TS: Creationism vs. Evolution

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I go to Catholic school, so I've been taught all about the story of creation and now we're being taught evolution. We'll have a debate about it soon and I wanted some of your views.

This reminds me: I should do my Science homework!

Aja (aja), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:02 (twenty-one years ago)

Catastrophism vs gradualism is a more worthwhile debate (the answer is catastrophism).

You weren't taught that the creation actually *happened, right?

Markelby (Mark C), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:07 (twenty-one years ago)

They want us to believe it, but I don't.

Aja (aja), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:09 (twenty-one years ago)

evolution, duh.

markelby OTM though.

latebloomer (latebloomer), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:11 (twenty-one years ago)

Why evolution?

Aja (aja), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:12 (twenty-one years ago)

Aja, your question is like "the sun - bright or dark?". There is one answer that is true, and one that is false. Evolutionary theory isn't perfect, and it's being improved all the time, but yes, it's true, we evolved from single celled life.

Markelby (Mark C), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:13 (twenty-one years ago)

previous threads could have been revived on this subject:
Creationism
and
I'm Afraid Of Americans

Sébastien Chikara (Sébastien Chikara), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:14 (twenty-one years ago)

evolution has these little things called "facts" and "evidence" on its side.

x-post

latebloomer (latebloomer), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:14 (twenty-one years ago)

Well yeah. You don't understand how bored I am.

Aja (aja), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:15 (twenty-one years ago)

Here's a better question: what's a better synonym for "innumeral"?

myriad or prodigious

Aja (aja), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:20 (twenty-one years ago)

do you mean "innumerable"? If so, myriad.

Markelby (Mark C), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:26 (twenty-one years ago)

oh yeah. sorry.

trying to copy it off the book without looking at the keyboard.

Aja (aja), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:28 (twenty-one years ago)

My favorite creationist.

I've interviewed this guy a couple of times. He's one of the few creationists with an actual science degree -- Harvard, no less; he studied with Steven Jay Gould -- and I find his attempts to honestly reconcile his beliefs with his scientific methods really interesting. If also bizarre and ultimately kind of sad.

spittle (spittle), Sunday, 12 September 2004 19:46 (twenty-one years ago)

Creationism is the facts. We were made as we are by a big man. A really big man. Approximately 30 years ago. You can disprove the goddamn Beatles if you have the eyes to hear. Also, fuck Leonard Cohen.

Eyeball Kicks (Eyeball Kicks), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:01 (twenty-one years ago)

I was made by my mom and dad

Aja (aja), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:03 (twenty-one years ago)

You shouldn't feel sad for him - he knows what he is doing. I guess I don't believe in either creationism or evolution, but I believe God 'created' (in some way) consciousness and perceptions, but I tend towards Berkelian idealism, so I don't believe the physical world has independant existance, so 'evidence' in support of evolution is mostly irrelevant to me. I don't particularly want to argue about this, just so long as Aja doesn't think the only rational stance is an evolutionary theory - creationism is just as rational, in that it doesn't depend on any internal inconsistancies and is based on the same evidence (you could be a creationism without believing in divine revelation, I suppose). The theory of evolution is by no means a necessary or certain truth, but you may come to the conclusion that most of the scientific community has comme to that evolution best explains the world as we find it.

Kevin Gilchrist (Mr Fusion), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:04 (twenty-one years ago)

a visual aid for your debate
http://www.geocities.com/ariniem/pics/evolution.jpg

joseph pot (STINKOR™), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:11 (twenty-one years ago)

The difference between creationism and the scientific method is that creationists start with a hypothesis that precludes the possibility of being disproven. If the data don't fit, the data are discarded.

spittle (spittle), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:15 (twenty-one years ago)

Well, the data wouldn't need to be discarded as such, just explained within the creationist world view - ie God made dinosaur skeletons for a larf. I don't necessarily except that a theory being exempt from disproof makes it untrue - it seems that maybe what is true could be incapable of proof or disproof. Besides, lots of theories are incapable of disproof - determinism, some marxist thories etc. I remember I had a lecturer who told us to ignore Richard Dawkins because he only wrote his book to get laid.

Kevin Gilchrist (Mr Fusion), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:19 (twenty-one years ago)

that should be 'accept' not 'except'.

Kevin Gilchrist (Mr Fusion), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:23 (twenty-one years ago)

A theory being exempt from disproof doesn't make it untrue, but it does make it unprovable. (If you can't disprove it, you also can't prove it.) Which makes the whole enterprise of trying to "prove" creationism scientifically futile.

spittle (spittle), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:33 (twenty-one years ago)

Not really. We could spend the next million years trying to disprove creationism, but if God appeared and said, 'yup, those christers have it right', that would prove creationism. So I think there is a difference between unprovable and 'undisprovable'. Even so, and you couldn't prove it either, that doesn't make it untrue. We can neither prove free will nor determinism, yet it seems that one must be true. And given the problems with any kind of knowledge held by humans, we have to accept that we can never 'know' anything (with a few exceptions). I never see what the bug problem the US has with this is - teach both darwinism and creationsim in schools, but don't teach them dogmatically. There often seems to be just as much bigotry from the scientific viewpoint as there is from the religious viewpoint.

