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Study Explains Evolution's Molecular Advance

pnewhook writes "The New York Times is reporting that 'by reconstructing ancient genes from long-extinct animals, scientists have for the first time demonstrated the step-by-step progression of how evolution created a new piece of molecular machinery by reusing and modifying existing parts. The researchers say the findings, published today in the journal Science, offer a counterargument to doubters of evolution who question how a progression of small changes could produce the intricate mechanisms found in living cells.'"

477 comments

  1. Matter of time by Transcendent · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It was only a matter of time before scientists discovered the steps and had enough knowledge to connect the dots.

    Frankly, I'm glad they're finding more and more of how biology works. I don't want to get into a creationist debate, but it has always astounded me that people would argue that life is too complex for it to have been made "naturally" and that a higher being must have helped along the way. But, by saying that, they're saying that God is not powerful enough to create such a universe in which evolution can happen, that a universe created by God could not possibly work by itself.

    How dare they...

    1. Re:Matter of time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dibs on Rex, T.

    2. Re:Matter of time by garyr_h · · Score: 1

      Yeah, creationists don't think God is powerful enough to think out such a thing. Why do they want it to be more simple than it is? God, Allah, etc. etc. is more complicated than just waving his finger and saying 'Oh, there ya go little humans...'

      --
      http://chickencamels.poemofquotes.com/
    3. Re:Matter of time by dsanfte · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's also immensely disrespectful to our ancestors of well over a million years' span, to deny their existence because it just might, maybe rock the boat a little.

      How many thousands of generations of people lived and died over the millennia so that we might be where we are today? And some would deny their very existence. Shame on you!

      --
      occultae nullus est respectus musicae - originally a Greek proverb
    4. Re:Matter of time by shawb · · Score: 5, Interesting

      To be fair, evolution does not disprove of A god...

      But it does kinda reduce the likelihood that there is a PERSONAL god who is intimately concerned with all of our activities, and so is a reason to behave in a moral way and more importantly, to then worship that god and tithe to the church who claims to be the bridge between man and god.

      (Note, I was not saying that atheists are not moral with the "is a reason to behave..." line, but for some people the existance of a personal god is one of the reasons to behave in a moral manner.)

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    5. Re:Matter of time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, I see the historical record has challenged your faith, and won.

    6. Re:Matter of time by hitmark · · Score: 1, Insightful

      and those basicly need a parent figure that they can look at with their puppy eyes and go "sorry, we didnt know that it was wrong"...

      allso, if god is personal, why do one need a church to act as a bridge? are "we" not all directly linked? ah, theology, creating debate for over 2000 years...

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    7. Re:Matter of time by plunge · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not at all. I'm an atheist, but I welcome imaginative, honest theist thinkers like biologist Kenneth Miller who feel that, if anything, evolution BETTER fits this theology than the reverse. A universe in which God allows to develop on its own, and then reaches out PERSONALLY to sentient creatures (and even performs miracles as part of this reaching out) is far more "free" than one in which God is constantly micro-managing.

      Now, I don't believe in God, but I bear no grudges against those who do, and as long as a belief doesn't involve scientific claims or attacking good science with falsehoods, but I applaud those who are taking their beliefs forward and refining them to make them more honest rather than simply defending dogma. If there were a God, the only kind I can possibly imagine would reward the former, not the latter.

    8. Re:Matter of time by Absentminded-Artist · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You can't make blanket condemning statements like that then declare you don't want to get into a debate.

      I don't think it's a question of lack of faith as you suggest. You have one side of the issue where a faith based person is bombarded with facts, statements, or just assertions that evolution occurred. On the other side you have a faith based person with a personal conviction that there is a God. How does he justify the two? In my observation, there are varied ways they do it. One is to declare evolution is flat out wrong without argument. Another is to point out evolution's flaws (something evolutionists get very testy about, btw. They don't like their faith questioned anymore than religious people do) Still another is to concede some evolution occurred and suggest that God guided evolution. The important thing to realize here is that Creationists are a loud bunch, but they don't speak for all Christians. For example, some suggest the 7 days in question were actually epochs of time of indeterminate length "like unto" 1000 years each.

      Frankly, it's not as if Genesis is like Make magazine with a creation How To. It's more like the Cliff Notes version. There's honestly not enough data to say HOW God did anything. Faith based people just believe that he did. They base that faith on their experiences with the Holy Spirit. If you can't relate to this experience then I can't help you. Often in matters concerning evolution and religion, one simply doesn't have much to do with the other and thus the conflict.

      Personally, I tend to support the Slartibartfast theory. All those fake fossil layers took a lot of work...they'd need longer than 7 days.

      --
      The Splintered Mind - Overcoming
    9. Re:Matter of time by geeber · · Score: 5, Interesting

      To be fair, evolution does not disprove of A god...

      But it does kinda reduce the likelihood that there is a PERSONAL god who is intimately concerned with all of our activities, and so is a reason to behave in a moral way and more importantly, to then worship that god and tithe to the church who claims to be the bridge between man and god.


      Personally, I feel like events such as hurricane Katrina, the tsunami in the indian ocean, and September 11th offer a much stronger proof of the lack of a personal god.

      Interestingly, other people look at the same events and come to the exact opposite conclusion.

      Wierd, no?

    10. Re:Matter of time by fferreres · · Score: 1

      It's designed to "naturally" evolve to what we are. God is powerful enough to create a universe in which evolution can happen...as designed. I don't have a problem with that.

      We'll need to figure most ALL the steps (especially the difficult, rare ones), and the probability that everything happened by change...and then believing things just happen (God by change) or believing that there's some highly improbable that happened (God, not chance) will still depend on a matter of chance. We'll never be able to conclude "this side was right".

      I tend to believe in that there's something strange, and have no problem believing there's something else than 100% chance evolution.

      Nobody is contradicting the other size really. There are still plenty of people that believe in destiny, although they don't believe in any kind of god. That's also strange. Intelligent design in some ways is the same, believe what you want :-)

      As long as the religious don't try to impose a way specific of living and moral on other (religious or not) I think things will be fine.

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    11. Re:Matter of time by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Another is to point out evolution's flaws (something evolutionists get very testy about, btw. They don't like their faith questioned anymore than religious people do)

      This is simply not true. Evolutionary biologists find flaws in existing theories of evolution fairly often, and the theories are adjusted accordingly over time. This is simply how all science, including biology, works; there is no crisis of faith as you claim.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    12. Re:Matter of time by Woldry · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But it does kinda reduce the likelihood that there is a PERSONAL god who is intimately concerned with all of our activities

      Why?

      What if the myriad quantum fluctuations that we observe as "random" are, every single one of them, directed by just such a god? What could be more "intimately concerned with all of our activities" than directing every single subatomic event?

      "Random" is a description, not an explanation. What if the statistical probabilities that we observe that say that particle X will deteriorate with Y frequency are subtle indicators of a divine plan? What if the exact moment of deterioration of said particle is not in fact random, as quantum physics describes it, but precisely chosen with some consequence millennia hence in mind?

      Or suppose that the apparent randomness is eventually demonstrated to be wholly explainable by strict and invariably deterministic law. What if the entire universe is wholly deterministic, without requiring the intervention moment-by-moment of any deity -- but it's that way because the deity set it up to be so, knowing full well exactly how every event, from quarks to quasars, would play itself out?

      Speaking as a Christian who fully acknowledges that evolution by natural selection fits all the available evidence, I heartily applaud every elucidation of the evidence and every logically sustainable proposal to bolster the theory.

      However, the likelihood that God is intimately concerned with our lives is a question completely independent of science, and cannot be considered to have been demonstrated to be more or less likely, no matter what science discovers.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    13. Re:Matter of time by plunge · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Another is to point out evolution's flaws (something evolutionists get very testy about, btw. They don't like their faith questioned anymore than religious people do)"

      It's easy to make this accusation, but intellectually lazy.

      I'd say that scientists spend more time picking apart each others flaws and mistakes than in almost any other realm of life. What they get testy about is people who haven't bothered to actually study the debates, who know next to nothing about the subjects they are talking about, spreading falsehoods or gross misrepresentations of science. Worse, even when these ideas are debunked or even admitted as wrong by the people making them, they then still get brought up over and over again to new audiences. How many times have you heard the "evolution can't add new information" or "if we evolved from apes, how come there are still apes" nonsense? If people seemed determined to spread lies and falsehoods about me personally, I'd certainly get "testy." But not because anyone was questioning my "faith."

      So I think your accusation is in very poor form.

    14. Re:Matter of time by Absentminded-Artist · · Score: 0

      Ah, a blanket statement of my own I missed before posting. I should have stated "some evolutionists" - especially the kind you find in public forums. However, this slight mistake doesn't mean my statement isn't true, just overgeneralized without the quantifier.

      Perhaps I was unaware of how many "Evolutionary Biologists" participated in slashdot free-for-alls. I've been too busy noticing all the snide comments, mockery, and insults tossed in the direction of anybody who might believe in (snigger, gufaw) a Deity that populate any slashdot discussion involving Evolution or Religion. I was under the impression most discussions here were held by people like us - not necessarily experts but not people bashful about being blowhards regardless. ;)

      It seems that both sides of the issue have their fanatics who use ad hominem attacks without pausing to support their statements, like the parent poster. As for your statement, "Evolutionary biologists find flaws in existing theories of evolution fairly often, and the theories are adjusted accordingly over time..." I must disagree with you. Perhaps true theorists love the challenge of adjusting the theory of evolution over time, but it's not something that happens without much resistance, and only if the flaws are pointed out by people the theorists respect. If a Creationist, for example, points out a flaw, if he isn't met with outright derision, his flaw is usually dismissed offhandedly whether he has a point or not.

      It's like the arguing between political parties. Neither side will concede the other has made a point for fear they'll give their enemy a leg up in the argument. So Democrats will support judges weak on child molestors, for example, and Republicans will support businessmen up to their ears in corruption, for example, instead of admitting there is a problem because the other side is hot on the issue. I see the same mechanism at work in the Evolution/Religion debate.

      Perhaps you were referring to academics instead of laymen as I was referring to?

      --
      The Splintered Mind - Overcoming
    15. Re:Matter of time by plunge · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That was actually the subject of this great, award winning blog post on Pharyngula:

      "The proper reverence due those who have gone before"
      http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2006/01/the_pro per_reverence_due_those.php

    16. Re:Matter of time by AxelBoldt · · Score: 1
      However, the likelihood that God is intimately concerned with our lives is a question completely independent of science, and cannot be considered to have been demonstrated to be more or less likely, no matter what science discovers.

      Well, if there's a personal God intimately concerned with our lives, then the fact that he caused or at least did not prevent the tsunami shows that his priorities are extremely strange indeed. He then certainly cannot be described as "good" in any of the word's standard senses.

    17. Re:Matter of time by shawb · · Score: 2, Funny

      I never said this DISPROVES a personal god, but it does show that the personal god as described in... well... most western monotheistic religions is not actually necessary for us to have gotten from a single cell floating around in a broth to the walking, thinking, complex organism that we are today. This makes the existance of that god less likely, as there is an alternative path of events that could have happened, as defined by natural laws, for us to get where we are today.

      If I go somewhere to eat and there are only hamburgers on the menu, I will order a hamburger (assuming that I order something, but us existing would be the correlary to ordering SOMETHING off the menu.) If there are hamburgers and chicken salad on the menu, it is less likely that I will order the hamburger as I could order the chicken salad instead. Wow... did I just compare god to a hamburger?????

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    18. Re:Matter of time by Absentminded-Artist · · Score: 1, Interesting

      No, my "accusation" was missing a quantifier. It's not intellectually lazy, just grammatically lazy.

      It seems you are arguing ideals of academia. I was referring to the proponents of evolution I find in slashdot forums. Many posters are hardly kind to the other side of any issue they stand against, be it religion, politics, etc.

      My statement still stands. The parent poster cannot proclaim the virtues of modern knowledge, lump all people of faith into one statement, then chastise them. THAT, my friend, is intellectually lazy.

      As for my statement about testy evolutionists, my statement was based on observation. Perhaps that was why it was an easy statement to make. You've done a fair bit of testy overgeneralization in your own reply which makes my point to some degree, though you were more polite than most. You seem to be assuming that the people I was referring to were only testy because they were dealing with ignoramuses. Isn't it possible that not all proponents of evolution are as high minded as you think? Perhaps, just perhaps, some of them abuse the slashdot rating system and participate in mocking debate in the forums? These are the proponents I was referring to. They don't publish in the tomes of academia. They troll the forums of the internet blindly debating the virtues of evolution just as ignorantly with as many falsehoods and gross misrepresentations of science as the fanatics on the other side do.

      --
      The Splintered Mind - Overcoming
    19. Re:Matter of time by AxelBoldt · · Score: 1
      One is to declare evolution is flat out wrong without argument. Another is to point out evolution's flaws (something evolutionists get very testy about, btw. They don't like their faith questioned anymore than religious people do) Still another is to concede some evolution occurred and suggest that God guided evolution.

      And here's another possibility: believe that God created a wonderful universe with laws rich enough to lead to the eventual evolution of sentient life. He looked at it, saw that it was good, and decided that no further tinkering was necessary.

    20. Re:Matter of time by Woldry · · Score: 1

      Wow... did I just compare god to a hamburger?????

      Sort of gives a different mental image to this passage, doesn't it? "And when he had given thanks, he brake it, and said, Take, eat: this is my body, which is broken for you: this do in remembrance of me."

      *looks over shoulder, expecting a thunderbolt*

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    21. Re:Matter of time by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1
      You Sir, deserve all the good mod point that you get. Well said.

      Sera
      (a former biologist now programmer, theist)

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    22. Re:Matter of time by Woldry · · Score: 1

      Getting off topic here, of course, but ...

      Better minds than mine have tried to tackle the argument from evil, from many angles and with admittedly questionable success; and I have nothing helpful to offer that they have not already presented.

      I will point out, though, as some of them have, that the occurrence of thousands of deaths all at once is really no more (or less) intractable a problem for the concept of a benevolent God than the occurrence of billions of deaths over millions of years.

      (I'm not really helping my own case here, I know; but it's not my intent to push my belief system on anyone else. Just to make the point that science is irrelevant to the question of the existence and the personal interest of a deity.)

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    23. Re:Matter of time by plunge · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "The parent poster cannot proclaim the virtues of modern knowledge, lump all people of faith into one statement, then chastise them. THAT, my friend, is intellectually lazy."

      Agreed. But then, most people use the term "creationist" to refer to YECs or other denialists. There are many theistic evolutionists who could be called creationists too, but whom have no conflict with mainstream science. But I'm not sure even they would identify with a criticism aimed at creationists.

      What you claim about people trolling is true, but trivial. Sure, for ANY point of view you can point to a couple of knuckleheads. But that's a pretty weak way to attack science in general, and claim that evolution is a "faith" that people are mad about anyone criticizing. Of course, if you can show me a criticism that's actually accurate and informed, I'll be very surprised. There are a number of very real hotly debated controversies within mainstream biology. But I've never, not once, seen any creationist mention them.

    24. Re:Matter of time by professionalfurryele · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, you are simply wrong about the need for faith as far as evolution goes. Because science doesn't deal in truth, it doesn't require faith. Science deals in likelihoods. Given X what is the chance of Y assuming Z. As a professional scientist I don't believe that the scientific method unviels truth. I don't have to. It isn't my job to get truth. I get scientific facts, and model them with scientific theories. They don't have to be true because I don't care about them being true. I care about the uncertainty of my facts and my theories predictive power.

      So there is no similarity what so ever between a theory arrived at by scientific method and one arrived at by religious inspiration. In many ways the scientific one has less value on a personal level. The point is that the scientific method is fair. So we use it when deciding things between people. Guilt in criminal cases, structuring our economy. It has also proved to be more sucessful than applying theistic methods to these problems, when you measure sucess in a scientific way. So to be fair to people we use science within a secular state to detirmine things. Not because it is true, but because it is fair, and useful.

      The problem is very simple. Some religious folk, in their mad desire to propagate their faith to all corners of the Earth want scientific authority behind them. Many people believe scientific results because they are used to them being right. It is hard not to in the modern age when every electronic device is dependent on scientific advances of the past. Having a home full of proof of concepts can be very convincing that scientific ideas have at least some truth to them. So what do these folk do when their religious belief and science collide? The sensible thing and say "Religion does not require consistency with science"? Hell no. That isn't the optimal method for getting recruits and keeping the faithful. Instead they attack science in the vague hope of converting a few more people, and retaining a few more of those they have already ensnared.

      The problem with certain religious folk is that they don't realise that they can, if they so choose, ignore what scientific method tells them. What they cant do is change the results of the scientific method. And that is what they desperately want to do. We are now experiencing a backlash against this, and individuals of religious persuasion want to be careful. They have lost every culture war since the turn of the 20th century and if they were sensible would hide in their churches and mosques instead of starting a fight they cant win.

      Evolution is an established set of facts, and an excellent theory. And if Christian Churches want a fight on this one, I and many others with a distate for their religion relish the thought, because it will add to the long history of Christain failures and crimes against humanity, which will be used against them again and again in the future.

    25. Re:Matter of time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed:

      Evolution is a name; It is the name given to , first, an idea and a THEORY. It is a theory and it MUST be proven. The theory of gravity was long anticipated by science and enhanced by casual and anecdotal/conventional wisdom. Gravity was shown to be a force and its purpose was that of 'attraction' and on and on and on...
          We know what gravity IS, but we do NOT know EVERYTHING ABOUT IT but we can approach what we know and do not know, SCIENTIFICALLY.
            The Bible speaks of many wonderous and mysterious things that occured in times and settings (Garden of Eden) that are eternally lost to us in there type, depth, and sophistication, but the Bible does not ever portray itself as a SCIENCE BOOK or as a TECHNICAL MANUAL. It would nevertheless be unwise and narrow-of-focus to assume that EVERY WORD or MOST words in the bible are false or, intentionally deceitful just because WE CANNOT REPRODUCE THEM in a test tube, or laboratory since after all, we cannot point to the 'Evolution Plasma Field' or the 'Evolutionary-Guide-Force-Principle',and prove it as we have GRAVITY!
          Proponents of Evolution will eventually get to the point where they feel they no longer must prove to the lay-person the validity of the CONCEPT of Evolution and then the REAL PROBLEMS WILL BEGIN! They will have to prove the WHY, the BIG WHY of Evolution!!!
          Where are we going that we need this All-Consuming, Near omnipotent, All-guiding force, to take us!?!
          Next, just as we ask it of God, we will have to ask, "Where did it come from?!"
          Finally, if we can control or change 'evolution' it may yet remain a powerful and irresistable force to mortal life-progress, but it will show itself accessible through it's own mechanisms like a car, or the living systems it appears to affect and control: 'It is mighty but not Almighty...' hence leaving plenty of room for new discovery and 'evolution.'
          The argument is that these tiny flaws that from time to time are introduced into the genetic systems of the living, represent evolution. An argument can then be made that these things may make a difference that does not wipe out a species or family, but, does it necessarily mean that these 'introduced aberrations' mean advancement (toward something) or change to which ADAPTATION must be facilitated by a system 'designed' to be enormously adaptable, oooooh! :O
          The Bible indicates that God, as Jesus, became man to teach us more about God. Until HE did this, and if He had NOT done this, according to cold observation, US mortals, us beings and entities affected by BOTH God and Evolution, would not have known ONE FROM THE OTHER!!!
          GOD HAS 'COME DOWN' and informed us personally and left us to our devices,.. now Evolution, must be PULLED DOWN, scientifically and empirically and it must , MUST, meet the challenge of being describable and having a cogent argument for its purposes, direction(s) and designs, and origin. Anything else and all you have is, well, FAITH, religion, not science and God has left Science up to us and given us enough to have faith in :) (I fear not flame, I am the Human Torch!!)

    26. Re:Matter of time by bigpicture · · Score: 1

      How long did it take to see the obviousness of this? How many years of fruitless arguement and debate? Evolution is the "how" of creation, the grand modus operandi if you will.

      So the follow up question is not so much is there or is there not a first cause, but if there is, what might its nature be?

      Human thought is limited to the relativeness of things, and must have borders or boundaries to work within. Hence the problem of comprehension of the infinitely large and the infinitely small, the infinitely long time and the infinitely short time. That is probably why the disposition toward the creation dogma.

    27. Re:Matter of time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [b](Note, I was not saying that atheists are not moral with the "is a reason to behave..." line, but for some people the existance of a personal god is one of the reasons to behave in a moral manner.)[/b]

      there are two ways of life.

      1. selfish
      2. god's way of caring for others equal to oneself.

      one leads to, well, what we see today. children dying by the thousands per day. poverty all over the world, the richest nation on earth stealing from their grandchhildren not even born yet and bankrupt at all levels of government.

      the second way of life is rarely even tested. i haven't seen any organziation teach this way of life (most churches are incredibly self centered and help their own or help others become one of their own - or else they don't care so much. this shows their selfish agenda), let alone live it.

      eg, does the catholic church management care about raped children or selfishly protecting their own image? that's easy, they got together decided to support the child molestor while making it difficult for the child molestee and, in fact, creating more child molestees. this wasn't one rogue guy, mind you - this was the practice of the ENTIRE ORGANIZATION!

      is this way of life #1 or #2?

      here's a few more items about organized religion:

      1. they tend to teach a hellfire doctrine that isn't scriptural and slander's god's most valued asset - his character. they turn death into life and grasp onto stan's first recorded lie with white knuckled hands - "you shall not die" (immortal soul).
      2. the reward of the saved isn't going to heaven. think about it. in simple terms, the bible speaks of an ascension and a second coming. there is no second ascension discussed anywhere. you can do the math. there are a multitude of scriptures which totally debunk the idea that we go to heaven.
      3. you mentioned tithing - it was for crops and the like. silver smiths back in the day *never* tithed. leather workers *never* tithed. metal workers *never* tithed. you get the idea. churches that teach tithing as some kind of standard (legal or otherwise) rarely, if ever, make this truth known to their people. paul had been serving thousands of christians for decades when he complained of being totally broke. i guess they just don't make preachers/pastors/priests/etc... like they used to, eh?

      why are these christian institutions wrong on such a mass level? i don't know, but i do know that it was predicted.

      Mt 24:5 - For many will come in My name, saying, 'I am the Christ,' and will deceive many.

      who comes in christ's name and says he is the christ? christians, of course. what do they do? many deceive people. why are you surprised? i'm not.

      so why are folks surprised when christians deceive people and act in a selfish, self centered way of life? if they told the truth and accurately represented things, they wouldn't be deceiving people, would they?

      back to the article, this piece of information doesn't prove anything on a massive scale. it has been hyped up beyond recognition and was meant to preach to its respective choir. kind of like nebraska man back in the day. that's the problem with the religious aspects of macro-evolution. just like those who come in the name of christ and deceive the many.

      this is important information and research should continue. having said that, they should report on the facts isntead getting caught up in an ego exercise trying to outdo a guy like behe. who cares what behe says... unless one is supporting one's own style of religion...

    28. Re:Matter of time by The+New+Stan+Price · · Score: 0

      Or just maybe an all powerful God did create the universe in six days, but decided to make it look as though it was done over many years through evolution.

    29. Re:Matter of time by plunge · · Score: 1

      "If a Creationist, for example, points out a flaw, if he isn't met with outright derision, his flaw is usually dismissed offhandedly whether he has a point or not."

      If you could produce some examples of creationists that have good points, you might be on firmer ground. But by and large, I've never really heard creationists make well informed criticisms, let alone ones that were "good points."

      On the other hand, within science, there have knock-down cat scratch vicious fights over things like symbiotic theory, punk eek, Woese's theory of multiple common ancestors, and so on, all of which were pretty major criticisms. All of them were eventually incorporated into science. Why? Because the people making them had good points in the way that science measures good points: those backed up with solid evidence.

    30. Re:Matter of time by monoqlith · · Score: 5, Informative

      Sorry to nitpick, but quantum "fluctuations" are not random. People often confuse the terms "random" and "probabilistic" when they talk about quantum physics. A "random" system is a system where any outcome of measurement is just as likely as any other outcome. However, quantum particles are more likely to be at the expectation value of position than at any other place, though there is a NON-zero probability of it being anywhere else in the system. So quantum "fluctuations"(I'm not sure what you mean by this) are NOT random, because some outcomes of measurement are vastly more likely than others. The only requirement for a quantum particle is that the probability of it being SOMEWHERE is 1.

      Quantum particles are associated with probability WAVES that fluctuate with time. When we say wave-particle duality we mean that the particle does NOT have a definite classical trajectory but instead a WAVE of probability associated with it that describes the positions, energies, and momentums at which the particle is most likely to be. This is called a wave function; it is a solution to Schrodinger's differential wave equation and its square is a probability curve.

      Depending on your interpretation, quantum mechanics does indicate some things about reality such as there is an ONTOLOGICAL limit on what we can know for certain about objective reality such that it appears meaningless to talk about an absolute objective reality at all. That is, reality changes by being observed. However, unlike general relativity which does indeed EXPLAIN gravity by saying that gravity is identical with a curved space-time geometry, you are quite right in saying that quantum mechanics does not explain anything. Nor does particle theory or E&M explain why there are electric and magnetic forces without beginning to conjure up force-carrying particles and the like. They are currently trying to explain all these things by means of string theory.

    31. Re:Matter of time by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      What you claim about people trolling is true, but trivial. Sure, for ANY point of view you can point to a couple of knuckleheads. But that's a pretty weak way to attack science in general, and claim that evolution is a "faith" that people are mad about anyone criticizing.

      Bingo. Give this man a +5 please, I'm all out.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    32. Re:Matter of time by YttriumOxide · · Score: 1

      I will begin my reply with a disclaimer: I am in fact, an atheist. I have however been quite involved in a study of Christianity, the myriad of beliefs that surround it and how they relate to each other.
      Your points are all valid and, if read with an open mind, should be really quite interesting to many Christians. But, I'm going to play devil's advocate (perhaps an inappropriate term here, but I'll let it stand) for the remainder of this post.

      they tend to teach a hellfire doctrine that isn't scriptural and slander's god's most valued asset - his character. they turn death into life and grasp onto stan's first recorded lie with white knuckled hands - "you shall not die" (immortal soul).

      I think you're taking Satan's quote out of context here. In Genesis 2:16-17 Satan (in the form of the serpent) spoke these words to Eve, which seemed in direct contrast with the truth from God spelled out earlier to her and Adam ("You may eat the fruit of all of the trees that are in the Garden and that are edible; it is only the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil that you should not eat. On the day that you do eat it, you shall die.")
      Basically, God had given Adam and Eve eternal life in the garden. They were truly incapable of death. Satan lied by saying that Eve would not die for eating from the tree in that after she had done so, she was now capable of death. However, that is not the death of the immortal soul. In many areas of both the old and new testament, the immortal soul is referred to, so we can come to the fairly obvious conclusion that it was only physical death that was being referred to.
      However, here we hit another conundrum. Very little of hell is spoken of in either the new or old testaments and every mention that does exist can be explained through other means. So we get to the question of what really happens when you die? And what happened to Adam and Eve?
      A common belief amongst many Christians (and is well supported by phrases such as "Whomsoever believes in me shall have eternal life") is that there is no hell, but there is a heaven. If you believe in God, accept Jesus as your saviour and are truly sorry for your sins, you'll get in to heaven and live forever. If you don't, then when you die, you're just wormfood - the soul is not immortal by default, but instead immortality is granted by God through Jesus.
      From this, we can assume the actually fairly unpleasant idea that before the coming of the Messiah (Jesus), almost no-one got in to heaven since they were sinners that had (almost) no path to forgiveness.

      the reward of the saved isn't going to heaven. think about it. in simple terms, the bible speaks of an ascension and a second coming. there is no second ascension discussed anywhere. you can do the math. there are a multitude of scriptures which totally debunk the idea that we go to heaven.

      Can you point some of these scriptures out to me? I'm quite curious to see them. The ascension and second coming are of Christ and have little to nothing to do with the rest of us. However it does raise an interesting side note on my response to the first point - no-one ever said you get in to heaven IMMEDIATELY when you die. Another belief that is common amongst some christian groups is that if you're getting in to heaven, it won't actually happen until the end of the world (Judgement Day). Most people that believe this also believe however that no apparent time passes between your death and the great ascension of souls, so it's not like you're sitting around in limbo or anything. But, further on this belief is the interesting thought that there's no-one in heaven right now other than people that were expressly pulled up there (an interesting example being the criminal on the cross next to Jesus who was told "Amen, I say to you, you shall be with me this day in Paradise")

      Mt 24:5 - For many will come in My name, saying, 'I am the Christ,'

      --
      My book about LSD and Self-Discovery
      Also on facebook as: DroppingAcidDaleBewan
    33. Re:Matter of time by kerrbear · · Score: 1

      This is simply not true. Evolutionary biologists find flaws in existing theories of evolution fairly often, and the theories are adjusted accordingly over time. This is simply how all science, including biology, works; there is no crisis of faith as you claim.

      Yes it is true IMHO. I don't think the previous poster was talking about flaws in the existing theory but something much deeper than that. Many evolutionists operate under the faith that evolution occured and it occurred purely through natural processes. No divine or other intervention has been involved. Any attempt to suggest teaching people otherwise is met with stiff and dogmatic resistance. It has not been absolutely proved that only natural processes have brought about our current situation, ergo faith is involved. They may believe that all the evidence points to their conclution, but it is still faith. And some, some, put out all the anger and indignation and name calling that previous faiths in history have put out.

      Now before anyone gets upset, I want to point out that some people's definition of faith = believing in spite of evidence. That is called blind faith. I'm arguing that faith is believing something for which evidence exists but cannot be absolutely proven. E.g. Why do you set your alarm clock in the morning? Because you have faith that it will work, that the sun will rise, that your job will still exist, etc. You have no absolute proof of this, but you have pretty good evidence that these things will be so.

      Many people hold the same view about God that others hold about evolution. They have investigated evidence and asked the questions to satisfy them that they can put their faith in God. Thus, some of them bristle and fight when their faith is challenged. But that is not to say that evidence for a creator is moot.

      I hope that all of us can try to be humble and agree that we should really all be looking for the truth. Some are so entrenched that they cannot see anything but what they want to see, but others of us can debate and listen and move the ball forward.

    34. Re:Matter of time by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Science may be irrelevant to the god, but it's not relevant to the claims. Claiming that a god is good can be tested and judged. We look at people all the time and make determinations about how good or bad they are, and we can certainly make those judgements about what a god has supposedly done. It's the place where a specific claim that is made where you might find something that is testable or subject to scrutiny.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    35. Re:Matter of time by Rary · · Score: 1

      "Many evolutionists operate under the faith that evolution occured and it occurred purely through natural processes. No divine or other intervention has been involved. Any attempt to suggest teaching people otherwise is met with stiff and dogmatic resistance."

      Evolution is science. Science is the study of nature. Anything divine or otherwise supernatural is outside the scope of science. This is why resistance is encountered when attempts are made to teach people otherwise in a science class. Attempts to teach otherwise in some setting other than a science class are generally ignored by evolutionists.

      This is the entire gist of the "Intelligent Design" debate. It's not science, so don't teach it in a science class.

      --

      "You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war." -- Albert Einstein

    36. Re:Matter of time by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      As a professional scientist I don't believe that the scientific method unviels truth. I don't have to. It isn't my job to get truth. I get scientific facts, and model them with scientific theories. They don't have to be true because I don't care about them being true. I care about the uncertainty of my facts and my theories predictive power.
      I agree absolutely that when evaluating scientific validity of a theory, predictive power is more important than anything else. But do you honestly, deep down so to speak, believe that science is only a tool to make predictions? Don't you think that the scientist should be trying to describe the true world? To me, what I read as your vision of science reduces it to a kind of machine for creating new technology because I only care about my prediction for its own sake if that prediction connects with reality in some way. If it doesn't connect with reality, then what good is it, except maybe to make the next vaccine, or the next airplane, or whatever.

      Evolution is an established set of facts, and an excellent theory. And if Christian Churches want a fight on this one, I and many others with a distate for their religion relish the thought, because it will add to the long history of Christain failures and crimes against humanity, which will be used against them again and again in the future.
      I agree that evolution is an established set of facts. You seem, though, to have a strange anger towards the people who don't believe evolution. I think it is good to remember sometimes that, sadly, this is 50% of the US! Most of these are good, honest, hard working people, who love their kids and want to do the right thing, but simply don't have the knowledge, intellect, or intellectual courage to accept something they perceive as contradicting what they already believe to be true. I hardly think that disbelieving evolution and natural selection qualifies to be lumped together with "crime against humanity." Yes, they often use terribly flawed arguments and always compare the scientific establishment to the Church during the time of Galileo, which is even more annoying, but there are much worse things to do, and be. Anger doesn't help anything, though.

    37. Re:Matter of time by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      If I could add a little more. It is not very well understood how quantum probability affects the macroscopic world (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schrodingers_cat ). We do know that the macroscopic world more or less obeys classical physics. So it's not clear if God would be capable of using quantum strangeness to affect our lives in the manner the GP post seems to mean (without violating the laws of nature, which I suppose in principle God can always do.)

    38. Re:Matter of time by Giddeon+Fox · · Score: 0

      I much prefer the idea that God is not a sentient being, but a sentient force or dimension of some kind, which is everywhere, much like time, and can effect and edit things as it pleases, but otherwise leaves things alone. Now I realize this goes against the core values of creationism, but I think it seems to fit our universe a little better. Not that I believe it, I'm Pastafarian, but I like the idea.

    39. Re:Matter of time by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      How doe sany of that off proof of gods existance or non-existance?

      Actualy I think the problem is that most people disclaim god or a god because it doesn't live up to thier personal expectations. When we are talking about the common gods, (christian, jewish, muslum....)the prime point is that it gives us the power of choice. Another attribute is that there is almost always a counteracting part (that of evil)wich is tolorated so a choice can be made. Now somethign happens, if it is to your dislike, wouldn't it more of a point that a god didn't interfere with it's evil counterpart actions?

      I personaly didn't see anything proving or disproving a god.

    40. Re:Matter of time by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Good verses evil is a reletive term. People agree on good and evil based on othe rinfluences in life, generaly teachings from a bible.

      The problem with testing good verses evil is that it only fits part of the entire picture. There could be more reason that evil is actualy good and vice versa. Now to ilistrate what i'm saying i will suppose a few things,

      What if the destruction with the tsumami was because someone in that area was developing a super-plague wich would mame and disfigure people for a long slow time until eventualy premature death. Would it be good or evil to take this out and possibly all those already infected with it? Now what if Katrina was actualy a warning to get things fixed before an even bigger storm that is neccesary to maintain the ballance of nature hit the same areas. Now what if 9/11 was allowed to happen because the world trade organization was really going to do somethign that would have ment the end of the worlds and 9/11 was just a way to set back those plans?

      Sure all the above is a conspiracy theory with no evidence to support it. The fact is, we don't know the reasons people do what they do but they seem to have agood reason for it when they do it. You realy have no idea why some guy in a car cut you off but he is bad for doing it. Then we see that you were cut off because he swerved to miss somethign in the road. He is still bad until we find out he was swerving to miss an animal in the road. He is still bad. Then we find out that the animal was actualy a small kid who wandered into trafic and balled up like a sleeping dog when she got scared(are that what he though). He is still bad?

      If you had the chance to go back in time, would you warn america about perl harbor or 9/11. Would you assasinate hilter or ted bundy before they had a chance to do thier deeds? Even if it ment a few inocent people might be taken out with them? Good is only a tool to justify whatever happens(ed) with whatever is beneficial or poular. It could be a sign of greed.

    41. Re:Matter of time by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      "But do you honestly, deep down so to speak, believe that science is only a tool to make predictions?"

      Yes and no. As far as what I require others to believe about science, it is only a predictive tool. If a Christian says to me "As far as I am concerned the Earth is only 6000 years old", I have no problem with this. If he does not think that science is providing the truth, I don't care. If however he says "The science is bad, these real scientists have prooved that the Earth is 6000 years old", then I get very upset. There is an important distinction to be made between those who don't believe the scientific method is a means of obtaining truth, and those who believe that scientists are a cabal of evil liars. Most of these idiots fall into the latter catagory.

      Your next point contains a subtle logical error. That is the fallacy of division. Because the whole is a destructive cancer of society, does not make it's parts destructive. The campaign against evolution is part of a greater campaign against the authority of science and the concept of a secular state. In the US that makes it part of an attack against the very constitution, and I believe that (inspite of not being a US citizen) that the constitution represents the very high of civilisation to this date. That is not to say it cannot be improved, but one would hardly call abandoning the concept of a secular state an improvement.

