Seems like I may be dropped another bomb.
But in all truth, scientific understand is not done by majority rule. Likewise the statistics of 72% God thread members who believe in god vs. 24% who don't in no way proves who is correct. The statistics of the number of people in the US who accept the theory of evolution is most likely a result of the dismal state of science education in the US. That state is the result of a vocal minority pushing an agenda through school boards.
(motivation) — I was asking about high leve scientist who devote so much of their live to it. I wasn't being facitious.
The concept that through successive random mutations which are then acted upon by evolutionary mechanisms such as genetic drift for example, the mathematical possibility of these being by chance alone is simply beyond the realm of possibility. Science has designated anything with a chance smaller than 10 to the minus 50th as impossible by convention.The cell has many such machines that do all of the work inside of the cell. Ribosomes, Golgi apparatus, etc. All working together in an amazing choreography all of which are programmed by DNA.
Quote from: dwcrawford on January 17, 2010, 02:54:44 PM(motivation) — I was asking about high leve scientist who devote so much of their live to it. I wasn't being facitious. Same thing that motivates everyone else in this world. Money. Perhaps Fame, since Fame = Money.
That's why you also got cheats who "found" missing links etc.
You can see the same thing happening today with the current "in" science, Climate Change. There's money being pro-climate change, but rarely anything in being a CC denier. You get the CC cheats too, fiddling the temperature data and inventing melting glaciers in the Himalayas.
What was Christopher Columbus doing when he happened on America? Trying to make money by finding a cheaper route to the East of course. And so on with most others.I suppose it's a bit cynical to say money motivates everyone. But I'm sure it's the vast majority.
Quote from: Hemodoc on January 16, 2010, 09:00:21 PMThe concept that through successive random mutations which are then acted upon by evolutionary mechanisms such as genetic drift for example, the mathematical possibility of these being by chance alone is simply beyond the realm of possibility. Science has designated anything with a chance smaller than 10 to the minus 50th as impossible by convention.The cell has many such machines that do all of the work inside of the cell. Ribosomes, Golgi apparatus, etc. All working together in an amazing choreography all of which are programmed by DNA. It's about time this idea, that the simplest single cell is so complex that the earth is not old enough for random mutations to have achieved its synthesis, were put to bed. Evolution does not start with a single cell. Indeed the simplest single cell with DNA is a long way down the evolutionary road. Each step along the road was easily accomplished in the time available with evolution that favored life that best fitted the environment. The remains of the initial (and simpler) life coding is still contained within cells in the form of RNA.
I don't want people to try and answer my question anymore. Not only was it poorly phrased but it is very vague. Perhaps if we could speak in person I could get my thought accross but it really didn't worked here. heh...With all due respect I should have stayied in the "What's for Supper" thread. Certainly I'm not qualified to talk of god or evolution. No problem except I really do think both threads to stay on topic!
Science has designated anything with a chance smaller than 10 to the minus 50th as impossible by convention.
Dear Stoday, where were you when I was taking my undergrad and grad level courses on cell theory if it is so simple as you claim.
You state that evolution does not start with a single cell because by the time we get to a cell with DNA we are a long way down the evolutionary road. That is a contradictory statement.
Please tell us when and where evolution starts in your understanding? Not debating, simply trying to understand your concept of evolution since you continually state that I am incorrect in my understanding.Thank you,Peter
The concept that through successive random mutations which are then acted upon by evolutionary mechanisms such as genetic drift for example, the mathematical possibility of these being by chance alone is simply beyond the realm of possibility. Science has designated anything with a chance smaller than 10 to the minus 50th as impossible by convention.The cell has many such machines that do all of the work inside of the cell. Ribosomes, Golgi apparatus, etc. All working together in an amazing choreography all of which are programmed by DNA. A single celled organism is much more complex than the space shuttle. Of a truth, no one would see the space shuttle and believe it was anything but complex engineering and deliberate design. Not only is the bacterial flagellum incredibly complex, but it is all regulated by information contained in the DNA. Where did that information come from? That is a very simple question that I do not is possible without an intelligent designer.
One note on the previous quotes Quote Science has designated anything with a chance smaller than 10 to the minus 50th as impossible by convention.No, "science" has not done that. Science designates anything with a chance of E-50 as having a chance of E-50. "Impossible" means the chance is 0 - and I don't know any scientist who will say that anything has a chance of 0. Other than jokingly.Quote from: Hemodoc on January 18, 2010, 08:08:52 PMDear Stoday, where were you when I was taking my undergrad and grad level courses on cell theory if it is so simple as you claim.That's ok, I'm sure we all had trouble with some undergraduate courses. The first time I took Differential Equations, I had a terrible teacher. It was completely baffling. When I took it again with a better teacher, it was all totally simple. I kept thinking "Why didn't the first guy just say this?"QuoteYou state that evolution does not start with a single cell because by the time we get to a cell with DNA we are a long way down the evolutionary road. That is a contradictory statement.I don't see a contradiction there. Could you elaborate? QuotePlease tell us when and where evolution starts in your understanding? Not debating, simply trying to understand your concept of evolution since you continually state that I am incorrect in my understanding.Thank you,PeterWell, we certainly don't have space for an introductory class, but one popular hypothesis is "RNA World".http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNA_world_hypothesisWe do know that amino acids are fairly common (they've been found in comets, for example). As I understand it, some of the early amino acids that stuck together eventually formed RNA. RNA can replicate itself, so now you have a replicating molecule. That is the first step.