Kevin Gilchrist (Mr Fusion), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:43 (twenty-one years ago)

Hi Aja!

Creationism is total bunk, don't swallow it. As for the arument that it's good to teach alternative theories to evolution, there are such alternatives (eg Lamarkian evolution), but creationism isn't one of them.

It is intrinsically unproveable, like all bad theories. It's a powerplay by extreme elements of the US Church. It's answer to all evidence is, 'God did that'. Well, why God? You might as well say 'The Boogie Man' - or 'Colin Barrow' - or 'Aja'. Invent your all-powerful deity and off you go. Just don't ask what created the all-powerful deity. And don't ask who moved your cheese either.

Evolutionary theory existed and was applied before Darwin for many thousands of years by farmers and animal breeders. Darwin and Wallace came late in the piece and sort of formalised it, spelled it out. Agrarian and farming communities could not have arisen without a basic understanding of genetic inheritance. We wouldn't have domestic dogs or cats, or merino sheep, or tangellos or broccoli! Mmmm broccoli.

the music mole (colin s barrow), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:49 (twenty-one years ago)

Dude, God can't appear and "prove" creationism because without faith you have nothing. Hoist on you own (fucking idiotic, irrational and should not be spouted around impressional children) petard.

Worse than pig-shit thick creationists = creationists who use long words. I'm really angry right now.

Markelby (Mark C), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:51 (twenty-one years ago)

Oh, I can't stand broccoli! I tried to eat it five days ago. I nearly chocked!

I believe evolution is neccesary for adaptation.

Aja (aja), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:52 (twenty-one years ago)

"Dude, God can't appear and "prove" creationism because without faith you have nothing"

This is an interesting misrepresentation of theism. I can believe in God and Creationism (which of course I said I don't) without believing that faith is necessary to divine revelation. I think people should avoid close-minded certainty around children, rather than an open exploration of the way people view their lives.

Kevin Gilchrist (Mr Fusion), Sunday, 12 September 2004 20:56 (twenty-one years ago)

Creationism is just as good an alternative to evolution as saying "It was all aliens! They made us and planted the evidence!" or "A TV hynotist has mesmerised everyone in the world into believing the world existed before last Tuesday." All of these are about as plausible and not susceptible to proof in any immediate future, if ever, and are all useless - and any of them could be true, but since I've just made two of them up, and someone else just made up the other, there are heavy odds against them. If you're going to ignore these scientific facts, why not just teach kids that the sun shines because god wills it, and the earth rotates... and TV works... and so on for everything. You may as well abandon science completely.

Free will/determinism is a rotten example of something similar. The debate there is worthwhile because there is scientific evidence for both sides, and it is not beyond imagining its provability or otherwise. Evolution/creationism is a debate between science and fairy tale.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Sunday, 12 September 2004 21:20 (twenty-one years ago)

Sure, all those other examples are possible, which makes evolution unknowable. It just ends up being a theory that fits the facts to your satisfaction. The reason creationism is different than those other examples is that the majority of people on the planet, and the majority of people who have ever lived, have believed in a creation story. Standing is front of a classroom of children and saying "evolution is just fact" (which it isn't, because of the problems with scientific theory) is going to be telling them that their parents lied to them. People have the right to bring up their children within the realms of their faith, but not to exclude them from being taught about other faiths, ideas etc. at school.

Also, a big problem with the debate about creationism is that people are assuming that people who believe in creationism are stupid and ignorant - they are not. Also the whole "and someone else just made up the other one" (ie creationism) thing is probably nonsense - people developed a religious sense and a religious culture because they believed in the things they were discussing, rather than just going out and lying to their tribes. There is a big difference between being wrong about something and 'making it up' - it was believed for good reason. Our ancestors, and our felow humans who are still theists, believed in God on the basis of rational evidence(and probably misunderstood evidence) - the existance and nature of the world, mankind's consciousness, etc. They took evidence and put a theory to explain it. Now, you may feel that theory was wrong, but they were not stupid. It really doesn't aid any debate to ridicule the other's point of view and call their (totally rational) beliefs a fairytale. (there is nothing irrational about religious faith - people have looked for a long time and have found no terminal paradoxes or inconsistancies in them).

Probability doesn't really help us either. If we are talking about probability, is the scientific or the religious one more probable? I don't think either is more probable, because in each everything is assumed; I mean Occam's razor would say the one that involves the fewest assumptions - well they both argue about the first cause, only the nature is different. The assumption of a God may seem unlikely to you, but a person who feels a personal spiritual relationship with God feels it is not only more likely he exists, but certain.

And we still have no widely accepted and understood explanation for the origins of the universe within the scientific viewpoint. Also, I don't think the free-will\determinism debate is a scientific one, but a philosophical one, and I can't think of any discovery or advance that would prove either.

