10-22-2005, 12:22 AM | #11 | |||
Niqo Niqo Nii~
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 6,240
|
Quote:
'Gaps in understanding'? Yeah but not nearly as much as the lack of fossil & observed evidence for evolution. Not even 'lucy' the famed 'missing link' is close enough to modern humans to accept as an ancestor - at the least, its highly debateable. Don't think I exclude the entire theory, however - Survival of the fittest, slight modifications over time in descendants, those kind of things obviously happen. It's the changing of types into entirely new species (the threshold is supposedly when the offspring cannot reproduce with the specis it was derived from, if I'm not mistaken) that is debateable. Quote:
__________________
Quote:
|
|||
10-22-2005, 01:05 AM | #12 | |
for all seasons
|
Quote:
__________________
check out my buttspresso
|
|
10-22-2005, 01:06 AM | #13 |
Mega Newbie
|
Robot Jesus-
The problem with your assertion that age is the determining factor in weather something is a theory or a law is that we have things referred to as laws that are roughly contemporary with Darwin's original works (which suggested the principles upon which the theory of evolution is based). Thermodynamics, for example, was termed in 1849 by Lord Kelvin. And entropy, the second law of thermodynamics, wasn't fully worked out until 1875 by Boltzman. The Origin of Species was penned by Darwin in 1859. One thing I did notice, though, is that the laws of thermodynamics can be represented through mathematical equations (similar to something we had to memorize in Chemistry called the "ideal gas law"). I notice, however, that there are no such mathematical exactitudes within the theory of evolution. Perhaps this, rather than age, suggests why we have "laws" of thermodynamics and gravity, but merely a theory of evolution?
__________________
Consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds. |
10-22-2005, 06:06 AM | #14 | |||
bOB iZ brOkeN
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: It's a nice place to visit...
Posts: 3,755
|
Quote:
So frankly, aside from those sea creatures, its dang near impossible to be as mind boggling accurate as you seem to demand. Quote:
Quote:
If the evolution view & its opposition had equal (or at least near-equal) merit, I'd have no problem with presenting both views. But that just isn't the case, and the problem with repeating a non-truth constantly, is that sooner or later people will start to believe it. Just look at how Hitler was able to turn German into the psychopathic killing machine that it was. SWK
__________________
:bmage: Because breakdancing is evil, and so am I, you will click on this link: You are in error. No one is screaming. Thank you for your cooperation. Yes I know the breakdancing BM link doesn't work, and I don't care.
|
|||
10-22-2005, 01:32 PM | #15 | |
Bhaktisiddhanta = Lion Guru!
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: the spiritual embassy
Posts: 365
|
Alright, so I have scoured the temple grounds and couldn't find our copy of Forbidden Archeology, so I will strike the gold chain example from the record, but by embedded I meant that you could hold the chain and the coal would hang from it - it was inside the rock, not just stuck on the outside. However if one is interested enough to go here then you could see three other examples of artifacts that would be extremely hard to explain not being of human origin - the youngest of which (a coin) is dated around 200,000 years old, and the oldest of which (a metallic sphere with 3 parallel grooves goin around it) is dated at around 2.8 billion years old. Yes...billion. There are also examples of bones and other such archeological finds at the website.
As a note for fossils, while they are one of the best ways to study very ancient history, we must remember that even the sheer number of fossils we have do not accurately represent the whole of the Earth. In a discontinued magazine called Origens, it cites David M. Raup (curator of Chicago's Field Museum) and Steven Stanley (john Hopkins paleontologist) numbering about 130,000 fossil species compared to the 1.5 million living today, and compared to the estimated 1 billion ever to have existed. They calculate that 99.9% did not leave fossils. Also, factoring erosion and other variables that remove parts of the rock strata, various scientists have found that there is very little of what should be there actually there. Geologist Tjeerd H. van Andel studying early Cretaceous sandstone in Wyoming concluded that only 2% of what should have been there actually was according to accepted rates of sedimentation. He also found that this can be repeated almost anywhere with the same result. (Tjeerd H. van Andel, "Consider the Incompleteness of the Geological Record," Nature, Vol. 294 (Dec. 3, 1981), pp. 397-398) With erosion and the adding of new layers, only a small amount is left over in the record of the rock; arond 90-99% of the layers are gone forever. Take also into account this statistic: The estimated volume of sedimentary rock deposits on the land surface of the Earth is about 134 million cubic miles. If 100,000 paleontologists were to divide up the task of examining just 1 cubic mile of rock, each would have to go through 1,472,000 cubic feet. At 8 hrs a day, 365 days a year, and at the rate of one cubic foot a minute - itwould take 84 years to investigate 1 cubic mile out of 134 million. While this can be used in support of why the fossil record is incomplete, it seems pretty silly to say that because the evidence will never be found, the theory must be right. Such huge gaps in the fossil record should lead one to simply take each fossil as a specific example. This species was at this place around this time, not that they appeared here or that they first showed up at this time. As for mutation, there is a quote from Luther Burbank, an American botanist, "I know from experience that I can develop a plum half an inch long or one two-and-a-half inches long, with every possible length in-between, but I am willing to admit that it is hopeless to try to get a plum the size of a small pea, or one as big as a grapefruit. I have roses that bloom pretty steadily for six months of the year, but I have none that will bloom twelve, and I will not have. In short, there are limits to the development possible." (Norman Macbeth, Darwin Retried (Boston: Gambit, 1971), p.36) Ernest Mayr of Harvard also did experiments on flies and found that, when using selective breeding to change bristles on their bodies, he could get a range of 25 to 56 per body (the average is 36), but beyond that they would die off and that when breeding was allowed to to be unselective, they would return to the average within five years. So while it is very likely to have selective breeding change minor features like a fly's eye color, it becomes difficult to impossible to imagine a fly being bred into a dragonfly or butterfly. Also, we can see even in sucessful cases of selective breeding like dog subspecies, if purebred specimens were not kept for breeding, most types of dogs would revert to a standard dog form, or "mutt" within a short amount of time, evolution-wise. Quote:
...man I make big posts, good thing this is a serious board.
