --
    We have seen that living things are too improbable and too beautifully "designed" to have come into existence by chance.
  171. Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've always wondered if these supposed ancient fossils are so old (millions of years) and some survive those millions of years that we find today...how come there's so few...? Shouldn't there be a lot more fossils in the course of millions of years if we're to believe that even one can survive?

    If we're so close to monkeys then how come it doesn't appear that way in reality? The dumbest human is far and away more advanced than the most intelligent ape. Why isn't there truly a species closer to humanity?--not just patterns, bone structure, and all that, but actual intelligence?

    Evolution is a crock of shit, sorry. Right up there with "global warming." It's all politics, man. Call me crazy but it always seems like science is trying really hard to prove evolution and is becoming more and more desperate, asserting even more assumptions than what proponents of ID want you believe. If evolution is so correct than why does science seem so afraid of any other explanation? Humans STILL can't accurately predict weather and we're supposed to believe that they can predict anything over a million years ago? Please, save this nonsense for science fiction.

    The Hunter
    #8,3,13,21

  172. New Tactic by Scientists by xevioso · · Score: 1

    One thing I found interesting about the NYTimes article was the out-and out blunt way in which the paleontologists involved said that this answers specific challenges from Creationists. In the past, even though this would still be seen in scientific journals as a "transitional" species, the cultural relevance to the battle between science and creationism would never get mentioned, or even explored.

    So my theory is, after the recent battles between the two ways of thinking in the educational world, and after Eugenie Scott's seminars at the recent scientist convention (I can't remember the name of the organization) wherein she basically said that scientists need to play hardball and come right out and oppose creationism in a very public fashion, I wonder if these paleontologists were doing just that when they mentioned this creature as a transitional form.

    There are lots of other transitional creatures out there; (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_transitional _fossils) prosynosychus is one that I saw when I took a tourist trip to Cambridge a few years ago. The fact that scientists are bluntly calling this a transitional fossil is almost as interesting as the fossil itself.

  173. Why not the back legs? by 123abc · · Score: 1

    Every fossil 'link' always makes sense from a functionality perspective.

    For instance, why don't we find fossils of creatures with developed hind legs and not front legs? One would think some of these failures would be found. (or can only workable configurations get fossilized)

    Obviously a mudskipper wouldn't work very well will rear fins/legs... and this creature probably wouldn't either.

  174. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by eheldreth · · Score: 1

    I would disagree; there is nothing inconsistent between the theory of evolution, a biblical view of creation, and observed reality. There is however incompatibility between abiogenesis and creation. The theory of evolution does not assume either kind of creation as it's basis, instead it is simply a model for the way living things change to survive in there environment. I personally believe in a young earth (10,000-20,000 years), I also believe that evolution occurs all the time. There is no inconsistency here, I believe God created life and gave it the marvelous ability to survive. I do not believe that man arose from ape or that mammals came from the sea, but there is nothing in the theory of evolution that would compel me to. Now if you where to say that creationism is incompatible with a naturalistic view of the world I would agree, however you are using an old bait and switch tactic to farther your argument. You are using abiogenesis as it is applied with the theory of evolution to argue against a creator God. Abiogenesis is no more a testable theory than creation. Even if we could create life from nothing in a lab that only shows it is possible it no more proves that life formed from non-life than it does that an intelligent being could create life.

    --
    The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum. - O'Toole's Corollary
  175. Why did they go on land? by Descalzo · · Score: 1

    To get new habitat, of course. Let's say there were plants up there already, then the first animal to make it would become enormously successful.

    --
    I cried real tears when Li Mu Bai died.
  176. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    I would disagree; there is nothing inconsistent between the theory of evolution, a biblical view of creation, and observed reality.

    On the contrary. There is ample evidence to suggest that humans have not existed contemporaneously with all life that has existed. Physical evidence suggests that humans are a relatively recent emergence of biological life on this planet.

    There is however incompatibility between abiogenesis and creation.

    I did not reference abiogenesis.

    The theory of evolution does not assume either kind of creation as it's basis, instead it is simply a model for the way living things change to survive in there environment.

    This is correct. Evolution begins at the time that the first imperfect replicators exist. The theory then explains how those first replicators became the ancestors of all diverse life on earth.

    I personally believe in a young earth (10,000-20,000 years),

    This age is not supported by physical evidence.

    I also believe that evolution occurs all the time.

    This statement is supported by physical evidence.

    There is no inconsistency here,

    There is no inconsistency between stating that the earth is 10,000 years old and that evolution occurs. However, there is an inconsistency between physical evidence for the age of the earth and claiming that the earth is 10,000 years of age.

    I believe God created life and gave it the marvelous ability to survive.

    This claim is not falsifiable, and addresses a scope beyond the realm of scientific inquiry, and thus is not scientific. It may be true, however it is incompatable with science.

    I do not believe that man arose from ape or that mammals came from the sea, but there is nothing in the theory of evolution that would compel me to.

    It appears that you are unaware of the evidence and information within the theory of evolution.

    Now if you where to say that creationism is incompatible with a naturalistic view of the world I would agree, however you are using an old bait and switch tactic to farther your argument.

    I am not. I am stating that young-earth creationism is inconsistent with observed reality.

    You are using abiogenesis as it is applied with the theory of evolution to argue against a creator God.