Kevin Gilchrist (Mr Fusion), Sunday, 12 September 2004 21:43 (twenty-one years ago)

GOD CREATED EVOLUTION.

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Sunday, 12 September 2004 22:16 (twenty-one years ago)

the question is who created this god figure?

did the neanderthals believe in him? do dogs and cats believe in him?

what do crows call your jehovah? or does the supposed creator of the universe only exist to humour humans on a planet called earth.

fairly clear that i'm with science on this one.

the line that god doesn't appear because it would ruin faith for everyone is just plain disappointing. faith is not the same thing as believing that something imaginary exists. faith is hope and belief in something real.

i have faith in jermaine defoe. i don't have any faith in a big beard in the sky.

darraghmac, Sunday, 12 September 2004 22:25 (twenty-one years ago)

Markelby -- is catastrophism related to punctuated equlibrium?

ryan (ryan), Sunday, 12 September 2004 22:27 (twenty-one years ago)

Creationists shit me. 'I have proof!!' NO YOU DON'T, all you have is a bloody dumb book full of shit.

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Sunday, 12 September 2004 22:32 (twenty-one years ago)

I think it simply needs to be observed that any valid theory can, in principle, be falsified. For example, various theories of electricity are all still theories, not facts. This doesn't mean that light bulbs invented using theories of electrical energy won't work. It may mean that the theory needs some tweaking or adjustment sooner or later.

The problem with fantasy theories like creationism, animism etc, is that, in principle, nothing could ever be observed that would prove them wrong. This is their weakness not their strength. They exclude any reality or truth test. This is always the problem with delusional beliefs.

Fantasy theories are characterised by a lack of practical application. One simply can't utilise them to make anything. Creationism is in this category, as is most alchemy.

the music mole (colin s barrow), Sunday, 12 September 2004 22:40 (twenty-one years ago)

The answer, of course, is Scientific Penguinism.

What bugs me about the creationist theory is that its adherents all seem like this one big cumulative gestalt of one of those people who can't stand to lose an argument, no matter what. They wouldn't sacrifice one bit of their faith and it wouldn't disprove one bit of God's existence if they just said, "yes, until we see more evidence to the contrary, it's likely that the way God created life was through evolution." But no, they have to make sure the other side loses the argument at all costs!

By the way, for the record, not all Catholic schools teach creationism - I was taught only evolution.

wetmink (wetmink), Sunday, 12 September 2004 22:48 (twenty-one years ago)

"I remember I had a lecturer who told us to ignore Richard Dawkins because he only wrote his book to get laid. "

Richard Dawkins is one of the main reasons creationism has thrived well for the past few decades in spite of the overwhelming evidence in favor of evolution.

latebloomer (latebloomer), Sunday, 12 September 2004 22:55 (twenty-one years ago)

they have to make sure the other side loses the argument at all costs!

That's odd, because in my experience they completely fail to answer questions.

'God created everything!! Evolutionary theory is bunkum!!'
'And you can prove this how exactly?'
'...hey look, it's raining'

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Sunday, 12 September 2004 22:59 (twenty-one years ago)

hmm yeah... maybe I should say, they have to make sure they don't compromise at all costs...

wetmink (wetmink), Sunday, 12 September 2004 23:05 (twenty-one years ago)

Yep. They can't defend themselves, so they just go all quiet. They can't face up to the massive flaws in their own belief system.

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Sunday, 12 September 2004 23:10 (twenty-one years ago)

hi aja!

oh yeah ... i'm on the side of evolution.

Eisbär (llamasfur), Sunday, 12 September 2004 23:56 (twenty-one years ago)

The universe is "god" of a sort, in that tao sort of way, so in a sense, both sides are right, because evolution created itself. Man.

Trayce (trayce), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:02 (twenty-one years ago)

Pffft, you don't know that. :)

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:04 (twenty-one years ago)

the christians could neatly resolve this whole thing by saying that "God created the universe, but he did so through evolution." why don't they?

Eisbär (llamasfur), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:06 (twenty-one years ago)

in liverpool, there is a sect that believes that robbie fowler is god (or so i'm led to believe).

fundamental judeo-christian beliefs pale in comparison, really.

darraghmac, Monday, 13 September 2004 00:06 (twenty-one years ago)

Tad: thats a fucking good point.

Trayce (trayce), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:07 (twenty-one years ago)

the christians could neatly resolve this whole thing by saying that "God created the universe, but he did so through evolution." why don't they?

Sometimes they do. Other just bang on literally about the seven-day thing.

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:13 (twenty-one years ago)

Err yeah - not all Christians are Creationists, Tad.

Alba (Alba), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:17 (twenty-one years ago)

Dead set. My old school chaplin was seriously christian, and he said the bible's a load of old cobblers.