      You point contains a number of excuses for those who aid the enemies of scientific progress, they lack "the knowledge, intellect, or intellectual courage" to understand the issue. You consider these flaws to be pitied. I consider them crimes in and of themselves when acted upon. If people are as you describe them then to not know it and to act on thier beliefs is wrong.

      Finally just anger can be very helpful. Science and scientific progress has an enemy. And we have to fight it. We cannot sit in our ivory towers surronded by our grant proposals and concerntrating on our next publication when nothing short of a cultural war against us is being fought. We have to fight back. If we don't, it isn't just science and scientists who will suffer.

    42. Re:Matter of time by A+Nun+Must+Cow+Herd · · Score: 1
      "A "random" system is a system where any outcome of measurement is just as likely as any other outcome."

      Since we're nitpicking, no, you're oversimplifying. That would mean a probability distribution would have no place in a random system.
      But in fairness, "Sensibly dealing with randomness is a hard problem in modern science, mathematics, psychology and philosophy. Merely defining it adequately, for the purposes of one discipline has proven quite difficult. Distinguishing between apparent randomness and actual randomness has been no easier." -- Wikipedia.
    43. Re:Matter of time by gronofer · · Score: 1
      As long as the religious don't try to impose a way specific of living and moral on other (religious or not) I think things will be fine.

      They have been doing it for the whole of recorded history, and they still do it. This is one of the main reasons to fight religion, instead of just shrugging off the religious as crackpots.

    44. Re:Matter of time by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

      How does a natural disaster present choice? There's this false dichotomy that a lot of Christians seem to embrace where they believe that all that is connected to God must be good, and all else must be bad/evil. So the presence of suffering and other bad things is simply written off as God giving us a choice. But I fail to see what natural disasters that one has no control over translates to having free will. So some family has their home destroyed by a flood. Where was the choice there?

      Just because there are now two supernatural dieties messing with your life now doesn't mean that you have free will because of it.

    45. Re:Matter of time by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

      So basically you're using an argument of ignorance to try to justify the deaths/suffering of millions of people due to natural disasters/disease? If I were you I'd re-assess your spiritual convictions.

    46. Re:Matter of time by nickallen · · Score: 1

      True that evolution does not disprove God but it does, in my opinion, disprove many religions. I think the reason most religous people are offended by it is that it makes their Bible, Koran etc look somewhat silly. The thing is that they regard the bible as 100% correct and as the word of God. One only has to find one inacurracy and then you have shown that the bible is not the word of God (how could He be so careless to overlook such an issue and lie to us in the process?). If the bible is not the word of God and has such huge inaccuracies then that somewhat diminishes its respect to the point that it is not worthy as the foundation for belief. Evolution is not a minor issue and cannot be easily explained away and contradicts the bible in so many ways.

    47. Re:Matter of time by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

      "You have one side of the issue where a faith based person is bombarded with facts, statements, or just assertions that evolution occurred. On the other side you have a faith based person with a personal conviction that there is a God. How does he justify the two? In my observation, there are varied ways they do it. One is to declare evolution is flat out wrong without argument. Another is to point out evolution's flaws (something evolutionists get very testy about, btw. They don't like their faith questioned anymore than religious people do) Still another is to concede some evolution occurred and suggest that God guided evolution."

      What's an evolutionist? Evolution isn't a religion, and it doesn't require faith. If it makes sense to you, then it makes sense to you, if not, then you won't accept it as true. I think the only thing that bugs rational individuals who believe in evolution is when creationists use absurd or specious arguments to deny the well-documented and understood aspects of the evolutionary process. People just get tired of debunking the same tripe arguments over and over again. And most people don't appreciate creationists trying to subject our school systems to their religious beliefs. We don't get testy about scientists poking holes in current understanding of evolution and thus improving upon the current scientific model. But we do get upset when our kids can't get a decent education because a bunch of ignorant religious fundamentalists want to be in denial about scientific facts.

      Stop calling anyone who uses reasoned arguments to criticize accepted Christian beliefs a fanatic just because you can't defend those beliefs objectively. I keep hearing Christians talking about all the science fanatics that are supposedly out there, and using this claim to say "see, science is no better than religion," and it's just a pathetic tactic. If you don't want to look ignorant by associating yourself with the creationists, don't be apologetic of them.

    48. Re:Matter of time by unapersson · · Score: 1

      "Still another is to concede some evolution occurred and suggest that God guided evolution. The important thing to realize here is that Creationists are a loud bunch, but they don't speak for all Christians. For example, some suggest the 7 days in question were actually epochs of time of indeterminate length "like unto" 1000 years each."

      I think one of the problems with Christians needing to constantly re-invent themselves to fit in with what science is proving (by suggesting God is guiding evolution for instance), is the fundamental lack of anything like that in the bible. I think for instance that the evidence of the bible being a wholly human work rather than having any influence from a greater being is quite plain to see. It's not so much what's in there, it's what is missing.

      It's not just evolutionary science. It the battles that science won long ago that are not so contraversial these days. Basic scientific facts like: the earth being round, that the earth orbits around the sun, the existence of atoms, the existence of bacteria. There is so much missing that I find it impossible to believe the suggestion a higher power has ever communicated with human beings. Then there are all the morals of the time that are written in these books, things that would be considered completely immoral now are perfectly acceptable in the bible. So it says little of a being standing outside of time providing guidance, rather giving more a sense of the usual human political manoeuverings trying to give a certain group the upper hand.

      Frankly it's absurd that a bronze age belief system, encompassing bronze age beliefs, still has such influence.

    49. Re:Matter of time by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      Yes, exactly, I have been saying this for a while. I'm proud that my ancestors were ratlike creatures. They survived and thrived, and pulled themselves up by their own bootstraps to produce a space age civilisation. They were the best, smartest and toughest ratlike creatures on earth!

    50. Re:Matter of time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry to nitpick, but random does not always mean uniformly random. In a system that is uniformly random, each outcome is equally likely. However there are random systems where each outcome has a different probability. For example a fair die has each outcome equally likely, but a weighted die has unequal probabilities but both are still called random.

      At least this is the statistical meaning of random. Physicists might have their own demented terminology...

    51. Re:Matter of time by dsanfte · · Score: 1

      That was quite profound. Thanks for the link.

      --
      occultae nullus est respectus musicae - originally a Greek proverb
    52. Re:Matter of time by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      "Yes, they often use terribly flawed arguments and always compare the scientific establishment to the Church during the time of Galileo, which is even more annoying, but there are much worse things to do, and be. Anger doesn't help anything, though."

      They also try to invade science cirricula with their religious teachings to the detriment of logical thinking and FACT. I am, and will ever continue to be, angry at someone who want to indoctrinate MY progeny with their beliefs with MY dollar.

    53. Re:Matter of time by Woldry · · Score: 1

      The argument is not that ignorance justifies the death and suffering. The argument is that without knowing all that an omniscient God knows, we are not in a position judge whether the death and suffering are justified. For those who choose to believe in a benevolent God, we have the option to trust that they are justified. For those who choose no such belief, the option exists to choose to believe that they are not justified. Either way, the option has little to do with the evidence and everything to do with what one chooses to believe.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    54. Re:Matter of time by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      I think the reason most religous people are offended by it is that it makes their Bible, Koran etc look somewhat silly. The thing is that they regard the bible as 100% correct and as the word of God. One only has to find one inacurracy and then you have shown that the bible is not the word of God

      Disproving the belief that the Bible is the word of god is even easier than that. I wouldn't even need to know one word of the Bible to tell you that. There is a major, glaring flaw with that belief. The Bible wasn't written in English, or German, or Latin for that matter. It had to be translated into those languages, which means two things.

      1. The story passed through a human filter
      2. The story passed through a language filter

      The words have changed given the fact that they passed through translator bias and a language filter that could have easily distorted meaning. Languages do not have a one to one correlation with each other. Words in some languages may have several sublte differences in definition, while only having one word in another language that is a suitable translation for any of those words and vice versa. This is reason enough to read the Bible allegorically and not literally, as the WORD of GOD. After all how can the word of god change depending on a variable like language?

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    55. Re:Matter of time by smidget2k4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think by "good point" he meant "a seeming logical fallacy that, to the lay person, seems convincing but is easily explained away when you start looking at facts." That is pretty much the standard point creationists and many others make. And when you see "debates" or speeches, this is the best way to sway an audiance. There isn't really time to present the facts, so this is the only effective method of communication without handing the audiance a collection of works by scientists and saying "ok, read and draw your own conclusions."

      Sorry, it is just a pet peeve I have. I find that this is exactly the same thing that goes on at polical speechs/events too (Ann Coulter and Michael Moore, I'm looking at you guys.)

    56. Re:Matter of time by nickallen · · Score: 1

      Many religious people believe that the people involved in translating and wording the bible were guided by God and so, therefore, were these translators. The bible always passed through people (even the very first version was written by people!) They do not think very rationally and will easily dismiss this issue of translation using this argument so that they can go on believing in the bible as the word of God. Dismissing evolution though is something that is not so easy for them to do.

    57. Re:Matter of time by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "(are that what he though)"

      Translate please.

    58. Re:Matter of time by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      Now before anyone gets upset, I want to point out that some people's definition of faith = believing in spite of evidence. That is called blind faith. I'm arguing that faith is believing something for which evidence exists but cannot be absolutely proven. E.g. Why do you set your alarm clock in the morning? Because you have faith that it will work, that the sun will rise, that your job will still exist, etc. You have no absolute proof of this, but you have pretty good evidence that these things will be so.

      This is a terrible argument. If you want to be a complete skeptic and actually wonder if the sun will rise the next morning then you cannot know anything, including whether a God exists or not. People do not have faith that the sun will rise, they know it will based on observable evidence, which, by the way, is completely lacking in ID theory. That is why it is called faith, or by your definition, blind faith. I've heard this argument in various forms by every IDer or creationist out there. Scientific theories are not faith-based. They have a lot of evidence to back them up. If you want to debate whether or not we know anything based on evidence then you have to debate whether we know anything at all. That would make you a skepitc, and if you're a skeptic what the hell are you doing believing in a God anyway?

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    59. Re:Matter of time by Woldry · · Score: 1

      "Quantum fluctuations" is a widely recognized phrase in physics, used variously to refer to uncertain outcomes of quantum mechanics:

      A book by Edward Nelson of CMU in the Princeton Series in Physics: http://www.math.princeton.edu/~nelson/books/qf.pdf
      From Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_fluctuation
      From a physics lecture at the University of Oregon (the mention is about halfway down the page): http://zebu.uoregon.edu/~js/ast123/lectures/lec17. html
      From Encyclopaedia Britannica: http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-64917
      From an article in New Scientist: http://www.ldolphin.org/qfoam.html
      A paper from the Division of Engineering and Applied Science, Roxbury Community College/Harvard: http://www.eduprograms.deas.harvard.edu/reu03_pape rs/Lopez.C.FinReport03.pdf
      Theses at Penn State: http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/31075.html

      A book from the World Scientific Series in Contemporary Chemical Physics: http://www.worldscibooks.com/physics/5952.html

      My argument fits the term as used in any one of these sources, or in the half-million others that can be found with a two-second Google search.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    60. Re:Matter of time by crazyeddie740 · · Score: 1

      Once there was a farmer who had only one horse. One day the horse got loose and ran away. "What bad luck!" his neighbors said. "Well, good, bad, who can say?" said the farmer.

      The next day the horse came back - leading several wild horses that it had befriended. "What good luck!" his neighbors said. "Good, bad, who knows?" said the farmer.

      The farmer's son, trying to tame one of the new horses, fell off and broke his leg. "How terrible!" said the farmer's neighbors. "Perhaps. We'll see."

      A few days later, the army came through looking for young men to conscript, but they couldn't take the farmer's son because of his broken leg. "How fortunate!" "Maybe. Good, bad, who knows?"

      - old Taoist story, stolen from here: http://infamous.net/election2004msg.html

    61. Re:Matter of time by lysergic.acid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My point remains. You, and the GGP are both arguing that, because we don't know God's masterplan, that natural disasters could be a good thing. That's an argument to ignorance, and you're using it to justify the sufferng caused by those natural disasters.

      And, yes, people have the choice to not buy into such fallacious arguments; most rational people don't since anyone with a basic understanding of logical fallacies can see the inherent flaw in such reasoning, not to mention the obvious insensitivity it shows towards other human beings. But it seems that you, and a lot of Christians do buy into it despite all of this. What does that tell you about yourself?

    62. Re:Matter of time by crazyeddie740 · · Score: 1

      Or to put it another way: "An optimist believes that this is the best of all possible worlds. A pessimist fears that this is true."

      The Problem of Evil is a tricky one, but I think even atheists (such as myself) should think about it. After all, God is basically Nature personified, turned into a moral agent. So what you say about the Problem of Evil says something about how you feel about the universe. Because evil exists, and because God is all-powerful, we know that God can not be omni-benevolent. However, that is not the same as saying that God is necessarily evil. It might be that He/She/It does value our well-being, but other moral considerations are interfering.

      For example, Free Will. God, pretty much by definition, can override our free will (He is all-powerful, after all). However, He may be choosing not to do this out of respect for our autonomy. This doesn't explain natural disasters, but it would explain a great deal of the evil in the world. Whether or not respect for our autonomy is an adequate reason for allowing such evil to occur is an exercise I leave to the student.

      Some say that evil is the Devil's fault. But either the Devil is like us - completely subject to the will of God, or else he is God's peer. (If the Devil is able to resist God's will in the slightest, then that makes him God's peer, even if he is somewhat weaker.) If the Devil is God's peer, then that just means that God (defined as an all-powerful moral agent) is a committee, which is something of a scary thought in itself.

      Personally, I see God as a narrative artist (actually, I picture Him as being not entirely unlike Kilgore Trout). And according to Kurt Vonnegutt (Kilgore Trout's own Creator), the job of a writer is to create good people, then put them through Hell, in order to show the audience what they are made of. Would a God of this sort be good? Can't answer for you, but it works for me.

    63. Re:Matter of time by crazyeddie740 · · Score: 1

      It tells me that a lot of people have faith that God is good. Faith, as Babylon 5 puts it, is the surrender to the possibility of hope. As an atheist, I don't have faith that God exist, but I still have faith that *if* He exists, he is good. If God exists, and He is evil, then about the only thing we can do is committ suicide and pray (oops, make that "hope", the Big Guy wouldn't have our best interests in mind) that there isn't an afterlife. Life, after- or otherwise, in such a universe wouldn't be worth living. A faith-held belief doesn't have to be probable, it only has to be possible. So as long as it is *possible* that God is good, (some) people will continue to have faith in it. And it seems to me that it is possible for a good God to create natural disasters, especially if this is the same God who created evolution. If God created evolution, then that implies that we are a work in progress. Both the Indian Ocean tsunami and Hurricane Katrina forced us to pull together and fix some things. Perhaps God is more interested in turning us into better people than He is in our current well-being. Whether or not this is an adequate reason for moral disasters is something you'll have to decide for yourself.

    64. Re:Matter of time by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "Many people hold the same view about God that others hold about evolution. They have investigated evidence and asked the questions to satisfy them that they can put their faith in God."

      Let's not go overboard here. There is plenty of evidence and to date all of the experts agree that evolution is the best proposed conclusion based upon that evidence to date. There is NO evidence pointing toward a diety of any kind. It is true that there is no evidence to dispute the possibility (although there are a number of proven errors in the most popular western doctrine that believers choose to gloss over); but that hardly qualifies as evidence to support it. This discovery helps to more firmly establish that there is no need to add an all powerful man in the sky to existing theories.

    65. Re:Matter of time by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The free will part is enforce by having a good and evil. A god of good would have to let the god of evil present evil powers in order for your "free will" to make a choice.

      But a natural disaster doesn't really present eith good or evil. Katrina victoms are basicaly victoms of mans decisions. This home was destroyed because they didn't listen to the warnings given by other men as well as nature(god?). As a matter of fact, very few major natural disasters didn't have any influence by man that made the outcome worse then it should have been. Here comes free will again.

    66. Re:Matter of time by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      That was just an example, not the argument. The point is that once you start saying that a god does something, or affects something, you're approaching the point at which you can test that god scientifically. If you're saying that your god is good, then you might be able to test that. If you're saying that your god makes every other electron weigh half as much as a proton, then you definitely can test that.

      If you want to keep your god completely separate from science, then god should not do anything, or be capable of anything. Keep him as vague as possible.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    67. Re:Matter of time by crazyeddie740 · · Score: 1

      Keeping God seperate from science might be a good thing (nobody likes to have their faith falsified), but it isn't really possible. How would you feel if you were some sort of faith-based atheist (perhaps an atheist who believes that there is no way a good God could exist), and then you open up the newspaper to find that the statement "God does not exist" has been falsified by the boys in the white coats?

    68. Re:Matter of time by Woldry · · Score: 1

      In what way is the argument "fallacious"? Please be specific. Precisely what logical fallacy is being committed here?

      I think it is on core premises, not on logic, that we differ. Core premises can neither be refuted nor supported logically.

      I repeat that no one is "justifying" the suffering. Since we are as human beings necessarily unable to know all the ramifications of a situation, some of us (not only Christians, and not only those whose lives are untouched by such tragedies) are willing to trust in the benevolence of the God in Whom we choose to believe (a core premise); and to trust therefore that there may be a justification that we cannot comprehend. This is a subtle but important distinction.

      If you choose a different belief -- i.e., a different core premise -- or are not so willing to trust, that is of course your right. But it is no more (or less) "logical" or "fallacious" than my core premise.

      But have you never learned that some act you thought was evil worked instead to your benefit? If I could honestly say that I had never revised your assessment of the good or ill of a situation as your knowledge and understanding grew, then I must have been either the wisest child or the most intractable idiot ever born. Did your parents never give you medicine when you were too small to understand that it would help? Did no one ever break your heart by leaving because they knew they were making you miserable? Did no teacher ever impose discipline that you thought at the time were monstrously unfair, but later came to understand as the only sensible way to run things?

      So please demonstrate in what way you are being more "logical" than Christians and other believers who think that our assessment of other situations, no matter how obviously horrific or wondrous they might seem, might likewise be revised if we understood all the ramifications.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    69. Re:Matter of time by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      A "random" system is a system where any outcome of measurement is just as likely as any other outcome.

      Then nothing is random, according to your definition. Even with a pair of dice you never get 13, and 7 is a more likely outcome than any other.

    70. Re:Matter of time by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Thats the entire problem most religios type people have. Science hasn't ever proven there is a god or that there isn't. All they have proven is that there isn't a way for them to scientificly check. Now, you will find on this thread as well as in the article, scientist are doing just that- attempting to disprove the possibility of a god and the roll a god might have played.

      But it goes even further then that, People are using natural disasters and other significant events to claim it is proof a god cannot exist. All this proves is they have an opinion on the subject.

      Now back to the article, The entire relation of the article is only proof of what Darwin showd us not that evolution was the way we came form a common ancestor. The scenario as laid out is little more then "circumstances unkown made something happen that was different". Now if we equate that to real terms it would be the same as saying everyone started using the back door to the pub instead of the front. The unknown reason might be that they made the front street no parking so all patron need to park in back. Evolution as in survival of the strong is really little more then that and as far as i know no one is disputing that. But for some reason it is an example of why no god could have played a roll in the desing.

    71. Re:Matter of time by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      The campaign against evolution is part of a greater campaign against the authority of science and the concept of a secular state.
      I think that this summarizes up your thoughtful reply to me. I agree that this seems to be true for certain groups of people, for example the Discovery Institute. I don't think this is true for most people, though. I don't think they understand biology well enough to know that removing evolution from school curricula does this. You and I understand that evolution and natural selection is an essential component of modern biology, because science is an exercise in critical thinking, and one cannot think about biology critically while leaving out evolution. However, I think a lot of people see science as more or less a collection of facts. Evolution seems to be a very small part of those facts. How can it be that big a deal to leave them out? Most people need to be educated, not confronted as criminals.

      I absolutely agree, though, with your sentiment that the authority of the scientific establishment is threatened, and that in turn threatens the US. This is in part due to my own personal beliefs about Science. I think that in practice, most scientists do have faith that if they honestly pursue Truth, they will find it, because Truth is both accessible and compelling. The authority of the scientific establishment is supposed to be the authority of Truth, which scientists have pursued for its own sake. The US is based on similar principles- that the individual can find Truth through critical thinking, and use it to vote in his best interest. This is being attacked with cynicism, not just with regards to evolution, but also global warming, the effectiveness of sexual education, the possibility of an unbiased report on war in Iraq, etc. When we no longer believe that a person can honestly pursue and state Truth, then by default any statement of fact becomes propoganda. We find ourselves with an entire news organization based around the idea of "fair and balanced", which seems to mean that somehow we must hear "every side" of the Truth, as if Truth has a side for every person who has an interest in what it is.

      This is why I find myself disliking the sort of positivist, instrumentalist argument that you used (I think I got my philsophical buzz words correct...), saying that evolution "gets results", so it is a valid theory. I know that it is seductive to use this argument to defend evolution. I have used it. However, I have come to think that it loses the war, so to speak. Partly this is because if the knowledge of science is only a tool to get results, this makes it feel uncomfortably close to propoganda. Also, the argument always seems to degenerate into a philosophical argument over whether science is somehow fundamentally more epistemologically justified than religion (scientists just have faith in evolution, so they interpret all data their way!), or over specific paleontological finds, which most of us (certainly myself included) are not really prepared to handle well. In any case, I don't think the point is to convince them that evolution is somehow more justified than creationism. The point is to sell them on the idea that Truth exists, that it can be compelling in its own right, that scientific papers represent the honest, thoughtful beliefs of the scientific community rather than some institutional dogma, and that cynicism is not the way. In other words, we need to educate them, not treat them like they are stupid, or criminals. To teach them, we need them to to trust us, and we can only do that by finding a way to respect them.

    72. Re:Matter of time by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

      The logical fallacy that I see in the argument is argumentum ad ignorantiam--by arguing that since we can't comprehend God's masterplan, we should trust that God has done the right thing by causing these natural disasters. And by arguing that natural disasters are a good thing, you are thus implying that the sufferng caused by these disasters are justified--in God's masterplan.

    73. Re:Matter of time by kerrbear · · Score: 1

      There is NO evidence pointing toward a diety of any kind.

      Once again, a complete dogmatic assertion of "truth". Since you know for a fact that there is no evidence for a God, I guess that clears up the whole argument. How is this different than the person that claims that all evidence for Evolution has been doctored up by the Evolutionists? Its simply a blanket assertion that upholds the person's pre-existing blind-faith belief.

      I'm perfectly willing to listen to the arguments for evolution as are many who are willing to listen to arguments for God. As someone else posted earlier, the two need not be mutually exclusive. The issue I'm raising is concerning those who make blanket sweeping statements which do not add anything to the debate and the requisite smugness and judgementalism that comes along with it. In my opinion, it is not unreasonable to believe in evolution and it is also not unreasonable to believe in God. Many prominent scientists in history have come to the conclusion that a God exists so its not without merit (Not that this is a reason for believing in God but I argue that reasonable people can believe it and still be reasonable).

    74. Re:Matter of time by Woldry · · Score: 1

      Either you misunderstand my position, or you misunderstand the argumentum ad ignorantiam. It applies to the argument that because we do not know that X is true, it therefore MUST be false, or vice versa.
      I am not arguing that anything must be true, or that "we should trust" anything. I am saying that I choose to believe that it is true (because it might be), and that I choose to trust (because I can, without compromising logic). I have repeatedly stated that my position cannot be supported logically (nor can it be refuted logically, without further evidence). It may be utterly false. I acknowledge that.

      You are arguing that because we cannot know God's masterplan, it must be assumed that it is evil. This is a much better example of the argumentum ad ignorantiam than my own argument is. Please demonstrate how your argument is any more logical or less fallacious than mine.

      And I repeat that no one is saying that natural disasters are a good thing. We are saying that they may be a good thing. We do not know. We cannot know. The judgment, either way, is a choice. To decide either way is an act of faith. I would prefer to believe in a benevolent universe; some prefer not to believe that, and that is their (your?) right.

      You can read more about the fallacy here and here.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    75. Re:Matter of time by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "Once again, a complete dogmatic assertion of "truth". Since you know for a fact that there is no evidence for a God, I guess that clears up the whole argument."

      Now you must simply be trolling. Either there is evidence of God or not. A typical part of most religions is that God will not prove himself to you. There literally is NO evidence that could hold up scientific scrutiny that points to a diety. There are no holes in the theories of life are most reasonably filled with one. This is not dogma, it is an evaluation of EVIDENCE.

      "How is this different than the person that claims that all evidence for Evolution has been doctored up by the Evolutionists?"

      You thousands of scientists of completely independant scientists to have doctored information in a such a way that it has held up to the scrutiny of some of the most powerful minds mankind has to offer. It has also held up to scrutiny by those other scientists that do believe in a diety.

      "Its simply a blanket assertion that upholds the person's pre-existing blind-faith belief."

      No, it is a factual argument. One can not prove a negative, so the burden is on you to supply FACTUAL evidence of creation. It is extremely simple for me to do the same for evolution, refer to the article we are posting under. It is arguably not merely evidence but as solid a proof as will ever be had.

      "I'm perfectly willing to listen to the arguments for evolution as are many who are willing to listen to arguments for God. As someone else posted earlier, the two need not be mutually exclusive."

      That is not at all what you are expressing. Your message is quite clear. You are not interested in hearing arguments for evolution without a diety. It is true that the two are not exclusive, it is quite possible for there to be a diety (God, with a capital 'G' implies the christian god and there are factual errors in that doctrine that rule out that possibility).

      You will never have evolution + diety mixed from a respectable scientist. This is not because it is not possible, it is because it is not a valid part of science. First, the existance of a diety can not be disproven and therefore is disqualified from the scientific method. No matter what evidence you find, the diety could have made it that way. Second, a diety is not needed to complete the theory, thus occams razor eliminates it. Third, magic all powerful entities in the sky who do not show themselves in modern days but did so back when men were very superstitious, gullible, and believed in magic do not top the list of most likely explanations for any reasonable person.

      "it is also not unreasonable to believe in God"

      Reasonable people can believe in a god and still be reasonable. That is not the same thing as saying a belief in a god is reasonable. Reason does not lead to a conclusion that a god, fairies, angels, demons, sprites, willow wisps, trolls, dragons, fairy godmothers, harpies, ghosts, and so forth are real. These things have all been believed by reasonable people at some point. Reaching the conclusion that they are real is a question of faith, not reason.

      Reason always leads to believing the simpliest natural conclusion that can be reached based upon credible observation.

    76. Re:Matter of time by sasami · · Score: 1
      This is simply not true. Evolutionary biologists find flaws in existing theories of evolution fairly often, and the theories are adjusted accordingly over time.

      But only as long as core beliefs are upheld. While I am not arguing for or against ID, the author of the study makes a surprising statement of faith in TFA itself:
      "The evolution of complexity is a longstanding issue in evolutionary biology," said Joseph W. Thornton... "We wanted to understand how this system evolved at the molecular level. There's no scientific controversy over whether this system evolved. The question for scientists is how it evolved..."
      This is simply how all science, including biology, works; there is no crisis of faith as you claim.

      Ideally, but humans are humans and the real world isn't that convenient. While reading Kip Thorne's Black Holes and Time Warps, I was fascinated by his observation (demonstrated by a very readable historical account) that scientific theories have a marked tendency to resist revision until the scientists who hold those theories... die off. And he was talking about some great luminaries of science here, from Maxwell to Planck to Einstein and onwards.

      In this regard, the GP post is right on the mark.

      --
      Dum de dum.
      --
      Freedom is not the license to do what we like, it is the power to do what we ought.
    77. Re:Matter of time by sasami · · Score: 1

      This is a terrible argument. If you want to be a complete skeptic and actually wonder if the sun will rise the next morning then you cannot know anything, including whether a God exists or not. People do not have faith that the sun will rise, they know it will based on observable evidence, which, by the way, is completely lacking in ID theory. That is why it is called faith, or by your definition, blind faith. I've heard this argument in various forms by every IDer or creationist out there. Scientific theories are not faith-based. They have a lot of evidence to back them up. If you want to debate whether or not we know anything based on evidence then you have to debate whether we know anything at all. That would make you a skepitc, and if you're a skeptic what the hell are you doing believing in a God anyway?

      What you've got here is two views on epistemology: philosophical skepticism, the position that knowledge does not exist; and logical positivism, the position that only empirically verifiable claims are meaningful.

      Neither of these positions are generally held to be intellectually viable, despite your claim that they are the only two options. In fact, there are dozens of epistemologies, and -- here's the point -- a person's epistemology is by definition an unproven assumption, taken on faith.

      What's wrong with positivism? It flourished for a while in the early part of the 20th century, but major problems were discovered quite rapidly, and it was discarded -- though not before much of it was embraced by the scientific establishment as unquestioned dogma.

      Simply stated, there are a lot of things that are generally regarded as True, but are rejected by positivism. You cannot empirically verify that the universe exists (or: you cannot demonstrate that we don't live in the Matrix). You cannot empirically verify that logical reasoning is reliable. But the real heart of the problem is this: you cannot empirically verify positivism. Positivism therefore claims that positivism is meaningless.

      The proper status of faith is of determining one's axioms. Christian faith takes God as an axiom alongside such things as logic and existence (rationalist axioms, incidentally).

      --
      Dum de dum.

      --
      Freedom is not the license to do what we like, it is the power to do what we ought.
    78. Re:Matter of time by mfrank · · Score: 1

      Don't know about you, but everything *I* need to know about the universe was summed up in "The Cold Equations".

      The universe just really doesn't give a damn. It's incapable of giving a damn. We're on our own.

    79. Re:Matter of time by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

      Either you misunderstand my position, or you misunderstand the argumentum ad ignorantiam. It applies to the argument that because we do not know that X is true, it therefore MUST be false, or vice versa.
      I am not arguing that anything must be true, or that "we should trust" anything. I am saying that I choose to believe that it is true (because it might be), and that I choose to trust (because I can, without compromising logic). I have repeatedly stated that my position cannot be supported logically (nor can it be refuted logically, without further evidence). It may be utterly false. I acknowledge that.

      You are arguing over petty semantics. Whethere you say "X is true" or "I believe X," they essentially mean the same thing. The statement "I'm not saying X is true, but X could be true" is meaningless in the context of a debate, and it doesn't refute any counter-arguments to X.

      Your basic proposition is that God has a benevolent masterplan (X), which includes natural disasters. To support this claim, you essentially argued that since X cannot be proven false, that X is true. That is argumentum ignorantiam. Even appending "I believe" in front of each proposition, the argument still follows the form of an argument from ignorance.

      Now, you also concede that this belief cannot be supported by logic. Well, atleast you recognize that, and that is why argumentum ignorantiam is a logical fallacy. Arguments of this form essentially are arbitrary beliefs that aren't supported by a sound line of reason. Your mistake was attempting to construct a line of reasoning where, admittedly, none existed.

      You are arguing that because we cannot know God's masterplan, it must be assumed that it is evil. This is a much better example of the argumentum ad ignorantiam than my own argument is. Please demonstrate how your argument is any more logical or less fallacious than mine.

      No, I was merely arguing that your claim was illogical. I don't believe in God or any such masterplan.

      And I repeat that no one is saying that natural disasters are a good thing. We are saying that they may be a good thing. We do not know. We cannot know. The judgment, either way, is a choice. To decide either way is an act of faith. I would prefer to believe in a benevolent universe; some prefer not to believe that, and that is their (your?) right.

      If you don't believe that natural disasters are a bad thing, then you are essentially justifying the sufferng they cause. End of story. Saying that it's a choice whether to believe that they are good or bad is a meaningly statement. Ofcourse we have a choice in what we believe, and you choose to believe that natural disasters are benevolent acts--thus you are implicitly saying that the suffering caused by them are justified. Dancing around semantics only suggests that you are having a hard time reconciling your religious convinctions and your conscience/sense of reason. Clearly you see that there is something wrong with such beliefs, but you still want to hold onto your convictions.

      You can read more about the fallacy here and here.

      Thanks, but I'm quite familiar with the fallacies of logic. But I think perhaps you should re-assess your own beliefs with the common fallacies of logic in mind, for I think you will find that many of the reasons you hold those beliefs to be true are based on logical fallacies--particularly the ones which "cannot be supported by logic."

    80. Re:Matter of time by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "When we are talking about the common gods, (christian, jewish, muslum....)"

      Just to be pedantic, all three examples worship the same God.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    81. Re:Matter of time by Woldry · · Score: 1

      It is not "petty semantics" to point out a distinction between "X may be true" and "X is true", nor to point out a distinction between "I can't know, but I believe" and "I know".

      Nor is it "petty semantics" to point out a distinction between "We cannot know whether Y is justified" and "Y is justified".

      Clearly you are unable to deal with ambiguity, and do not see any distinction between proof and belief. I have no difficulty reconciling my "religious convinctions and [my] conscience/sense of reason," nor do I see anything wrong with my beliefs. They are not supported by logic; such is the nature of faith. However, you have yet to demonstrate that they can be refuted by logic, except if you allow yourself to conflate belief with proof.

      I'm quite familiar with the fallacies of logic. But I think perhaps you should re-assess your own beliefs with the common fallacies of logic in mind, for I think you will find that many of the reasons you hold those beliefs to be true are based on logical fallacies--particularly the ones which "cannot be supported by logic.

      Thank you for your recommendation, but I have quite thoroughly examined my faith in the light of logic. It stands unrefuted. I do not claim it as "true" in the sense of the word as it is used as a technical term in logic. Yet I choose to believe it; I hope it is true, but I have no evidence to prove it, and until I see evidence to refute it, I choose to act on hope. If others choose to act on different hopes, or to forego hope, I do not judge them. Why do you feel the need to judge those who choose a different interpretation than yours, if you cannot refute their interpretation?

      If the only things one can ever legitimately choose to believe are those that can be proved to be logically true, then I cannot imagine how one can function in daily life. Many things must be taken on faith; many choices must be made on the basis of what we hope is true rather than what we know to be true.

      If you are unable to see the distinction, I have nothing further to offer in this discussion.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    82. Re:Matter of time by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yes but when you ask some people they wold tell you differently. That wasn't supposed to be an extensive lists of religions either, it was just the one on top of my head. It was a discusion about creationism in a way.

    83. Re:Matter of time by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      I understand it was an example. The pedantic side of me likes to highlight common misconceptions, I did not intend to imply you held any.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    84. Re:Matter of time by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      What you've got here is two views on epistemology: philosophical skepticism, the position that knowledge does not exist; and logical positivism, the position that only empirically verifiable claims are meaningful.

      Neither of these positions are generally held to be intellectually viable, despite your claim that they are the only two options. In fact, there are dozens of epistemologies, and -- here's the point -- a person's epistemology is by definition an unproven assumption, taken on faith.

      What's wrong with positivism? It flourished for a while in the early part of the 20th century, but major problems were discovered quite rapidly, and it was discarded -- though not before much of it was embraced by the scientific establishment as unquestioned dogma.

      Simply stated, there are a lot of things that are generally regarded as True, but are rejected by positivism. You cannot empirically verify that the universe exists (or: you cannot demonstrate that we don't live in the Matrix). You cannot empirically verify that logical reasoning is reliable. But the real heart of the problem is this: you cannot empirically verify positivism. Positivism therefore claims that positivism is meaningless.

      The proper status of faith is of determining one's axioms. Christian faith takes God as an axiom alongside such things as logic and existence (rationalist axioms, incidentally).

      Thanks for the epistemology lesson but I took that class five years ago. I don't think I really suggested that there only two epistemologies but I did suggest that when comparing faith to physical evidence that physical evidence wins. I also suggested that physical evidence can be used to determine reality. That is a very short and to be honest, almost meaningless summary of what I was getting at. If the reality we know is determined by physical evidence then the only way to grasp the only reality we can grasp is to determine reality based on physical evidence. It is entirely possible that our reality is not in fact reality but it is useless for us to attempt to analyze what we cannot analyze. If we don't accept that then there can be any number of explanations including God. This isn't very useful though. That's the problem. Philisophically it's fine to think about these things but scientifically it is not. Discussions about ID are great and I believe that philosophy should discuss these things, although I doubt you would get very far with it. ID doesn't belong in a science classroom though and trying to disprove evolution through the use of philosophy isn't science. It is philosophy. If you want science, evolution is what you get. If you want philosophy you can have anything you want.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    85. Re:Matter of time by monoqlith · · Score: 1

      You are correct. I was referring to a uniformly random system, but I think that's what many people mean when they say random. In any case I still think it's misleading to call a quantum system random because it implies that quantum theory can't make any meaningful predictions at all about what happens in that system besides the fact that it is random. But quantum techniques can provide meaningful predictions which are definitely not uniformly random - and, I would argue, not random in the slighest.