    I am not. I do not apply abiogenesis to the theory of evolution, because abiogenesis does not apply to the theory of evolution. I also have not denied the existence of a creator God. I do not understand how you have drawn such conclusions from my statements.

    Abiogenesis is no more a testable theory than creation.

    Abiogenesis is a hypothesis. It has not yet risen to the level of theory. "Creation", as is commonly used, can never be a theory because it involves claims that are fundamentally unscientific.

    Even if we could create life from nothing in a lab that only shows it is possible it no more proves that life formed from non-life than it does that an intelligent being could create life.

    I have never claimed that humans creating life from "nothing" would qualify as proof of abiogenesis. In fact, I do not believe that life from "nothing" is possible, as that would violate the law of conservation of matter and energy. I did not reference the origin of the first life forms at all, so I am puzzled as to why you frame your argument around it. I merely stated that special creation as described in Genesis is inconsistent with observed reality. I said nothing regarding the existence of any creator deities, nor did I say anything regarding the ultimate origin of the first life forms.

  177. Hitler Youth? by orangecheetos · · Score: 0

    It's so heartwarming to see the new Hitler Youth here on /. Just because a theory is worshiped and 'believed' to be true doesn't mean it is no matter how many professors pound their propagandist doctrine into your heads. You young 'scientists' are nicely bound to your religious beliefs: evolution is true and we will prove it! It's funny watching you flail around professing an unproven theory to the extent that you begin to see fact where there is none. Some might call what you practice 'faith'. Interesting, because I thought you agnostic evolutionists were against faith and grounded in fact. Very interesting indeed. But, no matter what you say, do, shout, believe, etc., EVOLUTION IS A THEORY. A hypothesis. Nothing more. Maybe some of you need to get back to basics... maybe check out a dictionary and look up the words 'hypothesis' and 'theory'. FACT: plants and animals 'adapt' over time, perhaps developing different appendages, a difference in height, skin color, etc. UTTERLY FALSE: plants and animals evolve/change into different species.

  178. Same old discussion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is it that every topic discussed on this site can quickly devolve into the same old argument of creationism vs. intelligent design, and all of you willingly jump into the discussion, but as soon as there is a duped article, all of you want to be the first one to cry about it? In either case, you end up discussing the same thing, right?

  179. living is harder than dying, fyi by cold+wolf · · Score: 1
    Instead, we could nuke the surface of every continent by noon tomorrow, but meanwhile millions of people on this planet are still dying of things like diarrhea.
    Dying is a hellova lot easier than living. To kill is simple--hit rock on head. To live is complex--get around that buffalo's defenses in order to attain food, or just find editable plants, and of course we always have to figure out how to survive all the attacks from other hungry animals, diseases, and the elements (among other things).

    Our environment demands constant change for it itself is constantly changing. As already mentioned, there is no "missing link" for we are always in a "transitional" phase. More accurately, we (organisms) are always adapting to the new environment. There isn't a final organism, just a species that fits extremely well with all the others. Which begs the question: we don't seem to be playing nice with our planet or anything else on it... does that mean we're inferior to other species?
  180. Re:"the" missing link? by mantar · · Score: 1

    I hope you're not asking about my educational background so you can jest at my ignorance... and if so, I hope you're sorely disappointed :-) I'll probably not get a response back to this post since I'm a day late, but here goes anyway:

    I'm a software engineer. I spent 5 years in college before graduating (never transfer to another school your senior year :-). 2 years of which were in physics. I have a strong scientific background... but I admit, not in biology. I love science, but my true interests are in human behavior.

    Why do I believe what I believe? First of all, I prefer a purely agnostic approach to the use of science to create theories, and later prove their validity. Science should start with observation, and not a conclusion. Secondly, my previous statement may be in error... I'm not too proud to admit that :-) BUT, I draw conclusions about topics such as these from the belief that evolution (the macro flavor) is either completely incorrect, mostly incorrect, or at the very least, rooted in poor execution of the scientific method. I'll name two examples for this. BTW, whether they like to admit it or not, EVERYONE else draws conclusions from some basic "worldview"... there is no such thing as an unbiased person. Indoctrination usually occurs at a young age. :-)

    -EXAMPLE 1-
    When I sit down to write a piece of software, I work within a structured framework to solve a problem. Part of that process is understanding the framework and the set of rules that govern how the end product will work. Our wonderful universe is similar. There are a set of rules that govern the physical inner workings of the universe... and the biological processes as well. This "Biological Rule Set" (in this context, we are talking about evolution) is a subset of the "Physical Rule Set" (we would call this physics).

    There is an obvious relationship here... evolution as a subset of physics cannot break the laws of physics. Take thermodynamics, for instance. On a macro scale, we understand that the universe tends towards disorder, rather than order. A cute little example of this: My brakes started going out on my truck last week (of course it had to happen when my car was in the shop). If the car salesman who sold me the truck 10 years ago had made a statement like: "You'll never need to replace this truck! It defies the laws of physics and it is constantly tending towards order, and evolving into a better truck!". We would certainly consider this man foolish, and out of touch with reality. I consider an evolutionist to be just as silly. Why then is evolution still a prevalent theory in science? Because someone early on decided that since we can't witness the process in our short-spanned lives (again, I'm talking about macro-evolution), it must take a really long time. A few others didn't like this idea, and decided that changes occur rapidly, but in spurts... punctuated equilibrium was born. But the problem still remains: How is it that lower ordered creatures could evolve to higher ordered creatures, when doing so breaks a fundamental law of physics?