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:19 (twenty-one years ago)

*nod* good point, I dont think any genuine xians I know are really on the creationist wagon. Not that I've actually asked them, but I would hope they arent that daft.

Trayce (trayce), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:28 (twenty-one years ago)

Haha you're all quite brave for taking it to the creationists like this.

You've Got to Pick Up Every Stitch (tracerhand), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:41 (twenty-one years ago)

The creationists are reading this thread but not responding. :)

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:42 (twenty-one years ago)

I just have one question: what's more believable, that an extra-terrestrial force put life on Earth, or that amino acids have mutated into mackerel and trees and human beings?

You've Got to Pick Up Every Stitch (tracerhand), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:52 (twenty-one years ago)

Considering the way humans have trashed this planet, I'd say the former.

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:56 (twenty-one years ago)

But, considering a sperm and an egg can turn into a six-foot person, either'll do me.

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 September 2004 00:57 (twenty-one years ago)

people always want water turned into wine for a miracle.

turning sunlight into wine through unbelievably advanced chemical reactions apparently isn't really impressive enough.

darraghmac, Monday, 13 September 2004 00:58 (twenty-one years ago)

Wine itself is enough of a miracle for me.

You've Got to Pick Up Every Stitch (tracerhand), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:00 (twenty-one years ago)

Turning loaves into fish isn't too far removed from reality, now that they put omega 3 into bread.

Sexual Air Supply (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:00 (twenty-one years ago)

a good book that questions evolution is "darwin's black box"

also, i idea of evolution came before we had knowledge of cells/microbiology. it made more sense back then.

(also, before anyone accuses me of christianity, i will say that i am a deist.)

todd swiss (eliti), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:04 (twenty-one years ago)

i don't think it was turnin loaves into fish exactly, more of a case of feeding three thousand people with just a small portion of each.

or so i seem to recall, at least.

darraghmac, Monday, 13 September 2004 01:05 (twenty-one years ago)

So they all ate and were still quite hungry.

the music mole (colin s barrow), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:11 (twenty-one years ago)

apparently, they were all full actually.

but then, buffet does that to people, spesh at big events.

Darraghmac, Monday, 13 September 2004 01:21 (twenty-one years ago)

It must have been one of the heavier, oilier, saltier fishes. Mackerel?

the music mole (colin s barrow), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:25 (twenty-one years ago)

Possibly a whale shark.

Wooden (Wooden), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:28 (twenty-one years ago)

i dunno, could have been tuna fish or even cod. they're huge.

i wonder if it was white sliced or wholegrain, cos raw fish and wholegrain doth not a happy toilet combination make.

Darraghmac, Monday, 13 September 2004 01:28 (twenty-one years ago)

a good book that questions evolution is "darwin's black box"

i've read that, and still don't know what to make of it. it brings up interesting questions but that last chapter is a bit rubbish and disappointing.

joseph pot (STINKOR™), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:42 (twenty-one years ago)

neither creationism nor evolution are facts.

i keep an open mind to both.

ken c (ken c), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:47 (twenty-one years ago)

although evo prolly wins out if i were to be T/S.

ken c (ken c), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:48 (twenty-one years ago)

just because pro evolution soccer is great.

ken c (ken c), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:49 (twenty-one years ago)

OMFG!!!

I'M WRITING TO KONAMI RIGHT NOW FOR THEM TO MAKE "PRO CREATION SOCCER 3"

ken c (ken c), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:50 (twenty-one years ago)

I have a vision of soccer moms. And it aint pretty.

Trayce (trayce), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:51 (twenty-one years ago)

indeed
http://www.hellomagazine.com/celebrities/specials/elegant03/fotos/victoria-beckham.jpg

ken c (ken c), Monday, 13 September 2004 01:53 (twenty-one years ago)

This is a depressing thread.

Eyeball Kicks (Eyeball Kicks), Monday, 13 September 2004 02:57 (twenty-one years ago)

a good book that questions evolution is "darwin's black box"'

arghh! that book has been roundly debunked. read the book "the Triumph of Evolution and the Failure of Creationism" by Niles Eldridge as a start. It has a pretty thourogh examination of Behe's claims and demolishes them very effectively.

latebloomer (latebloomer), Monday, 13 September 2004 05:45 (twenty-one years ago)

Do creationists generally reject not only evolution but also the idea that the world is really ancient? If they take biblical evidence for divine creation in favour of evolution by natural selection (not the only evolutionary theory as someone mentioned upthread) then they should really also accept the biblical timescale a la Archbishop Ussher and say that the world is only circa 4,000 years old (according to the genealogical table at the beginning of Luke's gospel which traces Jesus's geneaology back to Adam).

and leading on from that, they should also reject radioactive decay and for that matter the Copernican model of the universe in favour of the Ptolemaic one.

Oh and pi =3 , obv.