    86. Re:Matter of time by sasami · · Score: 1

      Apologies in advance if I've misunderstood anything you're trying to say. I've got project deadlines coming up this week and my brain is sorta frazzled. Thanks, though, for an interesting discussion.

      I also suggested that physical evidence can be used to determine reality. If the reality we know is determined by physical evidence then the only way to grasp the only reality we can grasp is to determine reality based on physical evidence.

      First, let me clarify that I am not defending the OP's argument that propositions like "the sun will rise" are a matter of faith. I certainly agree that our reality can be known via physical evidence.

      But you seem to make the further claim that our reality can only be known via physical evidence. (This is consistent with your original wording, "if you want to debate whether or not we know anything based on evidence then you have to debate whether we know anything at all," which is what led me to think you were espousing positivism.)

      My post was intended to point out that there are numerous propositions that we consider to be true -- i.e., we consider them to correctly describe reality -- yet which are not based on evidence. In fact, the Matrix question is rigorously non-empirical; it is impossible by definition to obtain evidence for or against it. Yet, almost nobody would consider it irrational or unscientific to believe in a real universe. This belief can even coexist rationally with the intellectual admission that it could be wrong.

      So is this philosophy? Yes. But is this about reality? Also, yes.

      Indeed, science typically presupposes a real universe -- which is clearly a philosophical position, not an empirical one. Which brings us to the second point:

      It is entirely possible that our reality is not in fact reality but it is useless for us to attempt to analyze what we cannot analyze. If we don't accept that then there can be any number of explanations including God. This isn't very useful though. That's the problem. Philisophically it's fine to think about these things but scientifically it is not.

      Let's make sure I understand. I think you're saying that empirical reality (which you call "our reality") is the only thing that is knowable, so even if "True Reality" is different, hypothesizing about True Reality is meaningless because anyone can claim anything about it, including God or fairies or time cubes.

      If that is what you meant, I would point out that you're still making a philosophical claim: that only empirical knowledge is valid knowledge, and everything non-empirical is speculation. Sure, that sounds and feels very reasonable, but it's nevertheless an axiom that is being taken as true without formal justification. And it is still a form of positivism, so it has the same problem of self-refutation: the statement "only empirical knowledge is valid knowledge" is not empirical knowledge, so it is not valid knowledge... just speculation. Even plain ol' rationalism doesn't have this particular drawback. Empirical positivism is simply too limited to be a good model.

      (To verify that this isn't an inadvertent strawman, I believe the following is equivalent: the statement "it is useless for us to attempt to analyze what we cannot analyze" belongs in the "cannot analyze" category and so "scientifically it is not [fine].")

      So science, which is solely a methodology, is always accompanied by an underlying philosophy -- not an "anything goes" philosophy of abstract word games, but a philosophy that seriously claims to have something to say about True Reality (or lack thereof), and science's relation to it (or lack thereof). Formally, I'm saying that you can't do science without an epistemology, because your epistemology determines what you consider to be knowledge.

      Which leads us to the third point:

      If you want science, evolution is what you get.

      It's interesting that you assume I am

      --
      Freedom is not the license to do what we like, it is the power to do what we ought.
  2. We see tiny things becoming more complex everyday. by Dante+Shamest · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Sperm + Egg = Baby

    Okay, I realise most people here have never had a chance to partake in this activity after they were born, but you get the picture.

  3. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Ckwop · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That should be: Can God create a stone so heavy he can't lift it, if he can, he's not all powerful because he can't lift the stone, if he can't he's not all powerful because he can't create the stone in the first place.

    Simon

  4. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If God is all powerful that means he can perform any action, this however is absurd. Can God create a stone so heavy he can't lift it, if he can, he's not all powerful because he can't lift the stone, if he can't he's not all powerful because he can't lift the stone in the first place. God could also create married bachelors, square circles and honest politicians.

    That argument is absurd. It's exactly like saying "God cannot create something that by definition cannot exist." Can you create a fish that's not a fish? How about a solid gas? Or an odd number evenly divisible by 2?

  5. Annoying.... by catbutt · · Score: 1

    that they ended with a quote by Behe.

    When will he just give up? He's just grasping at straws....

    1. Re:Annoying.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, frankly when Dobson and Graham and the other televangelists figured out how to turn religion into a business and market it to a large population of eager consumers, non-scientists like Behe were given a podium from which to misinform the waiting masses. There is money to be made in his position, just like a writer for the National Enquirer can actually make a living. On the other hand, his followers can be very successful at bankrupting an entire school district with their eagerness to misinform. But I don't think Behe is hurting from the mischief he has caused. Satan, as the saying goes, can spin a good tale.

    2. Re:Annoying.... by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Dr. Behe described the results as "piddling." He wondered whether the receptors with the intermediate mutations would be harmful to the survival of the organisms and said a two-component hormone-receptor pair was too simple to be considered irreducibly complex. He said such a system would require at least three pieces and perform some specific function to fit his notion of irreducibly complex.

      What Dr. Thornton has shown, Dr. Behe said, falls within with incremental changes that he allows evolutionary processes can cause.

      "Even if this works, and they haven't shown that it does," Dr. Behe said, "I wouldn't have a problem with that. It doesn't really show that much."
      He will never give up as long as he can keep moving the goalposts.

      It's truly an intellectually dishonest practice and it speaks directly to the kind of Doctor Behe is. This is the guy who testified in that 'lets put ID into the classroom' trial in Dover, PA. His testimony was an embarrassement and I'm surprised he has enough credibility left that the NY Times would include him in their article. I guess it's the whole "two sides of an argument" theme again.

      Here's a great astronomy example of almost the exact same thing.
      http://www.anomalist.com/commentaries/claim.html
      Rather than having two images of the same object, astronomers now randomly decided that three were necessary.
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:Annoying.... by aminorex · · Score: 1

      But he's right, it is a piddling example. The difference in complexity from those systems which Behe calls irreducibly complex systems is several orders of magnitude.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    4. Re:Annoying.... by Drooling+Iguana · · Score: 1

      The televangelists didn't need to "figure out" anything. Religion's already been a business for millennia. The televangelists are simply continuing a tradition that's been going on ever since ancient man first decided that everything we see around us has to be the product of a powerful being or beings that look, act and think pretty much the same way we do.

      --
      ... I'm addicted to placebos
    5. Re:Annoying.... by jfengel · · Score: 1

      True, though the article states that other ID proponents have cited it as an example.

      Behe's statement provokes an interestingly falsifiable challenge. Using the techniques developed for this study, it may be possible to find a system of at least three pieces performing some purpose, as he suggests. He's still got wiggle room in there should somebody discover that (especially in the word "purpose"), but he'll find himself increasingly marginalized if somebody manages to meet his challenge. (Not that he's not marginalized already by the vast majority of the scientific community, but perhaps that would be sufficient to keep him from being quoted in the New York Times.)

      Proving things from a molecular level to the organelle level that Behe talks most about will be extremely difficult, because of the orders of magnitude you mention. Here, he's lowered the bar to a mere three molecules. I'll be interested to see how he reacts if somebody manages to place such a demonstration in front of him.

    6. Re:Annoying.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Behe is like a guy who says Mt. Everest is unclimbable by him, therefore all hills are unclimbable, therefore anything found on top of a mountain must have been put there by a super-powerful, yet only vaguely describable "intelligent designer", and this idea is a "scientific" one.

      Then, when someone else makes a small, tentative, but still tangible step up the mountain, he calls the effort "piddling".

      You're right. He's right. It's small. But most of the time science makes progress by a great many such "piddling" steps. Give it time. He's given up *way* too early for a science as young as molecular biology.

    7. Re:Annoying.... by ppanon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But those several orders of magnitude are just a constant factor. What the research has done is really like proving a problem is solvable in Polynomial time when a bunch of people have been arguing that it's NP.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    8. Re:Annoying.... by raduf · · Score: 1



              I'm awfully annoyed when I even see intelligent design all over this kind of news. This is great news in iself, although a bit geeker then slashdot is lately. Also potentially very usefull, since evolution is, as far as we know, the greatest design method ever (we're living proof). And everything we find out about how it really works may lead to very very interesting stuff. But instead all i read is how this disproves ID. I already know ID is bullshit And i've had my "oh my god! there is no god!" stage in my adolescence, thank you. I'm over it. But sadly I don't seem to find people who think that way any more. All the comments I found (at a glance) that don't involve religion or ID are Funny. Anybody knows where are all the insightful people who left slashdot? I'd really like to go there...

  6. Re:The truth shall set you free. by CantGetAUserName · · Score: 3, Funny


    "Oh dear," says God, "I hadn't thought of that," and promptly vanishes in a puff of logic.

    (Douglas Adams)

    --
    Semper en excreta sumus solum profundum
  7. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Frenchman113 · · Score: 1

    Wikipedia has several solutions to this apparant paradox: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omnipotence_paradox

  8. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Take even a simple logic class and you'll realize how absolutely stupid you are. You make athiests look bad.

  9. Waah waah. That's what Google is for. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quit your crying and get thee to a search engine.

    http://www.libertypost.org/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?Art Num=135908

  10. Re:God created everything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is the difference between a man who is alive one second, and dead the next second?

    Electrical activity?

  11. Genes from extinct animals by Adrian+Lopez · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The scientists have managed to reconstruct ancient genes from long extinct animals. Does this mean that we are one step closer to having pet dinosaurs?

    Yay!

    --
    "In prison you just have to shut your eyes and take it. Here you have to shut your eyes and give it."
    1. Re:Genes from extinct animals by Jetekus · · Score: 1

      I imagine they've got enough genes by now! If they haven't I'm sure they could just use some frog DNA, anyhow. That should do the trick.

    2. Re:Genes from extinct animals by TubeSteak · · Score: 2, Informative

      Pet dinosaurs?

      I predict we can make millions selling the smaller ones to Creationist families. After all, don't they want to be closer to the original man?

      I can see the ad campaign now: Get your child a pet dinosaur so they can ride them just like man did before the flood! Now you too can have a beast of the earth, just as God gave to Adam! (Discounts given to Church groups buying more than 3 pet dinos.)

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:Genes from extinct animals by ollj · · Score: 1

      no dna can survive 100k years no matter how conserved and you cant just fill the huge gaps of that giant puzzle. But 10k year extinct sabertooth pets or similar old species are almost realistic.

  12. Create a live cell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did anyone manage to show how a live cell can be created from basic organic, non-live ingredients? Maybe somewhat off-topic but still interesting, I think.

    1. Re:Create a live cell by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Did anyone manage to show how a live cell can be created from basic organic, non-live ingredients?

      If anyone does, someone will accuse him/her of "playing god".

      --
      What?
    2. Re:Create a live cell by shawb · · Score: 3, Informative

      I don't know that we have as of yet been able so show a living cell bootstrap from basic inert materials (I'm using non-living as the definition of inert in this context. There may be a better word, but I didn't think "dead" would be appropriate, as it has an implication of "once was living".)

      However, it has been shown that many organic materials can be created in an environment similar to primordial earth. It has also been shown that many of these materials do tend to self-organize in a way that would be compatible with a cell possibly forming given enough organic material and time.

      Cell wall: phospholipids, mostly being hydrophobic with one or two ends being hydrophilic tend to organize in sheets or water filled bubbles, and so could naturally form a cell wall. Amino acids do self aggragate to some extent, and a random aggregation could form a useful protein, ditto for RNA (which I believe preceded DNA evolutionarilly for a number of reasons.)

      There is only one protein that would have to aggregate naturally before life as we know it could arise... ribosomes (or some suitable analog.) From there RNA could be transcribed into protein. At first most of the protein would pretty much be useless globs, untill a protein arises that can create copies of RNA. This protein could either aggregate naturally or be encoded by random chance into a strand or RNA. From there Darwinian evolution kicks in and as more beneficial RNA sequences come about that improve the transcription process and copying mechanism as well as the defense mechanisms, cellular life would not be too wild of an outcome. The progression of life would seem to be fairly slow at first, but the copying mechanism in RNA would probably be so imperfect that new variations arise very frequently, but most of those variations would likely be detrimental. Eventually better copying mechanisms arise, and eventually use of a more stable genetic material (DNA) make life blossom, expanding at a decent pace. Once some organism figured out a way to systematically capture and store energy from sunlight (or any energy source, really... thermal vents, gradiants across a thermo/chemocline etc) and a way to release that energy, then evolution can start proceeding at an exponential rate.

      So, if it can be proven that a ribosome or some other RNA-Protein copying method could eventually arise from a random mix of amino acids it would greatly support the possibility of some method of abiogenesis. It does not have to be likely that this ribosome would arise in a human time scale... it could take millions or billions of years. It just has to happen eventually.

      Complex hemes, carbohydrates and many other materials that are necessary for life at a complexity of ours would not be necessary to bootstrap the system from inert materials. Just some strands of RNA and something like a ribosome. Once you have those, something as complex as an RNA transcriptase could eventually arise from random permutations of RNA strands. And once you have RNA that has RNA -> RNA transcriptase encoded somewhere inside of itself and has some ribosome analogue working on it, then you have the bare bones beginning of organic life.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    3. Re:Create a live cell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, since only one of the four bases can be synthesized in a system that might have corrisponded to natural conditions at some point in earth's history, to say nothing of attaching the bases to the 5-sugar backbone; you've got a problem.

      Doesn't matter, though. Nucleotide synthesis genes require about 40 working proteans. The cheapest viable protean-synthesis chain requires one ribosome and 45 proteans. The complexity of this scheme approaches 10^40000 assuming the system has a generous damage tolerance of 75%.

    4. Re:Create a live cell by shawb · · Score: 1

      You had me worried for a little bit, so I did some looking around. Modern theories state that it wasn't even RNA that was the original genetic carrier, but self replicating proteins. Turns out it would have statistically taken somewhere around the order of one year for the creation of a self replicating protein to arise on the primordial earth. That gives plenty of time for that self replicating protein to have a couple of chances at being in the right place at the right time in the right conditions to bootstrap the life process..

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    5. Re:Create a live cell by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      "There is only one protein that would have to aggregate naturally before life as we know it could arise... ribosomes"

      Ribosomes are not proteins. They are mostly RNA with some proteins grafted on. This image shows this fairly clearly.

      (See here for more info. Especially the 'Implications' part)

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
  13. Re:God created everything... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is nothing without God.

    This is a science discussion - proselytizing has no place here.

    --
    "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  14. Re:God created everything... by kennygraham · · Score: 0
    What is the difference between a man who is alive one second, and dead the next second. The very second life ends???

    The brain loses its supply of oxygen, and stops functioning. Thought stops.

  15. Re:Waiting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Study, in a First, Explains Evolution's Molecular Advance

    By KENNETH CHANG
    Published: April 7, 2006

    By reconstructing ancient genes from long-extinct animals, scientists have for the first time demonstrated the step-by-step progression of how evolution created a new piece of molecular machinery by reusing and modifying existing parts.

    The researchers say the findings, published today in the journal Science, offer a counterargument to doubters of evolution who question how a progression of small changes could produce the intricate mechanisms found in living cells.

    "The evolution of complexity is a longstanding issue in evolutionary biology," said Joseph W. Thornton, professor of biology at the University of Oregon and lead author of the paper. "We wanted to understand how this system evolved at the molecular level. There's no scientific controversy over whether this system evolved. The question for scientists is how it evolved, and that's what our study showed."

    Charles Darwin wrote in The Origin of Species, "If it would be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down."

    Discoveries like that announced this week of a fish with limblike fins have filled in the transitions between species. New molecular biology techniques let scientists begin to reconstruct how the processes inside a cell evolved over millions of years.

    Dr. Thornton's experiments focused on two hormone receptors. One is a component of stress response systems. The other, while similar in shape, takes part in different biological processes, including kidney function in higher animals.

    Hormones and hormone receptors are protein molecules that act like pairs of keys and locks. Hormones fit into specific receptors, and that attachment sends a signal to turn on -- or turn off -- cell functions. The matching of hormones and receptors led to the question of how new hormone-and-receptor pairs evolved, as one without the other would appear to be useless.

    The researchers found the modern equivalent of the stress hormone receptor in lampreys and hagfish, two surviving jawless primitive species. The team also found two modern equivalents of the receptor in skate, a fish related to sharks.

    After looking at the genes that produced them, and comparing the genes' similarities and differences among the genes, the scientists concluded that all descended from a single common gene 450 million years ago, before animals emerged from oceans onto land, before the evolution of bones.

    The team recreated the ancestral receptor in the laboratory and found that it could bind to the kidney regulating hormone, aldosterone and the stress hormone, cortisol.

    Thus, it turned out that the receptor for aldosterone existed before aldosterone. Aldosterone is found just in land animals, which appeared tens of millions of years later.

    "It had a different function and was exploited to take part in a new complex system when the hormone came on the scene," Dr. Thornton said.

    What happened was that a glitch produced two copies of the receptor gene in the animal's DNA, a not-uncommon occurrence in evolution. Then, for reasons not understood, two major mutations made one receptor sensitive just to cortisol, leading to the modern version of the stress hormone receptor. The other receptor became specialized for kidney regulation.

    Dr. Thornton said the experiments showed how evolution could and did innovate functions over time. "I think this is likely to be a very common theme in how complex molecular systems evolved," he said.

    Christoph Adami, a professor of life sciences at the Keck Graduate Institute in Claremont, Calif. who wrote an accompanying commentary in Science, said the research showed how evolution "takes advantage of lucky circumstances and builds upon them."

    Dr. Thornton said the experiment refutes the notion of "irreducible complexity" put forward by Mich

  16. Contradictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The dumb thing is, is that science itself has proven that genetics is too interdependant amoungst the different protein stands and processes. If they all didn't change simultaneously, the whole thing would go kaput. DNA strands are the key example of this.

    At any rate, in nature you see general degradation of systems (laws of thermodynamics) for the system to create higher complexity out of thin air is completely bunk to me. The scientists just don't want to admit the existance of a God.

    1. Re:Contradictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We would gladly accept the existence of a God, if there was proof. However, there are only lies, hear-say and insanity. There is not God. Never was, and never will be.
      Unless you define God as science.

    2. Re:Contradictions by AxelBoldt · · Score: 1
      for the system to create higher complexity out of thin air is completely bunk to me

      Have you ever looked into genetic algorithms and genetic programming? There you see the creation of "higher complexity out of thin air" before your very eyes.

    3. Re:Contradictions by zenhkim · · Score: 1

      Okay, here's a contradiction for you:

      Given: God is omnipotent, which means God is all-powerful and can do anything.
      Question: Can God create a stone so heavy that even He cannot lift it?

      This is the worst kind of contradiction possible -- a dilemma. If God can make a stone too heavy for Him to lift, then he's not omnipotent! If God can't make a stone too heavy for himself, he's *still* not omnipotent AND he gets embarrassed by us humans! (Ever packed too many books in a large box and discovered you couldn't lift it off the floor?)

      While you're mulling that one over, here's something just for shits and giggles:

      Given: God is omnipresent, which means God is everywhere and is in everything.
      Therefore: God is inside all of us, and is inside all parts of us ...including our asses.
      Therefore: God has his head up everyone's asses.
      And...
      If: "Everyone" includes "God"
      Then: God has his head up his ass!

      That definitely explains why everything is so fucked up here.... :-D

      --
      "All hands, BRACE FOR IMPACT!"
  17. Molecular Biology Leads the Way by Quirk · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Molecular Biology has is taking the lead in terms of validating evolution as a cogent theory. The attacks on Darwin's ideas by factions such as those who proport Intelligent Design are following along far behind the advances being made today.

    It is amusing that religions touting a Creator God are excellent examples of Evolution in Action. The Creator God is the equivalent of the alpha male of a troop of primates. The idea of the Creator God speaks not to the present alpha male but to an idealized father founder of the tribe. The sense of history inherent in a Creator meshes with our sense of our own history. The concept of history, partially embodied in burial rites, points to the ideas of teleology and the status quo ante that underpin many religions. The idea of death as examplified in burial and a belief in a life after death are ideas that need to be examined as they define us as a species.

    Religions posing an alpha male Creator Father have evolved through many generations of selective mating. Those who strongly believed in the tribe's faith were more likely to find suitable mates. Those who couldn't bring themselves to believe in a Creator God were often killed outright as heretics or were driven from the tribe. Many generations of mating based upon religious beliefs should give us a population the majority of which advocate a belief in God. Religion is Evolution in Action.

    --
    "Academicians are more likely to share each other's toothbrush than each other's nomenclature."
    Cohen
    1. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by TheDreadSlashdotterD · · Score: 1

      But wouldn't you need those who questioned as a catalyst to keep everyone from killing each other? Their rage is directed at a target, thus allowing them to exist with each other in relative harmony. The boredom of life would cause strife, but by direct that energy towards the protection of their ideals the balance is maintained. Therefore, you would need some people as fodder for the protection of all.

      --
      I have nothing to say.
    2. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by shredthrashgrind · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Religion is Evolution in Action.
      Your example isn't evolution. It's natural selection. You're talking about popualations being refined, not growing a new leg or being endowed through mutations to better survive a climate or environment.
    3. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      What about religions that are not based on a "main dude"?

      I should also point out that most versions of Intelligent Design to not claim to characterize the creator(s). They could be aliens, smart shrimp, robots, etc.

    4. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      Religion is Evolution in Action.

      Your example isn't evolution. It's natural selection.

      I didn't understand his example either but his original premise is correct. Religion are shining examples of Evolution.

      We've got the dinosaurs (dead religions/mythology): Norse, Greek, Babylonian, Egyptian, Celtic, etc. Natural selection in action.

      And the ones still evolving: Islam, Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism, Bhudism, etc

      Notice that Judiaism spawned the two successor religions first Christianity (a new limb called Jesus, 2.1 Billion Strong) and then Islam (A new limb called Mohammad, 1.3 Billion strong). Both of which are far more successful then Judaism is right now (14 million and shrinking).

      Cristianity has become so large and successful that it as a species can support a variety of specializations(like the birds of the galapagos islands): Jehovah's Witness, Methodist, Baptist, Protestant, Episcopalian, Presbyterian, Lutheran, Catholic, Pentecostal, Church Of Christ, Assembly Of God, Seventh Day Adventist, Episcopal, etc.

      Islam isn't stagnant either: Sunni, Shi'ite, Salafis, etc

      Religions in general are going through both evolution and natural selection. Some faster than others but they are all doing it just the same.

    5. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by plunge · · Score: 1

      Leaving aside the rather silly speculative example, natural selection acting on a population IS evolution. It's leading to a population more suited to a particular lifestyle and overall collective behavior, which itself a new trait.

      Mutations certainly creates the options available, but natural selection is the only measure of what "better" actually means.

    6. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Your example isn't evolution. It's natural selection. You're talking about popualations being refined, not growing a new leg or being endowed through mutations to better survive a climate or environment.

      Evolution is any change in the relative frequency of an allele in the gene pool. There's no minimum amount of change necessary for it to be considered "evolution".

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    7. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by Hatta · · Score: 1

      I should also point out that most versions of Intelligent Design to not claim to characterize the creator(s). They could be aliens, smart shrimp, robots, etc.

      Or flying spaghetti monsters for instance. But that just makes their hypothesis even harder to falsify, which takes it even further out of the scientific realm.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    8. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by ppanon · · Score: 1

      That's porbably art of why we have team sports and fights in hockey. So that natural aggressiveness and violence can be redirected in non-destructive outlets.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    9. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Or flying spaghetti monsters for instance. But that just makes their hypothesis even harder to falsify

      Wouldn't SETI face a similar problem? Just because you don't know what you will (or will not) find does not make something non-science.

    10. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, but that's only a smokescreen, ID is recursive you see.

      Man cannot have evolved naturally. Aliens/shrimp/whatever came to Earth and spiked the gene pool.

      Aliens cannot have evolved naturally. Aliens/shrimp/whatever came to planet Xarggssea 3 and spiked the gene pool. .. ad nauseum

      Under ID, the only step that doesn't require a step above it is supernatural intervention. Hence, it requires a god.

    11. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by zenhkim · · Score: 1

      > Just because you don't know what you will (or will not) find does not make something non-science.

      True, but even Arthur C. Clarke is on record saying there is always the possibility that *there may be no other life forms in the universe*. And we're talking about one of the biggest authors in science fiction!

      There is also something to be said about healthy skepticism when it comes to a prolonged lack of evidence in spite of ample opportunity. As James "The Amazing" Randi put it, if you stay up on Christmas Eve night every year, waiting by the chimney yet never see Santa Claus, you haven't proven there is no Santa Claus. But after doing it for twenty years, you should probably call it quits. :-D

      --
      "All hands, BRACE FOR IMPACT!"
    12. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by Tablizer · · Score: 1


      There is also something to be said about healthy skepticism when it comes to a prolonged lack of evidence in spite of ample opportunity. As James "The Amazing" Randi put it, if you stay up on Christmas Eve night every year, waiting by the chimney yet never see Santa Claus, you haven't proven there is no Santa Claus. But after doing it for twenty years, you should probably call it quits.

      Is this in reference to SETI or ID?

    13. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And who created God?

    14. Re:Molecular Biology Leads the Way by zenhkim · · Score: 1

      > Is this in reference to SETI or ID?

      Actually, I was thinking of WMDs. ;-)

      --
      "All hands, BRACE FOR IMPACT!"
  18. Re:God created everything... by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The existence of evolution is not inconsistent with the existence of god. Most scientists agree on that point.

    The most common people to claim otherwise seem to be the more rabid IDers and creationists. Go figure.

    And for the most rabid athiests, I would point out that lack of proof is not proof of lack -- eg: Just because you'll never find the body doesn't mean I never killed mikie (don't tell the cops). Similarly: the fact that a 'missing link' is currently missing doesn't mean that it will never be found.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  19. The NYT page, no registration required. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
  20. no by Khashishi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They aren't saying that God is not powerful enough to create a universe with evolution. They are saying God didn't create a universe with evolution. Significant difference there

    1. Re:no by hitmark · · Score: 1

      if so, what are all those fossils and stuff? god's beta's?

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    2. Re:no by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 3, Funny

      No silly.

      Don't you realise when god put all the animals onto the Earth, some obviously missed and were embedded into the rocks.

      Its like when ensign redshirt gets beamed inside a mountain.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    3. Re:no by hitmark · · Score: 2, Funny

      so your saying god makes misstakes? heretic!

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    4. Re:no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      s/your/you're

    5. Re:no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they specifically say that it couldn't be possible, hence a higher power must be involved. They don't just say that a higher power probably was involved, they try to prove that evolution _couldn't_ have happened. But that gets into the 'omniscient' debate which is just silly anyway.

    6. Re:no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What god?

    7. Re:no by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      No, I think he's saying that if you had the power to hurl creatures at a planet at any speed you chose, you'd probably mis-aim some of them on purpose just for kicks too.

      (If you believe in God, which I don't)

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    8. Re:no by zenhkim · · Score: 1

      > What god?

      Better yet ....WHICH god??

      - The Jewish God? (Jehovah?)
      - The Muslim God? (Allah?)
      - The Deist or Unitarian God?
      - The Native American God? (the "Great Spirit"?)
      - The Ancient Greek God? (Zeus, ruler of the Olympians?)
      - The Old Norse God? (Odin?)
      - The Great Pumpkin??
      - The Flying Spaghetti Monster???
      (I've left out the Christian God, since that involves a nasty fork bomb.)

      Hmmm.... I guess I'll pick ...None of The Above.

      Wow. My headache's gone. ;-)

      --
      "All hands, BRACE FOR IMPACT!"
    9. Re:no by fimbulvetr · · Score: 2, Funny

      s/re$/re\//

    10. Re:no by hitmark · · Score: 1

      err, the post was supposed to be a joke, laugh :P

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    11. Re:no by mikiN · · Score: 1

      You left out the CmdrTaco option, you insensitive clod!
      Hail CmdrTaco!

      --
      The Hacker's Guide To The Kernel: Don't panic()!
    12. Re:no by LordSnooty · · Score: 1

      So was that post.

    13. Re:no by hitmark · · Score: 1

      well if you say so.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    14. Re:no by realityfighter · · Score: 1

      Dubious. If they believed that God could create such a world, they wouldn't accuse "science" of besmirching God with their research into evolution.

      The problem is that the particular strains of Christianity to which Intelligent Design appeal are a mix of mainline Christian philosophy and narrative orthodoxy. The former being the belief in God as a supreme being, omniscient and omnipotent, which is a fairly new feature of philosophy, and the latter being the belief that God literally created the world in six days, literally flooded the entire world, etc. These two live together in an uneasy ideological truce, and anything that requires one to take precedence over the other is a problem.

      Of course, the other problem is that ID as a movement is politically valuable - just like video game bans, ID proposals allow politicians to claim allegiance with a certain demographic without actually doing anything for them.

      --
      A strain of paranoid prevention can be worse than the disease, whate'er the intention.
  21. Re:God created everything... by mctk · · Score: 2, Funny
    God created science! God created discussion! God created computers! God created Slashdot! God created the "Reply to This" link! God made you type that! God made me type this!

    God rests his case.

    --
    Paul Grosfield - the quicker picker upper.
  22. Re:God created everything... by mctk · · Score: 1

    In response to your first paragraph, please consider Asimov's The Relativity of Wrong.

    --
    Paul Grosfield - the quicker picker upper.
  23. Re:We see tiny things becoming more complex everyd by middlemen · · Score: 1

    When I was young I used to think that once some guy got married to a girl, babies were automatically born as an after effect of marriage. It was just like my Mom said when I was 16, "When you grow older, you will grow a beard !".

  24. Jurrasic Park by dteichman2 · · Score: 0

    anyone?

    --


    Silence is golden... and duct tape is silver.
  25. Re:God created everything... by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1
    This is a science discussion - proselytizing has no place here.
    An evolution article on slashdot is not a science discussion; it's a page-hit-generating flamewar.
    --

    How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
  26. Why do we still care about the doubters? by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 2, Interesting
    "The researchers say the findings, published today in the journal Science, offer a counterargument to doubters of evolution who question..."

    Can you believe it's 2006 and we still care about the near-high-school drop-outs who continue to question evolution?

    I've found that most people who are ignorant of evolutionary processes lead sheltered lives. They are vaguely ignorant of where the beef on their table came from, they couldn't tell you how rainclouds form and they don't have a clue how much oil may be left in the ground. However, they darn sure know that men couldn't from monkeys.

    1. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by ferd_farkle · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Near-high-school dropouts"?


      From the article:

      Dr. Thornton said the experiment refutes the notion of "irreducible complexity" put forward by Michael J. Behe, a professor of biochemistry at Lehigh University.


      We care because these yahoos get control of school boards and muck about with the science curricula in public schools. It's 2006, and it would be inexcusable not actively oppose them, because they have no intention to stop inflicting kids with "near-high-school dropout" level of science education.

    2. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by blamanj · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, it's a fairly large percent of the population. According to the latest surveys, 42% of Americans believethat life existed in its present form from the beginning of time.

    3. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They breed more quickly and they vote.

    4. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      Partly because one of those near-high-school drop-outs is our president. And some others sit in Congress. And while I believe the federal government should have no say at all in local education the fact is they currently do. If they wanted to drop a school's federal funding because they teach evolution they can do it.

    5. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Can you believe it's 2006 and we still care about the near-high-school drop-outs who continue to question evolution?
      Another person posted this link above your post: http://www.chick.com/reading/tracts/0055/0055_01.a sp After reading it, and then reading your post, I couldn't help but chuckle at your attitude.
    6. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by f97tosc · · Score: 3, Informative

      Can you believe it's 2006 and we still care about the near-high-school drop-outs who continue to question evolution?

      For those of you who don't read science, I would like to add that the paper itself made no mention of ID at all. Of course, biologists are interested in evlotution of complex mechanisms for its own sake, not for the sake of convincing some young earth creationists.

      However, Dr Christoph Adami, who wrote in Perspecives (basically, giving an opinion of the significance of a new finding and providing the non-specialist with a context of the paper) made the point of how fatal this finding is for the ID argument. Here we have parts that have exactly the "irreducable complexity" that ID proponents love to talk about, and now someone has managed to reconstruct their evolutionary history.

      Tor

    7. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Can you believe it's 2006 and we still care about the near-high-school drop-outs who continue to question evolution?

      The problem is that evolution cannot be demonstrated making simple stuff into complex stuff before the eyes of observers and cameras. One has to except that truckloads of incremental and minor evidence can be extrapolated to the formation of complex life from simple life or mud. After being lied to by automechanics, lawyers, financial advisors, and marketers; people have formed a "show me" attitude when it comes to using peices to explain the whole.

      If automechanics, lawyers, financial advisors, and marketers have an agenda, then it makes sense to assume scientists do also. The average person asks, "why should I trust scientists over other professions"?

    8. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps it's fair to say that competitive pressures in the marketplace of ideas have caused scientists to evolve better evidence for evolution to combat the threat from the amusingly-ironicly-named "Intelligent Design".

      I'm Not joking - I think the torrent of announcements is a response to competitive pressure.

    9. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because there's no profit to be made off you believing in evolution?

    10. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by localman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Speaking of sheltered lives...

      I'm a high school dropout and I'm both an athiest and I subscribe to evolution. I know a lot of college graduates who are very sharp and intelligent and yet don't accept evolution and believe in god.

      Really, I think that the choice on this matter is often dicated by emotion, which overrides any intellectual consideration or presentation of facts. Some people are afraid of there not being a god, or don't like the feeling of not knowing the purpose of life, or just like sharing beliefs with their friends and families, or don't like to admit they've been wrong for the past forty years, etc.

      And these people are important: they make up more than half of the voting population in my estimation so they have a profound effect on you and I. So don't dismiss them. And don't bother trying to convert them. But find a way to live with them. You may even find some of them make good friends.

      Cheers.

    11. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by nrlightfoot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I continue to question evolution, and I gradutated University with a Bachelor's of Science in Physics. However I haven't had a biology course since 10th grade, so I haven't had that much exposure to evolutionary ideas in a while. However, one of my main objections has been that nobody could explain in a detailed manner how a random mutation could every add functionality to an organism, so it is nice to see that such things can be explained. It makes evolution seem more plausible to me, although I haven't quite made up my mind yet if I am going to believe in evolution or not.

      --
      what sig?
    12. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by plunge · · Score: 1

      I wonder if the people who answered yes to this really believe that:

      a) the dinosaurs never existed
      b) if they did, that it had no real effect on the ecology: things were still pretty much like they are now, just with dinos running around.

      I mean, the era of the dinos are by the far most well-known geologic period other than our own. And you need only to have seen a few imaginative pics of this time to know that they lived in a radically different ecology: all different plants, all different creatures, very different climate, etc.

      But maybe people manage to think of this as this as not much different from "in its present form"? I dunno. It's pretty hard to wrap ones mind around it.

    13. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by plunge · · Score: 1

      I'd say that the problem is that the evidence for evolution requires a lot of prior knowledge. You have to be reasonably well informed about: chemistry, genetics, bio-chem, statistics, geology, and the basic scientific method to put it all together. Most laypeople simply have neither the time nor the interest to devote to learning those things, much less looking at how all the evidence for evolution fits together.

      I'm not sure what the solution is, other than more education. Sadly, in the US at least, despite creationism being banned, basic biology is barely taught in many places, and evolution is often quietly skipped entirely.

    14. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by d_strand · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more. It's frustrating that people stupid enough to not be able to tell the difference between "I can't understand how this could work", and "This can not work" are able to get so much attention.

      I do take some comfort in the fact that this is only a big debate in the U.S. The rest of the (western) world seems to not care very much about the Creationists, thankfully.

    15. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by AxelBoldt · · Score: 1
      The problem is that evolution cannot be demonstrated making simple stuff into complex stuff before the eyes of observers and cameras.

      Teach genetic algorithms and genetic programming in school. Then everybody will believe that simple stuff can turn into useful complex stuff if you throw in some randomness, wait long enough, and always weed out the useless stuff. You can try it at home.

    16. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      Don't forget that 1 in 5 believe the sun orbits the earth.

      And out of 1,120 American adults surveyed, it was found that 45% believed the Sun was not a star.

      It's too depressing to think about..

    17. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by AxelBoldt · · Score: 1
      how a random mutation could every add functionality to an organism

      Take an afternoon to look into genetic algorithms and genetic programming. Then you'll understand the principle.

    18. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by jcdenhartog · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Amazing how ignorant people make baseless claims like this without doing a little research first. I am currently reading a series of essays of 50 PhDs advocating literal creation in six days... They are PhDs in a wide variety of scientific fields, including biology, biochemistry, geology, and physics, to name a few.
      (The book is called "In Six Days"). There are plenty others out there including here, for example.

      And the commentator gets rated 'Insightful'. Speaks to the wisdom of most slashdotters.