    -EXAMPLE 2-
    Since my real interests lie in human behavior, I try to also examine the historical and cultural context and what kind of impact they had on the topic. When evolution was conceived, it flew at the face of established religion. Those early pioneers of evolution were confronted with two problems: actually finding evidence to support evolution, and bearing any persecution sent their way from the established belief systems at the time. When virtually no supporting evidence was found... and Darwin's classical view of evolution was seen as dying due to a lack of evidence in the fossil record (a constraint placed on the theory by Darwin himself), the evolutionary theory turned to politics for its salvation. Roe v. Wade was a turning point for evolution... they slapped an "Approved by Science" sticker on the theory, and the courts

    --
    # man tar
  181. It's obvious by CptPicard · · Score: 1

    As we all know that the Bible is an unerring account of Creation, it is obvious to all believers that this fossil is yet another ploy by Satan to delude the so-called "scientists" who are blinded by logic and the scientific method. It's unbelievable to what lengths these "scientists" will go to accommodate these unholy scams into their imaginary, contrived model of "evolution" while it's all given in the Bible, plainly told for all who are just willing to open their eyes and believe...

    --
    I want to play Free Market with a drowning Libertarian.
    1. Re:It's obvious by chawly · · Score: 1

      It's obvious if you like; I noticed this bit

      "yet another ploy by Satan to delude ......"
      and wondered. In fact I'm still wondering; I thought that "ploys to delude" was a patent held by an American fellow called Bush. Does Satan know that he is guilty of patent infringement ? Unless, of course, you subscribe to the interesting theory put about by another world renowned twit - O.B.Laden, to give him his name - to wit, that G.W.Bush and Satan are one and the same ! Please notice that this theory is the responsibility of the originator and nothing to do with me.

      Myself, I favour the idea that we should call a twit a twit and not a bloody shovel - to misquote an expression from many years ago.

      --
      How many beans make five, anyhow ? ... Charles Walmsley
  182. Problem with theory of evolution by scarolan · · Score: 1
    Darwin's theory of evolution does not conform to the accepted scientific method of discovery. The scientific method consists of four steps:

    1. Observation
    2. Hypothesis
    3. Prediction
    4. Testing

    Let us see how well Darwin's theory of evolution holds up to the scientific method.

    Observation: Darwin's theory of evolution will never be proven with the traditional scientific method, because it can't even meet the first qualification of this method, namely observation. We have no way to actually OBSERVE the actual process of evolution that takes billions of years to occur. At best we might speculate based upon micro-evolution of one species into a slightly different one, but human lifespan and history are far too short to do any real observation of the actual phenomena.

    Things are already not looking so good for Mr. Darwin's theory, but for the sake of argument let's move on to step 2.

    Hypothesis - Darwin's hypothesis was that variations in genetic distribution would cause some members of a species to be better adapted to survive than others, allowing those members to pass on the useful genetic traits to future generations. Eventually this process of natural selection is supposed to create brand a new species. Ok, we can move on to step 3.

    Prediction - The submitted article has some element of prediction, eg, here's where we thought the fish with legs would be located, and how old it would be, etc. But this finding tells us nothing about FUTURE evolution, which is required for us to do step 4. So to meet the qualifications of step 3, someone needs to predict how, when, and under what specific conditions one species is going to evolve into another species.

    Testing - Here's where the whole theory completely falls apart. Because of the inability to do step 1, eg, actually observing one species turn into a completely different one over millions of years, there's no way to even test the hypothesis!

    Flame me all you want, but Darwin's theory of evolution is NOT a proper scientific theory, because it doesn't conform to the scientific method. It's unfortunate that it's presented as a factual proven theory by our schools and universities.

    1. Re:Problem with theory of evolution by plunge · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sigh. No.

      You don't understand the method. Observation is observation of some fact or state of affairs that we want to explain. In evolution, those facts are things like the fossil record, the diversity of life on earth, and the very particular character of that life. "Observation" is not a requirement that we see things with out eyeballs, or even the part where we draw conclusions. It's the set of circumstances that we are trying to explain. That's why it comes first. It's TESTING where we find out if the explanation was correct or not.

      And that's where you go wrong again. Testing in evolution is testing any given piece of evidence to see if it confirms or disconfirms the theory. If you don't think evolutionary biologists run tests or use evidence to confirm or disconfirm their claims, then you don't know anything about the field.

      IF evolution is true, then all other sorts of things MUST be true. Are they true, or not? We test, and find out. We gather evidence and compare it to those theoretical requirements. Does it hold up? Yes, it does: in fact it holds up in spectacular and exacting detail.

      If what you were saying were true, then forensic science wouldn't be science either. But, unfortunately for your post, it is science. I don't think you're liable to find any textbook on the scientific method that would actually support what you are saying.

    2. Re:Problem with theory of evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, speciation does not require millions of years, and we have seen it happen. Here's links to a few references.

      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.htm l
      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/speciation.html
      http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CB/CB910.html
      http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyP ages/S/Speciation.html

      I'd also recommend reading the book "The Beak of the Finch", which is a lot more interesting that it sounds. A team of biologists tracked the entire finch population of one of the Galapagos Islands and watched it evolve from one extreme of the group of species of Darwin's finches to the other and back again.