__________________
People are so much apt to indulge in transitory speculations even when they are to educate themselves on a situation beyond their empiric area or experiencing jurisdiction...This impulse moves them to fix the position of the immanent to an indeterminate impersonal entity, no clue of which could be discerned by moving earth and heaven through their organic senses. -Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Thakur Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare |
|
10-22-2005, 02:33 PM | #16 | |
Worth every yenny
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: not my mind that's for sure!
Posts: 1,299
|
Quote:
Sounds like an argument against evolution, but it really isn't. This is because evolution occurs slowly over time, and only in the "direction" of benefit: there's no benefit to a fly gaining attributes of a dragongly or butterfly, so even if it were to mutate like this, the genes could well never get passed on because they haven't aided the organism in any way. |
|
10-22-2005, 02:58 PM | #17 | |
Libertarian Socialist
Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 377
|
Quote:
__________________
We are all atheists about most of the gods that humanity has ever believed in. Some of us just go one god further. ---Richard Dawkins there was only one true Christian, and he died on the cross. ---Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche These are rumors spread by the liberal, elite media. Much like civil rights and Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion. |
|
10-22-2005, 04:38 PM | #18 | |||||||
Niqo Niqo Nii~
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 6,240
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Yes, yes, the houseflys. They've done all kinds of stuff to houseflys. None of it beneficial or lasting, which are the 'goals' of evolution. Changing eye color means he bred a bunch of flys with that gene until that gene became dominant in that family. True mutation is very rarely beneficial, and I haven't heard of any naturally occuring mutations that were. They are most often listed under 'defects'. Its like I said, modifications can happen, but they don't alter the basic animal. Variety doesn't prove evolution. It proves variety. Quote:
Quote:
Game Over. Play Again? Quote:
__________________
Quote:
|
|||||||
10-22-2005, 05:10 PM | #19 | ||
The unloved and the unloving
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: NPF
Posts: 1,673
|
Wow. An actual debate on evolution that only involves the secular aspects. Never thought I'd see the day.
That said -- Quote:
Incidentally, isn't carbon-14 dating inaccurate in some circumstances? Like extended exposure to water? I checked the Wikipedia article, but it gave me nothing, and I don't know any other good places to go look. If it is, that's worth bringing into the discussion, as I don't think it's come up yet. Another question on the general topic -- why on Earth would we evolve the ability to feel a change in depth narrower than a human hair? I don't have an online source on this (it was a magazine article), so to check it, I felt a scratch on the surface of the wood desk my keyboard is on, then pulled out one of my own hairs and compared it to the scratch I felt. The scratch is definitely shallower than the hair is wide. I believe that constitutes a valid experiment; if nothing else, it's repeatable. I'm not being all "dur this proves evolution is wrong!", since I know better than to declare victory in debate (in part thanks to Lucas, but mostly through common sense), and because I've found evidence religion and evolution aren't in any direct conflict. Let's not talk about that, though. That's not good here. I'm just interested in these two questions.
__________________
Bruno the Bandit, by Ian McDonald. The One Formula to encapsulate all reality. How to care for your introvert. Quote:
|
||
10-22-2005, 05:26 PM | #20 | ||
Data is Turned On
|
Quote:
A fossil "between two species" would automatically belong to its own species. Personally I think the hominid fossil record displays massive change over time as well as anything could. And I like that little "awfully convenient". It's just so vaguely accusatory (or reproachful, I can't tell). As for Dasanudas' posts, I really can't tackle all of that. Lets just say that I don't think that a scientific conspiracy on such a scale is plausible. I think the existence of a small fraud (those incredibly ancient alleged artefacts) is much more easy to belive than a much larger fraud (the destruction of all other similar artefacts that were discovered and the collaboration of scientists in that many fields). And for one specific example, lets take the 2.8 billion years artefact. Wasn't oxygen too rare (according to the evidence) to support more than the simplest of life until 2 billion yars ago? That's what I heard. Maybe that was fabricated too. Quote:
Edit: If anything, Intelligent Design would be the conception affect by this. It's much more purpose driven than all variations of evolution theory I know.
__________________
6201 Reasons to Support Electoral Reform. Last edited by Archbio; 10-22-2005 at 05:32 PM. |
||
|
|