      On the flip side, most Christians do not read the Bible closely enough to properly answer the arguments that evolutions try to pose against creationism. Most importantly, they fail to reckon from the perspective of original sin (most of them don't believe in it anyway) and sin that blinds man to truth (John 9:39, John 9:40,41). It fails to reckon with man's bondage to to sin, so that he ALWAYS seeks the lie, because he by nature hates God and seeks the lie. (Ephesians 2:1-6, John 15:18-25). This results in them proposing poor responses to arguments for evolution, or leaving out things altogether.

      The number of people believing or advocating an idea bears no weight as to the truth of the matter. In fact, most often the majority is wrong, as history has proven again and again. Yet man in his pride always likes to think he is more intelligent than his predecessors.

      It is humorous how the majority of slashdotters trying to argue why God should not exist argue from the perspective of what they think a God should be. Of course, it is almost always only something a little above a human, and a God prone to many of the human weaknesses found in humans. Rather ludicrous, don't you think, that man should define God based on his feelings about what he thinks God should be?

      Evolutionists make science their god, and anything that cannot be observed in nature through some means or another does not exist. Thus they purposely cut themselves off from ever even entertaining the possibility that there is more than that. In fact, they run in the opposite direction. They won't even entertain any alternate theories to evolution anymore, even if it was made by a non-religious person.

      Sometimes I wish all the evolution and ID stories would be left off of slashdot. They seldom result in any constructive comments anyway. Perhaps it's time to filter them out of my list.

      --
      "The majority is always wrong; the minority is rarely right." - Henrik Ibsen
    19. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Creationists feel that atoms are held together by Jesus.

      After thoroughly disproving evolutionary theory, they then disprove quantum theory. (Rememeber there's a reason it's called a theory.)

      Gluons are a made up dream. No one has seen or even measured them.. they don't exist! It's a desperate theory to explain away the truth!"
      ...
      Protons have positive charges. One law of electricity is: LIKE CHARGES REPEL EACH OTHER! Since all the protons in the nucleus are positively charged, they should repel each other and scatter into space.
      ...
      If gluons aren't the answer... what is?
      ...
      It says that Christ the Creator "Is before all things, and by him all things consist (are held together)." Also it says "All things were made by him (Christ); and without him was not anything made that was made"

      If you have questions about evolution, fine. But consider how they disprove gluons and realize that they disprove evolution using the same techniques. It sounds good unless you are knowledgable enough to figure where they are skirting or misrepresenting the facts.

    20. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      It is not just random mutations. What adds functionality is selective pressure, helped by recombination. Mutations just creates diversity, that is essential to evolution to work.

      You should really study a bit of genetic programming, as a previous poster said.

    21. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by pbhj · · Score: 1

      >>> "evidence for evolution requires a lot of prior knowledge"

      In fact creationists are all absolute drooling morons .. like this guy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behe mentioned in the article.

    22. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by plunge · · Score: 1

      Oh really? You mean, the Behe that claims to accept common descent? The Behe who does not claim to be a creationist? That Behe?

      Nice try, but you stepped into your own tarpit. I didn't say that merely being educated would convince you: and it's always still quite possible to be just plain wrong, no matter how smart or informed you are (though it's telling that ID mostly seems to be the need of a well-educated people who struggle with combining science with their faith). But I'm more than willing to state that most people's denials are based on a lack of understanding. That's easy to see from all the grossly uninformed criticisms made of evolution.

    23. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take an afternoon to look into genetic algorithms and genetic programming. Then you'll understand the principle.

      The principle is fine, but the devil is in the details. Using genetic algorithms, if I randomly write bytes at 10M/sec to a hard disk long enough, I will eventually produce Windows Vista or Red Hat WS 4.

    24. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by zpok · · Score: 1

      "I've found that most people who are ignorant of evolutionary processes lead sheltered lives."

      Well, I've been around and am saddened to have to inform you that I have found that the vast majority of people don't know of or don't believe in the validity of evolution theory.

      I was profoundly shocked to find out that in my immediate surroundings, even my well educated family there are people who without any reason or willingness to consider scientific proof, flat out reject the notion that we are descendant from apes - which to me is confirmation of the fact...

      Sad but true, only 2 % of this planet's population doesn't believe in a supernatural being that guides our life.

      Now, of that 98% of believers, how many do you think are motivated to take some scientific thingy seriously, especially if you take into consideration that most creation stories start with a god creating a complex universe. Where evolution implies that simple elements combine to emerge as complex systems?

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    25. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by plunge · · Score: 2

      "They won't even entertain any alternate theories to evolution anymore, even if it was made by a non-religious person."

      That's because, in science, you have to have evidence to back up what you say. If it were the case that scientists were just tossing away lots of convincing evidence against evolution and for another theory, you'd have a point. But instead, most of what they are being attacked with is hordes of poorly informed nonsense that's been dealt with a million times.

      I would bet that with a little research, you could find huge gaping flaws in the logic of most of your ICR PhDs. In fact, I know so, because I'm aware of the work. From people arguing subjects outside of their field (which doesn't make them wrong, but which should certainly preclude them from claiming special authority just because they have a degree in something else) to people getting the basic facts mangled and misunderstood, I have a hard time seeing how the view that scientists are a bunch of dogmatists who simply wont listen to the virtuous arguments of heretics is anything more than self-serving.

    26. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Alsee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Using genetic algorithms, if I randomly write bytes at 10M/sec to a hard disk long enough, I will eventually produce Windows Vista

      You have no idea what you are talking about.

      Genetic Algorithms are *NOT* about a million monkeys typing random garbage until you stumble upon the complete works of Shakespeare. You reveal a complete ignorance of what Genetic Algorithms are and how they work when you suggest such a thing.

      I am a programmer and I have personally used Gentic Algorithms in the past. I have personally witnessed just how FAST they spontaneously generate information. How FAST they generate complex structured information. Sometimes they demonstrate slow steady improvements, and sometimes they generate huge leaps and bounds in solving problems.

      The process by which evolution creates information is well understood, and has been the subject of many mathematical papers. The FACT that the evolution process can be harnessed to create information and solve problems has been extensively observed, documented, and USED in real industrial applications. In fact the Genetic Algorithms evolution process has been used to create new better more efficient jet engine designs, designs better and more efficent than any human expert has ever been able to design.

      Genetic Algorithms are a powerful tool in the programmer's bag of tricks, and I highly reccommend that any and all programmers learn and explore them. Any programmer can easily witness ad understand for himself exactly how evolution is an information processessing system, and an information creation system. Can witess for themselves exactly how evolution can and does create information. Just pick up any book on Genetic Algorithms, or use Google to find any of the excellent websites on the subject.

      And anyone who claims that evolution does not or cannot create information, well they are flat out Wrong and Ignorant. It's as silly as someone claiming that man can never build a heavier-than-air fling machine AFTER scientsists have understood and built and witnessed such machines working.

      I've built it. I've witnessed it. And anyone who doubts it is absolutely invited to study Genetic Algorithms and understand it themselves and built it themselves and witness it themselves.

      People who say evolution cannot create complex information and cannot produce the complexity of life we see today, those people warrant as much respect as someone claiming flying machines are impossible.

      A sun-centered solar system explains the mechanism that divides the light from the darkness. It is absurd for anyone to suggest that a sun centered solar system in any way says or means that God does not exist. Nuclear fusion explains the mechanism that creates light for the earth. It is absurd for anyone to suggest that nuclear fusion in any way says or means that God does not exist. Optics explains the mechanism that creates rainbows. It is absurd for anyone to suggest that optics in any way says or means that God does not exist. And evolution explains the mechanism that creates the diversity of life on earth. It is absurd for anyone to suggest that evolution in any way says or means that God does not exist.

      Anyone who suggests that evolution and God are in any sort of conflict is as bad as the crackpot fundamentalist idiots who had Galileo imprisoned for life when he said that the earth moves around the sun. The fact that so many people are replaying this exact same nonsense today is an absolute embarrassment.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    27. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "'They won't even entertain any alternate theories to evolution anymore, even if it was made by a non-religious person.'

      That's because, in science, you have to have evidence to back up what you say. If it were the case that scientists were just tossing away lots of convincing evidence against evolution and for another theory, you'd have a point. But instead, most of what they are being attacked with is hordes of poorly informed nonsense that's been dealt with a million times."

      Granted, I'm not sure exactly how much evidence actually supported the previously very popular theory that the universe has always existed and never changes, but when the big bang theory was first proposed many scientists hated it because it pointed towards something creating everything. Eventually, of course, it became generally accepted. But it just shows that scientists, quite frankly, are not unbiased.

      Evolution, I think, is a bit different, but the debate still stinks bias on the evolution side because the scientists, in my opinion, have failed to show all the evidence they have accumulated. Instead, they insult their opposition and insist that evolution is a fact no one should doubt. Now, this is probably a generalization that doesn't always hold true, but my experiance is that I have yet to hear a satisfactory layman-friendly account of the sheer volume of evidence that they have.

    28. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by plunge · · Score: 1

      "But it just shows that scientists, quite frankly, are not unbiased."

      But science doesn't really rely on anyone being unbiased: its a method set up whereby good evidence eventually beats out bad. Science as a process is thus often conservative, but in the end highly flexible when the evidence is there. I can think of countless even recent examples where scientists proposed something that was controversial and harshly criticized, but ultimately became mainstream: it weathered the criticism and laid out a better case on the evidence.

      When the BB was first introduced, it was controversial not only because it was different, but because the evidence for it wasn't very convincing yet and the current model still seemed to work pretty well. More evidence and developments elsewhere (like relativity) made the case, and won most everyone over pretty quickly. In fact, compared to virtually every other area of authority, from religion to politics, I'd say that the remarkable thing is how quickly people were to admit that they were wrong when the evidence showed them they in fact were.

      As for the evolution debate, I agree that most people are unaware of the evidence, but I don't see how this is the fault of scientists. I mean, countless great resources and books have been written trying to explain things not only to other scientists, but also laypeople. The problem as I see it is that no matter how good your explanation is, it still requires readers to spend a lot of time and energy digesting it all: time many people don't have, or even refuse to commit to because they are hostile to the idea in the first place.

      I also don't think it's quite fair to cite them insulting creationists while leaving out that creationists spend most of their time and energy insulting scientists, ascribing evil conspiracy motives to them, and trumpeting pure falsehoods. When a movement exists that constantly repeats a fallacy like how the 2nd law disproves evolution, how can you not get a little pissed off after awhile? I don't feel like creationists or even the ID movement has laid out good evidence for their case, and in fact I can point to countless examples where they really seem to spend most of their time on PR gambits, misleading people, misquoting scientists, and so forth.

      This is not what the people pushing the Big Bang, symbiotic mitchondria, or all the rest did. They proved their cases, not by appealing to popular sentiment, but by producing convincing research and argument that couldn't be ignored and survived criticism. Creationists have generally done just the opposite: most of their arguments are so peppered with simple mistakes that they haven't even survived a basic first reading... and yet those arguments keep getting made as long as they continue to sound convincing to laypeople.

    29. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by doc+modulo · · Score: 1

      Excellent post, it was a good read.

      Unfortunately, I think people need drama. Drama is needed for change and drama is therefore needed to feel alive. Or something like that.

      --
      - -- Truth addict for life.
    30. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "So don't dismiss them. And don't bother trying to convert them. But find a way to live with them. You may even find some of them make good friends."

      Oh, absolutely. But can we please ban them from Slashdot?

    31. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And evolution explains the mechanism that creates the diversity of life on earth. It is absurd for anyone to suggest that evolution in any way says or means that God does not exist.

      Depends on your definition of god! Some of the things that were said about god are clearly imcompatible with what we know about Nature nowadays. So these kinds of belief have been disproved. You could always come up with some god that is not in conflict with what we know about nature nowadays (but may not be safe from future scientists).

      In short evolution does disprove certain versions of god.

    32. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you have a physics degree you must have taken some statistics. Anything with a probability greater than zero approaches one as time goes to infinity. Considering the quadrillions( septillions, who knows?) of random chemical reactions occurring every second on this planet and a few billion years to play with, surely one could see how the current feature set of life could have arose with selection pressure?

    33. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 0

      I find it strange that so many people in the US didnt get the idea that evolution = random mutations + NATURAL SELECTION beat into their head in school. Hence they easily fall for the 747 from metal scraps argument.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    34. Re:Why do we still care about the doubters? by Copid · · Score: 1
      Now, this is probably a generalization that doesn't always hold true, but my experiance is that I have yet to hear a satisfactory layman-friendly account of the sheer volume of evidence that they have.
      You'll probably find that talkorigins.org does a pretty good job of accumulating the relevant evidence and breaking it down in a layman-friendly way by topic. They usually have references to the most relevant handful of papers on any given topic. They're also pretty good about giving pointers to further reading if you leave them some feedback.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  27. Re:The truth shall set you free. by kertong · · Score: 1

    In the sage words of H. Simpson - "Could Jesus microwave a burrito so hot, that he himself could not eat it?"

  28. Re:God created everything... by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    When science thinks they understand something, credit should be made to God.

    To which "God", out of the thousands of deity constructs worshipped and acknowledged throughout human history, do you refer and why do you reference that specific God to the exclusion of all others.

    And there were thousands of witnesses to miracles he performed, and that he rose from the dead.

    Please provide references to independent accounts for each of the "thousands" of witnesses.

  29. Re:God created everything... by TheDreadSlashdotterD · · Score: 1

    You might want to take something to help you relax. It's obvious that you're way too concerned about where you are, where you're going, and where you've been.

    --
    I have nothing to say.
  30. In the brave new world by arcite · · Score: 1

    The disbelievers will in the near future miss out on genetic enhancements/cloning/implants and thus be weeded out of the population as they become unable to compete. Problem will fix itself.

    1. Re:In the brave new world by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The disbelievers will in the near future miss out on genetic enhancements/cloning/implants and thus be weeded out of the population as they become unable to compete. Problem will fix itself.

      Probably not. A number of medical technologies we now consider part of the standard of care -- anesthesia, aseptic surgical technique, vaccination, x-rays, antibiotics, and blood transfusions all come to mind -- met with fierce challenges on religious grounds when they were first introduced. Over time, as the benefits became obvious, the true believers changed their tune (evolved, one might say ...) and "moved the goalposts" to find new things to object to. Only a very small number of fanatics now refuse any of the treatments I listed above, but a much larger group of fanatics willingly takes advantage of them while trying to hold back, e.g., stem cell research with religious objections which sound strikingly similar to those raised against now-common practices in the past, as well as attacking the fundamental biological education which makes such discoveries possible. If the nuts actually had the courage of their convictions to live and die by their own nuttiness, the rest of us would be much better off.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    2. Re:In the brave new world by smittyoneeach · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident."
      Let me roger up, though, for the Bored Followers of Christ.
      I rejoice in science framing the what of existence in increasing detail.
      Still not doing much for the why of existence.
      Nor are the various religions and philospies, Christianity among them. It remains subjective.
      I'll just relax and watch the show.
      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    3. Re:In the brave new world by LupusCanis · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, but can I'd appreciate it if you could find some sources for this historical opposition to antibiotics, x-rays etc. etc. Personal interest more than anything else.

  31. Re:I'm not buying it by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    They are claiming that God couldn't have made those enzymes, or the manner in which they function.

    The letter string "God" did not occur anywhere within the article. I believe that you have misinterpreted the claims made in the article, or you have mistaken read a different article than the one referenced. Your conclusion cannot be drawn from the actual article.

  32. The Blind Locksmith: Carl Zimmer's analysis by fleshapple · · Score: 3, Informative

    Carl Zimmer,who is of course, THE MAN! of parasite parables and paraphenalia, has posted a more in-depth analysis of this story at his weblog, The Loom , going into the genetic/molecular mechanism. Additionally, Zimmer responds to the creationist take on the story (the usual move-the-goalpost panic of those advocating irreduceable complexity). Of larger concern, why does this incredibly fascinating discussion about scientific sleuthing and the potential and beauty of proteomics, get automatically sidelined into a discussion on "what does creationism say about this?" I don't blame Zimmer for responding; indeed, that's the duty of science writers as gifted as he. But it diminishes the power of the story itself to have to ask, imnsho.

  33. Re:God created everything... by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

    When it comes to evolution, I don't think there is really a "missing link" anymore.

    The theory is fairly well fleshed out. Scientists and archeologists know what they're looking for, where they're looking for it and when (in the past) it should be found. The only thing a "missing link" can do now, is to reinforce & reconfirm the existing theory.

    What will be much more interesting from a science perspective, are animals or chemical processes that don't fit in with the existing body of knowledge. Those are the types of discovery that will expand and advance the theory, anything else (while important) will, like I said previously, just reinforce the existing body of knowledge.

    Science is much more exciting when you get unexpected surprises than when you get heaps of data to support your hypothesis/theory.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  34. Re:Waiting... for God? by From+A+Far+Away+Land · · Score: 4, Funny

    If the Great Creator Spaghetti Monster wanted you to read the article, he'd have provided you with a free registration.

  35. Re:God created everything... by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1
    God made everything.
    Everything? Including evil? So, does that make God evil?

    Nobody else can say their God walked the earth except Christians.
    I can say that the Ori are attempting to destroy the galaxy, that doesn't make it true. And the Greek/Roman gods walked the earth plenty of times in their stories.

    In response to your whole post: Show me the proof of God. And show me the proof Jesus actually did miracles--there's no special mention of Jesus in Roman books, which there would be if he made such miracles. The only actual witnesses to those we have today are the Gospels. Jesus was almost certainly just a man--a very brave man, to stand up to the leading religious thought of his time--but still, just a man. Too bad modern Christians have fallen into their own blind religious hate. If Jesus were alive today, he'd be absolutely pissed at what Christianity has become.
    --
    Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  36. Science is wrong 99% of the time. by ShnowDoggie · · Score: 1

    It is? And Religion is never wrong? ('Cept for those Geek God worshippers and Roman God worshippers,.. oh, and all the other religions that are not mine ..)
    Was Galileo wrong when the Church banned many of ideas? Does the sun indeed revolve around Rome?

    How about, lets just keep an open mind. And the next time you see a doctor, remember, if this doctor is a medical doctor, the doctor has studied science. Hope the doctor is not wrong 99% of the time.

  37. The disbelievers will really be in trouble when by arcite · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The disbelievers will really be in trouble when we genetically engineer hyper-intelligent monkeys who can work in Walmart and Mcdonolds and take their jobs.

  38. Re:God created everything... by yankpop · · Score: 1

    It must be nice to be God. You get credit for everything that anyone ever does right, from scientific discoveries to touchdowns, it's all the Big Guy's work. But the fact that "science is wrong 99% of the time", well that's because the scientists are fallable humans. Doesn't sound so much like an all-powerful being as apologist spin. Small-pox vaccine? God's inspiration. No Aids vaccine? Human failure.

    That so many otherwise intelligent people are prepared to accept such circular notions is perhaps the strongest argument against evolution. I'd expect millions of years of natural selection would have weeded out such soft-headedness.

    yp

  39. Re:I'm not buying it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    As far as science is concerned, it doesn't make a lick of difference if God exists or not. His existence is ultimately irrelevant, and not worth considering.

  40. A *cough* thoughtful *cough* rebuttal? by Mr+Z · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Somebody ought to send Dr. Thornton this even-handed, thoughtful rebuttal by Jack T. Chick.

    1. Re:A *cough* thoughtful *cough* rebuttal? by Mr+Z · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Durrh... somehow the wrong URL ended up getting pasted. Let's try this again.

    2. Re:A *cough* thoughtful *cough* rebuttal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And their propaganda was written in comic form....

      God, I wish biology professors would have treated the disruptions from anti-science whiners in my classes as the Chick drug-induced delusions of victimhood paint themselves. We had to put up with them and they really did disrupt and detract from the teaching that I paid good money for. (And, no, none of their arguments made any sense... They sure did like to pretend to know more about a subject than the Professor of the class they were a student in.)

  41. Re:God created everything... by Expert+Determination · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You are a moron. Before I'm modded down as flamebait I shall justify that statement.

    When science thinks they understand something, credit should be made to God.
    Science is not a person. Science is not plural.

    But God has been here FOREVER!!
    Just saying this in capital letters doesn't make it so.
    He has been proven to be true.
    Propositions or sentences are proven to be true. 'True' isn't an adjective that can be applied to characters from mythology. Maybe you mean "He has been proven to exist." But your inability to construct meaningful sentences is already losing you credibility.
    Unlike any other religion or science...
    What is the subject of this sentence? Are you saying that Christianity, the religion, sent Jesus. Or that God did? Do you have any idea what you are saying and how to construct a sentence.

    Nobody else can say their God walked the earth except Christians.
    Anyone can say that. Watch my lips "The evil God Urgzal, eater of babies, walked on Earth".

    Anyway, it was pretty easy demonstrating what a moron you are. You have demonstrated an inability to think beyond what most 5 or 6 year olds can achieve.

    I'd dismiss you as a troll but as I've seen so much evidence that many people do 'think' like you I'm taking you seriously.

    --
    "The White House is not an intelligence-gathering agency," -- Scott McClellan, Whitehouse spokesman.
  42. Re:The truth shall set you free. by ral8158 · · Score: 1

    The answer: He creates the stone, and he can't lift it with his hands. He'll just have to use his incredible Divine Level a Bajillion mind powers to move it. Or, he can just choose not to use the word "lift" any more, and kill anyone who does. Therefore, even though he can't -

  43. Re:God created everything... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

    Oh, I get it - sorry guys, I fed the troll.

    --
    "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  44. Re:I'm not buying it by Aris+Katsaris · · Score: 1
    "We would not be here without God"

    I wonder if you are defining the word God as "He who made everything", or whether you have an alternate more complex definition that would embrace theists of other conceptions of deity.

    Would God still be God to you if instead of a directing mind that "created everything", he was (as I believe the Mormons think) a fellow intelligence that may have advanced from a lower level akin to our own to what He is now, and working inside the constraints of the system that he was in rather than constructing one from scratch?

    Would God still be God, if instead of a trinitarian deity, he was divided along Male-Female principles as I think the Wiccans worship?

    "He made everything, and the rules of the system."

    According to which religion? Or don't you particularly mind which God made those rules, as long as you believe that *some* intellect did?

    Really, the trick to battle theists is the old "divide and conquer" technique. Let them see that no matter how they try to make common cause with other theista against non-theists, us non-theists see right through them and their united front is as hole-ridden as their argument. Don't let them argue for the existence of *a* God, without defining *which* God that is.

  45. That's an ad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Parent is misleading. It leads to an ad that you have to click through.

    So while there may not be any registration required, you still have to view their stupid ad.

    If anyone's got the real text, please post it.

  46. Re:God created everything... by onebecoming · · Score: 1

    Twenty-one grams?

  47. RTFA in Science, not in the slime by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    RTFA where it appeared in Science, not the media mush in the New York Slime. For important articles like this there is not only the actual article, full text but also a condensation and explanation in the perspectives section. Read that and you'll know what this is actually about.

  48. Re:God created everything... by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1
    I'd expect millions of years of natural selection would have weeded out such soft-headedness.
    It's because they don't believe in birth control, so they have so many more children and train them to think just as the parents do, so on and so on, until they've pervaded humanity.
    --
    Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  49. Liberal lies! Don't trust science, trust W by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    trust W instead

  50. Re:The truth shall set you free. by RandomPrecision · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What the hell, man? There's nothing about God in this article.

    If evolution was universally accepted, there would still be believers in God, and if God was universally accepted, there would still be believers in evolution.

    I don't know how you got modded either insightful or flamebait, much less both. Your post is simply off-topic.

  51. Re:God created everything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah right. You probably want a ban on all AIDS research too.

    You sicken me.

  52. Accuracy and Precision by chiao · · Score: 1

    The value of a theory lies in its ability to make accurate and precise predictions about the future. Religion has very little value in this sense, because it places few constraints on what to expect in the future; even if it is accurate, it is very imprecise. Evolution is the best theory we have about life because it makes the most accurate and precise predictions about life.
    I can imagine that for people who do not know what it means to be accurate, or precise, this whole brouhaha about science must be a great mystery. I would recommend reading Eliezer Yudkowsky's Excellent Introduction to Technical Understanding , especially the paragraph on the dragon.

    1. Re:Accuracy and Precision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd quibble with your conflation of "what to expect in the future" and "accurate and precise predictions about life".

      Science is useful for predicting what you will find right now if you look at something more closely.

      But the future is wide open whether looking through science or religion. Between random mutation and the degree to which humans have incorportated random processes into their behavior, you'll never be able to get any firm handle on the future. Even with a near perfect understanding of the current state of all elements in the world, a single high energy particle traveling from another galaxy could still concievably alter in significant ways the course of human events.

      Again, no argument on the value of science over religion in predicting the minutae of the world around us should we look carefully enough to confirm the reality of it, but as to the future, science holds no special status.

  53. Re:The truth shall set you free. by ardor · · Score: 2, Interesting

    First: Science does not deal with truths, only with models.

    Second: Science cannot be applied everywhere. There are questions that cannot be answered by science, because no answer fulfills the requirements. (Like, "what is outside of the universe", or "why are we here".) There comes a point where the only thing you can do is - believe. In something. Some believe that there are no higher entities (science cannot disprove them, but because of this they are filtered out by Occam's Razor, just like all non-disprovable things). Some believe that life is guided by some god, some believe in a living an conscious Mother Nature etc. Claiming that atheism is "The Only Way" (tm) is just plain wrong because it does not have any advantages over other beliefs.

    --
    This sig does not contain any SCO code.
  54. ID already mathematically incoherent by plunge · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's worth noting that most mathematicians already think ideas like Irreducible Complexity and Complex Specified Information are a load of hooey, despite the appeals people like Dembski and Behe make to having made innovative breakthroughs in these areas:

    One good blog on this subject I've found is Good Math, Bad Math, and some posts relevant to this topic are:

    -CSI is basically incoherent: if you translate the definition of CSI into non-obscure words, it essentially boils down to either "something that contains a lot of information, but doesn't contain a lot of information" or a definition for which EVERY piece of information is specified:
    http://goodmath.blogspot.com/2006/04/one-last-stab -at-dembski-vacuousness.html

    -IC, when translated into math, makes no sense. We can actually PROVE in math that there is no general proof that some system is the simplest possible (which IC requires), much like we can prove that we can never solve the halting problem.
    http://goodmath.blogspot.com/2006/03/problem-with- irreducible-complexity.html

    -Even if they did make sense, CSI and IC basically conflict with each other, arguing contradictory things:
    http://goodmath.blogspot.com/2006/03/conflict-betw een-ic-and-it-arguments.html

    1. Re:ID already mathematically incoherent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      -IC, when translated into math, makes no sense. We can actually PROVE in math that there is no general proof that some system is the simplest possible (which IC requires), much like we can prove that we can never solve the halting problem.


      Bzzt. Wrong.
      for (x = 1 .. IC-components)
      {
        for (y = 1 .. x)
        {
        foreach (c = component in all possible components)
        {
        solution[y] = c
        if (works(solution) return 0
        }
        }
      }
      return 1
    2. Re:ID already mathematically incoherent by plunge · · Score: 1

      LOL.

      Omg, you've solved the halting problem! Turing was wrong! Oh wait, nope, you just din't understand what it was in the first place. :)

  55. Re:God created everything... by pikine · · Score: 1

    That's okay, we can look at this matter in a more light hearted way.

    Imagine a scientist looks at an ancient CVS repository of the Linux kernel and notices that the source code evolves and branches. He is able to compute the diffs between each source code revision and to recall an early snapshot of the Linux kernel. He concludes that the code must have evolved on its own.

    Moreover, he claims this justifies that Linux kernels must have evolved from a monocellular organism, which kind of makes sense because Linux kernels are monolithic kernels. If it wasn't monocelular at its origin, how can it be monolithic?

    --
    I once had a signature.
  56. Reducible Complexity by posterlogo · · Score: 4, Informative
    The study is a fascinating one. If you have a subscription to Science, I suggest reading the summary of the research by Cristoph Adami termed "Reducible Complexity." I'm sorry I don't know how to get that article to those without a subscription but I can give a lay-man's summary here. Although the original research did not specifically mention evolution vs. intelligent design, they essentially disproved the central tenet of ID, that of "irreducible complexity." IC states that some things are so complex, they look like a "lock and key" mechanism -- one could not have be made without the other "in mind" -- thus they must both have been designed. The research that is the focus of this article described two different hormones with two different receptors. Both look like lock and key systems. By tracing evolutionary lineages, the authors of the study showed how a series of mutations, as little as 2, occuring sequentially by random could have led to the two divergent lock and key systems from a single precursor. As an academic biologist, I really think this elegant study is one of the nicest pieces of evolution research to come out recently. It truly addresses a problem even Darwin admitted was a caveat (though Darwin also offered the solution, which was indeed confirmed here).

    The solution is that the original precursor gained the ability to bind a new hormone by a single point mutation, and this did not disrupt the ability of it to bind its old hormone. The new receptor then diverged and through a well known process of gene duplication, begat multiple and independently evolving molecules. One retained the function of binding the old hormone, whereas another mutated further to lose the ability to bind the old hormone and could now only bind the new hormone. Viola -- two seemingly "designed" systems out of one precursor -- evolution at its finest, and IMHO, damning evidence against the basic principle of Intelligent Design.

    On a personal note, it never fails to amaze me how much people deny the intelligence of humans to figure things out... the old "just because we can't explain it now, it must have be an unexplicable force, like God." I'm sure lightning and earthquakes seemed supernatural too. Evolution is no different -- it can be dissected and explained.

    1. Re:Reducible Complexity by plunge · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yep. It's important to note that the functional abilities of proteins are often determined by just a few key sites (certain amnio acid sequences) which make the protein fold in a certain way. The rest of the protein is free to vary somewhat without making much of a difference. And sometimes, these sections can, through mutation, add a new function to the protein without taking away the old function: the new folding may not interfere with important part of the old shape.

      Of course, this "retain the old, try the new" can happen in a lot of other ways in a genome as well: like if the code specifying a protein is duplicated, creating two identical copies... and then one can mutate and acquire a new function while the old one keeps doing the old function. This mechanism is what seems to have been the sort active with the evolution of blood clotting.

    2. Re:Reducible Complexity by master_p · · Score: 2, Informative

      Another way to speak about reducible complexity is to use the analogy with compilers: originally, there was no compiler. Then somebody made a translator of the first programming language in assembler; then someone else wrote another compiler in this programming language etc. And now we have operating systems and compilers who seem to exist in "lock and key" status, but they were actually produced independently.

  57. Gen. questions/doubts about evolution? Ask away. by plunge · · Score: 1

    In the interests of good discussion, I'd like to answer any questions that those questioning or unfamiliar with evolution have about the basic idea. We always seem to get a lot of sniping and pile-ons, and cross debate on this subject, so I thought I'd at least offer a place to express doubts or ask somewhat more general theory questions. Most of what I'm best experienced with as regards to evolution is common descent, but I've been studying the subject for quite some time now both as an amatuer and as an aspiring grad student, so I feel pretty comfortable with the broad scope of evidence and debate as long as it isn't too overly technical, even if it's outside my general focus of zoology.

  58. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Lehk228 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    God cannot be

    Omnipotent
    Omniscient
    and Good

    all at the same time

    Fact: the world contains evil.
    Fact:Creation of evil is an evil act

    Conclusions:Either God performs evil acts and cannot be trusted, God is bound by some greater force requiring balance, or God cannot accurately predict the consequences of it's own actions.

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  59. It is ridiculous by ashayh · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It is ridiculus and demeaning to all human scientific progress to suggest that articles published by researchers are to be used as a "counter argument" to ID.

    Please compare: What is their argument and what is ths scientific argument ? Who and where are their researchers ? What "science" do these reseaerhers do ? Is it a coincidence that almost all of them are Fervent Christians ? Do these peope want REAL answers to questions in the Universe or have they decided their answers already ? Imagine what would happen if their "science" becomes mainstream in schools and Universities: Something similar to what would have happened if Nazi bigotry had become mainstream.

    What I'm trying to say is, it is stupid, demeaning and a complete waste of time,for example, to present arguments of the level of Einsteins work to someones who's bigotry driven intelligence is barely comparable to a below average high schooler. (not to demean high schoolers).

    The only way to tackle these lies is to hit the root of the Big Lie: Who, what and where is this I in ID that they speak of ? Showing them Science journal will come later.

    1. Re:It is ridiculous by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      There is a big difference between those who question the plausibility of a particular part of a scientific theory and advocates of "Intelligent Design". The former are a needed part of the scientific community, no matter how much support the general theory has. After all, if people didn't have questions regarding the current models of how life first evolved, we would not have this research to begin with. If Einstein didn't have the balls to question Newton's well accepted model of the universe, he would have never have developed his theory of relativity. If Oswald Avery had not committed scientific heresy by demonstrating that it is DNA, not proteins as previously thought, that held inheritable genetic information, researchers like the ones in this article would not be able to prove anything because they would be working with the wrong material. Science needs and thrives on doubt and criticism.

      Intelligent design, on the other hand, is a catch phrase used by a movement that attempts to capitalize on this fact to provide a renewed belief in some other theory on the origin of life (of course they could not be talking about creationism, as if you apply the same form of doubt they hold on evolution onto creationism, it wouldn't fare all that well...).

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    2. Re:It is ridiculous by Morky · · Score: 1

      Well said. The press and all of us are playing into their hands by even entertaining the argument.

    3. Re:It is ridiculous by AxelBoldt · · Score: 1
      Who, what and where is this I in ID that they speak of?

      The I in ID was a design committee. Buddha, Brahma and Allah got together, had a brainstorming session, agreed on specifications, and promptly went on to design bacterial flagella.

    4. Re:It is ridiculous by ashayh · · Score: 1

      I hope you're trying to be funny. I've actually seen people who believe what you've said. "All gods are the same...etc etc"

    5. Re:It is ridiculous by ashayh · · Score: 1

      Accepted that there might be real criticism of evolution etc.

      However, the vast majority of evolution denyers are not critically examining the plausibility of anything(If they did, their books would be the first thing they burnt). They have already made up their minds.

      And nor do they have any scientific, alternative theories to present. Even if their criticism arrives from varying angles, their alternative remains the same: "Jeebus did it!!1"

  60. Re:The truth shall set you free. by truthsearch · · Score: 1
    Science does not deal with truths, only with models.

    From Columbia University's electronic encyclopedia:
    For many the term science refers to the organized body of knowledge concerning the physical world, both animate and inanimate, but a proper definition would also have to include the attitudes and methods through which this body of knowledge is formed; thus, a science is both a particular kind of activity and also the results of that activity.


    So I'd say it does deal with truths (as in known facts).
  61. Because real science takes the high road... by weston · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Can you believe it's 2006 and we still care about the near-high-school drop-outs who continue to question evolution?

    As the article points out, near-high-school-dropouts aren't the only ones who have questions about evolution, and I'm not just talking about proponents of intelligent design.

    But maybe it's not so much that we care about what those who "question evolution" think as that good science doesn't simply stick to whatever the prevalent dogma is. Maybe it's that good science continues to come up with and test hypothesis after hypothesis and continually refine its case.

    There's absolutely nothing wrong with questioning evolution or even our current conception of how evolution works.

    1. Re:Because real science takes the high road... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the contrary... while questioning the current dogma is a good thing in general...

      1) Denying evolution completely is at this point just dumb. Evolution and speciation have been observed in the laboratory and evolution is also the inevitable byproduct of our understanding of heredity.

      2) The same for teaching kids, only stronger. Kids should understand that evolution is by far the best fit we have for the data, and that the remaining questions are not about whether, but how, evolution works.

      Skepticism is only healthy to a point - too much of it and you become a conspiracy theorist or a crackpot.

    2. Re:Because real science takes the high road... by plunge · · Score: 1

      I agree, but the problem is that all the prominent "questioners" of evolution are making, well, exceedingly dumb arguments.

      If evolution is all wrong, okay, but SHOW ME SOME EVIDENCE. And while you're at it, please please explain all the evidence that already exists, particularly the twin (or even triple) nested cladistic heirarchy of life.

      As soon as I see a creationist/IDist even attempting to do that in a rational, non-completely out of their depth way, I'll happily listen to them. But all this "but dogs only ever breed more dogs" idiocy that can't even be bothered to understand the theory they are criticizing isn't going to cut it.

  62. Re:God created everything... by plunge · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Indeed. Most scientists roll their eyes at the use of "missing link" because it obviously misleads far more than it informs. The basic idea is that we have a family tree of life. There are millions upon millions of branches (species), and billions upon billions of twigs (individual creatures) alive over time, but only a very very tiny proportion are still alive today. That means that there is a far far vaster space of animals that died that are NOT the ancestors of any living creature than there are.