  183. More info by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey everyone, here is some more info. They offer some rational explanations as opposed to the rather irrational news media of today!! AiG

  184. All they have really found is... by Soothh · · Score: 1

    All they have actually found is a fish that is another example of a lobe-finned fish (one of which still lives today--the coelacanth) that has bones similar in position to those seen in the arm and wrist of land-walking creatures--except these structures support fins with rays in them, not digits like fingers and toes.

    --
    We have seen that living things are too improbable and too beautifully "designed" to have come into existence by chance.
    1. Re:All they have really found is... by kronocide · · Score: 1

      Wow. You should email Edward Daeschler of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia and explain to him that he is being silly, and that if he had just read up on some different kinds of fishies he would know that this is nothing remarkable.

  185. You do know yo' mama is a missing link? by geekotourist · · Score: 1
    As I commented in one of many earlier discussions on evolution:

    'First, a background question: you know that a transitional species- a missing link- will itself be a species? Because "species" are actual lifeforms, everything else is just a clade- a grouping. So if you have a an animal species that becomes another species, the transitional form can't be anything but a species.

    'Also, you know that evolution is nothing but changes in allele frequency in a population over time, so at no point, with either modern scientists or Darwin himself, was anyone ever expecting to see a transitional form that wasn't itself a functioning, living species? Its not like the transitionals are going to be half-melted blobs melting from human into porcupines, like some frozen outtake from Species the movie.'

    'If you're talking about genetic missing links, that's really, really easy to find. For example, chimps and humans don't have the same number of chromosomes- we have one less- but funny how human chromosome 2 is almost identical to chimp chromosomes 2p and 2q. We even have broken bits of telemorase right in the middle of 2, exactly what you'd expect if 2p and 2q had fused together. All primates have to eat vitamin C, we can't produce it ourselves, unlike all other mammals except guinea pigs. One prediction scientists made (see the excellent and reference-rich essay 29 Evidences for Macroevolution for the details) was that we'd eventually find that primates have a broken vitamin C gene. Funny how they recently found that exact gene, the identical broken bit shared by all primates (The gene also has further 'chips and scratches,' where the additional broken bits correlate highly with the type of primate. Guinea pigs also have a broken gene, but in a completely different place. The designer sure spent a lot of time on making broken genes correlate with morphological similarities. You'd think the designer could be a lot more creative in being a plagarist, no?)

    So, going back to the post title, here's an analogy: given the existence of you and your brother, then both your mom OR your mom's siblings act as a missing link. They have traits common to both you and your brother. Given the existence of you and your cousin, then your grandmother OR your great aunts and uncles could act as a missing link. They don't have to be direct ancestors to be a link. They don't have to be dead to be a link- just older.

    Given the existence of modern chimps (brain size 400cc) and humans (brain size 1200 cc), science expected to find hominids with traits similar to both. (Here the 'relatives' analogy doesn't quite work, because chimps live where fossilization is rare. Be like one side of you family always cremates their dead.) So far we have 20 main hominids. Look at the set of skulls science has. They're all fairly human, and they're all fairly ape-like, and they all are distinct species. Each is slightly different from its neighbor, but very different from a few neighbors down. No, the earliest ones could not be confused for modern humans, no matter how much you shaved and suited them up. (And for kicks, you still have some morphological leftover traits-- take a look at your teeth, and notice the giant roots for your tiny little canines. Note how earlier humans used to have much larger canines.)"

    1. Re:You do know yo' mama is a missing link? by somersault · · Score: 1

      heh that link doesnt work btw. Also it can be seen that humans, while still saying humans, have changed bone structure over time, in fact if you breed smaller people with other smaller people you're gonna end up with smaller descendants - was just wondering how anomalies like dwarfs would be explained by archeologists, for example if a fossil of one was found, would they be counted as a different species? And how much variation is there in bone structure in different human races today? I can believe that our species change, though I can also believe that God created all of those species, maybe even created monkeys to demonstrate the difference between us and other creatures that are similar, but just so different because of our brains. Since I've not read any anti-evolutionary reasoning for a while, then everything people say here sounds reasonable, but while it can be observed that species change due to natural selection - and they actually change quite rapidly, not needing the millions of years that people always fall back on to explain how species develop new traits. To me, relying on millions of years of time and chance, rather than having to properly explain how a trait is developed from one species to another, is as much of a copout as just saying that God made all creatures. I can even see why some people would think God set the world in motion and designed everything to evolve from the ground up, but still, I basically just dont believe that, from my experience in life. I dont think I have 'blind faith' though, or I wouldnt even want to discuss evolution in case it turns out to oppose my views of the bible.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    2. Re:You do know yo' mama is a missing link? by geekotourist · · Score: 1
      Here's the 29 Evidences for Macroevolution link. If you read it, you'll have seen some of the best arguments for evolution. What do you think?

      For the 20 hominids links I gave, they in turn give you names and links to additional articles.

      Check out the side views of the skulls- those aren't just people with changed bone structure, unless you're saying that chimps are people. Of course they all are individual species- that's the definition of species. But how would you classify them- human or chimp?

      For modern Homo sapiens, there is very little difference in bone structure, and genetically we are all almost identical. You'll find more genetic diversity in *one* troop of chimps than in the *entire* human race.