MarkH (MarkH), Monday, 13 September 2004 07:17 (twenty-one years ago)

MarkH, yes. Some Creationists do believe the Great Flood killed the dinosaurs (and also carved the Grand Canyon).

robster (robster), Monday, 13 September 2004 07:21 (twenty-one years ago)

I think the Flat Earth Society was founded on a literal interpretation of some Bible passages as well.

robster (robster), Monday, 13 September 2004 07:22 (twenty-one years ago)

well, there's 'young earth' creationists who believe in a literalist biblical account of creation and there are 'intelligent design' or 'neo-creationists' who aren't biblical literalists but believe life was designed (implicitly they mean god of course) and so try to disprove darwinian natural selection (and fail every time, though that don't stop 'em).

latebloomer (latebloomer), Monday, 13 September 2004 07:26 (twenty-one years ago)

although there is a psalm which refers to the "cirle of the earth", which is sometimes cited as meaning that the writer knew that the earth was a sphere long before it was Proven by Science and that knowledge could *obviously* only have been imparted to him by divine revelation!

this is incidentally at odds with the Judaic model of the universe at the time the psalms were written which I can't be bothered to describe (there's bound to be a picture of it online somewhere).

MarkH (MarkH), Monday, 13 September 2004 07:27 (twenty-one years ago)

the Great Flood killed the dinosaurs (and also carved the Grand Canyon).

do dinosaurs have souls?

MarkH (MarkH), Monday, 13 September 2004 07:30 (twenty-one years ago)

the T-rexes have R-souls

ken c (ken c), Monday, 13 September 2004 10:05 (twenty-one years ago)

According to quantum theory, there is a small but real possibility that the earth could have popped into being spontaneously, fossils, lungfish, bacteria, republicans and all. Problem is, such an event would only happen once in the time span of a trillion trillion trillion consecutive universes.

Markelby (Mark C), Monday, 13 September 2004 10:11 (twenty-one years ago)

We live in a 4 dimensional bubble of low entropy caused by a hugely improbable quantum event.

Jarlr'mai (jarlrmai), Monday, 13 September 2004 11:15 (twenty-one years ago)

which is sometimes cited as meaning that the writer knew that the earth was a sphere long before it was Proven by Science and that knowledge could *obviously* only have been imparted to him by divine revelation!

Well, that would be nonsense. Plenty of people thought the earth was round before science showed it to be so. The idea that everyone thought the earth was flat is a myth.

Alba (Alba), Monday, 13 September 2004 11:17 (twenty-one years ago)

I only half-read this thread, but a post upthread that I only sort of caught seemed like a great piece of logic:

If God created all species, why don't squirrels have churches?

dave225 (Dave225), Monday, 13 September 2004 11:29 (twenty-one years ago)

god wanted them to play with their nuts.

latebloomer (latebloomer), Monday, 13 September 2004 11:43 (twenty-one years ago)

Our bubble has a 6 dimensional twin somewhere - we could feasibly escape the big crunch by jumping from our universe to our twin at the right moment.

Markelby (Mark C), Monday, 13 September 2004 13:18 (twenty-one years ago)

mmm, big crunch.

RJG (RJG), Monday, 13 September 2004 13:26 (twenty-one years ago)

The funniest creationism conversation I've ever heard: my mom and some missionary chatting about it, where she asked him about the 7 day thing, and he replied, very straight faced and calmly, that we have to think of God like we do dogs: dog years are the equivalent of 7 human years, right? Well, it is like that, for God as well. Except instead of 7 human years, it could maybe be like 100 human years or more, but to God it is a year.

Allyzay Science Explosion (allyzay), Monday, 13 September 2004 14:07 (twenty-one years ago)

One thing catches my attention here: Ken claiming that evolution isn't a scientific fact. It is. Simple as that. The exact mechanics of its details are still being debated and explored, but there is no doubt that it has happened, unless you choose to invoke God tricking us all, with fossil and continuing experimental evidence, which means you are abandoning the idea of 'scientific fact' entirely.

As for catastrophism vs gradualism, I think both look like being subsumed by complexity theory, the many models and examples that that is producing that show order emerging absolutely inevitably from complex systems - this isn't just mathematical, it demonstrates autocatalytic sets emerging from random chemicals, and these sets are gaining ground as a bottom-line definition of 'life', and other complex biological processes, to do with cell formation, embryonic cell differentiation, the way amino acids work and so on. (I wrote a little basic stuff about this on FT ages ago.) I'm far from an expert, but there are very rich and striking correlations with what evolution actually does. This would explain both gradual change and catastrophic change very nicely. I suspect it will also provide answers to the awkward questions about complex biological sructures that have no obviously useful intermediate stages - the eye is the most popular example - as it seems to show how complex structures can snap together out of very little.

I've no idea what Mark is talking about re the big crunch (which there is not evidence to support yet) and a six-dimensional twin. Is this the ten dimensions of string/m-brane theory? They're a bit small to hide in, I'm afraid.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Monday, 13 September 2004 14:07 (twenty-one years ago)

Nver mind all that, dude, when do we get superpowers?