    Hence, since fossilization is basically a rare and random crapshoot, the chances of finding THE common ancestor are always unlikely, and we can't even reliably tell if we had. But, fortunately, it's also irrelevant. That's because we can learn more than enough simply by finding a fossil that's past a particular branching point about the creatures that led to those we see today. We are trying to learn the general, overall shape of the tree, and since features all tend to be unique to any given lineage, we can still always tell everything we need about the prior branchings from the random sampling of fossils we have.

    Currently we have so many that all the basic connections are pretty clear. And when you add in genetic studies that confirm these relations, the conclusion becomes about as rock solid as can possibly be. Creationists often try to confuse the debate over how particular twigs branch with a debate over whether there even is a tree of life pattern and branching at all.

  63. Intelligent design terms? by random+coward · · Score: 1

    Now can this story please explain it without using terms of design.

    "reusing and modifying existing parts"

    This begs the question who is modifying and reusing existing parts? Can't evolutionist stop using concepts and words describing a design that is implemented by intelligence? Won't that more than anything help them put to rest intelligent design.

    1. Re:Intelligent design terms? by posterlogo · · Score: 1

      Those terms are not "owned" by ID proponents. The language is very common in biology. We often say the "cell" reuses this and modifies that. Or that a certain protein can modify another protein by attaching a tag to it. Whole classes of enzymes may be termed "modifying enzymes". The point is that these are models for what is essentially a chemistry reaction (which itself is essential a problem in physics). One should not have to describe every atomic configuration every time one wants to discuss an enzymatic reaction, for example. We use language such as what you mentioned to describe many aspects of biology. We don't claim to "own" those terms and frankly, I don't think anyone does. Just because we anthropomorphize "things", it doesn't mean we intend to give them an intelligence parameter or neccessarily imply that they were designed, unless you consider evolution a designing force.

    2. Re:Intelligent design terms? by ollj · · Score: 1

      Im pretty sure parts mean proteins. Many lifeforms use very similar proteins as they are the same tools with the same functions. The DNA also definitely has "Start" and "stop" codons (base tripplets that mark start and end points" so far those are parts and each part codes one (or more) protein(s). (theres also parts that get deleted... during proteinbiosynthesis).

    3. Re:Intelligent design terms? by random+coward · · Score: 1

      I am not argueing that the terms are "owned" by ID. I am argueing that the terms are terms that in other contexts describe design.

      "I re-used the code in Module A, and modified the Code in Module B to do this new thing."
      "I re-used the tail ligts from the Trailblazer in the Solstice. I modifed the ecotech from the Saturn to 2.4 liters for the Solstice."


      Does anyone say:
      "The lottery commision re-used two of the numbers from last night"?

      "The random number generator modified the number sequence fro the last run to this run"?


      What random process, other than evolution, is described using terms that are normally used when talking about people designing things?

    4. Re:Intelligent design terms? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who said evolution is random? Anyways, describing things in language that that butts up against methods employed by humans to do things is fine. It's not a meaningful criticism so long as it is understood (and it is) that the molecules are not little people. Trust me, you have not detracted from the biology being done here at all. You will have to try harder if you want to prove a human-like yet all powerful "being" is repsonsible for life as we know it on Earth. Now get to it -- you have work to do! Slacker. ;-)

    5. Re:Intelligent design terms? by random+coward · · Score: 1

      As to who said evolution is random; I didn't say it I said that the genetic changes in evolution are a random process. I asked what other random processes are described using terms of design.

      Random: lacking any definite plan or order or purpose governed by or depending on chance; "a random choice"; "bombs fell at random"; "random movements" [ant: nonrandom] 2: taken haphazardly; "a random choice"

      If evolutionary changes are nonrandom, then there is a plan or order to it. That implies design. Darwinian evolution pre-supooses random mutations as the change agent for evolution. If you are saying it is nonrandom, your saying that evolution is the method of some intelligent design.

      The major tenets of the evolutionary synthesis, then, were that populations contain genetic variation that arises by random (ie. not adaptively directed) mutation and recombination; that populations evolve by changes in gene frequency brought about by random genetic drift, gene flow, and especially natural selection; that most adaptive genetic variants have individually slight phenotypic effects so that phenotypic changes are gradual (although some alleles with discrete effects may be advantageous, as in certain color polymorphisms); that diversification comes about by speciation, which normally entails the gradual evolution of reproductive isolation among populations; and that these processes, continued for sufficiently long, give rise to changes of such great magnitude as to warrant the designation of higher taxonomic levels (genera, families, and so forth)
      -- Futuyma, D.J. in Evolutionary Biology, Sinauer Associates, 1986; p.12

      So it appears that evolution as currently understood by biology is caused by random changes, just as I implied. What other random even is described using terms of design?

  64. Re:The truth shall set you free. by msh104 · · Score: 1

    indeed, some time ago i saw a movie that tried to "proof" the qoran as a "true" book of god. I found it quite of funny to see that they sad things along this line:

    1. well, we see the stars moving away from each other so the universe must be expanding.
    2. so if they are moving away from each other there must have been a beginning point, a "big bang" place
    3. that is where allah created the universe.

    the previous pope held a simulair belief.

    while I neither believe in Islam nor in Christianity i do believe that religion will go on for quite some time, even when there would be total proof of evolution.

    religion refused to die when the earth appeared to be round after all, and it will refuse to die after evolution is proved to be right.

    It will only change the way that religious people will interpet there "holy" scriptures. perhaps one day science will have all the answers to "capture" the religious folks, but if you really really want to believe something, there is not really much science can do for you.

    --
    Nietzsche: there are no truths, only interpretations

  65. Ramen by uberjoe · · Score: 1

    Did they find His Noodly Apendage?

    --

    The days of the digital watch are numbered.

  66. Re:God created everything... by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1
    My point is that, even if one accepts that a missing link 'exists', that only proves that it hasn't been found, and not that it won't. It's the finding of other (previously) missing links which 'prove' that whatever links may currently be deemed as 'missing' are more likely to be found than not (with appropriate resources).

    That something has not been found doesn't prove anything by itself. For the lack of proof to be considered proof of lack, you would also have to prove that you've created (usually contrived) conditions where, if it were possible for the 'missing' item to exist, you would have been certain of finding it.

    The above statements apply to both fossils and gods.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  67. Re:God created everything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The devil demands the credit here too! C'mon! Everyone always forgets to give me credit. :(

      When it comes to "causing elevated carbon emissions" it's suddenly my fault. Yet, when it comes "creation of Slashdot" suddenly it's all to God's credit!? Not fare!

  68. Re:The truth shall set you free. by pikine · · Score: 1

    When we talk about evil, people usually attribute it to Satan. However, Satan was first created to be the most beautiful being of all things, anointed as a guardian cherub and adorned with precious stones in the garden of Eden (Ezekiel 28:11-19). But he chose to betray God.

    If you look up Ezekiel online, note that subject in Ezekiel's discourse is King of Tyre, but Tyre is used to allude to Satan.

    God did not create evil. His most beautiful creation turned evil on him. God knew this would happen and already foretold the destruction of Satan.

    You can ask why did God create Satan knowing he would turn evil and bring suffering to the people? My understanding is too shallow to answer this question, but I believe that God is doing this for a globally optimal solution. When you look at it locally, it may not be optimal. It's not a greedy algorithm.

    --
    I once had a signature.
  69. VERY Interesting, if a tad bit overstated... by tommyServ0 · · Score: 1

    After RTFA I have to say I'm impressed with this study. Science for far too long has neglected to roll its sleeves up and get to the nitty-gritty of how biochemical evolution might have occurred. Usually scientists show us a chart of, say, eyeballs, from the primitive light-sensitive patches of worms all the way to the more advanced eyeballs, like the humans. This is usually followed with some vigorous handwaving, capable of producing hurricane-like winds. "Behold! Evolution!" shouted with triumph, but without scientific backing.

    Okay, they've shown us the simple to the complex, but there's a lot more to these organs evolving, as Dr. Thornton has tried to demonstrate. I hope he's able to do more work and tackle something a bit tougher, like the eye, or bacterial flagella, or perhaps our immune system. The enzyme cascades in blood clots would be incredibly interesting as well. These are the holy grails of irreducible complexity.

    The hormone receptors, while an interesting scientific challenge, are a far cry from the problems presented by the biomechanical processes and machines listed above. Until a study can demonstrate, step-by-step, how the bacterial flagella (and the other IC challenges listed) came into existence without divine intervention, the Irreducible Complexity camp will not cower in defeat.

    --

    Consider the daffodil. And while you're doing that, I'll be over here, looking through your stuff.
    1. Re:VERY Interesting, if a tad bit overstated... by plunge · · Score: 1

      It's worth noting that demanding full explanations for how everything evolved is particular premature in that we don't yet know how a lot of these work in the first place. It's pretty hard to reproduce and think about and test simpler or ancient versions of something when you barely understand hwo it does what it does in the here and now. We're learning, but it's no coincidence that people like Behe have picked for their examples things which lie very very very far back in time and are still largely unstudied.

      It's also worth nothing that the IC camp has made arguments about plausibility and incredulity (there's no way this could have evolved!). Scientists have already countered with descriptions of possibility: many different ways this or that could have evolved (we just can't be sure which one was THE one)! The IC then retreated to demanding your "step-by-step" explanation of how it DID in fact evolve. But this is a very different question: it goes from pointing out a potential dispositive flaw in evolution to merely bickering about the incomplete present state of our knowledge: which isn't a very strong criticism of evolution at all. So I'd say that while they wouldn't admit it, they HAVE cowered in defeat, or at least retreated to a fairly unimportant position.

    2. Re:VERY Interesting, if a tad bit overstated... by narcc · · Score: 1
      Until a study can demonstrate, step-by-step, how the bacterial flagella (and the other IC challenges listed) came into existence without divine intervention, the Irreducible Complexity camp will not cower in defeat.

      Here is an easy to understand explanation: http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CB/CB200_1.html

      Dispite your claim, this will not satisfy you. You'll just come up with something else yet to be explained and claim proof of ID.
  70. Re:The truth shall set you free. by ThosLives · · Score: 1
    Too easy:

    Do automobile manufacturers create car crashes?

    --
    "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
  71. The gist of the research... by brian0918 · · Score: 1

    The gist of the paper seems to be that the belief that intertwined mechanisms had no purpose prior to their union is false. While we may not currently know what purpose the individual mechanisms originally served, it does not mean that they arose solely to work together. The belief that they arose to work together seems to be a sort of bias toward the present-day--an assumption that what there is now is somehow better than what there was in the past, and therefore the past must have been working solely to achieve the present.

    I'd like to see a journalist go back in time and do an interview with a T-Rex, who can't wait for the day that his entire sub-order will be wiped out so as to pave the way for humans to come about...

  72. Re:God created everything... by smittyoneeach · · Score: 3, Funny

    Wasn't sympathy from Sir Mick Jagger enough?

    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  73. Intelligent Design-ism is a benefit to science by Theovon · · Score: 1, Interesting

    There are two reasons why we have a recent uprising of ID. One is that there are people whose religious beliefs are found in conflict with evolutionary science. The other is that people are simply ignorant of the science, in large part because of lousy science education and hard-to-read science literature.

    In response to the ID debate, scientists have been motivated to clean up their acts. First, they have targeted specific areas of research that the ID proponents have harped on. Secondly, they are working harder to improve science education.

    Things like ID arise ultimately due to a fault in the science. Well, we know science has faults, so the only result here can be an improvement in the science.

    1. Re:Intelligent Design-ism is a benefit to science by plunge · · Score: 1

      I'd say that by and large, this isn't true. The vast majority of scientists have no interest in, and pay no attention to, these sorts of political debates. They certainly aren't doing research with an eye towards ID: they've been persuing the same subjects as careers, not as activism.

      I'd say that what has started to change is the way the few politically and publical involved scientists have tried to convey information to the general public. They realize that the ID and creationist folks have been using PR tactics to try and sell their views without offerring anything substantive. So the science fans are fighting back.

    2. Re:Intelligent Design-ism is a benefit to science by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While I agree with some of your post but your statement "In response to the ID debate, scientists have been motivated to clean up their acts. First, they have targeted specific areas of research that the ID proponents have harped on." is way off. The principle job of a scientist is to do research and you directly state we're not doing our jobs. That's pretty offensive especially since research in molecular evolution started back in the 60's when ID was still called creationism. Thornton's research is just (like I'll ever get a Science article!) the latest in a long chain of research. Thornton's study just didn't pop out of thin air either, since his first publication in that area goes back to 1998. Like any good scientist he did the study because it was something that interested him and could yield some new insights. That it punches yet another hole in the swiss cheese that is ID is just a side effect.

    3. Re:Intelligent Design-ism is a benefit to science by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In response to the ID debate, scientists have been motivated to clean up their acts. First, they have targeted specific areas of research that the ID proponents have harped on. Secondly, they are working harder to improve science education.

      Clean up their act? They're cleaning up other people's mess!
      Having throwbacks to pre-rational thinking dictate areas of research to target is a nuisance, not a boon. And they are working harder because they have to undo the harm that the ID conmen have caused, hard work that could be better spent furthering science, instead of defending it against reactionaries.

      It's not an improvement: it's dammage control.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    4. Re:Intelligent Design-ism is a benefit to science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are two reasons why we have a recent uprising of ID.

      three reasons.

      3. some people actually want a high standard of evidence instead of nice tasting "kool aid." the concept of saying "we study the physical and, therefore, this is the *only* way things could've happened, let's go find some evidence and spin it liek a top" just isn't fulfilling to some. picking up a pig's tooth and claiming nebraska man just doesn't do it for me. claiming the well established law of bio-gensis is was broken by claiming "primordial soup" is equally as silly. EVIDENCE.

      pimping Archaeopteryx as an obvious transitional entity between dinos and birds is just DISHONEST. there is plenty to contest here, and this what a bird expert and evolutionist has to say...

      http://research.unc.edu/endeavors/spr97/bird.html

      1. "Nobody had ever imagined finding a modern-type bird alongside these ancient birds," Feduccia says. "And not only were birds very widespread by then, but they also occupied a variety of habitats."

      2. In traditional theory, all modern bird orders appeared by 80 to 90 million years ago and "oozed" into the present. That makes no sense, Feduccia says, because the cataclysmic event that killed the dinosaurs would have extinguished most birds too.

      3. Feduccia is probably best known for challenging the view that birds evolved from dinosaurs. "The more you dig into the facts," he says, "the more the goblins start to creep out."

      4. For instance, he says, the dinosaurs thought to be most like birds lived 80 million years after the first-known birds. And when you get down to the details, even these dinosaurs weren't all that similar to birds. For example, dinosaurs had recurved, serrated teeth, while the early birds had peg-like teeth.

      5. But flying is the biggest problem. A dinosaur, turkey-size or larger, would have had to begin flight by running and then jumping off the ground. Not possible, Feduccia says. Its short front legs would have had to re-elongate to evolve into wings. This almost never happened in evolution.

      6. And sprouting feathers would have slowed down a dinosaur trying to fly, Feduccia says. "Feathers produce turbulence and drag, which is just the opposite of what you would want if you were going to evolve flight from the ground up."

      7. He pulls out a photograph of the fossil. "What you find is a darkened area from the nape of the neck down to the tip of the tail," he says. "And it's almost certainly one of these lizard-like frills running down the back. It has nothing to do with feathers."

      Concluding that this dinosaur had down is "ridiculous," Feduccia says. "In baby birds with down, when they become wet, they will die of hypothermia unless they get under the mother's wings immediately. So having down in a terrestrial dinosaur would be maladaptive. They would become mucked up and wet."

      8. Feduccia says he's not looking for controversy; he's just looking for the facts.

      "My book is the first major publication to seriously question the dinosaurian origin of birds," he says. "So I'm getting a lot of heat. But there haven't been many revolutions without shots fired."

      it was within the last two or three days that someone was pimping Archaeopteryx as an obvious transitional entity and anybody who didn't "get it" was, apparently, an ignroant person. there was absolutely no discussion along the lines of Alan Feduccia b/c the poster boviously was ignorant himself or he he had so much faith that he can't even understand contrary evidence.

      there is a twist, though. i'm not convinced that ID can be proven through any type of scientific means. in fact, i bet it can't and any effort there is wasted effort.

      in that sense, i'm different than the behe's of the world.

      i actually require rigorous evidence.

      then again, i'm different than most of the macro-evolutionist choir, too.

      i had one person argue that the bones in

    5. Re:Intelligent Design-ism is a benefit to science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, my first response was "Oh great. Another creationist quotemining." But then I saw Feduccia. He's semi-famous, you know. Once upon a time, he was considered a legitimate, but somewhat unorthodox researcher. However, he's long since moved deep into crank territory with repeated denials of evidence and no-one takes him seriously . Except the even more cranky creationist clown contingent. And Nebraska Man. Holy shit you got anything that was ever widely accepted....er EVER accepted...that's more recent than 80 FUCKIN' YEARS AGO YOU TWIT? Go run off and handle some snakes you drooling moron. I'm sure they've got that lovely red flavor kool-aid you're so obviously fond of.

    6. Re:Intelligent Design-ism is a benefit to science by ZeusAndHades · · Score: 1

      I doubt what you are saying is true. From what I have seen, the Creationist/ID (not the same thing, I know) movement has resulted primarily in Evolutionism preached more dogmatically, and media smearing of Creationism/Intelligent design becoming more frequent. Simply by attacking the credentials of supporters, or by making the claim that it is "not science", it is possible now to just write them off without having to deal with the tough questions. And there are plenty of tough questions. Perhaps eventually all three campaigns (Evolutionism, Creationism, and ID) will sort out their differences, but all I see right now is a heated battle of rhetoric that quite frankly disgusts me. Seriously, people, grow up!

      --
      -=Zeus=And=Hades=-
    7. Re:Intelligent Design-ism is a benefit to science by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1
      (not the same thing, I know)
      Actually, it is. One of the leading pieces of literature on ID, "Of Pandas and People" or something like that, was actually a piece of creationist literature with "Creationism" changed to "Intelligent Design".
      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  74. Actually by Daath · · Score: 1

    According to creationists, that person would be God. Per definition ;)

    --
    Any technology distinguishable from magic, is insufficiently advanced.
  75. You guys will grasp at anything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    What Dr. Thornton has shown, Dr. Behe said, falls within with incremental changes that he allows evolutionary processes can cause.

    "Even if this works, and they haven't shown that it does," Dr. Behe said, "I wouldn't have a problem with that. It doesn't really show that much."


    Most do not argue about "micro" evolution; which is small changes in species. The argument goes to "macro" evolution where one species mutates into another (i.e. monkey -> man) and that is bunk and has no basis in fact nor can it be proven at all.

    1. Re:You guys will grasp at anything... by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      Windows 1.0 couldn't possibly have mutated into Windows XP.

      Large changes come in small parts. A little less fur here, a little more defined a nose there.

      I mean, seriously. You'd think you've never seen evidence of that sort of action in a retirement plan.

      --
      110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
  76. How evolutions can occur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For those who don't know much about cell division/gamete production:

    Background: Chromosomes/DNA code for genes, which express traits that give an organism distinct traits. In humans, we have 23 chromosome pairs. In a set of 23 chromosomes, each contains a DNA code different from the other 22. We have 2 pairs of chromosomes, 1 from mom, one from dad. The end result, is that the set from mom will have a gene, coding for say, black hair, and your dad will have a set coding for, say, blonde hair. For simplicity's sake, lets say the hair gene is on chromosome 1, and you have 2 chromosome 1's, one form mom, 1 from dad. If black hair gene is dominant to blonde, then even though the offspring has black hair gene on one chromosome, and the blonde hair gene on the other, the offspring will express black hair. It get's even more complicated, but this is just a basis for further discussion.

    The human genome is extremely large, according to Wikipedia there are about 3 billion base pairs total. Cell division requires duplication of DNA, and during this duplication, errors can occur. Further more, the production of gametes results in the splitting of cells via a mechanism called meiosis. In meiosis, our 23 pairs of chromosomes (1 set of 23 from mom, 1 set from dad) are duplicated, resulting in 4 sets of chromosomes. These 4 sets 1-23, can undergo a process called recombination where homologous chromosomes (such as the 4 sets of chromosome 1, 4 sets of chromosome 2, etc.), pair and DNA can be switched between chromosomes. This allows for variation in gametes, and as result, your kids should never quite look like you. These chromosomes end up separating in such a manner that cell division results in 4 cells, each with 1 set of 23 chromosomes (1-23). These cells are gametes, ie, sperm/ova. These individual sets of 23 (no longer pairs), can be ANY combination of 4 sets chromosomes, adding further variation to the gene pool.

    The point is, errors can occur. We call these mutations. These mutations can result in serious disorders. Trisomy at chromosome 21 results from an error in meiosis where when the chromosomes do not behave correctly, and an individual ends up with 3 sets of chromosome 21.

    Now, a little on how DNA codes for protein. The dumbed down version is: each a triplet of base pairs in DNA codes for an amino acid. Proteins are a chain of amino acids. DNA specifies the order of the chain by having a specific DNA sequence, and this results in the many proteins that are made in the human body, which in turn result in the expression of certain traits.

    Mutations in meiosis can result in the rearrangement in the DNA sequence so that new proteins are formed. For example, a gene coding for a protein sequence can be erroneously duplicated and placed right after the original gene sequence (AAACCCGGG-->AAACCCGGGAAACCCGGG). As a result, the new protein is like the old one, only twice as big, and looks like 2 of the original proteins stuck together. If this protein result in the expression of a beneficial trait, then the mutated individual may be selected for in nature. If the original organism can be out competed by the new individual, then it dies out, and the new gene is what survives.

    BUT, say the original organism isn't out competed. Instead, it produces offspring with another mutation in that same gene, where only a part of that gene is duplicated (AAACCCGGG-->AAACCCCCCGGG). As a result, you get a protein with 2 duplicated regions within it. And, perhaps this confers some sort of advantage, the individual can perform better than the parent. Accumulations of these sort of mutations are what account for the divergence of species, and the basis of evolution, and takes very, very, very long periods of time.

    Also, what I've just mentioned is the basis of resuse and modification of existing parts. A code sequence for a particular protein already exists, and the modification (by replication error) of this code results in a new protein, or if the sequence gets duplicated and moved infront of

  77. Re:The truth shall set you free. by ComaVN · · Score: 1

    Would they create uncrashable cars if they were benevolent and omnipotent?

    --
    Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
  78. Re:The truth shall set you free. by localman · · Score: 1

    My understanding is too shallow to answer this question, but I believe that God is doing this for a globally optimal solution.

    I credit you with admitting that you don't understand it either. But that's the problem, I think. I'm not saying I can understand everything, and I don't think that life is a net loss (i.e. I believe there is more good than evil). But it seems quite understandable that any all-knowing, all-powerful, all-good God could allow the evil that has happened to have happened. And saying that it's okay because it's the next life that matters is a cop-out: if this life doesn't matter then why have it at all? If it's a test, it's not a fair one as we don't all get the same one. The whole system reeks of organic disorganization. Mysterious ways indeed.

    Anyways, as someone who was raised Christian and eventually became an athiest because of the above line of thinking, I just thought I'd throw it out there since you're thinking about it too. In the end everyone believes what they want whether it makes sense or not.

    Cheers.

  79. Sabertooth Tiger by TheZorch · · Score: 1

    Its established Paloentological fact that the Sabertooth Tiger has appeared, went extinct, and reappeared at least four times in prehistory. This is due to genetics. Every big cat and every domestic feline carries the genes that could become active again and thus bring about the reappearance of the Sabertooth.

    All one has to do is think of DNA as a complex computer program. It can correct itself if errors are found, and it can change itself to adapt. Its not hard to imagine that Evolution is a byproduct of DNA's ability to rewrite itself to suit certain situations. Its not Intellegent Design, its just how DNA functions.

    --
    Michael "TheZorch" Haney
    thezorch@gmail.com
    http://thezorch.googlepages.com/home
    1. Re:Sabertooth Tiger by plunge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I can't find any reference to this fact about the "reappearing Sabertooth" anywhere. Nor does it really make much sense that we could declare something extinct if there is fossil evidence that it existed after that period. Nor am I aware of any genes in domestic felines that can simply be turned on to produce a Sabertoth. So..... Cite?

    2. Re:Sabertooth Tiger by alext · · Score: 1

      Cat evolution is considered a minefield because of the large number of apparently similar types that are unlikely to be directly related.

      I seem to remember that sabretooths have appeared at least twice, but of course it's unlikely to be because of a simple genetic switch such as that controlling coat colour.

    3. Re:Sabertooth Tiger by Morky · · Score: 1

      I bet you spent about three minutes researching that. There was a South American marsupial that was nearly indistinguishable from smilodon, a placental mammal. They arrived at a strikingly similar evolutionary result through a very different path.

    4. Re:Sabertooth Tiger by plunge · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what you are getting at. "Striking similar" is a matter of relative degree. Most mammals are "strikingly similar" in most respects. It's not surprising that marsupial mammals have similar niches as placentals. In fact, it goes far beyond the sabertooth. There are marsupial "deer," "dogs," "bears," etc. So?

      That's not the same thing as sabertooth tigers popping in and out of existence.

    5. Re:Sabertooth Tiger by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The DNA functions because of the intelligent design, not orthogonal to it.

    6. Re:Sabertooth Tiger by Morky · · Score: 1

      So, they evolved along completely different paths as their placental look-alikes to fill similar niches with very similar forms. That's interesting, no?

  80. Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyone? by tjstork · · Score: 0, Troll

    The flipside of the evolutionary topic is, well, what if we just say there is no God and move on? Dismissing the existence of God in no way advances the human condition.

    Consider, why does one need to foolishly accept that a better adapted emergent species is not fundamentally better than a less adapted one? It's one thing to argue, correctly, that fossils form an evolutionary chain or that, we can witness the evolution of bacteria in near real time, but then to make the argument that because something is not as well adapted smacks of political correctness designed to avoid the obvious conclusion, that if some beings are better adapted than others, than humans must be too, and there ought to be scientifically determinable markers to measure which humans are better or which are worse. If we think macroscopically, we could also conclude that a culture forms an organism of sorts and different cultures evolve as well, with some naturally and deservedly displacing others, or, some others breeding weakness into a culture by virtue of exchange of information...

    Not that I would ever troll, if there is no God, what is actually wrong with Western domination of the world, or, in particular, the American invasion of Iraq and its goals to inject Democracy into the middle east. If it works, then, would that not prove American Democracy was superior, especially considering that only 130,000 soldiers are tasked to correct a nation of some 25 millions, and, if so, then, wouldn't it simply be as natural as one strain of bacteria emerging that is better adapted to say, penicillin, than another?

    --
    This is my sig.
  81. Re:God created everything... by Mastema262003 · · Score: 1
    I would point out that lack of proof is not proof of lack
    As a side note, for a Bayesian http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayesian_probability, absence of evidence IS in fact evidence of absence. If you go your whole life and never see a white raven then your belief that there are no white ravens SHOULD increase each passing day. If you want to be a rational thinker that is. If you don't care whether your thinking is strictly rational, then may I suggest religion?
  82. Re:God created everything... by Maset · · Score: 1

    Please don't use such subtle humour here... this is slashdot!

  83. Re:God created everything... by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
    But God has been here FOREVER!!

    No, god does not exist. He hasn't been here at all.

    He has been proven to be true.

    Sure, whatever. In the mean time, more intelligent religious people keep their god out of the realm of science. Every time god steps in there, he gets his butt kicked.

    Nobody else can say their God walked the earth except Christians.

    Every ancient religion had gods that walked the earth. Don't be silly.

    That should be proof enough that God created everything.

    No, that's proof that people are still as gullible now as they were thousands of year ago.

  84. Re:The truth shall set you free. by ZeroExistenZ · · Score: 1

    This is an excellent question that causes a great deal of controversy. Since every possible outcome, event and possibility is happening and will happen, then all good and all evil balances out in the superverse. After the reality of multiple worlds sank into our collective thought, the one basic change to all religious dogma is the concept that good and evil does not exist as an organized force in our lives nor can it be used as a useful way to judge what God may think of a situation. Good and evil are personal experiences that can only guide what we do as individuals and how we relate to others. This outlook also makes it impossible for me to judge any other person or event. We cannot see the entire universe as God sees it therefore we will never be Gods or be capable of judging anything outside of ourselves. My actions can only be judged as good and bad by me and my God.

    --
    I think we can keep recursing like this until someone returns 1
  85. Re:The truth shall set you free. by bogjobber · · Score: 1

    If you really want an answer to this conundrum, read St. Augustine. His argument, which is still widely accepted among theologians (I think), is that there is no such thing as evil. What we call evil is simply an absence of godliness.

    You can make an analogy to atoms. The space in between atoms or sub-atomic particles doesn't have any properties in and of itself, we simply categorize it as emptiness by describing it as the absence of something.

    The same thing goes with evil. Evil doesn't have any properties by itself, it is just the way we categorize something that is "less divine".

  86. Re:God created everything... by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
    That so many otherwise intelligent people are prepared to accept such circular notions is perhaps the strongest argument against evolution.

    That's actually what I'd expect. Shouldn't a creature the recently picked up the ability to think rationally do it imperfectly, and not all the time? Shouldn't there be holdovers from previous types of thinking, like instinct and "emotional logic"?

    The first vertebrates to move onto land weren't very good at it. I'd expect the first critters to use intelligence to be just as flawed.

  87. Not going to dissuade the intelligent designers by mcc · · Score: 5, Insightful
    A bit of context, for the record:

    The reason the NYT is giving this the "doubters of evolution" spin is that there's this guy, Michael Behe, who wrote a book around 1995 somewhere called "Darwin's Black Box". The central idea of that book was the allegation that evolutionary science treats the cell like a "black box" that nobody attempts to look inside or explain. Evolutionary science, said Behe, only concerns itself with larger structures, and only assumes the stuff inside the cell "just works". Because evolution can't explain, subcellular structures, evolution lacks a foundation, is built on nothing, and is wrong.

    This is, of course, silly if you're actually familiar with the science, because to whatever extent scienists ever treated the cell like a "black box", it was because we didn't know how to look inside yet. Viewing machinery the size of a molecule is really hard. Scientists could analyze things, but have only relatively recently gained the ability to view the full picture of things, much as they might have wanted to.

    Once the technology for understanding the molecular structures that make up cells really started to take off (say, at the beginning of the 80s-ish), a revolution of sorts started in microbiology and genetics. And as this happened, Behe managed to exploit a neat trick of timing; he wrote his book just as a lot of fascinating questions were appearing through this revolution in microbiology, but before (since the questions had only just been asked) we really knew what the answers were. Behe was able to craft the illusion, since we didn't know the answers to some of those questions yet, that the questions didn't have answers or would never be answered and thus evolution was flawed-- not mentioning that work was underway or even partially completed to find answers to all of these questions. In the time since Behe wrote his book, cell microbiology has progressed by leaps and bounds, but the book itself is able to do a neat little job of making it seem like the cell really is just an inexplicable black box, because he wrote it just as science totally finished picking the lock.

    Which brings us to this story: The one scientific "big idea" in Darwin's Black Box was what Behe calls "Irreducible Complexity", and the publication of Darwin's Black Box was the main way this idea was popularized. The idea behind irreducible complexity is that there exist structures that contain one or more parts, and that if you remove one of the parts, the entire thing stops working. But one would expect that evolutionary mutation can only change "one thing" at a time; the idea that a single new allele that could simultaneously create two separable and interlocking structures seems wholly unbelievable. So how did irreducibly complex structures evolve?

    This is an extremely reasonable question, and one evolutionary science is obligated to answer. The problem is that Behe, and the rest of the ID crowd:
    1. Instead of asking the question, "how did irreducibly complex structures evolve?", skipped the question and immediately jumped to the conclusion "it is impossible for irreducibly complex structures to evolve".
    2. Even after answers to the question saying "this is an explanation of how irreducibly complex structures can evolve" were provided again, and again, and again, kept doggedly insisting "it is impossible for irreducibly complex structures to evolve".

    The answer to how irreducibly complex structures could evolve is pretty simple: all that would have to happen is for a structure to change its purpose over time. That is to say, it doesn't matter that irreducibly complex structures can only evolve one part at a time, because it is simple to imagine each of the small structures in an irreducibly complex system independently evolving for some other purpose than the big IC system performs, then being adapted into a bigger IC system with rube goldberg style ingenuity, then gradually losing the ability to function for their original purpose indepen

    1. Re:Not going to dissuade the intelligent designers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1575 called and it wants to let you know what mathematical induction is I'm going to have this tattooed on my pet dog.

    2. Re:Not going to dissuade the intelligent designers by FFFish · · Score: 1

      Best. Explanation. Evah.

      Thank you.

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    3. Re:Not going to dissuade the intelligent designers by jamesmrankinjr · · Score: 1

      This is an extremely reasonable question, and one evolutionary science is obligated to answer.

      This sentence sets you apart from many of the natural-material dogmatists out there.

      Many opponents of theism act as if this was not a reasonable question at all, and any question that gives possible support to theistic arguments is an evil question to ask.

      You make a good, un-ad-hominem case that Behe continues to change the IC goal posts in the face of new evidence. I applaud you for sticking to the substance of the arguments and refraining from impugning the perceived motives of those who disagree with you. Finding such arguments are becoming a rare, precious thing.

      Thank you.

      -jimbo

    4. Re:Not going to dissuade the intelligent designers by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      Not to seem stupid, but what on earth is a 'natural-material dogmatist'?

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    5. Re:Not going to dissuade the intelligent designers by jamesmrankinjr · · Score: 1

      Not to seem stupid, but what on earth is a 'natural-material dogmatist'?

      Well, natural-materialist in the sense of starting with the philosophical assumption that there is nothing beyond the natural universe, and rejecting any attempt to inquire into whether there might exist anything more than that.

      Dogmatist was just to emphasize that such persons, by definition, would be accurately described as dogmatic.

      Peace be with you,
      -jimbo

    6. Re:Not going to dissuade the intelligent designers by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      Oh.

      You know, calling science by any other name doesn't make it any less reproducable.

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  88. Re:The truth shall set you free. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

    While you paid attention to some portions of your philosophy/religion class, you missed the part where God is defined as an all-powerfoul being that can do the logically possible. I.e., you can't set up inherently contradictory claims and then deduce from them the contradictory nature of god.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  89. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by Dimensio · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The flipside of the evolutionary topic is, well, what if we just say there is no God and move on?

    I do not see how this is, in any way, an "evolutionary topic". The theory of evolution says nothing whatsoever regarding the subject of deities.

    Dismissing the existence of God in no way advances the human condition.

    To which "God", out of the thousans of deities worshipped and acknowledged throughout human history, do you refer and why do you reference that particular deity to the exclusion of all others?

    Consider, why does one need to foolishly accept that a better adapted emergent species is not fundamentally better than a less adapted one?

    I do not see that one does need to do this at all. "Better adapted" is itself a relative condition, and there is no means to judge any one species as "fundamentally better" than another in an absolute sense. I do not understand what point you are attempting to argue.

  90. Re:The truth shall set you free. by ThosLives · · Score: 1
    Ok, more explicitly, although I'm sure some folks won't be able to grok this:

    The only way to be truly benevolent is to allow free will. Thus, there is a possibility for evil.

    To use my car analogy: You could have a crashless car, but you would not have the freedom to choose where the vehicle went or how it operated. That is the only way to guarantee "no crashes". So, in having a vehicle where we are free to control it, there is a possibility for catastrophe; but the "bad" was not created. It is simply a consequence of freedom. If you want more information on this particular question, google The problem of good and evil.

    --
    "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
  91. Stop it! Just stop it! by Garse+Janacek · · Score: 0
    The researchers say the findings, published today in the journal Science, offer a counterargument to doubters of evolution who question how a progression of small changes could produce the intricate mechanisms found in living cells.'

    Or, in other terms, "The researchers want to generate hype, so instead of letting a great result stand on its own they have decided to legitimize their ascientific opponents (who will not change their minds anyway) by claiming that their discovery, of all the thousands of fundamental discoveries made in biology, is the one that will shut down this illogical and uninformed ID talking point."

    Stop feeding the trolls. If (and this is a big if) ID adherents are convinced that a particular aspect of evolution actually does make sense, they'll just shift to the next gap in our far-from-complete understanding and say that that one is the problem. Talking about real, important discoveries as though their significance is to confirm evolution, rather than explain it, is to play into the hands of IDers and creationists by accepting implicitly that evolution still has holes that need confirmation, and by falsely suggesting that serious biologists are relieved to have this new discovery, since before that they had no answer for the current batch of ID talking points.