      What do you say to the genetic missing links we have? Human chromosome 2 looks just like chimp chromosomes 2p and 2q fused together. For example, the ends of chromosomes have telomeres- end caps. In human chromosome 2 you can see- literally, you can download the data- that there are broken remnants of telomeres in the middle of the chromosome. To visualize

      Chimps' 2 chromosomes: Start-A-B-C-D-E-Stop Start-Q-R-S-T-U-Stop

      Humans' chromosome 2: Start-A-B-C-D-E-Stuptart-Q-R-S-T-U-Stop

      Where the letters represent identical or nearly identical genes.

      Even if we had no fossils in the world, that the genetic data of the 20th century corroborates the physiological data from several earlier centuries is evidence for evolution.

    3. Re:You do know yo' mama is a missing link? by somersault · · Score: 1

      Someone else pointed that out also, maybe they were talking about a different gene at the same time, but I thought that they said that was a gene to do with vitamin C (either that or both chimps and humans have a 'broken' vitamin C gene, and I thought it was kind of funny that in genesis we are given fruit trees etc, eg we get our vitamin C from external sources). I dont see why God can't re-use the same gene patterns, since he's working within a given set of rules, that I'd say he made, to do with genes, then if he wants to have us eat fruit, have fingers, etc, presumably we have to have similar gene patterns, just as any creature with eyes, nose, mouth, ears would have similar gene patterns. How come you use the similarity of the genes to try and disprove that there's a creator, when, if you look at other species, a lot of them have eyes, nose, mouth, ears, in a similar arrangement to us. You can use a lot of arguments either by saying that we have developed these by adapting to our environment, or just say that we were created that way to fit in our environment.

      For the 29 evidences, well I dont see any problem with having different species, or even species changing over time (but still being sexually compatible with their ancestors). Our bone structures have changed over the last few hundred years, though I would have attributed that to what we eat etc, but it can also be genetic too. It is obvious that we as a species adapt to our environment, for example darker skin for people that live in places with more sun. Maybe as result of that then macroevolution could be possible, but I think changes happen much faster than macroevolutionists think, and that they don't generally involve speciating. In the evidences you have given, some things have 'speciated', but basically I dont even know what that implies as far as religion goes, since the bible doesn't deny evolution, but neither does it talk about it, instead saying that God created everything. That could mean that he had us evolve, but I think there are still too many unknowns and unproven things in evolution, which probably can't even be proven anyway, eg how single celled organisms could grow to have reproductive organs, hearts, etc. Evolution is naturally a kind of wooly concept, that if you give enough time and mutations/natural selection, then these things will develop. For some reason people think it's even more wooly to suggest that God could have just designed these things, but if it's true, then how is it any worse an answer? It maybe takes some of the mystery away, but there are plenty of other things in the world that are still unknown.

      Basically I believe we can adapt, but I still believe in God, and I'm sure in my lifetime there will be either some things which show some obstacle that evolution cannot surpass, or that people may make a bit more of a concise argument than 29 thesis about how bacteria can speciate (though that's one of the things that I think is helpful for examining rapid changes, since they reproduce quickly).

      --
      which is totally what she said
    4. Re:You do know yo' mama is a missing link? by geekotourist · · Score: 1
      Check the 29 evidences essay for the section on Vitamin C. It isn't that all primates share the same gene for Vitamin C- we all share a broken gene. And its not that some primates have one type of broken gene and others another- the gene is broken in the same place.

      Guinea pigs also have no ability to make vitamin C, but they have lost a completely different gene (not lost as in gone: lost as in broken). The question isn't "why would a Designer reuse good, working genes?" its "why would a Designer replicate broken, nonfunctional genes?"

      Once a gene is broken, it is no longer maintained, so it gets additional changes in random places. Those breaks correspond with other markers of close relationships between primates. For example, humans and chimps have nearly identical "additional changes."

      i.e. all primates share an obvious breaking point- an error that makes the gene fail to work entirely. Other errors have accumulated, and the pattern of those errors correlates with the type of primate. Humans and chimps have very similar errors. The errors in humans and chimps are somewhat like the errors in old world monkeys, and the errors of H C and OWM are fairly similar compared to either of New World monkeys or lemurs. In other words, the errors *nest.* For example:
      Working: Start-M-A-K-E-V-I-T-A-M-I-N-C-Stop
      Broken1: StarrrM-A-K-E-V-I-T-A-M-I-N-C-Stop
      Lemurs1: StarrrM-X-X-E-V-I-T-A-M-I-N-C-Stop
      OldWld1: StarrrM-X-X-E-V-I-T-A-M-X-X-C-Stop
      NewWld1: StarrrM-X-Y-E-V-I-T-A-X-Z-X-C-Stop
      Chimps1: StarrrM-X-X-X-V-I-T-A-M-X-X-C-Stop
      Humans1: StarrrM-X-X-X-V-I-T-A-M-X-X-D-Stop

      This is not what you'd expect a designer to use: this is what you'd see in plagarism, or in blind copying. Think about how a professor checks for students copying each other: the prof checks for identical errors, not identical correct answers. OR think about how a map-maker checks for copying: the original map will have a few tiny deliberate errors. If the same error pops up in a different company's map, then you know it was copied.