B.A.R.M.S. (Barima), Monday, 13 September 2004 15:10 (twenty-one years ago)

Martin skidmore so OTM it hurts!

latebloomer (latebloomer), Monday, 13 September 2004 15:14 (twenty-one years ago)

One thing catches my attention here: Ken claiming that evolution isn't a scientific fact. It is. Simple as that. The exact mechanics of its details are still being debated and explored, but there is no doubt that it has happened, unless you choose to invoke God tricking us all, with fossil and continuing experimental evidence, which means you are abandoning the idea of 'scientific fact' entirely.

I guess you're right really. I suppose when I hear the word "fact" it gives me the impression that there is no elements of doubt. and i keep thinking that maybe someday somebody will discover something that totally disproves this and will give strong evidences for some totally different theory about how we begun. Like, evolution is the most plausible theory that we have now, a little like at the time how a lot of religious dudes thousands (etc) of years ago thought God had made everything. While I think that evolution is probably what happened (maybe from a single celled thingie or other stuff) i just don't feel comfortable calling something as fact without being totally sure because that implies that we should give up on exploring any other possibilities further.

but thinking like this would mean that very little things in the world are "facts".

ken c (ken c), Monday, 13 September 2004 15:34 (twenty-one years ago)

i'm interested to know what todd means about darwinism making more sense before the discovery of microbiology

trans = i am too lazy/busy to read "darwin's black box"

You've Got to Pick Up Every Stitch (tracerhand), Monday, 13 September 2004 17:12 (twenty-one years ago)

evolution as an idea came before the knowledge of cells in human beings and how intricate they actually are.

without the knowledge of cells and how complex they are, it is easier to believe that evolution could have occured.

heck, i believe that both creationism and evolution are far-fetched, i just think creationism is a little less far-fetched.

todd swiss (eliti), Monday, 13 September 2004 19:18 (twenty-one years ago)

oookay

oops (Oops), Monday, 13 September 2004 19:37 (twenty-one years ago)

The problem is we couldn't live in a six dimensional universe the way a two-dimensional being couldn't live in ours - the space we experienced would be infinitely bigger than the space it experienced.

Martin, although there are theories that state the 5th+ dimensions in our universe are subatomic in size, the alternateive theory of our ten-dimensional universe splitting in two means that there may well be a 6-dimensional universe into which we could tunnel via a wormhole just as our universe collapses on itself.

Markelby (Mark C), Monday, 13 September 2004 20:37 (twenty-one years ago)

Todd, read some stuff on complexity theory - there is a lot of stuff there making the evolutionary development of cells much easier to understand. I'd recommend 'At Home In The Universe' by Stuart Kauffman. I think it explains its maths pretty well, but I have always found maths easy, so I can't really tell.

I hadn't heard that version of ten-d space, Mark. Where does it come from? It can't be accommodated within string or m-brane theory, as far as I understand them, which isn't all that far to be honest. Those theories need those tiny curled-up dimensions to work - though not necessarily ten, as there are versions with 11 or 26 dimensions.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Monday, 13 September 2004 21:46 (twenty-one years ago)

do you believe you were made, in God's image, todd swiss?

RJG (RJG), Monday, 13 September 2004 23:39 (twenty-one years ago)

26 dimensions = most TRUE FACTUAL thing evah!!!

You've Got to Pick Up Every Stitch (tracerhand), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 00:20 (twenty-one years ago)

rjg, no.

todd swiss (eliti), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 02:05 (twenty-one years ago)

todd rhymes with god

ken c (ken c), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 02:07 (twenty-one years ago)

the T-rexes have R-souls

"The dinosaurs they moved their cars
And the souls they rolled the bones
But their teeth tasted none so sweet
As I did when I sighed to thee...
OH WATCH ME NOW!"

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 02:16 (twenty-one years ago)

http://www.discovercreation.org/kidpage/cartoon-dino-web.gif

the ex, jeremy (x Jeremy), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 02:17 (twenty-one years ago)

Guys you are not counting on how omnipotent god is. Everythign you observe is created by His will. That includes your senses and observations. So really, there are no "facts", just the observations that He wants you to have. When a satellite shows you a picture of a round earth, that is just His way of testing you: do you really know that it is round or did he just make it look that way in the picture, and it's really flat? The answer is, only He knows. You must have faith in His plan, and not question whether the earth is round. If He wants you to know, He will reveal it with a miraculous message passed down to those who have the greatest faith. Is this pissing you off? Hell I so hate christians who try to "explain" things to you. What a useless waste of belief system. Aja, if you have to deal with these screwed up people, just don't argue if you can possibly avoid it. It will just infuriate you and create deep resentment that will make you sour, which is what they want, so they can pretend to make you feel better with their screwed up system. Just smile and don't participate. Know how screwed up they are and how little they will ever really accomplish with beliefs made out of air. You wil be free in a few years. If you have to argue, knock em down by comparing them to "the flat earth." (I love Thomas Dolby.)