    There are many holes in our understanding, and many points at which we don't know exactly how certain aspects of evolution work. This does not mean we are uncertain that it works, any more than extremely small oddities in general relativity experiments make us uncertain that gravity works. The precise how we're still nailing down, but no scientist doubts that masses attract each other. Stop letting the other side make this seem like a legitimate scientific conflict, and emphasize what's really important here -- that we have made another step towards explaining the how.

    --

    I am the man with no sig!

    1. Re:Stop it! Just stop it! by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      Look, I want to agree with you, but I have some bad news. These barsteds are legitimised whatever scientists do. It is time to bombard the public with the message "ID is wrong, science have proove it for the 400th time". Until the public is sick and tired of hearing how utterly wrong ID is, we have to fight them. You cant pretend like ignoring these people will make them go away. It's time to turn the entire scientific establishment on the antiscience that is ID and obliterate it.

      The public will think there is a legitimate scientific conflict whatever we do. So our best bet is to make every result, every piece printed in the paper, every section of programming on TV, every portion of the media, every address by a scientist would can make a relevant contribution about the subject into an attack on ID. The foundation of science itself is at stake, and it is time that the scientific establishment fought at least as dirtily, if not dirtier than these idiots.

    2. Re:Stop it! Just stop it! by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      The article doesn't actually mention ID.

      On the other hand, ID has leaked into the scientific establishment. This is a problem; it's religiously-based pseudoscience. It pollutes research in a sneaky way - because without thinking too much about it, it's plausable.

      I've heard arguments here and there: It's impossible to create a DNA strand complex as a human's by throwing random numbers at a wall for centuries (like they never heard of genetic AI techniques); an 'indivisible structure' couldn't have evolved (like they never heard of microbiological repurposing); while microevolution has been proven, macroevolution hasn't (driven (by survival) small change * time == large change, guys).

      Non of 'em have quite flown with me.

      The fundamentalists survive mostly on spreading FUD; all the IDers have left is the uncertainty and doubt aspects (Fear of God's Divine Wrath isn't there). We can't let that sort of shit grind our scientific community to a halt. It's not fair to science OR God.

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  92. Dear moderator by Adrian+Lopez · · Score: 1

    My post was meant as a joke, ya' silly sod. :P

    --
    "In prison you just have to shut your eyes and take it. Here you have to shut your eyes and give it."
  93. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Yes, God is indeed an all-powerfoul being.

  94. Re:We see tiny things becoming more complex everyd by Aranth+Brainfire · · Score: 1

    I figured babies had something to do with kissing.

    I had a really good reason to be majorly grossed out by kissing as a little boy, I think...

    --
    "Quoting yourself is stupid." -Me
  95. Re:The truth shall set you free. by sqrt(2) · · Score: 1

    Thank you for sharing in detail what makes him "...absolutely stupid...". You realized it was so obvious that you skipped right to ad hominem attacks. You're a shining beacon of humanity.

    --
    If you build it, nerds will come. Soylentnews.org
  96. Re:The truth shall set you free. by localman · · Score: 1

    You're kidding, right? This would have no bearing on our day to day life. Of course we must judge what is right and wrong outside ourselves. I'm sure you do. And when you're living in a way that lines up, more or less, with your beliefs, then you don't really believe them.

    Cheers.

  97. Creationist Nonsense by eclectic4 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Scientific American gives 15 Answers to Creationist Nonsense.

    Memorize them for your next party

    --

    "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
  98. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Dark_Lord_Prime · · Score: 1

    "Universal" means "the same, everywhere".

    If evolution were universally accepted, there would, by definition, be no dissenters(i.e. believers in "god/creation").

    If god/creation were universally accepted, there would, by definition, be no dissenters(i.e. believers in "evolution").

  99. Re:God created everything... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

    And then someone ruins the joke by pointing out that the kernel source was signed by its authors...

    --
    "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  100. Re:The truth shall set you free. by eclectic4 · · Score: 1

    You might call a man evil, I may call him extraordinarily indifferent to other beings. I think they can be explained by mere psychological and physiological differences, circumstance, and perspective.

    --

    "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
  101. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by tjstork · · Score: 1

    I do not see how this is, in any way, an "evolutionary topic". The theory of evolution says nothing whatsoever regarding the subject of deities.

    There are those in the evolutionary camp that would argue that science displaces the need for God, and therefor, science itself should assume the social role of determining moral values.

    To which "God", out of the thousans of deities worshipped and acknowledged throughout human history, do you refer and why do you reference that particular deity to the exclusion of all others?

    It doesn't matter, it's really, which ever one wins.

    I do not see that one does need to do this at all. "Better adapted" is itself a relative condition, and there is no means to judge any one species as "fundamentally better" than another in an absolute sense.

    I disagree with that. Take two people and put them in a pool and tell them to swim laps. One will last longer than the other, and is better.

    You could, concievably, with more work, evolve a mathematical metric that values all of a person's probable contributions to society, and arrive at an empiracle definition of who is better. Of course, the definition would change over time as society evolves. That's why some people are paid more than others - in a free enterprise system, the masses of people decide who is better with their wallets, and in a socialist system, it's a committee. If there is no God, can you admit that you are a loser for not having a billion dollars? Can I? Boy, that's a tough, tough pill to swallow.

    --
    This is my sig.
  102. Re:The truth shall set you free. by CthulhuDreamer · · Score: 1

    You're standing on one. Make a rock heavy enough, and the lifting issue sort of takes care of itself.

  103. Biology is amazing... by Pedrito · · Score: 1

    Now, I'm not endorsing intelligent design. Personally, I believe in evolution, not out of faith, but because the evidence is in, has been in, and will continue to be in, on the fact that evolution is the truth.

    That said, I've recently been reading a lot of biology stuff and I have to say, the mechanisms, even at the cellular level, that have evolved, are simply astounding. Here's just a single example: The membranes of cells contain proteins for different functions. For example, there may be a protein that collects "food" of some sort for the cell. Some of these proteins, will just sit there and when a "food" molecule comes by, it binds to the protein, the protein then changes shape in such a way, that it pulls the "food" molecule inside the cell. It then releases the "food" inside the cell and then changes shape back to the way it was.

    I mean, I can see how someone can look at that and say, "That can't just evolve." It did, but I can understand the counterposition on it. And that's simply one example, and that's just a lowly cell. You've got 70kg of cells (+ or - depending on the person) in a person, each one doing it's own thing, and somehow, it's a living, breathing, thinking, person. It's all pretty mind boggling.

    And even after seeing the individual steps of how each piece evolved, each protein, each cell, each organism, it's still hard to believe that all these amazing little mechanisms work together, in sync, and they weren't designed by anyone.

    I mean, hell, it's all we can do to build a robot that walks upright, and mother nature did it without any thiking at all. How stupid are we.

    You can be a really educated person and understand a lot about biology, and you can still question evolution simply because it's so friggin' hard to believe on a lot of levels. So, while I understand most of us here believe in evolution, I'd ask that you keep an open mind and try to understand the other side as well. I'd also ask that people on the other side try to keep an open mind and understand why we don't want to be preached to and told what we should believe.

    1. Re:Biology is amazing... by nano_assembler · · Score: 1

      I apologize for being nitpicky but... I mean, hell, it's all we can do to build a robot that walks upright, and mother nature did it without any thiking at all. How stupid are we. I am a little perturbed by the goddess motif, but what really bothered me about your statement was the neglect of the magnitude of time needed to evolve to stand upright. Compare that to the time it took for humans to make a robot that walks upright and I think the robot building feat is impressive.

    2. Re:Biology is amazing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, I'm not endorsing intelligent design. Personally, I believe in evolution, not out of faith, but because the evidence is in, has been in, and will continue to be in, on the fact that evolution is the truth.

      please tell me where all this evidence is. i've looked an i haven't found it.

      every fossil i've looked into has a reasonable explanation that is different than transitionary.

      Archaeopteryx is the poster child of transitionary fossils, yet it very reasonably was no such thing.

      http://research.unc.edu/endeavors/spr97/bird.html

      if the poster child is riddled with holes so easily shown to be reaosnably something else... how bad are the other "examples?"

      at best, this is extremely *weak* evidence when OVERWHELMING evidence is predicted. since said OVERWHELMING EVIDENCE has never shown up, they changed the theory into a big bang theory where evolution is compressed.

      there's no logical reason for this to occur other than the dearth of evidence regarding gradual steps.

      i have no pony in this race, other than to learn TRUTH.

      however, what i see is the macro-evolutionary community spinning information in ways that would make jim baker blush.

      imhop, spin isn't good for truth and science should be based on truth. all sides of truth.

    3. Re:Biology is amazing... by Xtravar · · Score: 1

      When I think about evolution vs human-made things, I think about computer AI.

      AI composed with an evolution algorithm will take a lot longer to mature, and it will most-likely be a lot more flexible to its environment and robust than hard-coded AI written by a 'designer'/programmer. Hard-coded AI will achieve its functionality immediately, but it not be able to handle unknown cases.

      Yes, evolution is amazing... but when I see it work within the confines of a tiny computer in a matter of hours, I can understand how working within the confines of the universe over billions of years results in such complexity.

      On a side note, I don't understand why it's so freakin' hard for people to grasp evolution. It's a perpetual guess-and-check mechanism where you only get to answer incorrectly so many times until your population is extinct. Other populations' guesses cause your answers to change and vis versa. It can be applied to anything. I have 8 paper cups on my desk, but none of them are making any guesses that will prevent me from tossing them in the garbage, so the population of paper cups on my desk is going extinct.

      --
      Buckle your ROFL belt, we're in for some LOLs.
    4. Re:Biology is amazing... by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      I think you make a very good point. I think that part of the problem is that the human mind has very poor intuition for probabilities that involve very large and small numbers, and natural selection involves both. For example, this article http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/03/1 7/2224223 shows a study that claims that about 100 boulders have hit Titan from Earth. This is, to me, mind blowing. Space is so huge- how is this possible. But, we are talking about a lot of time, and a lot of boulders, so the results are unintuitive. Similarly, while it isn't too hard to imagine that 1000 monkeys sitting at 1000 typewriters could eventually type MacBeth, it isn't too difficult to calculate how long this would take. I don't remember the exact number of years- 10^30 comes to mind, but in any case, I remember it was far longer than the history of the universe (assuming they typed one letter/second.) So large numbers can play funny tricks on you. While a bacteria evolving into a man via natural selection is completely inconceivable, the amount of time and numbers of generations is also completely inconceivable.

  104. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    There are those in the evolutionary camp that would argue that science displaces the need for God, and therefor, science itself should assume the social role of determining moral values.

    Such individuals are clearly in the minority. Their opinion does not change the fact that the theory of evolution makes no statements whatsoever regarding the existence or nature of any deities.

    It doesn't matter, it's really, which ever one wins.

    It does matter. Dismissing a "God" who demands human sacrifice, for example, could arguably improve human society.

    I disagree with that. Take two people and put them in a pool and tell them to swim laps. One will last longer than the other, and is better.

    This would demonstrate that one individual is arguably a better swimmer. From this, I cannot deduce who is better at Calculus. "Better" is a relative standard, requiring a frame of reference.

    You could, concievably, with more work, evolve a mathematical metric that values all of a person's probable contributions to society, and arrive at an empiracle definition of who is better.

    Nonetheless, the standard is still arbitrary, as it is defined by "potential contributions to society". Not only is the declaration itself arbitrary, but the contributions possible could well vary based upon the society in question.

  105. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh my, oh my. Science does deal with truths. Thats a given. Second, of course science can be applied everywhere. Thats what science is. The accumulation of everything knowable (and for knowable read 'in existence'). Questions like 'what is outside the universe?' are like 'what is north of the north pole?' - meaningless and only asked by people ignorant of the question that they are asking.

    Science is the one true God. And frankly, anyone who is religious is ignorant, and mentally unstable. In no other way are humans given license to believe in something that does not exist. Fairies, Bigfoot, UFO's. All make people sound nuts if they believe. But god, creating the lord Jesus who can walk on water etc etc? Give the human race a break! It's insulting.

  106. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by shmlco · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Dismissing the existence of God in no way advances the human condition."

    You mean other than removing the need for some to kill the non-believers and heretics in "his" name?

    --
    Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
  107. Re:The truth shall set you free. by discordja · · Score: 2, Informative

    So you managed to pass philosophy 101 and think that because you can take the most pithy argument about the problem of evil and 'prove' god does not exist. Alvin Plantinga, a standing professor at Notre Dame, dealt extensively with the problem of evil and has several books on the topic. Many philosophers, even those who categorize themselves as secular, generally agree that Plantinga's Free Will Defense is a logical and mostly complete answer to the questions the problem of evil poses. Johnathan Kvanvig, at Missouri, has some incredibly excellent works on the Problem of Hell, a much more difficult topic. Both authors are well worth reading. Furthermore, theologians don't just say 'god exists, nyaa!' and leave it. The argument from contingency (St. Aquinas sustaining cause, further developed by Swinburne as an inductive study) has real legs in demanding the need for "something" to exist other than the universe. Mind you, NONE of this actually will equate the sustaining cause to the Judeo Christan God, but that's what other branches of philosophy and theology is for.

    I tend to agree with Kenneth Miller. Anyone that claims to be of faith should read his book 'Finding Darwin's God' where he attempts to bridge the gap between hard evolution and it's implications for religion.

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    I stole this .sig
  108. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by tjstork · · Score: 1

    Such individuals are clearly in the minority. Their opinion does not change the fact that the theory of evolution makes no statements whatsoever regarding the existence or nature of any deities.

    It's a heck of a minority though, Dawkins comes to mind.

    It does matter. Dismissing a "God" who demands human sacrifice, for example, could arguably improve human society.

    Theoretically, not that I've been playing too much Rise of Nations and Age of Empires, the God whose people had the most villagers would ultimately win, assuming he withstood the rush strategies of other Gods.

    --
    This is my sig.
  109. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by tjstork · · Score: 1

    You mean other than removing the need for some to kill the non-believers and heretics in "his" name?

    Well, yes, except that, killing nonbelievers, Islam excepted, hasn't really been a factor in Western civilization except for maybe a short period from the dark ages through the 30 Years War. Before that, wars were generally fought for plunder, as, indeed, wars after that were fought for plunder as well. Nazism is sort of the ultimate proof that you don't need a Godlike God to go and destroy other people. They did it using a hopped up form of social Darwinism as their shtick. And Communism certainly didn't have a God complex either, but, there's plenty of dead in that shtick's wake...

    So yes, removing God from the equation accomplishes nothing.

    --
    This is my sig.
  110. Glitch in the Matrix by 123abc · · Score: 0

    "What happened was that a glitch produced two copies of the receptor gene in the animal's DNA, a not-uncommon occurrence in evolution. Then, for reasons not understood, two major mutations made one receptor sensitive just to cortisol, leading to the modern version of the stress hormone receptor."

    So we have a glitch, then a couple of big glitches, and then walla! "evolution 'takes advantage of lucky circumstances and builds upon them.' "

    With all the machinery in cells to correct and prevent glitches, evolution is a real lucky guy (and funny how he always takes advantage of something without knowing what he's taking advantage of).

    It's a nice fairytale, but the only thing processes without a vision build upon is taking a pile-o-shit and making it a bigger pile-o-shit.

    What we are really seeing here is similar chemicals being used for different functions in different situations. This does not mean one thing let to another. The "glitch" and "two major mutations" are a major re-design.

  111. Public Relations by obender · · Score: 1
    I am starting to get sick and tired of all these PR scientists. I guess a dry description of what they found will never generate as much fame as saying: we've just proven evolution.

    Vinik after discovering Ingap hired a public relations person. And it was all a miracle until the phase 2 tests. Hwang Woo-suk risked and lost all credibility in cloning just by trying to be the famous. And the list goes on forever.

    If it works so well show us an application. Otherwise show it to your peers that can have a qualified opinion.

    1. Re:Public Relations by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 1

      What happened when the lab I worked in got a paper in PNAS was the university contacted the prof to get a press release worked up after the paper was accepted for publication (disclaimer: I had nothing to do with any of it, other than coming up with the press release title). The press release was, um, released, and a day or two later he was contacted by the local paper who published a nice little article. So all that happened was a solid science paper got peer-reviewed and published in a very high-profile journal and a nice little bit of public education happened with the aid of the local paper. On the next grant application, I imagine the boss will have a sentence in there saying the lab got local media coverage, ain't that nifty, which will very slightly improve the chances of the grant being accepted. That's it.

      Thornton's at the same university (U. Oregon GO DUCKS!), so it went along the same lines. Thornton did some really cool research, got it through peer review and published in Science (which is really, really hard. Most scientists will never get an article in Science), and then this media stuff happened. Whether he approached the university for a press release or vice versa I couldn't tell you, but he most certainly did not approach the NY Times. I imagine no one is more surprised than Thornton about all the hoopla. Pleased, sure. It'll serve him well in a couple years when he's up for tenure, but the tenure committee will care a lot more about the paper being published in Science than it being mentioned in the NY Times. They'll care even more about the science his lab's been doing over the last five years. Sure there are some that skip peer review and just sensationalize whatever they've got directly to the media, but that's not what's going on here.

  112. Not for me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I never had to click through any ad. *shrug*

  113. HOW HARD COULD IT BE? by blair1q · · Score: 1

    How hard can it be to understand evolution?

    Time + slow variation + selective extinction = sophistication.

    Beats the hell out of

    Undetectable magician + ineffable motives = sophistication.

  114. The summary is not scientific .. yes I did RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >>> "demonstrated the step-by-step progression of how evolution created a new piece of molecular machinery by reusing and modifying existing parts."

    They did nothing of the sort.

    They may have demonstrated a _possible_ (even probable) progression of molecular forms. That's a huge leap away from the actual progression. I'll presume (!) that they've started from current molecular structures and extrapolated back saying if such-and-such happened then this could happen and that could happen ... oh that'll do, it could of been^H^H^H^H was that way.

    For example

    >>> "...found that it could bind to the kidney regulating hormone, aldosterone and the stress hormone, cortisol.".

    So what, I physically could have played in the Superbowl this year. Guess what?!

    The article is pretty poor if they are actually hoping to close any loopholes .. I hope the research findings hold more water ... this made me chuckle :

    >>> "Dr. Thornton said the experiments showed how evolution could and did innovate functions over time.

    Innovation is a thought process. The whole point about evolution (AFAI-can-tell) is that it doesn't innovate it's random mutations that survive if they are beneficial .. that's not innovation that's monkeys on typewriters with editorial oversite [insert tabloid pun here!].

    And anyway, it doesn't discount irreducible complexity just counters one instance (poorly it would seem _from the article_). If someone can explain how a rotor-stator pair on a bacterial flagellum isn't irreducibly complex then I'll think they're getting somewhere [no I don't buy the arguments based on homology of the TTSS with a rotor socket - but then I've never heard a scientific proof of other minds!].

    Incidentally none of this proves anything against a "running start" theory (unless you want to unleash the "argument from incredulity" which Dr. Thornton appears to think creationist are relying on.

    ---

    PS: Nice baiting!!

  115. How many? None! by pbhj · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    >>> "How many thousands of generations of people lived and died over the millennia so that we might be where we are today?"

    None.

    Only I exist.

    But it intrigues me that I generated that bit of sense data. Perhaps it's not just me?

  116. Re:Waiting... by From+A+Far+Away+Land · · Score: 1

    Dr. Behe has some serious sour grapes going on.

    He's redefining complex as "at least three" instead of just a combination which could be two things that have changed together in this experiement that's been conducted sucessfully. Once other scientists start validating it, and expanding on this reasearch, we should see a decline in the number of "experts" standing behind Intelligent Design's "give up" attitude.

  117. Get yourself User Agent switcher: be a googlebot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Become a googlebot with Firefox with the User Agent switcher tool.
    add `Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; googlebot/2.1; +http://www.google.com/bot.html)' to the User Agent field.

  118. Re:God created everything... by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

    And for the most rabid athiests, I would point out that lack of proof is not proof of lack

    No, but as Dawkins says, we'd laugh at someone who believes that there's a teapot orbiting Pluto.

  119. Re:The truth shall set you free. by shmlco · · Score: 1

    "... God is defined as an all-powerfoul [sic] being that can do the logically possible..." Sort of kills off the ALL-powerful part of the program, doesn't it? Brings him down to being just another poweful entity with restrictions on his behavior. In that case he's probably not all-seeing or all-knowing either. Has a staff to manage those kinds of details...

    --
    Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
  120. Re:We see tiny things becoming more complex everyd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sperm + Egg = Baby

    okay, which came first, according to the theory of evolution?

    how is being sexual in nature more conducive to survival? if you've been married, you'd know better... if not, you will...

    why do i have an amazing, astounding, ingenious, freaked out eyeball of complexity and teeth that want to fall out? weren't teeth important to survival, too? especially 10,000 years ago?

    how is a hybrid land / water ear advantageous on eithe rland or water? btw, no such ear has ever been discovered. just postulated.

    if the platypus lived and went extinct x thousands of years ago... what would an evolutionsit claim claim about it being transitionary? how would slashdot react?

    how does life come from death?

    how do appendages that offer no benefit stay around long enough to eventually become a benefit?

    why are my ears facing forward instead of backwards? i can see forward, so wouldn't the greatest benefit come from having my ears pointed backwards so i could better hear prey coming up from behind? *especially* before language existed? or did ears come into existance *after& language came into existence?

    how come we can't repreoduce macro-evolution in the lab? why can't we turn bacteria into something entirely different than bacteria - even thoug we've dramamtically increased the speed of reproduction?

    just curious.

    is that allowed in *science*, anymore? ;)-0

  121. continual questioning ... that's S-C-I-E-N-C-E by pbhj · · Score: 2, Insightful

    >>> "Can you believe it's 2006 and we still care about the near-high-school drop-outs who continue to question evolution?"

    Yes.

    I can't believe you got plus-5 insightful for that flame-bait.

    If you don't question things you're not a scientist. I question evolution, I question every facet of existence that I come across.

    Incidentally I've got an honours degree in Physics and Maths and an undergraduate diploma in computer science. No big guns I know but that's me. I consider myself to be a philosopher. What about you?

  122. Re:God created everything... by shmlco · · Score: 1

    "Nobody else can say their God walked the earth except Christians."

    According to the mythos only the mortal son of God walked the earth, not God Him/Her/Itself.

    --
    Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
  123. stop bringing up ID by Jookey · · Score: 1

    Can we please stop bringing up intellegent design in every artice pertaining to evolution. This is slashdot for jeebus sake. Your preaching to the choir.

    1. Re:stop bringing up ID by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      The choir here has a number of sour voices. Geeks who, in their strange form of geekdom, believe that the Flying Spaghetti Monster created us all with his Devine Meaty Orbs of Meatness.

      There are also some here who believe, in the face of all other evidence, that the Great Green Arkleseizure sneezed us out.

      The fruitless, futile debate between the knowledgable and the useless thus rages on. Another day, another slashdot.

      --
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  124. ID = Heisenberg Uncertain Principle? by victorvodka · · Score: 1

    Could it be that Intelligent Design is like the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle in that it tells us the limits of what knowledge can be? Well, no. While nothing that HUP predicts not to be knowable has ever been known, it seems things that things Intelligent Design predicts to be unknowable are being gradually explained. This shows it to be a very bad theory. In Science, as opposed to other realms of inquiry, theories that are disproven are ABANDONED. Hey wingnut creationists, time to imitate the behavior of the rats that left your sinking ship!

    --

    The flag just makes more sense than the constitution. - Judas Gutenberg

    1. Re:ID = Heisenberg Uncertain Principle? by robertjw · · Score: 2, Informative

      Where did you come up with comparison of the Uncertainty principle to ID. IIRC Heisenberg's prinicple said that observing something changes it's behavior, thus making it uncertain. I can think of many areas where this is true, but ID or evolution already happened. We can neither observe it, or change it. We are all already here. All that can be done now is attempt to prove in a laboratory that evolution is possible, which still doesn't prove that it happened.

      Ultimately, I just don't understand why this is an issue. Bottom line is we are here. If we have evolved then we are uniquely suited to our environment due to millenia of nature working on us. If we are here by ID, we are uniquely suited to our environment because somebody built us that way. It's a stupid argument, and stupid area of study.

    2. Re:ID = Heisenberg Uncertain Principle? by victorvodka · · Score: 1

      the comparison is valid because Heisenberg claimed to know where it was absurd to continue a path of scientific inquiry. ID purports to do the same thing, though it uses the arbitrary 'it's too fuckin' crazy man, there's no way we'll EVER be able to figure this one out" standard.

      --

      The flag just makes more sense than the constitution. - Judas Gutenberg

    3. Re:ID = Heisenberg Uncertain Principle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution has been proven. Now what is taking place is merely a refinement. This is done partially to to knock off the malinformed naysayers from the wingnut contingent (the current article completely refutes the "irreducible complexity" argument) and partially just to improve (as science always does).

      You could say the development of scientific knowledge behaves kind of like evolution in a sense. The good is saved, the bad is discarded. Thus, the whole becomes a stronger and a better description of reality over time. Of course, biological evolution is quite a bit different than this. But it is fun to compare.

    4. Re:ID = Heisenberg Uncertain Principle? by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      "Bottom line is we are here. If we have evolved then we are uniquely suited to our environment due to millenia of nature working on us."

      Preach on, apathist brother!

      "It's a stupid argument, and stupid area of study."

      I agree that while evolutionary study is not immediately practical, it may become useful in a number of ways in the future. All research is good research.

      Meanwhile, some of the less apathetic humans on this planet DO, against all rational thought, want to know where they ultimately came from. Something like the interminable 'Why's that come from small children. "Where did it all come from" is a question borne in boredom that eventually eats into the very souls of the neurotic - so they must study.

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    5. Re:ID = Heisenberg Uncertain Principle? by robertjw · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, some of the less apathetic humans on this planet DO, against all rational thought, want to know where they ultimately came from.

      I have no problem with research. I think it's great that we research it. Educating elementary children is NOT research. Arguing about it in the popular press, on blog sites and in the court room is NOT research.

      It's a ridiculous argument and a colossal waste of time because neither side will ever be persuaded. Questions like 'where did we come from?' and 'why are we here?' are best left for philisophical discussions.

    6. Re:ID = Heisenberg Uncertain Principle? by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      Ok. Do you have an issue with teaching the process of natural selection and genetic adaptation - two proven concepts that are directly related to evolution - to elementary school students?

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    7. Re:ID = Heisenberg Uncertain Principle? by robertjw · · Score: 1

      Absolutly not. Natural selection, genetic adapation and manipulation are things that easily reproduced in a laboratory and are obvious in every day things from the pets we keep to the food we eat.

      The problem I do have is primarly in making the whole evolution concept into a stumbling block for our educational process. We have kids that graduate without the ability to make change, write a complete sentence or spell common words. Although the majority of our society has graduated from high school newspapers are written at a 5th grade level so people could understand, but we are worried about teaching them what amounts to a philisophical issue. Government officials are elected based on their opinions on evolution and it's teaching in our public schools. Lets put this issue behind us, agree to disagree, minimize it's impact in our schools curriculum and worry about important things.

  125. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by Frank+Battaglia · · Score: 0

    "I disagree with that. Take two people and put them in a pool and tell them to swim laps. One will last longer than the other, and is better." Sure, but switch the pool to ice-water, and the jock who can swim farther now freees to death faster because he doesn't have as much insulative body fat as the slow swimmer. "Better" isn't objectively definable without a context.

  126. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by plunge · · Score: 1

    "Nazism is sort of the ultimate proof that you don't need a Godlike God to go and destroy other people."

    I think you meant Stalin. As crazy as Hitler became in his later years when he saw organized religion as just another obstacle in his way, his whole basic anti-semetic philosophy was basically a plagarism of Martin Luther's "On Jews and Their Lies" and the manipulation of centuries of church-approved anti-semetic prejeduce. Hitler referenced God and god's authority in his speeches as much if not more often than politicians today. The highest Nazi honor was the Iron Cross... and so on. The idea that a highly religious country like Germany somehow magically transformed overnight into a bunch of atheists is absurd.

    You don't need evidence to demonstrate that the godless can be bad people. We're just people, after all, not some radically different form of life.

  127. full text of link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    April 7, 2006
    Study, in a First, Explains Evolution's Molecular Advance
    By KENNETH CHANG

    By reconstructing ancient genes from long-extinct animals, scientists have for the first time demonstrated the step-by-step progression of how evolution created a new piece of molecular machinery by reusing and modifying existing parts.

    The researchers say the findings, published today in the journal Science, offer a counterargument to doubters of evolution who question how a progression of small changes could produce the intricate mechanisms found in living cells.

    "The evolution of complexity is a longstanding issue in evolutionary biology," said Joseph W. Thornton, professor of biology at the University of Oregon and lead author of the paper. "We wanted to understand how this system evolved at the molecular level. There's no scientific controversy over whether this system evolved. The question for scientists is how it evolved, and that's what our study showed."

    Charles Darwin wrote in The Origin of Species, "If it would be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down."

    Discoveries like that announced this week of a fish with limblike fins have filled in the transitions between species. New molecular biology techniques let scientists begin to reconstruct how the processes inside a cell evolved over millions of years.

    Dr. Thornton's experiments focused on two hormone receptors. One is a component of stress response systems. The other, while similar in shape, takes part in different biological processes, including kidney function in higher animals.

    Hormones and hormone receptors are protein molecules that act like pairs of keys and locks. Hormones fit into specific receptors, and that attachment sends a signal to turn on or turn off cell functions. The matching of hormones and receptors led to the question of how new hormone-and-receptor pairs evolved, as one without the other would appear to be useless.

    The researchers found the modern equivalent of the stress hormone receptor in lampreys and hagfish, two surviving jawless primitive species. The team also found two modern equivalents of the receptor in skate, a fish related to sharks.

    After looking at the genes that produced them, and comparing the genes' similarities and differences among the genes, the scientists concluded that all descended from a single common gene 450 million years ago, before animals emerged from oceans onto land, before the evolution of bones.

    The team recreated the ancestral receptor in the laboratory and found that it could bind to the kidney regulating hormone, aldosterone and the stress hormone, cortisol.

    Thus, it turned out that the receptor for aldosterone existed before aldosterone. Aldosterone is found just in land animals, which appeared tens of millions of years later.

    "It had a different function and was exploited to take part in a new complex system when the hormone came on the scene," Dr. Thornton said.

    What happened was that a glitch produced two copies of the receptor gene in the animal's DNA, a not-uncommon occurrence in evolution. Then, for reasons not understood, two major mutations made one receptor sensitive just to cortisol, leading to the modern version of the stress hormone receptor. The other receptor became specialized for kidney regulation.

    Dr. Thornton said the experiments showed how evolution could and did innovate functions over time. "I think this is likely to be a very common theme in how complex molecular systems evolved," he said.

    Christoph Adami, a professor of life sciences at the Keck Graduate Institute in Claremont, Calif. who wrote an accompanying commentary in Science, said the research showed how evolution "takes advantage of lucky circumstances and builds upon them."

    Dr. Thornton said the experiment refutes the notion of "irreducible complexity" put forward by Michael J. Behe, a prof

  128. Re:Waiting... by From+A+Far+Away+Land · · Score: 2, Funny

    "definately"

    I take that as no insult from someone who can't spell "definitely".

    Just because he has Dr. in front of his name doesn't mean he knows what he's talking about or isn't trying to mislead you.

  129. Corollary by sydbarrett74 · · Score: 1

    Ahem...just as they say 'a feature is a bug with seniority' in computing circles, I guess biologists can say that a function is a mutation with seniority.

    --
    'He who has to break a thing to find out what it is, has left the path of wisdom.' -- Gandalf to Saruman
  130. Re:Waiting... by kimvette · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    AC, Let me introduce you to bugmenot. Bugmenot, meet AC. I suggest you two get acquainted! :D

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  131. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Boronx · · Score: 1

    The only way to be truly benevolent is to allow free will.

    That's a strained definition of benevolence.

    You haven't considered the notion of free will without evil, for instance:

    You could have a crashless car, but you would not have the freedom to choose where the vehicle went or how it operated. That is the only way to guarantee "no crashes".

    This is nonsense. If carmakers were omniscient and omnipotent, they could give you a car that would take you any where you wanted to go, but would never crash. Would never hurt anyone. You could do anything you ever could with a normal car...except cause harm.

    You also are ignoring the incredible burden of evil and suffering that is through no fault of anyones, was not brought upon them by an act of free will.

  132. Re:The truth shall set you free. by master_p · · Score: 1

    The question you ask is illogical. Infinity can not be compared to infinity. Operations between infinite numbers are not defined in mathematics. By saying "so heavy he can't lift it", you make God (an infinity) comparable to something lesser/greater than infinity (the stone).

    The question also assumes that time and space exists for God, which is outside of the universe, as it exists for us, who are inside the universe. Of cause this does not make sense, because if the structure outside the universe is the same as the universe, then the outside par would also be part of the universe.

    Generally, all actions attributed to God assume that time and space exists for God as it exists for us. Which is something highly illogical, since time and space where born with the big bang.

    Spock out.

  133. Re:God created everything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The existence of evolution is not inconsistent with the existence of god. Most scientists agree on that point.

    Hell, even the Pope agrees on that point.

  134. Re:God created everything... by master_p · · Score: 1

    "The existence of evolution is not inconsistent with the existence of god. Most scientists agree on that point."

    Actually, it is. One of the reasons that God created the universe and us, is to interact with us. A God who just pushed a button and then left us alone, would be no God: the whole thing with God is that he interferes with out lives at key moments for humans and for each person separately.

    There are many cases where God has interacted with humans: the destruction of Sodoma, Noah, splitting the water so Moses can pass, the ten commandments, sending Jesus to Earth, etc.

  135. Re:The truth shall set you free. by master_p · · Score: 1

    "Claiming that atheism is "The Only Way" (tm) is just plain wrong because it does not have any advantages over other beliefs"

    Actually, it does. Many people live a life where they wait God to come and save them. The result is that the governments of the countries where these people live in take advantage of those people.

    If more people said to themselves "look, I AM responsible for my situation, not God and not any other" and "no one affects my good will but me", lots of bad things that happen today would not happen.

    For example, the caste system of India would have been demolished centuries ago, and India would be a democracy long before it did. And they wouldn't be so many poor people, because people would take matters in their hands.

  136. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Boronx · · Score: 1

    It's interesting that such a simple question has provided inspiration for the most intricate and airy logical constructions that the world's finests theologians could create for thousands of years, when the obvious answer lies open for the youngest child to grasp.

  137. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Belief in God (or an Intelligent Designer) may give you someone to talk to on a dark lonely night but does absolutely nothing to explain anything about the physical universe.

    The claim that God created the universe becomes meaningless when the consequential question of who/what created God can be given only garbage answers - any of which could equally be applied to the original question of who/what created the universe.

    ID is for simpletons who cannot understand even this.

  138. Evolution creates stuff? by suv4x4 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "how evolution created a new piece of molecular machinery by reusing and modifying existing parts"

    So now evolution "creates" and "reuses" stuff? Why not call it a win-win for both evolution and creationism and go home already.

    1. Re:Evolution creates stuff? by BMojo · · Score: 1

      Since this is the language understood by those who would oppose the findings in this article it may be appropriate. In the end it is pretty much the same as saying "how the PROCESS of evolution created a new piece of molecular machinery by reusing and modifying existing parts."

      --


      -BMojo

  139. By the way... by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

    If scientist ever manage to 100% prove evolution is an actual autonomous process that happens because of natural selection... it kinda still leaves place for creationists to claim God created evolution :)

    They've stepped back and adapted numerous times before (from flat earth, women rights, earth centric system, sun centric system, biology, there was also the claim we'll bring on the Apocalypse for researching atoms and subatomic particles /shocking: we're not made out of mud after all/)

  140. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "truths (as in known facts)"

    Come on. Is "Known fact" the same thing as "Truth"?

  141. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by tjstork · · Score: 1

    You don't need evidence to demonstrate that the godless can be bad people. We're just people, after all, not some radically different form of life

    I agree to disagree with your historical assesment as to the meanings of Nazism, but, since I'm a Republican you'll have to trust that I'm more familiar with it.

    In all seriousness, there's that aspect of liberalism that believes that if we eliminate God from the social discourse, humanity will improve. There's a lot of people of that John Lennon ilk "Imagine there's no religion", that believe that if we could deconstruct every existing social institution we could have new world order where everyone would love each other. And me, I just think that will give us some new thing to have wars about. Of course, in saying that, that doesn't mean that there's not aspects of conservatism that are equally stupid. Intelligent design comes to mind... I mean, what takes more of God's brains, designing a plant leaf by itself, or, designing an entire unwinding mechanism of physics and chemistry so that plants and animals and man would arise as a part of a majesty of his will. It's almost like to argue ID is to say that God is too stupid to design an evolutionary process or too vain to give Man free will upon the Earth.