    5. Re:You do know yo' mama is a missing link? by somersault · · Score: 1

      Well the fact that these 'errors' contribute to differences in us, and aren't just there, not making an effect, how can you truly call them 'broken' or even errors? Using evolutionary reasoning, wouldnt you say that since we can get vitamin C from fruit, that that is why the gene is 'broken' in the first place, so it's not really broken, just un-needed, yet it still plays a factor in our makeup.. it isnt like something that's broken completely and gets thrown out.

      --
      which is totally what she said
  186. Re:Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by mjeffers · · Score: 1

    The fosil layer can be replicated in a VERY short amount of time, think about it, the bones if they were sitting in the open air for even thousands of years, not packed in by dirt, would probably not fosilize. Remember grade school science class, a jar of junk and dirt and water, to see how the layers land... that took 5 minutes.

    What the hell kind of fucked up ideas about God do you have to have to think that God would put all this proof into the world that disproves the story in the bible? Can't you just accept that it might have been an allegory (or did Solomon's wife had teeth made out of sheep and a fortified tower for a neck)?

  187. ID != catholic by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1
    Oh yea, it is also mostly the newborns and catholics that cite the 6000 year stuff.

    I'm a catholic and I spent 4 years at a catholic boarding school where I was taught mostly by priests. I think that the IDers who believe that the bible trumps evolution completely misusnderstand the purpose and the style of Genesis, and I got a lot of that belief from the priests that taught me.

    Even the vatican has denounced ID as misguided.

    That having been said, I don't believe that the validity of evolution and the existence of a god are at odds with each other. They're really disjoint questions. Answering yes to one doesn't require answering yes or no to the other.
    _____

    AFAICT, the heart of ID is that the 'proof' of evolutionary theory is nothing more than a godly prank on the scientific community, and the reason why there are (or rather, aren't) "missing links" is that the all-seeing, all-knowing God somehow 'forgot' to create some of the missing intermediate links in the palentelogical record.

    They seem to further believe that 'we're right' is sufficient scientific cause to throw out a couple of centuries of accumulated proof and refinement.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  188. Evolution doesn't dead end for me! by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1
    Damn, am I sick of this fallacy.

    Anyone can go to a sperm bank and get some money in exchange for their precious bodily fluids. It's how I paid for CS books in college. There's probably a billion little copies of me running around somewhere, since I was tall, smart, and a college student.

    Actually, that random link I found has a kinda cute picture of a duck looking down his pants. Heh. He looks sad!

    --
    Man, you really need that seminar!
  189. Re: Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 1

    "Seriously, if you want to keep the debate on a rigorous level..."

    See, that's the problem. To the people like the GP (and myself, FWIW) there is no debate. To take a mundane analogy, it would be like sitting around the dinner table following a good meal, full and satisfied with lots of dirty plates still sitting around, when someone says "So I'd like to debate whether or not we just ate."

    The idea you could debate such an "obvious" conclusion is ridiculous. Likewise, to myself and many others, the idea you could even begin to debate whether or not evelution is responsible for the complexity of life is absurd.

    -Trillian

  190. Bride of Science and Proof by kronocide · · Score: 1

    Oh yea, verily I say unto you--it sure seems people are unlearning a lot about science these days. So, one more time for the record:

    Claiming that a scientific theory is weak because it has not been proven is like claiming that Peter Forsberg is a poor athlete because he didn't make a single homerun last season. Wrong game. Science deals in evidence, which makes a theory more or less likely. Biological evolution has a lot of evidence, non of which proves it, but enough to make it very, very likely. Similarly, the theory of gravity (you know, the theory that stuff falls down) has lots of evidence, but not enough to prove that it's true. Nor did Charles Darwin make a single homerun last season.

    Bonus redundant explanation: the end product of science is theory, not fact. Facts are things observed in nature, that may constitute evidence to corroborate or refute a theory. (For the logically inclined, facts tend to be existentially quantified, theories universally quantified.) Theories are what scientists produce and work with, and they never stop being theories to become facts, just like baseballs don't become hockey pucks. They just become more or less likely. Evolution through random mutations and natural selection is more.

  191. Typical Mistake by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

    When discussing evolution (or Apple, etc) you're supposed to turn humor OFF at the beginning of your post. Hope this helps!

    --
    Man, you really need that seminar!
  192. Re: Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by swillden · · Score: 1

    See, that's the problem. To the people like the GP (and myself, FWIW) there is no debate.

    I agree that there's no real debate between creationism and evolution. But if you want to be the side that espouses rigor and accuracy, pointless namecalling just hurts your own cause.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  193. Re:I found him too! OMG... by davidsyes · · Score: 1

    OMG... I was joking. But, in this joke, the Cave Man just happens to have fallen into someone's uncovered, unfenced swimming pool. Then, his harried/hairy ass drowns next to the pool filtration extension.

    Course, if he was leaning or listing up against the poolside, he'd be the Lis'ing Mink instead of the Missing Link...

    Curious, though... I wonder if a DA would sue the pool owner for letting or facilitating the cave man's gene pool die in the swimming pool. (I'm assuming a reconstituted caveman would have SOME kind of rights, or, would he have been multi-grandfathered to get these rights we (supposedly) have today...)

    image word... "octane"

    (pool-preserved bar-b-qued cave man, anyone? Cave man Jerky, anyone? (Add that to the list of Alien Jerky sold in Nevado near/past Bakersfield))

    (No, I don't really have a "beef" with missing links...I usually leave'm at the store cuz they cost too much to bring home that bacon...)