Queen Electric Butt Prober BZZT!! BZZZZZT!! (Queen Electric Butt Prober BZZ), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 07:05 (twenty-one years ago)

Awesome, Aja just got you all to do her homework for her. Pwned, I'd say.

suzy (suzy), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 07:31 (twenty-one years ago)

Aja doesn't think it manipulative, cynical terms like that, Suzy.

Martin, I'm (probably incorrectly) repeating something from Michio Kaku's "Hyperspace" about the 4 and 6 dimensional universes being side by side. I'll see if I can find the appropriate chapter. Bear in mind though that the book is now ten years old.

Markelby (Mark C), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 08:54 (twenty-one years ago)

One person's manipulation is another person's practicality, I've found (I thwarted dozens of highly coercive attempts to get me to complete others' homework for them at this age which is why I still get snotty about being copied, honestly). And the only person who can tell you what she's thinking is Aja.

suzy (suzy), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 09:20 (twenty-one years ago)

i guess any kind of "research" in this kind of debate would be copying of some sort. reading others opinions, and absorbing them and then debating about it from what is learnt.

aja just happened to have found a good (or really bad depending on your assessment of the quality of the arguments here) place to ask the question, i guess. it'd be nice if she does let us know if she will happen to use any of these in her debates/essays though.

ken c (ken c), Tuesday, 14 September 2004 13:21 (twenty-one years ago)

two years pass...

only in America? unfortunately, it's spreading.

http://evolutie.blog.com/ (dutch, sorry)

The Dutch EO (Evangelical TV station) has broadcast BBC's Attenborough series The Life Of Mammals, but they have edited out every mention of evolution, and they've even released a DVD Series that contains 3 discs and no book, instead of the 4 dvd's + book that the BBC have made. (missing: episode 10, that mentions human evolution)

Can they do that? Buy the rights to a (BBC) series and just cut and paste in every episode, and then sell it, labeled like a BBC/Attenborough production?

StanM, Monday, 30 July 2007 13:52 (eighteen years ago)

three months pass...

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v201/sevenxviii/evoclock.jpg

Curt1s Stephens, Tuesday, 13 November 2007 05:33 (eighteen years ago)

Thou shalt have no gods before Seth Thomas.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 13 November 2007 05:33 (eighteen years ago)

three weeks pass...

scientist fired for not understanding science

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 10 December 2007 18:55 (eighteen years ago)

am I wrong in believing this guy's lawsuit doesn't have a prayer

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 10 December 2007 18:57 (eighteen years ago)

Abraham, 35, is now a biology professor at Liberty University

That's all I need to read.

Ned Raggett, Monday, 10 December 2007 18:57 (eighteen years ago)

God is a midget who loves bowling

Bo Jackson Overdrive, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 05:20 (eighteen years ago)

Abraham, 35, is now a biology professor at Liberty University

heaven needed a pseudoscientist?

darraghmac, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 11:26 (eighteen years ago)

This would be no different from a church firing a priest for not believing in the bible, if the bible were true.

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 13:45 (eighteen years ago)

http://i15.tinypic.com/6z5zeoj.jpg

StanM, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 14:04 (eighteen years ago)

That's hilarious

Bill Magill, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 15:22 (eighteen years ago)

I do really love the image of a giant pair of Tyranosaurus foot peacefully tramping across the garden of eden once in a while.

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 15:23 (eighteen years ago)

No no, after Adam's sin, T-Rex looking on all sympathetic while Adam and Even ate by their toil and the stone bruised their heel or whatevs. A sad sight for a dinosaur to see.

Abbott, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 15:27 (eighteen years ago)

The Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination dismissed the case this year, saying Abraham's request not to work on evolutionary aspects of research would be difficult for Woods Hole because its work is based on evolutionary theories.

:)

Abbott, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 15:27 (eighteen years ago)

o right, after adam's sin. I'm doing it wrong.

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 15:28 (eighteen years ago)

Their skies were clouded with pterodactyls, rocs, flamingoes, and pepper moths.

Abbott, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 15:43 (eighteen years ago)

Who wrote genesis again? adam or eve? or was it noah? or abel? cain? jospeh and his amazing technicolor dreamcoat?

Will M., Wednesday, 12 December 2007 16:01 (eighteen years ago)

i would read andrew lloyd webber's bible

darraghmac, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 16:05 (eighteen years ago)

true story: i was once isaachar in a production of dreamcoat :(

Will M., Wednesday, 12 December 2007 16:07 (eighteen years ago)

I have been Asher and Napthali and both times sung Benjamin Calypso!

Bo Jackson Overdrive, Thursday, 13 December 2007 03:22 (eighteen years ago)

one month passes...

Good news/follow-up to this post of mine:
TS: Creationism vs. Evolution

The Evangelical TV station that sold an adapted version of BBC's The Life Of Mammals DVD series (without the final episode that mentions human evolution) has received a complaint by the BBC and they've had to remove all copies from shops.