    --
    This is my sig.
  142. Unless... by tjstork · · Score: 1

    If there were a God, the only kind I can possibly imagine would reward the former, not the latter.

    God really is a bloodthirsty volcano god of doom! In which case, he's going to reward whoever screws with people the most to make Universe 1.0 the most entertaining screen saver ever!

    --
    This is my sig.
  143. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the poor people bit, I'm doubtful. For one thing Atheism, or materialism, encourages "live it up now 'cause you'll die tomorrow" philosophies. Moreover, people can't always help themselves. What do you do if you've just moved to the city and you can't find a job, even though you've looked everywhere until you're exhausted? What do you do when a man gives you money for you allowing him to take some of your blood, so you can finally feed your family, and then it turns out you have HIV because the needle was infected? This is a real situation that does happen in India.

    Yes, people are responsible for themselves. But to base a whole culture's philosophy on "look after yourself" will lead to people stuck in the ditch because they can't help themselves (either because they made mistakes, or because other people made mistakes (or because other people are lining their purses)).

    Thus, the real problem here is in the nature of people, because as a society we will always act in a way that actually undermines, to a certain extent, the common good, because we care more about ourselves than other people. If human beings were perfectly loving, there'd be no need for government. Wouldn't *that* be the ideal situation, not some individualistic do-it-yourself world where no one helps you to regain your footing?

    And let us not forget that mere self-responsibility wouldn't prevent a dictator from taking power and commiting genocide. Indeed, he could be fulfilling his own responsibility to himself by doing so; since those minorities are just such an eyesore, it's up to *him* to remove that eyesore.

  144. Is evolution male or female? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >> ... how evolution created ...

    Often people who don't want to mention, or perhaps even to accept, God will personify evolution itself as a creator. Or often writers will personify some creature, describing it as though it deliberately evolved some feature. Belief in evolution as a primary cause is just as much an act of religious faith as believing in God, because we observe only the results, not the process itself.

    1. Re:Is evolution male or female? by Tony · · Score: 1

      Belief in evolution as a primary cause is just as much an act of religious faith as believing in God, because we observe only the results, not the process itself.

      I'm not sure where you are going with this. What about those of us who accept the theory of evolution as the most likely description of the process that shapes and changes biospheres? ... how evolution created ... may be a poor phrasing, but it certainly doesn't equate to a belief in a super-being as first mover. As described, evolution is a natural process, and belief in natural processes is certainly more rational than believing in God.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    2. Re:Is evolution male or female? by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      Dunno about you, but I took the biology classes, saw the processes, grew legs on the head of a fly.

      Ok, that was kinda graphic, but you get my point. Where, in Sunday School, do they let you speak a small colony of bacteria into life? And no, I'm not making fun of your breath.

      Anyway, the point is this: Science actually empowers those who study it. There is no belief; in fact, the main tenet of science is disbelief of possibly flawed results, and encouragement to test them.

      This is not some hermit in a closed room whiling away his time writing about the ineffabilities of life, then promptly forbidding others to eff them. Science attempts to explain HOW to eff those ineffabilities, and asks anyone who has the brains to help in the effing.

      Hm. I just said that aloud and it sounds a bit dirty.

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  145. Re:Matter of time | emit fo rettaM:eR by hyperpixel · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Interesting view and discussion that's is transpiring here today. If this is the case, I feel much better about my existence. After all, if what you're saying is true, then you must have been instructed by God to be telling us here today - that would make you a Prophet.

    Furthermore, my agnostic point of view makes me feel much more comfortable in that it was God's decision for me to be agnostic and not my own. I guess you could say "Thank God" whatever happens, I'm released from consequences as it was God's plan that led me to my beliefs.

    So all of that biblical mumbo-jumbo can be chucked out the door, because no matter who does or does not believe in God, it was his decision - ALL the way down to the quark level.

    Sorry to sound like a troll, but it just seems to me that Christians _always_ defeat themselves when they talk about their religion.

  146. Re:God created everything... by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

    I prefer Douglas Adams' explanation. Although that's pretty nice, if misguided because the Linux kernel has no mechanism of coding itself.

    --
    Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  147. Personally... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Personally, I feel like events such as hurricane Katrina, the tsunami in the indian ocean, and September 11th offer a much stronger proof of the lack of a personal god.

    Either that, or at least strong proof that if there IS a god, he/she's a sadistic bastard without anything resembling our idea of morality, justice, or fairness. In other words, any god that regularly lets shit like this happen deserves our scorn, not our adoration.

    Either way, religion is shit.

  148. Mutations Must Be In Reproductive Cells To Evolve! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did the study cover a mutation found in a living organism that isn't passed on, or one that is with the organism from birth? I mention this because it opens a possible wedge of attack by creationists, namely that mutations in non-reproductive cells won't get passed on and so cannot contribute to evolution. Anonymous Coward (currently without a clever sig due to cognitive budget constraints)

  149. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    pop philosophy.

    god didn't create evil and has never done evil.

    what is evil? the opposite of love. what is love? doing unto others as you would have them do unto you. eg, if a billionaire were a starving child living in poverty with three days to live, what would you want a billionaire to do for you? that's what the billionaire should do. that's LOVE. not doing that is EVIL.

    why is this important? god promises happiness and a great eternity and that is logically impossible with selfish, self centered entities. it is an automatic result when everyone loves.

    god has created free will beings capable of evil. first, the angels. 1/3 of them apparently went evil over time. god's greatest creation to date, apparently led the way.

    some argue god knew this would happen. is foreknowledge and freewill illogical? it might be. if go knows i'm going to do something and i *have* to do it, do i have free will? i don't think so.

    rather, i tend to believe god chose not to know. that's the beauty of free will.

    in any case, after god's eternal angels went corrupt - something god in his perfect love may well not have thought they would do (it is irrational from god's perspective. what moron would choose to live in misery?) - god created physical, temporary, adam and eve. they rejected god's way of love and the rest is history.

    does this make god evil? m it depends. if he's enjoying this misery, then yes. however, if he is allowing us to temporarily hoist selfishness upon ourselves so we can learn the fruits of selfishness for a much greater purpose, then no.

    is a parent evil for spanking a child so they don't run out in the atreet to see the 50 mph beemer symbol close up evil?

    consider this life a spanking. why? when our eternity is at stake, we will have perspective that 1/3 of the angels did not have. in theory, that perspective should lead to better long term decisions - which is essential for eternity.

    no, god can't make 1" to 2" (from our perspective) w/o changuing the definition of an inch. that doesn't mean he doesn't exist, it just means you don't understand what he is. nor does anyone, really. but we can understand what is important - care for others EQUAL to self.

    god has always lived that way and always will.

  150. Re:We see tiny things becoming more complex everyd by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 1
    Sperm + Egg = Baby okay, which came first, according to the theory of evolution?

    I don't know, I haven't studied that particular situation. Anyone know? Google it?

    how is being sexual in nature more conducive to survival? if you've been married, you'd know better... if not, you will...

    Sexual selection is thought to work in a roundabout way such that those that are seen as most fit by members of the opposite sex are seen as more attractive. The selected attribute may actually have something to do with survival ability, or it may be as arbitrary as a difference in color. The real answer is that being sexual may not be more conducive to survival itself, but is more conducive to reproduction.

    why do i have an amazing, astounding, ingenious, freaked out eyeball of complexity and teeth that want to fall out? weren't teeth important to survival, too? especially 10,000 years ago?

    Normally eyeballs don't fall out. But they do help you to survive much better than you would without them. Teeth are important to survival, but 10,000 years ago, you may not have lived to an age long enough to have them fall out. But as long as you lived long enough to reproduce, that was enough.

    how is a hybrid land / water ear advantageous on eithe rland or water? btw, no such ear has ever been discovered. just postulated.

    For the first creatures crawling out of the water, their water ears probably didn't help very much on land. But since they were the first creatures on land, there wasn't much else for them to hear anyway. As more and more creatures crawled out onto the land and started to stay there, competition began. Those that whose water ears heard a little bit better than the others, in general, survived to reproduce better than the others. Through random mutation and natural selection, eventually those "water" ears worked much better as "land" ears.

    if the platypus lived and went extinct x thousands of years ago... what would an evolutionsit claim claim about it being transitionary? how would slashdot react?

    A particular species going extinct doesn't necessarily any bearing on whether it is transitory or not. Either the species has diverged into different species with the original species no longer existing, or the species went exinct before then and didn't. An "evolutionist" would claim one of the two, whichever scenario happened to be the one that happened. Slashdot probably wouldn't care one way or another.

    how does life come from death?

    Usually happens when you hear "CLEAR!!!" Or, if what you really meant was how does life come from non-living material, current hypoteheses are discussed here. Note the difference between chemical abiogenesis and spontaneous generation, which traditionally refers to fully formed organisms like maggots forming from dead or nonliving material.

    how do appendages that offer no benefit stay around long enough to eventually become a benefit?

    Example?

    why are my ears facing forward instead of backwards? i can see forward, so wouldn't the greatest benefit come from having my ears pointed backwards so i could better hear prey coming up from behind? *especially* before language existed? or did ears come into existance *after& language came into existence?

    I don't know about you, but I have more than a front and a back, I also have a left and a right and thanks to the concept of stereo hearing, I can identify sounds all around me, including the behind me.

    how come we can't repreoduce macro-evolution in the lab? why can't we turn bacteria into something entirely different than bacteria - even thoug we've dramamtically increased the speed of reproduction?

    We can increase rate of reproduction and watch thousands of generations happen, but even at such rates we would still be waiting around for millions of

    --

    kurzweil_freak

    5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

    Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

  151. Re:Waiting... by kimvette · · Score: 1

    Apparantly the n00b with mod points isn't aware that BugMeNot is an extension which automatically logs one into sites such as the New York Times which require registration. Oh well.

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  152. Just to shed a little sunshine on this 'debate' by sacrilicious · · Score: 1
    The researchers say the findings, published today in the journal Science, offer a counterargument to doubters of evolution who question how a progression of small changes could produce the intricate mechanisms found in living cells.

    Two points I feel compelled to raise in response to things implied by the statement above:
    (a) This is by no means the first evidence supporting evolution, nor the most substantive, and
    (b) So-called 'Intelligent Design' (and I have little doubt that "doubters of evolution" refers to proponents of such) is not a scientific argument that deserves scientific refuting, given that "ID" is non-falsifiable in the same way as the "theory" that the universe was created three seconds ago and the memory of all that came before was implanted.

    --
    - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
  153. Teeth. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "why do i have an amazing, astounding, ingenious, freaked out eyeball of complexity and teeth that want to fall out? weren't teeth important to survival, too? especially 10,000 years ago?"

    In most earlier animals, teeth fall out constantly and are then regrown. Sharks are a good example. They go through many sets. The advantage of this is that worn out teeth are replaced.

    Mammals have more specialized jaws than earlier animal types. Grazing mammals have flat grinding teeth, rodents have slicing incisors. Because mammalian teeth are so specialized, if new teeth are constantly moving in to replace the old teeth then the tooth alignment ends up way off. Therefore in many mammals tooth replacement is limited.

    Limiting tooth replacement helped young mammals survive long enough to reproduce because they could eat better. The downside of this adaptation, long-term tooth loss, was not sufficient to deter the shift to non-replaceable teeth.

    This is exactly the kind of change evolution predicts. Old systems are adapted to new circumstances in a non-designed way. Nobody goes back to "fix" the downsides, because all that matters is that the new system works better than the old one.

    "if the platypus lived and went extinct x thousands of years ago... what would an evolutionsit claim claim about it being transitionary? how would slashdot react?"

    The platypus only appears to be a transitory form to the most uneducated and cursory examination. Morphological difference between its beak and those of birds are impossible for any dissector to ignore.

    Basically, all your points boil down to "I have an imperfect understanding of biology, and I find inconsistencies in that understanding." The fact that you don't know the answer to a question does not in any way imply that it hasn't been answered, or that the answer challenges evolution. It's just you not knowing.

  154. Wish I had mod points by localman · · Score: 1

    This is dead on. You nailed it: a) the process has been demonstrated b) it is not in conflict with god or the bible.

    Why are we still arguing about this? Honestly I don't know. As I said in another post people have an emotional reaction to this for some reason and I don't expect any amount of truth to dissuade them. Yes, like with Galelio. Maybe another hundred years from now we'll be past it as people die off.

    And that's the ultimate purpose of death: to clean house.

    Cheers.

  155. Yeah, we already know by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1

    Study explains evolution's molecular advance Friday April 07, @12:24PM Rejected

    Way to go samzenpus, keep up the good work.

    --
    We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
  156. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by plunge · · Score: 1

    "since I'm a Republican you'll have to trust that I'm more familiar with it."

    Unless Republican is synonymous with "historian" or "logician" I'll have to take that with a gargle of salt. :) Read Martin Luther's "On Jews and their Lies": the text that Hitler read that got him all fired up and which he cited over and over: you'll find pretty much the blueprint for everything the Nazi's did in the writings of the founder of Protestantism.

    I don't really understand the state of denial here. The fact that Germans were religious, and did bad things anyway, is not some horrible secret that needs to be covered up. It doesn't mean that religion is bad, anymore than Stalin demonstrates that not having a religion is bad. Christianity used to be very anti-Semetic, but thanks in part to absolute disgust at the Holocaust, it's purged itself so completely of that that there is almost no sect in the world where someone can express anti-semetism and not be condemned for it. That's an incredible achievement, not just for Christianity, but for human society.

    "And me, I just think that will give us some new thing to have wars about."

    I agree. I don't think religion is bad anymore than I think sports are bad. If people express views and beliefs that I think are bad, I can say so. Trying to pin it on religion, or anything else, is a fools game. Worse, it allows the people who actually chose the act to move out of focus: they're the ones responsible.

    "It's almost like to argue ID is to say that God is too stupid to design an evolutionary process or too vain to give Man free will upon the Earth."

    That's what Kenneth Miller argues in his "Finding Darwin's God" a great book on the controversy. A common analougy is a pool shot: who's the better player, the guy who picks up each and every ball and drops it in the pocket? Or the guy who sinks the whole table in one shot.

  157. Re:The truth shall set you free. by ThosLives · · Score: 1
    I will allow that the interpretation of the word 'benevolent' is an important factor in this conversation.

    I'm not sure I clearly communicated the intent of my car analogy. I was not saying "if car companies were omniscient and omnipotent they could make a safe car". What I'm saying is that it is possible to make a car which has the full capability of safe operation - which cars today do have - and yet the possibility still exists for damage to occur through the use of those machines. Does that mean the car companies created crashes? No. Likewise, there is the possibility that an omnipotent being could create people in such a way that they have the capacity for 'good' living but the possibility of 'evil' living is also present. Was that possibility created? It's a philosophical question, to be sure; if one creates a positive space and therefore a 'negative' space remains, is the 'negative' space a created thing? I cannot say I know all the aspects of that argument but I'm sure philosophers in the past have wrestled with it.

    I'm not sure I understand what you mean by "the incredible burden of evil and suffering that is through no fault of anyones". Now, suffering I can grant you: the physical world is a harsh place. But I do not equate 'suffering' with 'evil'. Evil, in my mind, can only be perpetrated by someone who is also capable of good. Otherwise it is a moot point to talk about 'good' and 'evil'. Now, I make a distinction there between 'pleasant' and 'unpleasant'. A bear eating a person because it is hungry is not 'evil', but it is surely 'unpleasant.' A hurricane destroying something is 'unpleasant', but it is not 'evil.' The only reason people think a murderer (for instance) is evil is because that person is assumed to have the ability to choose to not murder. If a person is incapable of good, then nobody would be offended if that person committed a crime. A hurricane has no choice about being destructive; it just is what it is. (I am unable to contemplate a universe with laws of physics so different that hurricanes would not arise, and, given the current physics, hurricanes will exist and will be destructive).

    So, if there is no standard by which to measure 'good' (as in the good vs evil sense, not the 'desirable' sense), is there such a thing as good? I do not know how to answer that question.

    --
    "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
  158. Re:God created everything... by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1

    If God made the Universe, then he probably understands how to tweak things with minimal effort. For 'someone' who has existed for 14 billion years, spending a few hundred thousand years to 'tweak' humans into existence wouldn't be a big deal -- and the end result would be indistinguishable from 'natural' evolution.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  159. Re:Mutations Must Be In Reproductive Cells To Evol by Tony · · Score: 1

    I mention this because it opens a possible wedge of attack by creationists, namely that mutations in non-reproductive cells won't get passed on and so cannot contribute to evolution.

    And your proof of this is.... ?

    Horizontal gene transfer to gametes would allow pretty much any genetic material to enter the reproductive cycle, even viable, proven mutations in other parts of the body, or (even more likely) from some other genetic material.

    It turns out that genetic material is promiscuous. Bacteria and viruses like to exchange genetic material with all kinds of things, including you and me.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  160. Re:Mutations Must Be In Reproductive Cells To Evol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Horizontal gene transfer is based on what mechanism? (I work in AI, so my biology is limited.)

    AC

  161. Re:The truth shall set you free. by pikine · · Score: 1

    But it seems quite understandable that any all-knowing, all-powerful, all-good God could allow the evil that has happened to have happened. And saying that it's okay because it's the next life that matters is a cop-out: if this life doesn't matter then why have it at all?

    Christians, as daughters and sons of God (1 John 3:1), have holy spirit dwell in you (Acts 2:18). You have the authority to dispel evil (Mark 6:7, 13). God also wants us to share his glory. "In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God's grace that he lavished on us with all wisdom and understanding." (Ephesians 1:7-8).

    Since you are given all the authority to rule over evil, what more do you want? You just have to keep in mind that this authority does not come from you, but it is from God. I don't know your circumstance for being unhappy with your life, but I think learning to be a Christian is a long and gradual process, and that you didn't try enough before you quit.

    I do know some people who walk with God already enjoy success in their lives, given to them by God's glory. It appears to me that this life is important. I don't know where you get the impression that you can simply look forward to after-life in heaven and waste this life.

    A lamb that belongs to God will never be lost.

    --
    I once had a signature.
  162. My goodness, where to begin... by FatAssBastard · · Score: 1
    At the beginning, I suppose:

    Many evolutionists operate under the faith that evolution occured and it occurred purely through natural processes.

    It is not "faith" if it is supported by MOUNTAINS of evidence, as evolution theory is.

    No divine or other intervention has been involved.

    This is not what most people who actually understand the science say. What they do say is something along the lines of, "There is no evidence of a higher power."

    Any attempt to suggest teaching people otherwise is met with stiff and dogmatic resistance.

    Again, there is no evidence of the divine, that's why it shouldn't be taught in science class.

    It has not been absolutely proved that only natural processes have brought about our current situation, ergo faith is involved.

    Science doesn't absolutely prove anything. Your saying it should belies a basic misunderstanding of what science is.

    They may believe that all the evidence points to their conclution, but it is still faith.

    Just because you (and others of your ilk) continue to say it over and over doesn't make it so. If, at a murder trial, the murder weapon is found at the suspect's home with the suspect's fingerprints on it, the victim's blood is found in the suspect's car, the suspect was seen entering the victim's home just before the time of death and seen leaving just after, and the suspect was the victim's ex-boyfriend, and the victim's friends said she had just broken up with him, is it "faith" to hand down a guilty verdict? If so, you have a very different definition of "faith" than I do (or any dictionary you care to mention).

    Why do you set your alarm clock in the morning? Because you have faith that it will work, that the sun will rise, that your job will still exist, etc. You have no absolute proof of this, but you have pretty good evidence that these things will be so.

    This is absolute bollocks and leaves me wondering why I even debate with someone like you. Not only would my alarm clock and my company suddenly have to cease to function overnight, the very solar system would have to cease to function. If you call that "faith", then it is a completely different kind of faith from religious faith, and the two shouldn't be compared as you are attempting to do.

    But that is not to say that evidence for a creator is moot.

    Please offer us some empirical evidence of a deity.

    Some are so entrenched that they cannot see anything but what they want to see...

    Now there's something we agree upon.

    ...but others of us can debate and listen and move the ball forward.

    "Intelligent Design" doesn't move anything forward, it is a political movement consisting of nothing but empty speculation based on religion.

    --
    /.: why the hell am I here?
    1. Re:My goodness, where to begin... by kerrbear · · Score: 1

      It is not "faith" if it is supported by MOUNTAINS of evidence, as evolution theory is.

      No, there are many problems with evolutionary theory that require a faith in it. But I am not by saying that, denying that it is true. It may well be true. You, like the people I am talking about, make the mistake of assuming that any person who questions it is some kind of relgious fanatic or stupid person. In this, you share the dogmatic positions of the religious zealot.

      Some facts are undeniable. The world is a sphere. Nobody is looking for more evidence that the world is a sphere. It cannot be contested. If evolution bore this status then there would not be the need to look for evidence. Evolutionists' faith in their theory drives them on to find that evidence. I have not said that their faith is misplaced!

      Again, there is no evidence of the divine, that's why it shouldn't be taught in science class.

      I respectfully disagree about the evidence for the divine. Anyway, I never said that God should be taught in science class and I don't say it now.

      Science doesn't absolutely prove anything. Your saying it should belies a basic misunderstanding of what science is.

      Yup, I just must not understand science. That's my problem.

      Just because you (and others of your ilk)...

      Nice. Once again, my ilk./p>

      This is absolute bollocks and leaves me wondering why I even debate with someone like you. Not only would my alarm clock and my company suddenly have to cease to function overnight, the very solar system would have to cease to function. If you call that "faith", then it is a completely different kind of faith from religious faith, and the two shouldn't be compared as you are attempting to do.

      Yes, religious faith. That's the stuff that people believe even though its irrational, right?

      If you knew your alarm clock was going to fail (due to power outage) then you would not bother to set it. You have faith that it will work. If you knew you were going to be fired tomorrow, you would not go to work. You believe the job will still be there. Its not bollocks that these are faith assumptions- its only BS if you define faith as an irrational choice. I am defining it as a rational choice. I did not suggest that they would all fail at once, but that we have faith, based on evidence that none of them will fail. Some have a higher probability of failure than others.

      Please offer us some empirical evidence of a deity.

      I would if you really wanted it but that seems unlikely to me given your blind-faith based statement that there is no evidence for the divine.

      "Intelligent Design" doesn't move anything forward, it is a political movement consisting of nothing but empty speculation based on religion.

      When did I say I supported intelligent design? My point was simply the idea of faith as based on evidence and the viceral reaction certain people have when that faith is challenged. I don't agree with the intelligent design movement but you seem to have put me in that camp because of my questioning.

    2. Re:My goodness, where to begin... by zenhkim · · Score: 1

      > My point was simply the idea of faith as based on evidence....

      Sounds to me like you're deliberately abusing the word faith. As I understand it (and as I hear people around me use it) "faith" means "absolute belief regardless of proof."

      When a scientist collects his data, documents his observations, then uses that evidence to form a theory, he has to come up with methods to prove the theory. Faith doesn't fit in the equation: if the scientist is already convinced his theory is good, he's in deep trouble because his mind can play tricks on itself -- focusing on favorable evidence while ignoring damning evidence, or "remembering the hits but forgetting the misses."

      When Kepler received the collection of astronomical observations from Tycho, he was working on proving the heliocentric (sun at the center) model of the cosmos. Imagine his shock when, after he analyzed Tycho's records, Kepler found that they didn't fit the model! The problem was that Kepler was working from the common belief that *the planets follow perfectly circular orbits*. In essence, it was an article of faith: Everyone assumed that the heavens were the domain of perfection, and that planetary orbits had to be perfect circles.

      Everyone was wrong.

      The only way Kepler could explain the apparent position and movement of the planets was that they travelled in *elliptical* orbits, which are like imperfect circles. Then the theory matched the data. It took an enormous effort on Kepler's part (as shown in his journals) when he rejected faith in the face of stark truth.

      This is why honest scientists avoid putting faith in many things, and frankly it annoys me as well when you blithely accuse such people of being no different than the ID zealot crowd. A scientist may have *confidence* in a theory, but if AND ONLY IF the evidence supports it. To paraphrase JFK, "theory is always subject to proof."

      And as for putting faith in the sun rising tomorrow morning ....did you know our ancestors feared the sun was dying every time there was an eclipse? Faith told them that the gods were angry (or that Nature was faltering) and that only loud prayers and sacrifices would bring the sun back. Science, of course, tells us to just sit tight and wait things out (and maybe dress up a little warmly) because IT'S JUST THE MOON PASSING IN FRONT OF THE SUN.

      You're entitled to your belief, of course, and you can have it ...all to yourself. However, the next time you go spouting off about the divine, you might think about this choice quote from an ancient Greek:

      "Behold, the people think epilepsy divine because they do not understand it; but if all things we did not understand were divine, why, there would be no end to divine things."

      The man was Hippocrates, best known as the father of medicine (the Hippocratic Oath comes from him) and who formed the theory that illness and disease were caused by purely physical means -- *not* by divine retribution or evil curse. Before Hippocrates, it was a common belief that people fell ill because they had angered the gods or had become possessed by a demonic evil, and so were either ostracized (literally, voted out of society) or put to death to prevent the "curse" from spreading.

      Carl Sagan put it simply: "If you want to save your child from polio, you can pray or you can inoculate." One method relies on nothing but faith. The other doesn't.

      --
      "All hands, BRACE FOR IMPACT!"
    3. Re:My goodness, where to begin... by kerrbear · · Score: 1

      Sounds to me like you're deliberately abusing the word faith. As I understand it (and as I hear people around me use it) "faith" means "absolute belief regardless of proof."

      Nope. Most theologians correctly pair faith and reason together as inextricably tied. Faith is not "absolute belief regardless of proof". Blind faith is "absolute belief regardless of proof". This idea of blind faith was not introduced until well after the enlightenment period by Søren Kierkegaard which he termed a "leap of faith" against reason. This is what many people now equate with any kind of religious faith, or any kind of faith in general, but it is not the traditional western view of faith. Perhaps now the term is charged with that meaning and may be why this debate is a little unclear.

    4. Re:My goodness, where to begin... by sasami · · Score: 1

      Please offer us some empirical evidence of a deity.

      - Please offer us some empirical evidence that we are not living in the Matrix.
      - Please offer us some empirical evidence that logical argument is reliable.
      - Please offer us some empirical evidence that anyone exists besides yourself.

      These are all things that most of us believe in, but cannot be established empirically. All beliefs of any kind are predicated on axioms that are taken as true without proof. In the most general sense, this is called epistemology.

      The idea that "all truth must be established empirically" is a form of Logical Positivism, and was very popular for a very short time in the early 20th century, until people realized that it undercuts a large number of things that are pretty well accepted to be True, such as the examples I've listed above.

      Interestingly, the scientific establishment latched onto positivism with a vengeance but lacked the philosophical training to recognize its flaws, and so turned it into unquestioned dogma. Elsewhere, positivism died a rapid and thoroughly embarrassing death at its own hands:

      - Please offer us some empirical evidence that "all truth must be established empirically."

      --
      Dum de dum.

      --
      Freedom is not the license to do what we like, it is the power to do what we ought.
    5. Re:My goodness, where to begin... by zenhkim · · Score: 1

      > Nope. Most theologians correctly pair faith and reason together as inextricably tied.

      Uh-huh. So... based on that line of reasoning, we can trust in theology to be a reliable source of logic and reason? Wasn't it theologians who maintained that the world was flat, the sun revolved around the Earth, and that the Moon is a perfectly smooth sphere?-- all conclusions based entirely on their reasoning?

      Hell, even scientists can screw up royally when they become overdependent on reasoning -- everyone used to think Venus was a tropic-like "sister planet" of the Earth, simply because all telescope observations of Venus revealed a heavily clouded atmosphere, so dense that no surface features were visible. Their line of reasoning went something like this:

      "Damn! I wish I could see through Venus's clouds."

      "Yeah, but since it's cloudy all over Venus, we at least know it's got plenty of water."

      "Uh-huh. It must rain on Venus a hell of a lot -- maybe all the time."

      "You mean, like a planet-sized rain forest?"

      "Hell, yeah! Of course, a lot of the surface must be covered by water, so Venus must have seas and oceans like Earth -- maybe more than us!"

      "Wow! The whole planet could be teeming with life already! On land *and* sea!"

      "Cool!!"

      Of course, astronomers had no way to test these theories, but that didn't stop sci-fi writers from having a field day cooking up ideas on what life on Venus must be like. It never occurred to anyone that the clouds of Venus might not be made of water....

      Enter radio astronomy, which gives observers the power to determine the precise chemistry and temperature of objects in space -- stars, planets, gas clouds, etc. When the first radio telescopes were aimed at Venus, astronomers were in for *two* shocks:

      1.) The clouds of Venus consisted almost entirely of sulfur oxide and sulfuric acid -- corrosive and deadly to every living thing we know of, and

      2.) The average surface temperature on Venus is over *eight-hundred degrees Fahrenheit*! "Too hot for me!"

      Furthermore, both findings were proven conclusively when the first Venus probes were launched by NASA in its "Pioneer Venus" program. Sadly, none of the probes lasted much more than an hour after landing on the surface. (However, try bathing any machine in sulfuric acid rain while baking it at 800 degrees and see how long *it* lasts!)

      Science isn't about reasoning alone: it also involves observation and experimentation, vital to the formulating *and proving* of ideas. Without them, it's easy to start from bad premises, reason with unproven assumptions, and reach flawed conclusions which never get tested! (Until some wiseass like Galileo comes along and starts spouting off about how this and that idea being stated as fact by the Church *is total bullshit* -- and that he has proof!)

      > This is what many people now equate with any kind of religious faith, or any kind of faith in general, but it is not the traditional western view of faith. Perhaps now the term is charged with that meaning and may be why this debate is a little unclear.

      "Perhaps"? "May be"? You don't get out much, do you? ;-)

      When I was studying software engineering, the instructors and professors spoke of "confidence", "optimism", "probability" and "statistical likelihood", "certainty" (but only in a relative sense -- e.g.: "high certainty" vs. "low certainty"), "trustworthy" and "reliability". NO ONE ever spoke of "faith".

      My first lecturer, a professor teaching an introductory course, said, "No matter if it's design or execution, question everything! It's always the one thing you *didn't* think about that turns around and bites you in the ass!" He went on by recounting to us numerous engineering fuckups in history, including the sinking of the Titanic and the Challenger space shuttle disaster. He concluded by telling us bluntly, "You fuck up, someone else dies."

      Maybe there's a (gasp!) VALID REASON why some

      --
      "All hands, BRACE FOR IMPACT!"
    6. Re:My goodness, where to begin... by sasami · · Score: 1

      > > Nope. Most theologians correctly pair faith and reason together as inextricably tied.
      >
      > Uh-huh. So... based on that line of reasoning, we can trust in theology to
      > be a reliable source of logic and reason?


      He's not saying that faith is the same as reason. He is saying that faith is compatible with reason. His point about "blind faith" being unbiblical is correct: Kierkegaard notwithstanding, the colloquial word "faith" has always been encrusted with many meanings, one of which is "irrational, blind, unquestioning faith." But the faith spoken of in the Bible derives from a Greek word meaning "to be persuaded."

      Part of the problem is that you seem to have an incorrect and perhaps vague idea of what faith is. Much of your post, and previous posts, seems to rebel against the idea that faith should replace reason and investigation.

      Well, no one in this discussion is saying that.

      Yes, engineers should deal in confidence intervals and rigorous measurement and exhaustive testing. Yes, every assumption in every situation should be questioned and questioned again. The "faith" that so bothers you is not what we are talking about. So let us arrive at a clear definition, then.

      There is a common idea that "faith" is a repulsive, backwards, outdated concept. After all, a "rational" person should never believe in anything until it's proven, right? But it turns out that rational people believe in plenty of things that are not proven, foremost being Reason itself. After all, there's no formally valid way to logically establish the correctness of logic, or to empirically establish the correctness of empiricism. Anyone who engages in debate or discussion or science holds such axioms as true, without proof.

      Another truth that most of us accept is the existence of the universe itself. Does that sound silly? Let me rephrase it: the belief that we aren't living in the Matrix. Again, we take this belief as an axiom, without proof. It is impossible by definition to even conceive of an experiment to detect the Matrix; it is rigorously unknowable. Yet, no one would call you irrational for believing the universe is real. Here then is an example of reasonable faith in the absence of evidence. In other words:

      Faith is relying on your axioms.

      This is the "inextricable tie" that the GP was speaking of. Reason does depend on faith, because you cannot prove that reason works. This is (loosely) an a priori relationship. Yet, faith does depend on reason, because a good axiom should work well and a bad axiom should work poorly. This is an a posteriori relationship.

      As it happens, the common notion of a "rational," "intelligent," "educated" person is of one who accepts the axioms of Reason and the axiom that the universe is real, and so on, but rejects the axiom that God exists. This is an arbitrary cultural distinction, and has nothing to do with being rational, intelligent, or educated.

      You may argue that God is a poor axiom. You are welcome to do so, and I may respond with my arguments for its being a good and quite indispensible axiom. In such a discussion, the above formulation of "faith" can be reworded thus:

      Faith is the choice between two plausible alternatives.

      Wasn't it theologians who maintained that the world was flat, the sun revolved around the Earth, and that the Moon is a perfectly smooth sphere?-- all conclusions based entirely on their reasoning?

      We've already established that no one (here) is proposing that faith substitute for investigation. But a historical aside: the geocentric theory that was held by the Church organization in the Western world -- few people today know about the equally large Eastern Church, seeing as they were slaughtered quite thoroughly -- was not based on Biblical theology but upon Ptolemaic cosmology, which was considered to be the state of the

      --
      Freedom is not the license to do what we like, it is the power to do what we ought.
  163. Re:The truth shall set you free. by pikine · · Score: 1

    Full disclosure: I was raised as a Chinese-Pagan syncretised Buddhism. I was never atheistic because I believed in Buddha and the spiritual world, though there was a time I had strong resentment on Christians because I had a tough time growing up as a teenager and I blamed it on them. I supported evolution, rejected and ridiculed creationism. About a year ago I admitted Christian faith, and I believe the decision was made on an informed basis.

    I've lurked on Slashdot much longer than I become a Christian. I've never tried preaching on Slashdot, but it's worth trying.

    --
    I once had a signature.
  164. Re:Mutations Must Be In Reproductive Cells To Evol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Okay, just came off Wikipedia. The problem is that Germ Cells are protected against horizontal transfer in organisms that use gametes, which are most of the more advanced animals. So my question isn't quite as trivial as you suggest.

    Anonymously Cowardly

  165. Re:The truth shall set you free. by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

    It's God's archenemy, freshman philosophy-major man! ;-) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Rubenomnipotenc e.jpg

  166. Slashdot filter needed by mlewan · · Score: 1
    Could someone please implement a filter, so posts with the following words don't appear: "god", "atheist", "bible", "creationism" and "intelligent design" and then apply it to every article about evolution?

    Some of us are actually interested in the science of evolution, but it is next to impossible to find posts about that in this swamp of pro-contra-creationism posts.

  167. Re:Liberal lies! Don't trust science, trust W by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dr.W? :3
    he uses science to build the 8 robots to take over the world o.o'
    (i'm just kidding a bit because this creationist dumb vs evolutionists not so dumb discussion may get a lil boring XD)

  168. This is just Moonlighting by protobion · · Score: 1

    I do not understand what the fuss is about here. I am not talking about the ID-Evo debate. What the good Dr.Thornton seems to have discovered, is only a case of moonlighting, which is well known in biology. Moonlighting is the phenomenon when a single protein fulfills several, often unrelated and even more often unexpected functions in a cell. Biologists are aware of this fact, and hence understand this to be one of the basic ways in which molecular evolution occurs. The fact that an aldosterone receptor can exist before aldosterone is not really surprising. Drug designers are designing molecules all the time for which receptors already exist. Basically, I do not think that it is a novel as the NYtimes would have us beleive. Here is an interesting paper describing several such moonlighting occurences.[Warning: PDF]. Further a presentation for non-biologists on moonlighting is here One of the leading researchers in the field of moonlighting proteins is Dr.Joel Sussman. He works on how the AChE enzyme may be affecting a variety of other aspects in neural cell biology.

    --
    Essentia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem.
  169. Re:The truth shall set you free. by fimbulvetr · · Score: 1

    Thus, the real problem here is in the nature of people, because as a society we will always act in a way that actually undermines, to a certain extent, the common good, because we care more about ourselves than other people. If human beings were perfectly loving, there'd be no need for government. Wouldn't *that* be the ideal situation, not some individualistic do-it-yourself world where no one helps you to regain your footing?

    You're mistaken. In a perfectly loving world, we'd all be screwed. We'd be copasetic, complacent people with no drive, no skills, no challenges and no drive to ever learn/do anything. I guarentee you one thing, and that's that there is at least something worse than an stupid person, and that's a complacent person.