    --
    Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
  194. Re:"the" missing link? by bloodredsun · · Score: 1

    I ask about your educational background as your comments puzzled me. You write as an obviously intelligent person (yes, I'm complimenting you) who is strangely uneducated in evolutionary theory (yes I'm insulting you, but hopefully only a little!).

    Your belief in the agnosticism of the scientific method is one that I wholeheartedly agree with. Science should be based on observations not preconceived conclusions with the data then being shaped to fit. I believe that you are also correct in that all people, scientists and priests alike, have their own worldviews and bias. That is the beauty and strength of the scientific method, it doesn't care what you think. As long as you follow this method, your results will be unbiased and the facts will be there for all to see. How people interpret these facts in another matter entirely.

    Hopefully I will be able to deal with your 2 examples.

    The first one is a classic piece of misdirection that people are often taught in religous cultures: that evolution breaks the second law of thermodynamics. The second law of thermodymics states that a closed system will tend towards entropy/disorder. The world we live in is not a closed system (one where the amount of energy is static) but open (where energy enters into the system from outside). In our case it is the sun that provides more than enough energy to combat any tendency towards increased entropy. This can be seen by the fact that nearly all life relies either directly (photosynthesis) or indirectly (consuming plant matter or animals that eat plant matter) on energy derived from the sun. The few that don't are those life-forms around hydrothermal vents which derive their energy from the heat at these vents. To use your analogy, this would be the equivalent of getting a solar powered mechanic for your truck, who replaces worn parts with better ones, thus giving you a better truck!

    This is how lower ordered creatures could evolve to higher ordered creatures, they do so with the energy provided by the sun.

    You second point deals with a couple of issues: supporting evidence for evolution and the politicisation of evolution.

    Supporting evidence for evolution was fairly sketchy at this time. The shape of finches beaks is not a resounding confirmation of a theory but it was the start. You say that virtually no supporting evidence was found and this was probably true in the middle to late 1800's. But what is important is that what evidence there was supported evolution and that as more evidence was found it all agreed with the predictions of this theory. You also mention the contraints of the fossil record. It is fairly obvious that evolution could be shown to be false by the fossil record, and I'm not talking something as extreme as finding the skeleton of a homo sapien in the belly of a T. Rex but even something as subtle as an intermediate species showing traits that neither it's descendents or antecedents possess. Fortunately for evolution, the fossil record is congruent with the predictions of evolutionary theory to the extent that this new fossil species was predicted to have the anatomical features that it did and live in the location it was found in. The current state of the fossil record shows overwhelming support for evolution.

    The second part, the politicisation of evolution I will admit to not being too knowledgable on. Not being american I cannot tell you the true significance of abortion to evolution, but I cannot understand you when you go from the 1850's to 1970's in half a sentence and then say that "evolution was seen as dying due to a lack of evidence in the fossil record". You miss things such as the Scopes monkey trial where evolution was argued to be correct.

    The true politicisation of evolution has come from the religious right who's world view is threatened by it's undermining of one of it's central tenets, creationism. I disagree that evolution has no place in schools. It is a scientific theory and as such should be taught in science classes. Science shou

  195. Thanks for using your brain by anomaly · · Score: 1

    I can't explain how much I respect the fact that you use a tone of derision while failing to address any of the meaningful components of my response. It's admirable how much you demonstrated the capabilities of your intellect.

    Want to score some points? Drop the ridiculous attitude, and start conversing like an adult. I brought up some points that are *not* misdirection, ad hominem, or "inferiority-complex" related and you ignore those. Thanks for your ad hominem attack against me personally, and against people like me, though.

    Hind-quarters of a large rodent, indeed.

    I appreciate that you can respect Dembski's intellect. For what it's worth, Gould was brilliant - although his worldview affected his science to the point of making his intellect lack productivity. He was, simply, wrong.

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Thanks for using your brain by JetJaguar · · Score: 1

      You don't understand. I don't need to score any points against you. This isn't a debate. The points you bring up have been answered by others. Repeatedly. And you don't have to look very hard to find the responses. I'm not going to waste my time trying to educate you, when I'm fairly certain that you are fully capable of doing that yourself. I'm just trying to goad you into doing so.

      --

      Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

  196. Who needs facts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evolutionists should be forced to not use facts,
    as there are no facts supporting the Talking Snake Theory of Intelligent Designers...

  197. Re: Queue the "Creationists are idiots!" posts by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

    If being in a book makes something true, than most Christians are in deep, deep doo-doo. Hint: "the Da Vinci Code". :D

    --
    Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  198. Missin link..ya mean dey found ole george bush by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ya mean they found ole George Bush's great grandparents?

  199. Re:"the" missing link? by dsci · · Score: 1

    but the scientific process with which it is studied.

    Or rather, discussed. Ooops again.

    --
    Computational Chemistry products and services.
  200. Willing slaves. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Q: Why does the need of "god" to be worshiped have any bearing on whether or not this "god" exists? It's really irrelavant to the central question of whether a super powerful being created most/all of what we know of the universe and humans.

    A: The motivation of the "god" creature is important, first just for believablity, but if you actually believe, it is important to know if worshipping the creature is beneficial to your existence.