Quote from: Hemodoc on January 16, 2010, 09:00:21 PMThe concept that through successive random mutations which are then acted upon by evolutionary mechanisms such as genetic drift for example, the mathematical possibility of these being by chance alone is simply beyond the realm of possibility. Science has designated anything with a chance smaller than 10 to the minus 50th as impossible by convention.The cell has many such machines that do all of the work inside of the cell. Ribosomes, Golgi apparatus, etc. All working together in an amazing choreography all of which are programmed by DNA. A single celled organism is much more complex than the space shuttle. Of a truth, no one would see the space shuttle and believe it was anything but complex engineering and deliberate design. Not only is the bacterial flagellum incredibly complex, but it is all regulated by information contained in the DNA. Where did that information come from? That is a very simple question that I do not is possible without an intelligent designer. I don't know where you are getting this "chance of 10 to the minus 50th" statistic from, but would be interested to see these numbers and know which statistical methods and data were used. Are you saying that this is the probability of life on earth starting up by "chance"? Chance is a misleading term here. The environment would be putting pressure on the essential elements of life (nucleotides, amino acids) and the laws of chemistry - the natural attraction between the four nucleotides (thymine, adenine, guanine, cytosine) - would facilitate early DNA synthesis. DNA is made up of only a few elements in the periodic table. Carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, phosphorous, and nitrogen - and these elements interact with each other in predictable ways. I have no information to judge that particular statistic by, but we are talking about a process that may well have had billions of years to develop. Given enough time, even unlikely events can take place, and it only takes one self-replicating DNA strand to kick off the process. I'm sure everyone has heard the analogy that if you put 1000 monkeys with 1000 typewriters in a room for 1000 years, one of them will write Hamlet. This is one (silly) way to illustrate a basic statistical rule. Though this is certainly way outside of my studies of primate evolution, I believe that the theory is that DNA began outside of a cell environment, and that organelles and cell membranes were acquired over time. One extremely well-studied and oft-mentioned organelle in evolutionary study is mitochondria - the energy producers of the cell. The most commonly-accepted theory is that mitochondria were once independent organisms, but entered into a mutually-beneficial relationship with animal cells. The mitochondria provide energy to the animal cells, and the cells provide a safe environment in return (endosymbiosis). Evidence for the theory that mitochondria were once independent includes the fact that mitochondria contain their own DNA, which is double-stranded and circular like bacterial DNA. I did say that I would further investigate my statement that the majority of DNA mutations are neutral, and I have: According to my text Human Evolutionary Genetics: Origins People and Disease by Jobling, Hurles, and Tyler-Smith (2004) 98.5% of human DNA is non-coding and only roughly 30% of our DNA is transcribed. A quote from the text: "The function of most of this nongenetic material is not known, but some of it certainly does play essential roles in cells." (p. 30) Oh, and they state very clearly that it is not possible to take out the introns and see how the exons fare, so I don't know what I was thinking with my prior speculation. The most common type of mutation is called a base-substitution, and it means what it says - that the wrong nucleotide is placed during the copying phase. The cell also contains "proofreaders" and there is redundancy in the genetic code which allows for mistakes without affecting amino acid production. As for whether there are more positive than negative mutations in DNA, the writers state that there are more ways to ruin a gene than enhance it, but they also consider that negative mutations are much more easily spotted within populations. (We know certain diseases are genetic and we study them, but positive mutations may be overlooked or attributed to good environment.) No real info on embryonic loss, but I think this is a difficult area to study, since I assume the stat on 75% embryonic loss includes embryos that fail to implant and other instances where the loss is so early that usable data is not generally available. Again, not my area, so this is pure conjecture.
Rocker, it is contradictory to tell me not to conflate abiogenesis with evolution, yet you went right to it as the start of your evolution beginnings. Yet, that is not surprising at all since EVERY book by evolution advocates does the same thing. So, if you want to talk about abiogenesis, then please start a new thread since it is off topic.
Quote from: Hemodoc on January 19, 2010, 01:25:10 PMRocker, it is contradictory to tell me not to conflate abiogenesis with evolution, yet you went right to it as the start of your evolution beginnings. Yet, that is not surprising at all since EVERY book by evolution advocates does the same thing. So, if you want to talk about abiogenesis, then please start a new thread since it is off topic.Every book by evolution advocates? I have in front of me some of my texts from my physical anthropology masters, and they do no such thing. No mention of abiogenesis. I had never heard that term until I began reading these threads. Evolution starts with the universal common ancestor. According to the particular text I cited above (Human Evolutionary Genetics, a widely-used foundation text for graduate level study in various aspects of anthropology, biology, and genetics): "The common ancestor of humans and Escherichia coli may also be the last universal common ancestor." (Escherichia coli = E. coli, quote from p. 11)We seem stuck on this idea of asking where that universal ancestor came from, and it is clear to me that no one here is going to be able to answer that question to your satisfaction, Hemodoc, since we are attempting (at least in my case, since I hasten to admit that this is NOT my field of study) to use science and not theology to tackle it. There are actually many fascinating debates within the field of evolution. Many. Perhaps we will work our way around to those, or perhaps not. I actually do have a question for you, Peter, since I am hearing conflicting ideas from your posts. What exactly are your beliefs with respect to Intelligent Design? Do you believe that a "designer" created these mechanisms and evolution moves on from there, or do you literally believe that no evolution is taking place on earth? Or something else entirely? I will take a look at the article that you posted.