  170. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Wheely · · Score: 1

    Don't you think your argument only applies to the Christian God?

  171. Richard Dawkins. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evolutionary biologists find flaws in existing theories of evolution fairly often, and the theories are adjusted accordingly over time..." I must disagree with you.

    Richard Dawkins is probably one of the most famous evolutionary biologists and anti creationists around and has very little time and much mockery of the creationist line of thinking. However if you read his book "The Ancestors Tale" he is very clear that there is much debate, much unknown and many things that may never be known about evolutionary history. He clearly outlines competing theories in the side branches of evolutionary theorey, gives his own theories and admits that in the future they may be proved or disproved. This is the hallmark of good scientific discipline and of a work very much in progress.

  172. It's simple, really. by ThePromenader · · Score: 1

    God is ignorance.

    Some are happier in god; some argue vehemently to defend their position in him.

    --

    No, no sig. Really.

    ThePromenader
  173. One does not preclude the other by Ugly+American · · Score: 1

    Accepting evolution does not preclude belief in god, and vice versa. The two are not mutually contradictory.

    Evolution and a literal interpretation of the Book of Genesis are another story, but that's another argument entirely.

    --
    For sale: one sig space, gently used. Inquire for details.
  174. Re:The truth shall set you free. by localman · · Score: 1

    I guess I didn't make a very clear post there.

    I never said I was unhappy with my life. Actually, I'm quite happy and at peace. I would even say such feelings of peace and hapiness increased when I stopped trying to fit what I saw as contradictions into my head.

    I agree that I have authority to rule over evil in my life, and I do my best to keep it under control. The evil I was talking about in my post isn't in my life. Right this very moment there is a child being raped. There is a man being tortured for speaking the truth. There is an adulterer ruining a family and enjoying it. The last light is leaving someone's eyes from starvation, and they never had a chance to experience great joy. And a million more tiny crimes, too. That is the evil I was talking about.

    And I agree that this life is important. I believe so quite strongly since I think it's all we have. But I have often heard from Christians, that the attrocities of this life are inconsequential next to the afterlife. As I said, that explanation seems a cop-out.

    Cheers.

  175. Re:The truth shall set you free. by localman · · Score: 1

    Might as well fully disclose too: I was born and raised in a strong Christian environment: my grandfather was the pastor of the Pentecostal church in the town I grew up in. He was a good man, too. But by the time I was 18 and had read most of the Bible, the whole thing made a lot more sense as a work of man. And the way the world functioned made much more sense without any guiding force. I'm 32 now, and as time goes on I find more and more peace in my naturalistic beliefs. Even facing death, I'm at peace with the idea of my one brief life. I try to make the most of it, and to help others make the most of theirs.

    Cheers.

  176. Re:Mutations Must Be In Reproductive Cells To Evol by protobion · · Score: 1

    There is a catch to this. A lot of mutations[I use the term loosely as it is used on Slashdot] occur due to the individuals tendency to acquire them, ie, genetic predisposition.

    If somatic cell mutations occur and confer an advantage to the organism, it will presumably manifest as a greater chance for the organism to pass on its genes, and thus pass on the genetic predisposition to acquire that mutation.

    One on-field implication of this, is that many types of cancers tend to develop resistance to drugs through identical (!) molecular mchanisms, even though resistance is obviously developed de novo in different individuals with the same type of cancer. This is because the administration of a same drug applies identical selection pressure and thus causes the identical, (apparently) most probable and stable phenotype to appear in the cells.

    --
    Essentia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem.
  177. Re:We see tiny things becoming more complex everyd by zenhkim · · Score: 1

    > why are my ears facing forward instead of backwards? i can see forward, so wouldn't the greatest benefit come from having my ears pointed backwards so i could better hear prey coming up from behind?

    You ears face forward so that sounds originating from *behind* you sound different from sounds originating *in front* of you. That way you can determine the direction of a noise source more accurately.

    Jeez, I learned that in junior high biology. What the hell were they teaching *you*?

    > how is being sexual in nature more conducive to survival?

    Dude, were you even AWAKE during biology class?? I guess not.... ;-)

    --
    "All hands, BRACE FOR IMPACT!"
  178. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Darby · · Score: 1

    Infinity can not be compared to infinity. Operations between infinite numbers are not defined in mathematics.

    Yes, they are. Pretty well defined, in fact. Some infinities really and truly are bigger than others.

    This has nothing whatsoever to do with the whole God argument going on around us, but mathematicaly, there an infinite ;-) number of distinct infinities.

    A fairly simple demonstration that there are at least 2 different ones

    More complicated but a demonstration of the fact that there are infinitely many infinities.

    Again, pretty complicated but it demonstrates how while operations on infinity are pretty well defined, they can't be understood as well as most people would like.

  179. there is no theory of evolution by Zaibatsu100 · · Score: 1

    There is no theory of evolution. Just a list of animals Chuck Norris allows to live.

  180. Re:The truth shall set you free. by MindKata · · Score: 0

    Or he creates a stone where he wants it, so he doesn't have to lift it! :)

    --
    There are 10 kinds of people in the world... those who understand binary and those who don't.
  181. Shut Creationists up with the Bible by bergwitz · · Score: 1

    Creationism is pure stupidity. If we are to take the Bible's story of creation literally, which if the TWO should we use. Pick up any Bible, read the two first stories. Both describe God's creation of the world and man, but they contradict each other at several points.

    I'm sure the creationists could counter the argument with some theological hand waving, but any reasonable person would understand that you aren't supposed to take these stories literally. They are myths, and myths are meant to be interpreted.

    --
    Evolution is just a scientific theory. Creationism is not.
  182. Re: give the monkeys an editor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wish I could remember where I saw it... I thought someone repeated that calculation of the monkeys working on MacBeth. By keeping only the letters that monkey's got right and letting them work randomly on the rest, the time to write MacBeth was shortened quite a bit.

  183. Re:The truth shall set you free. by master_p · · Score: 1

    No. Operations on infinity are undefined. Operations on cardinals on infinities are defined though, because infinity is reduced to a countable number. In short, inf + n, inf - n, inf * n, inf / n etc are undefinable.

  184. Re:God created everything... by master_p · · Score: 1

    From a mathematical point of view, there is no such thing as 'minimal effort' for God, because God is infinite, and any effort God makes is minimal no matter how big it is (since there is always a bigger effort). That's a classic mistake though: God can not have concepts like 'effort', because 'effort' means spacetime similar to ours. And if you put God in a separate spacetime, then there is something already bigger than God that it is infinite: the universe God is in. For all these reasons, the concept of God is illogical.

    From a philosophical point of view, God had interacted many times with humans, after humans were created. As I said, various events in the Holy books describe just that (devine intervention).

  185. Re:The truth shall set you free. by master_p · · Score: 1

    Atheism will not cause people to look after themselves" only, but to organize themselves so they can achieve greater things. Now as it is, a large part of people have left themselves "in the hands of God", i.e. open for exploitation.

    So with atheism, there wouldn't be a chance for a dictator, because a state would never be in such a bad situation that would allow one person to claim power.

  186. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

    "...who's the better player, the guy who picks up each and every ball and drops it in the pocket? Or the guy who sinks the whole table in one shot."

    Hard to tell. The first guy's not even playing pool.

    Then again, it's a good analogy. The Creationists aren't even studying science.

  187. Re:15 Answer Nonsense by ttfkam · · Score: 1
    Yes, you were taught wrong.

    Science is not about "truth," it is about probabilities and -- very important -- predictions. You determine the probability that something could happen and predict how it will be seen in the future. That is science, not some abstract, higher notion of "truth."

    Evolution predicts that random mutation will give rise to new variations within a species and eventually a new species. This very Slashdot-linked article describes how someone reverse engineered DNA to show us the roadmap it took. How we predicted evolution occurred is being corroborated with evidence from this study.

    If, on the other hand, this study found that the DNA sequence showed the opposite, a non-sequential series of steps that could only be explained by outside engineering (i.e., an intelligent designer), then a major aspect of evolution would have been demonstrated false. But it wasn't rendered false. It merely adds to the body of evidence for evolution. The data best fits the evolutionary theory given.

    This is how science works: probabilities, predictions, and falsifiability. Now your turn.

    How can Intelligent Design:
    1. determine the probability of an intelligent designer? (Simply proclaiming the probability to be a certainty does not make it so.)
    2. make a prediction based on its assertions?
    3. be rendered falsifiable through testing?


    If you cannot come up with a reasonable answer for all three of those questions, you are not talking about science; you are talking about theology and dogma.

    FYI: Archaeopteryx is indeed a transitory species. We are all transitory species. There is no such thing as a "finished" species. It was only probably not in the direct lineage between dinosaurs and modern birds like previously... *cough* *cough* predicted *cough* *cough* ...from its body structure. Luckily, this particular piece of evidence was falsified upon further review.
    --

    - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
  188. Re:Gen. questions/doubts about evolution? Ask away by LF11 · · Score: 1

    Thanks for posting -- I do have a quick question;

    Why isn't there a gradient of species today between various species? Even, say between man and ape. There seem to be places where man and ape have coexisted for many thousands of years, but there is no apparent species gradient.

    "Ensatina eschscholtzi" appears to be a species in the midst of evolution. However, it rather proves the point; both subspecies in question are "salamanders." Given time, enough changes and species splits could occur such that something completely different would arise. However, you'd then have several hundred species in gradient, or so I would think.

    Can you shed some light on this?

    (For the sake of the discussion, here's my viewpoint; Creationist for logical and philosophical reasons, but happy to change given a decent explanation not based on faith. I already know the Bible isn't quite the "perfect word of God", so it's not a crisis of faith for me to accept the evolutionary mechanism.)

    Thanks for your offer. I hope I've worded my question clearly.

    Chris
    cej102937

  189. Re:God created everything... by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1

    It may be that that is simply the way that God chose to do things. It is god who mad man in his image, not the other way 'round. Who am I to (or you) say that God is required to do something a specific way. I'm just looking at what (s)he seems to have done.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  190. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by plunge · · Score: 1

    Well, if you think of the rules of the game pool as sort of like the laws of nature, then some people might be impressed that someone is violating them: those lifted balls are miracles.

    But then, of course, you remember that the laws of nature would have to be things that God laid down in the first place. So now we have God violating his own laws to accomplish something that he apparently couldn't do by playing by his own rules.

    And if you try to fit all this into what we know of the history of life on earth, a history without evolution, what we end up with is a tinkerer: a God who has to intervene CONSTANTLY in his own natural world to fix a constantly failing and unsustainable creation.

    Were I a believer, I don't see how I could ever imagine such a circumstance as being particularly majestic for an all powerful being: bizarre is more like it. But then that's the problem with creationism: it's not a theory that's thought through to its logical conclusions. It's a very brief smokescreen meant to distract, meant to get people to stop thinking and back to just affirming.

  191. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Darby · · Score: 1

    They're not undefinable. They're all infinity for whichever infinity you're using.
    Taking infinity to be Aleph0 whch is what most people mean by it (i.e. the cardinality of the integers) all of those operations work just fine and the result is Aleph0.

    2^Aleph0 is a strictly larger infinity. That operation is also perfectly well defined.

  192. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    I think you're forgetting a few things. Nation sized entities have never really gone to war for religious reasons. Individuals though, and even fairly large groups engage in violence all the time over religion. It's also a nice method of convincing your populous to go to war (for other reasons).

    Here's the Wikipedia site on sectarian violence: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sectarian_violence

    Note that the Irish situation is semi-contemporary (although it's calmed down a lot in the last few years) and the Shia-Sunni Muslim conflict, which admittedly isn't really western, is definitely ongoing. Note also that sectarian violence is between members of the SAME religion with only slightly differing beliefs! There are lots of mosques, temples and churches vandalized even in North America every year though.

  193. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Boronx · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure I clearly communicated the intent of my car analogy. I was not saying "if car companies were omniscient and omnipotent they could make a safe car". What I'm saying is that it is possible to make a car which has the full capability of safe operation - which cars today do have - and yet the possibility still exists for damage to occur through the use of those machines. Does that mean the car companies created crashes? No.

    First, there isn't any truly safe way to operate a car, and second, if car companies were omniscient and omnipotent, then yes, they created crashes, since they foresaw every future crash of their device and had the power to design away from each crash or to reach out their hand and stop each crash as it occurred. Likewise, is it impossible to imagine an omnipotent God who gives humankind free action to do anything except that he reaches out his hand to stop evil? We can chose to drive to Chicago, or New York, but not through the neighbor's kitchen.

    Are natural forces evil? I don't think that's relevant. Saying that kids dying of cancer is not evil does not explain why an omniscient, omnipotent, benevolent god allows it to happen. If God is omnipotent, that physical laws are just a useful fiction, there is none in reality except God's will.

    So, if there is no standard by which to measure 'good' (as in the good vs evil sense, not the 'desirable' sense), is there such a thing as good? I do not know how to answer that question.

    I think there isn't really a standard. If we were a species or culture that cared nothing for life, would murder and cancer matter to us, would murder still be evil?

    Are you justified in valuing the life of your family more than a Pakistani family around the globe?

    Imagine a Pentagon planner. Information about a terrorist safe house is forwarded to him, and he gets to make the call among three options: don't strike, strike while warning neighboring families, possibly tipping of terrorists, or strike without warning.

    Now imagine by grace of God the call is misrouted to the office of a man who's family lives next to the house. Don't you think his evaluation will be different than the Pentagon planner? Can there be any objective standard to decide who's action would be more "good" and less "evil"?

  194. Don't Ignore the Evidence Against Evolution by 4d49434841454c · · Score: 0, Troll
    1. Re:Don't Ignore the Evidence Against Evolution by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      And

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      110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
  195. An omnipotent God can make free will without evil by spun · · Score: 1

    Natural disasters may now be partially alleviated through choices that civilizations made, but this was not the case for most of our history, and is not always the case now. So how do you explain that in the majority of cases, natural disasters represent an evil for which there is no corresponding action of will?

    In any case, the phrase "worse than it should have been" gives the game away. Even making the best possible choices, there would be suffering. An all loving, all knowing, all powerful God could easily take away all suffering that is not directly caused by free will, yet He does not. Therefore, He must not be all loving, all knowing, and all powerful.

    If God is all powerful, he could create free will that was free of the possibility of evil. For instance, free will is now free of the possibility of flavenfurgen (a meaningless concept I just made up.) You can't choose to commit flavenfurgen. Yet even without this choice, you have free will. An all powerful God could create a free will that could not conceive of, let alone choose evil. To state otherwise is to admit that God is not all powerful.

    Just because you cannot conceive of how this could be does not mean that an omniscient God could not conceive of it or do it.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  196. actually the researchers did NOT do this by Intraloper · · Score: 1

    The research article did not mention ID. An accompanying commentary, written by someone else entirely, did.

  197. Re:Cultural Evolution, and Nationalism Reborn,Anyo by tjstork · · Score: 1

    Unless Republican is synonymous with "historian" or "logician" I'll have to take that with a gargle of salt. :)

    Actually it was meant as sort of a joke. A lot of lefties around here assume Republicans and Nazis are the same and I thought it entertaining to make some humor of it for a change.

    As far as the history goes, I used to be avidly interested in World War II and how the Nazis came to pass, and I don't recall a source for Hitler having an epiphany by reading Martin Luther. I don't seek to defend protestantism, but, for the historical accuracy, I do believe that Hitler seems to have formed his mission at a young age - he speaks of being caught up with Wagnerian Operas and had already identified with being a historic figure as a child. When World War I broke out, Hitler was more than delighted to volunteer and go. With that said, the region was already violently anti-semetic even at the turn of the 20th century, if not earlier than that. You almost don't need a dramatic moment to make a Hitler out of that batch. You just need a grandiose kid, permissive recognition that a particular minority is a problem, and boom, you got yourself a Hitler.

    The question is, how pervasive and how deep is that general labelling of a minority as a problem is necessary? Right now if you walked into a bar, in the USA, and said that, "I think we should pull all the troops out of the middle east and just nuke all billion of them", a lot of people would agree with you, but I still don't think we're not at the cattle car point yet - the Germans during their Nazi heyday would see things like Abu Ghraib as harmless entertainment by rightful exploitation of an evil but weaker race. But, left unchecked and for a few decades more, who knows, maybe a genocidal war against the middle east of the sort that Hitler waged against Poland and then Russia is not out of reach for the United States.

    I agree with the rest of your post completely.

    --
    This is my sig.
  198. Re:Gen. questions/doubts about evolution? Ask away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you are willing to accept the evolutionary mechanism by which life as we know it on Earth has developed, then you are not a (big C) Creationist. Although, yes, you can still believe God is responsible for this very effective mechanism. And in that sense you might call yourself a (little c) creationist (as in, God created evolution as the mechanism by which life came to appear on Earth).

    To reiterate: You cannot be a big-C Creationist if you believe in science/evolution. They are mutually exclusive positions. One involves science (evolution). One involves rejecting science (big-C Creationism, or Intelligent Design).

    Btw, I am not sure what you mean by "gradient of species" between different species. Is this a concept you read about somewhere?

  199. Flat out wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If by "they" you mean the proponents of Intelligent Design, the idea that God is not powerful enough to create a universe with evolution is EXACTLY what they're saying.

    ID holds, not just that evolution DIDN'T happen, but that evolution COULD NOT HAVE produced organisms with "irreducible complexity."

    If God COULD HAVE used evolution to create the organisms we observe, ID is dead.

  200. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

    if you believe god is both omnipotent and omniscient there can be no free will. by creating a being or object god already knows every interaction that object or being will have and it's effect on the universe.

    what reason would a purely good being have for willfully creating a being of pure evil? unless it either had to be done as balance or to prepare things for some inevitable occurance which even God cannot prevent.

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  201. Re:An omnipotent God can make free will without ev by sumdumass · · Score: 1
    Sort of but..

    So how do you explain that in the majority of cases, natural disasters represent an evil for which there is no corresponding action of will?

    I don't explain or attempt to explain. I cannot fathom all the possible reasons for a natural disaster to happen. Punishment might be one, living in the wrong areas and destroying the hbbitat might be another. A natural disaster might be the direct cause of anothers actions completly around the world . Skyscrapers, man made damns and other objects can cause earthquakes wich can in effect cause tsunamis wich both can have devestating concequences. The perception of evil also is reletive to the opinion. I saw the Tsunami and Katrina and though great. in one place we have clensed the earth of over population while in another we have found government shortcommings and waist that should ensure lesser effects of furture catastrophies. Others looked and though how could this happen.

    An all loving, all knowing, all powerful God could easily take away all suffering that is not directly caused by free will, yet He does not. Therefore, He must not be all loving, all knowing, and all powerful.

    But who ever said the (a)god was just all loving, all knowing, and all powerful. The bible clearly outlines a malicious god who takes vengence for not aligning your free will with his spirit. This is displayed before any o fthe softer sides of it. Katrina had warnings, people didn't listen to these warnings. The california quakes had warnings and no one listened (that they were in an earthquake prone area and minor quakes happened in the previous months). Almost all disasters have some sort of warning that we just don't pay attention to or can fault on someone else. This reminds me of a story.

    A preacher recieved news that a flood was comming, He said the lord will take care of him. Still everyone else started evacuating. then the waters rose anf a guy in a boat came by asking him if he wanted a ride to saftey. The preacher replied "no thankyou, god will take care of me" The water got higher and he was sitting on the rof of the church. Along came a helicopter wich lowered a rope and the preacher replied "no thankyou, god will take care of me". Well after he died and went to heaven, he asked why didn't god take care of me. An angel replied, "he sent warning of the impending flood, you refused the help. He sent a boat and you refused to get in. He sent a helicopter and you refused the airlift to safety" "now you are in heaven when didn't he take care of you?.

    If God is all powerful, he could create free will that was free of the possibility of evil. For instance, free will is now free of the possibility of flavenfurgen (a meaningless concept I just made up.) You can't choose to commit flavenfurgen. Yet even without this choice, you have free will. An all powerful God could create a free will that could not conceive of, let alone choose evil. To state otherwise is to admit that God is not all powerful.

    He could create it but it wouldn't serve a purpose. This is the common theme I see when people disclaim a god. First they cite somethign they don't agree with and say if god was real he wouldn't have let it happen. Actualy that is greed and at best only shows you have an opinion about whatever you disagree with. People understand the good and bad of actions. This is why we need something to contrast the possibilities of our actions. suffering can teach us lessons. Lessons that aren't being learned. The first time you grab a hot stove, you "suffer" and think twice about grabbing a hot stove again. The same can be said about other lessons in life. The problem is insteead of learing the lesson, we focuse on how a god could let somethign happen or if he actualy exist because to happened. The book of job watches a god torture a guy to win a bet based on free will. In the end he realized a wealth and riches.

    Just

  202. Actually, information is amazing... by cr0sh · · Score: 1
    Because that is what is driving the whole damned thing. The quicker you understand this, the better off you will be - and you may just be the person that figures out how to exploit it and become wealthy beyond your wildest dreams. That, or destroy the planet.

    Anyhow, if you want more insight to the processes behind everything (and it sounds like you have a clue anyhow), read the book "FAB" by Neil Gershenfeld (ISBN 0-465-02745-8, hardcover). In the last section, entitled "The Future", the author discusses how ribosomes, messenger RNA and transfer RNA work together to create proteins, one of the basic building blocks of life. When it gets right down to it, this combination is nothing more than a very funky version of a UTM (Universal Turing Machine), where the ribosomes are akin to the read/write head, and the messanger RNA/transfer RNA serve the role of the read/write head encoding and "infinite tape", with the output being new protein. A similar mechanism (to a ribosome) called DNA polymerase actually does copying of DNA.

    If you could figure out how all of this work (simple thing there, uhuh), in theory you could build (grow?) anything (provided it was protein based, likely). If you could create a silicon (or other hard material) nanomachine analog, you could construct nearly anything.

    Yeah - in each of our's and other species cells lie something very similar, if not the equivalent of, Turing Machines - miniature computers, whose instruction set is a series of codons in a certain sequence. When that sequence is "off" (either through chemical degradation or cosmic rays, or similar), the computer mis-translates, which in effect become "mutations". Some of these mutations may be helpful, some may be deadly. Ultimately, it is these mutations which serve to move things forward in harmony with evolution.

    There are many other books I could reccommend you read as well - I have posted lists of these here on /. in the past, so I am not going to rehash it (suffice to say there are several). I suggest you track my lists down and read those books as well. Please note that I don't consider FAB to be one of these books, but it is a good, quick read - something I ran across at the library as I was thinking about building a 3-axis CNC milling machine...

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  203. Re:The truth shall set you free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's more likely that good can cause evil, than evil cause good. Goodness is harder to explain than evil, as evil is the natural state of (almost) everything.

    (See: Descartes)

    Of course, you are also assuming that God creates evil directly, (instead of by proxy) which is yet to be proven. You need to define evil as well.

  204. Re:God created everything... by Fordiman · · Score: 1

    Question... Where did God come into this conversation?

    No, seriously, I want to know. Cos I'm pretty sure this article is about a scientific find concerning fossil record evidence about evolution.

    Bringing God into it is basically a null statement: waste of space.

    Of course, it's possible you ARE a waste of space. It happens; there's a large number of people on this planet who happen to be wastes of space. They're called business majors.

    You're not a business major, now are you?

    --
    110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
  205. Re:God created everything... by Fordiman · · Score: 1

    *yawn*

    No, really man. If you're going to be a whack job, you should be posting on slashdot, not he-

    Shit, I'm on the wrong site again.

    --
    110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
  206. I've seen you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I'm proud that my ancestors were ratlike creatures."

    I wouldn't call your mom and dad your ancestors.

  207. Re:The truth shall set you free. by ardor · · Score: 1

    Actually, it does. Many people live a life where they wait God to come and save them. The result is that the governments of the countries where these people live in take advantage of those people.

    Wait - you forget something. What you are talking about is the classical dogmatic religion with high priests, rules, and non-thinking. You have to differentiate here. Belief is not the same as religion.

    One should find out what to believe by oneself, NOT by hearing some old priest reading from a thick book. Everybody asks "why am I here", "what is the purpose of life?" etc. these questions, while being non-addressable by science, are valid. The point is that one has to find these answers by actively thinking about it, searching for them etc. As a result, you start looking at yourself, asking who you really are, what you really want in life, questions which are VERY important because they shape a person. This involves a LOT of critical thinking (especially about yourself - one of the hardest things to do), and has the side benefit that you become a critical and very self-aware person who is hard to manipulate. Thus, IMO belief is much closer to philosophy than religion.

    But what is religion? Organized, preprocessed belief (which is actually an oxymoron). This is what makes religions so dangerous: high priest X already thought about things, or got wisdom from God/Allah/whatever, you are supposed to follow this - and DO NOT think about it or even question it! (This is why I don't see Buddhism as religion; its far too personal and does not think for you.)

    As a consequence, most people are actually doing things the wrong way. And the only reaction is the complete opposite: Atheism. Its ok if you get to become an atheist after thinking about things, and finding your way, but its NOT ok if one chooses atheism simply because religions are so evil.

    --
    This sig does not contain any SCO code.
  208. Re:The truth shall set you free. by ardor · · Score: 1

    If this is a troll: nice try.
    If this is serious: read Popper.

    --
    This sig does not contain any SCO code.
  209. Re:15 Answer Nonsense by eclectic4 · · Score: 1

    Your logic is ill-conceived.

    Just a few quick points that seem to escape you (I have very little time or I would quite enjoy piercing every single comment you made with mere logic and fact). The Earth is 4.5 billion years old. This time-frame is impossible for the majority of humans to grasp. Instant and spontaneous species generation would be impossible to witness. Thankfully, there are libraries filled with evidence to guide us. Yes, you were taught wrong. Science is not about truths as stated (P.S. Gravity has not been "proven" as you suggest either. Not one piece of evidence, nada, zilch, etc... Science still does not know gravity's origin or mechanisms, just like evolution).

    Most of your arguments are spastic drivel with nary a spot of logic. You seem to know nearly nothing about the ways of discovery. None. Just realize this, we do not know the truth about most things, but we do leave the door open to discovery. In other words, I leave the space open to have the blanks filled in via science, whereas other seem to want to plug them in with "magical creatures" such as a "maker", because it's easy to do (see all throughout history, and religion's losing battle with science). It's the difference between having the answers spoon fed to me and eating it with a heavy dose of indoctrinated "faith", or realizing that millions of years of human discovery and understanding about this Universe we live in has been the only guiding light with regard to discovery. The choice is clearly simple for me...

    --

    "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
  210. Re:The truth shall set you free. by pikine · · Score: 1

    I agree that I have authority to rule over evil in my life, and I do my best to keep it under control. The evil I was talking about in my post isn't in my life. Right this very moment there is a child being raped. There is a man being tortured for speaking the truth. There is an adulterer ruining a family and enjoying it. The last light is leaving someone's eyes from starvation, and they never had a chance to experience great joy. And a million more tiny crimes, too. That is the evil I was talking about.

    If you know you have the authority, it should be your best interest to tell other people that, they too, can have this authority if they believe in God, and to teach them to use it. A Christian should not keep one's faith to oneself (see Matthew 25:14-30).

    --
    I once had a signature.
  211. You should have just checked Wikipedia by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    Before claiming you'd researched it. Had you done so, you'd realize that right in the first paragraph, it says this

    "The saber-tooth morphology is an excellent example of convergent evolution as it occurred repeatedly and independently in at least four distinct mammalian groups."

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
    1. Re:You should have just checked Wikipedia by plunge · · Score: 1

      Uh hello? That's not what the parent poster said. They said that Sabertooth tigers had gone extinct and then re-appeared, and even that their could ust magically reappear from domestic cats at any time.

      That's NOT what "convergent evolution" is.

    2. Re:You should have just checked Wikipedia by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

      Way to nitpick... prick.

      And by the way, they did "go extinct" and "re-appear". In different species of cat.

      That IS what convergent evolution is.

      And one last thing, why are you such an asshole about it? You;d thik after peting 30 times in the same thread you'd realize that

      a) no one cares what you think
      b) being a dick gets you nowhere

      So why be a dick? Especially when you're wrong?

      Don't reply, I foed you because I don't have time for assholes like you.

      --
      "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
    3. Re:You should have just checked Wikipedia by orcrist · · Score: 1

      sooooo.... I'm looking through this thread trying to figure out where he (plunge, I assume?) is being a "prick"/"dick"/"asshole" and the only really offensive post seems to be where you start the name-calling. Am I missing something here?

      -chris

      --
      San Francisco values: compassion, tolerance, respect, intelligence
    4. Re:You should have just checked Wikipedia by plunge · · Score: 1

      No, that's not what convergent evolution is. Convergent evolution is when similar selection pressures cause similar _traits_ (at least when observed on a gross level: often they are different in underlying ways) to appear in different lineages. It isn't an entire species going extinct and then re-emerging out of a different lineage. The fact that the teeth of different lineages of cats (placental and marsupial) became elongated at different points in time is not the same thing as an "established Paloentological fact that the Sabertooth Tiger has appeared, went extinct, and reappeared at least four times in prehistory." It CERTAINLY isn't because domestic cats carry latent Sabretooth genes.

    5. Re:You should have just checked Wikipedia by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      Check his posting history. I reckon pre-pubescent or some sort of terminal shut-in. In either case, he won't last long. :D

  212. Re:The truth shall set you free. by pikine · · Score: 1

    my grandfather was the pastor of the Pentecostal church in the town I grew up in.

    If my understanding of Pentecostalism is correct, they have an emphasis that persons baptised by the holy spirit can speak in tongues, especially one for a mystical language.

    I think this is a misunderstanding of Acts 2. The disciples, upon receiving the tongue of fire, spoke in tongues of existing languages spoken by nearby regional people: Parthians, Medes, Elamites, ..., Cretans and Arabs. These were not random utterances or a mystical language. The purpose of that is so the disciples can reach out to different ethnical groups and spread the gospel.

    Furthermore, in 1 Corinthian 14, Paul addresses the issue of speaking a mystical language. Someone in the Pentacostal church should have noticed this.

    " 6 Now, brothers, if I come to you and speak in tongues, what good will I be to you, unless I bring you some revelation or knowledge or prophecy or word of instruction? 7 Even in the case of lifeless things that make sounds, such as the flute or harp, how will anyone know what tune is being played unless there is a distinction in the notes? 8 Again, if the trumpet does not sound a clear call, who will get ready for battle? 9 So it is with you. Unless you speak intelligible words with your tongue, how will anyone know what you are saying? You will just be speaking into the air." -- 1 Corinthian 14:6-9.
    --
    I once had a signature.
  213. Re:An omnipotent God can make free will without ev by spun · · Score: 1

    Go ahead and tell all the victims of the tsunami or hurricane katrina about the lessons they need to learn from their experience. Not all suffering has a purpose. In any case, the God you describe is not something I would ever worship.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  214. Re:The truth shall set you free. by localman · · Score: 1

    That may all be the case. It doesn't really matter to me, though. All Christian religions can be found in conflict with the bible on a point or two since it has conflicting information in itself. My reason for not believing is more fundamental than that. I don't believe because it just doesn't seem true.

    Cheers.

  215. Re:The truth shall set you free. by localman · · Score: 1

    But I don't get the authority from God. I get it naturally as a birthright. I can choose to be good or evil. And I've chosen good. Of course I try to spread this to others, but that doesn't change my original point: that life on earth is a terrible thing for some innocent people and I can't fathom a creator who would allow such things to happen.

    Cheers.

  216. Re:An omnipotent God can make free will without ev by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    But who said they are suffering? This again is a reletive term.

    Do what you want. i wouldn't ever worship a god to begin with.

    Here is a lesson to learn though, Don't build your home directly in the path of a hurrican prone shoreline. and if you do, expect to lose your home. Don't build you home directly around a fault line in the middle of an ocean. More importantly, When warnings about somethign bad is about to happen or is happening, listen and seek higher ground. Don't rush to the beach with a video camera trying to film it or surf the wave. There was warnings in the tsunami as well as Katrina and some people did the exact oposite of those warnings.

  217. Re:The truth shall set you free. by pikine · · Score: 1

    You clearly have a contradiction. You think certain birth rights are inherently yours naturally for granted, but you blame the lack of these birth rights on a creator.

    You don't sound like a true athiest to me. If you are, you would shrug off the terrible things that happen to innocent people as something by chance or consequential of natural law, which serve no basis to prove or disprove the existence of God.

    In the atheism framework, the ability to choose between good and evil is purely incidental. You do not have it as a birth right. Moreover, neither good nor evil has a meaning. If everything happens by chance, then these tags---"good" and "evil", "suffering" and "joyce"---are simply assigned to certain things arbitrarily. In fact, this is how a search engine sees the world.

    Clearly, you can see any discussion in this framework falls into a dead end, and no more meaningful discussion can take place.

    You will only find a solution if you're willing to follow the way of God.

    --
    I once had a signature.
  218. Re:The truth shall set you free. by pikine · · Score: 1

    It looks like you don't know the bible well enough to claim that something it says "doesn't seem true."

    Christian religions contradict the bible on a point or two because of someone's misunderstanding of the bible. It has nothing to do with the bible itself.

    Suppose I give truth tables of "AND", "OR" gates to a group of monkeys, but none of them can derive the correct truth table for "A AND (B OR C)", then is my truth table at fault?

    --
    I once had a signature.
  219. Re:An omnipotent God can make free will without ev by spun · · Score: 1

    You are quite possibly one of the most callous people I have ever conversed with. Not that that's wrong or bad, but I think you are missing out on one of the greatest feelings a human can have: empathy.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  220. Free Will by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    I tend to agree with what Albert said when quoting what some other guy said about free will, "A man cannot will what he wills". For a detailed explaination see the books "Godel, Esher, Bach" by D. Hofstadter and "Unweaving the rainbow" by R. Dawkins.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  221. Re:An omnipotent God can make free will without ev by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    I really don't see empathy as a great thing. It is more like a cripling disease then anythign great. When it aligns itself with my needs, i see ampathey as a tool but then again that what most people (especialy politicions) do.

  222. Re:An omnipotent God can make free will without ev by spun · · Score: 1

    Wow. Just.... Wow. The scariest part is that you think most people are like you. Look up the definition of sociopath sometime, see what it says about empathy.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  223. Re:An omnipotent God can make free will without ev by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    Lets face it, the majority of people with empathy are pushing an agenda. There are a few legit people who see someoen elses suffering and fell for them. The majority of people though see it as a way to exploit an agenda. Now lets be real, compasion and empathy are two different things and While some would say they are inseperatable, It is far easier to have compasion then empathy.

    But of course compasion is harder then empathy because it generaly requires some type of action. Compasion can also be exploited by others but at least someone requiring support/help gets somethign from the deal.

  224. Re:The truth shall set you free. by localman · · Score: 1

    There's no contradiction: I don't blame anything on the creator. I'm just saying there isn't one. If there was, he'd be a jerk, not a good guy as most religions claim. That's the contradiction and it doesn't fall on my side of the fence :)

    You obviously don't know many athiests. Athiests have a wide range of philosophical beliefs -- being an athiest doesn't mean one believes any particular thing, just that one doesn't believe in a god. And that is most certainly the case for me. Yet without god I can still form concepts of good and evil and have great compassion towards my fellow man. I don't believe in destiny but I don't believe in everything being random either: I believe in will, which man exercises to great effect. I believe in responsibility for ones actions.

    The world seems far to big and complex for any single minded God. That's just our only easy way of comprehending things: to project a personality onto the natural world. But it just doesn't line up once you dig down.

    Cheers.

  225. Re:The truth shall set you free. by localman · · Score: 1

    I'd be willing to put money that I know the Bible as well as you. I certainly know it far better than most people who call themselves Christians. Of course, it's so ambiguous and believers are so comfortable with loose interpretation that you can never really demonstrate a contradiction to a believer's satisfaction, but if you spend a few minutes trying to reconcile the laws of the old testament with the attituded of the new testament, you'll see what I mean. Of course someone will always say that the new replaces the old, but Jesus himself said he did not come to change the law. And some will say that the old only applied to the Jews. But in any case if I saw Jews stoning their children for misbehaving, even before Christ came, I'd have a problem with that, as would you. And the idea of a God who punishes generation after generation for the sins of the parents, yet is somehow called merciful and loving. And even the very core idea of someon dying on a cross cleansing other people's sins. As if a crucifiction several thousand years ago has anything to do with some guy beating his wife today. It doesn't make a lick of sense.

    But it doesn't have to. People just want some static framework for life so they don't have to try to fit the complexity of the world in their heads. And religion does a pretty good job of that for the most part. But it's pretty obvious that's all it's for if you think about it.

    Cheers.