    If you are a slave, and an you think an invisible master owns you and wants you to do things. Whether or not you should believe that the owner exists and has good intentions is directly relevent to you. Your options are:
    1. Invisible slave owner exists and has good intentions.
      1a. You could try to follow what you thing the invisible slave owner wants.
      1b. You could decide there is not enough evidence of the invisible slave owner. The slave owner wont hold it against you, because he purposely hides himself, and being fair, decides you descision is reasonable.
    2. Invisible slave owner has bad intentions.
      2a. perhaps worshipping and obeying helps get along, or perhaps not.
      2b. Try to "escape"
      2c. You decide not to believe in the bad invisible slave owner, because doing so evidently and logically would not do anything.
    3. Invisible slave owner does not exist, because 1 and 2 are silly.

  201. See?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No less than the same day, what story is on the front page of this very site:


    Sun Research Yields Unexpected Results
    Posted by CowboyNeal on Thursday April 06, @07:20PM
    from the fact-and-theory dept.
    Space Science
    Syberghost writes "There are two major theories about the composition of the Sun. One says that it has similar composition to the planets. The other, that it has enriched levels of oxygen-16. NASA has been doing research on the soil samples Neil Armstrong brought back from the moon, to determine which of those theories is correct. Today, we have the results; they're both wrong. It looks like we're going to have to look more closely at the composition of everything in the solar system to figure this one out."


    And in this particular case, they actually have samples!!! I fucking said it and I'll say it again, science knows nothing. Don't listen to them, don't believe what they say, do your own research and ignore these liberal bastards. They are WRONG time and time again. Go with God.

  202. Good read for the uninformed by MrGrey1 · · Score: 1

    To anyone who has wondered why or how we know what we know through science and also anyone who loves 'blowing their mind' on really cool facts and figures I have to recommend "A Short History of Nearly Everything" by Bill Bryson. Many of the questions asked above are well and truly answered in this wonderful book especially in relation to our knowledge of the fossil record and the incredible improbabilitys of an organisim ever actually becoming a fossil.

  203. Re:Well then...Ok, slowly then by tgv · · Score: 1

    Exactly. So how did the change occur if there was no time?

  204. Archaeopteryx by Olftep · · Score: 1

    The Archaeopteryx bridged nothing. It's been proven to have been a real bird and not just a midpoint of evolution.

  205. Knowledge by QMO · · Score: 1

    Giving you the benefit of the doubt, by supposing that wasn't just a Troll post:

    There are some things that you say in your post that suggest that you don't really know much about religion.

    1- "Religion provides a great numbing effect"
    If you make a good study of the effects of religion on the lives of many adherents I think you would quickly clear up for yourself the misconception that "numbing" is a universal effect of religion truth.

    2- "It's easier to just give in to religion"
    Having "given in" to a religion, and feeling pressures all around me to not live as I believe, I would have to disagree with you there. I can't think of any person that I know (from any religion) that feels like religion is the easy way out.

    3- "All this killing in the name of religion is nuts."
    The fact that I, and everybody I know (especially the strongly religious) agree with that statement, suggests that you've missed the point somewhere.

    The trouble is that there are some religions that have exactly the effects that you've described. If you're looking for reasons to discount religion, you can definitely find enough bad examples. If, on the other hand, you're not trying to fit data to a pre-conception of what religion is, it is very easy to see that there are religions that are valuable to humanity.

    --
    Exam 4/C again. Maybe I'll do better this time.
  206. Re:It's not a missing link, No one has seen it by Thinker85 · · Score: 1

    You all sound like a bunch of buffoons. None of you have even seen it. I was able to see a drawing but that is it. The article I read said "Researchers found several fossils between four and nine feet long. The creature was a fish -- with scales, fins and gills -- but it moved its head independently of its body, could drag itself along on land as today's seals do, and may have walked, although the research team did not find fossil hindquarters to test that hypothesis." Where is are the lungs? More hopeful (faith?)banter about nothing. Maybe you can find another old monkey tooth and draw up another caveman(see Piltdown man and Ramapithecus). Maybe you should drop the agenda and really look at the facts. You have been looking at fossils for years and still have the same old tired "theory." First of all, how did what ever was there before "Big Bang" get there? What was it? Second, the principal steps en route to the origin of life as envisioned by evolutinary theory, are (1) the existence of the right primitive atmosphere and (2) a concentration in the oceans of an organic soup of "simple" milecules necessary for life. (3) From these some proteins and nucleotides (complex chemical compounds)that (4) combine and acquire a membrane, and thereafter (5) they develop a genetic code and start making copies of themeselves. NONE OF WHICH HAVE BEEN PROVEN. The chance of life forming apart from a creator on this rock is 1/10 followed by 113 more zeros. Any thing over 1/10 followed by 50 zeros is considered never to have happend. Getting the correct left handed 20 amino acids to line up and form a protein, considering there are over 100 some are right handed and some are left handed, is ridiculous. If somehow the amino acids did reach the organic soup the idea of polymerization is contrary to what takes place in that environment. More than likely a depolymerization would have taken place, breaking them up. If some how they survived this volatile envirenment either the oxygen in the atmosphere or if no atmosphere at this point, harsh ultraviolet radiation would have destroyed them. So before you go (again) adding this unseen, unstudied, artists rendition to my family tree the basic begining needs to be solved. Evolutions can't even get us to the first and oldest fossil let alone "bridge", "transition" or any other term you may use, to any creature. The uneducated, bible thumping, cretins know the beginning and it makes perfect sense. See Genesis chapter 1, its all in there.