(the following article is in Dutch again, sorry)
http://www.gva.be/nieuws/Media_Cultuur/default.asp?art={FFFA689D-D70F-4D48-BD31-8C8712340494}

StanM, Monday, 28 January 2008 17:53 (eighteen years ago)

(just copy/paste that whole line if you want to read it/know Dutch)

StanM, Monday, 28 January 2008 17:53 (eighteen years ago)

four months pass...

http://i31.tinypic.com/2n6dpfk.jpg

StanM, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:04 (eighteen years ago)

("Evolution is a fairy tale for grown-ups!" - So, exactly like religion then?)

StanM, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:06 (eighteen years ago)

life starting from some perfect being that popped into existence and made everything...

vs

life starting from very simple single cell organisms that became more complex over time.

jeremy waters, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:10 (eighteen years ago)

I bet god evolved before he created the big bang.

StanM, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:11 (eighteen years ago)

THE FOSSILS SAY NO! = classic, though

StanM, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:11 (eighteen years ago)

well, that it explains everything then.

xp

jeremy waters, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:13 (eighteen years ago)

-it

jeremy waters, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:13 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah, we just solved the problem! ^5 !

StanM, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:14 (eighteen years ago)

Waht's the tape on his head for?

libcrypt, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:41 (eighteen years ago)

No idea - I thought it was a backwards baseball cap, but I just got the picture forwarded to me as well, no source info at all

StanM, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:44 (eighteen years ago)

The whole pic makes more sense if it's tape I think.

libcrypt, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:52 (eighteen years ago)

not his car?

gff, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:56 (eighteen years ago)

I thought this was just a couple of guys seeing this car parked along the side of the road & going "take a picture!" while going "lol, awesome!"

StanM, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 19:14 (eighteen years ago)

it's a book by that **** Gish

http://www.amazon.com/Evolution-the-Fossils-Say-No/dp/0890510466

StanM, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 19:18 (eighteen years ago)

he's the top scientist on the whole fossil records project, obviously. next month he's publishing his findings on homosexuality on the hood of a '93 celica. "ADAM AND EVE NOT ADAM AND STEVE GOD BLESS AMERICA!"

andrew m., Wednesday, 28 May 2008 19:20 (eighteen years ago)

no. fucking. way. THAT IS SO AWESOME

RabiesAngentleman, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 19:24 (eighteen years ago)

NO being barked out of a triceratops skull is soooooo classic

RabiesAngentleman, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 19:26 (eighteen years ago)

seven months pass...

Evolution in action:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7840404.stm

I'm sure there have been other well-documented cases of evolution being observed in the wild, but this is the first one I've heard of.

NotEnough, Wednesday, 21 January 2009 13:00 (seventeen years ago)

So while they may be the butt of many jokes, it would be foolish to pooh-pooh their talents.

FUCK YOUUUUUU

JtM Is Ruled By A Black Man (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Wednesday, 21 January 2009 13:19 (seventeen years ago)

lol

my president is black, my skyhawk's blue (Curt1s Stephens), Wednesday, 21 January 2009 13:51 (seventeen years ago)

i don't know where else to link this to, but this an interesting article:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/20/health/views/20essa.html?_r=2

Remember when life was simpler, and diets weren’t full of processed food and chemicals? No, not the 1950s. Increasingly, we are developing nostalgia for a much earlier epoch: the Pleistocene, when humans lived in small hunter-gatherer groups and didn’t worry about high cholesterol.

Although the box-office lure of skimpy fur garments cannot be underestimated, movies like “10,000 B.C.” are popular because they appeal to our sense that life used to be more in sync with the environment. A recent cartoon shows one of those evolutionary progressions — ape to man walking upright to man slouched over a computer — with the caption “Somewhere, something has gone terribly wrong.”

Maybe our woes arise because our Stone Age genes are thrust into Space Age life. That beer gut? It comes from eating too many processed carbohydrates; our bodies evolved to eat only unrefined foods, mainly meat, and we get out of kilter veering from our ancestral diet.

Food allergies and digestive woes? We, like other mammals, aren’t meant to consume dairy products after weaning. When politicians fall from grace after committing adultery, some commentator will always point out that such behavior has evolutionary roots: weren’t the best procreators alpha males with roving eyes?

In short, we have what the anthropologist Leslie Aiello called “paleofantasies.” She was referring to stories about human evolution based on limited fossil evidence, but the term applies just as well to nostalgia for the very old days as a touchstone for the way life is supposed to be and why it sometimes feels so out of balance.

As an evolutionary biologist, I was filled with enthusiasm at first over the idea of a modern mismatch between everyday life and our evolutionary past. But a closer look reveals that not all evolutionary ideas are created equal; even for Darwinians, the devil is in the details. The notion that there was a time of perfect adaptation, from which we’ve now deviated, is a caricature of the way evolution works.

First, when exactly was this age of harmony, and what was it like? Scavenging, or eating the carcasses of dead animals left by (or stolen from) predators like lions, was probably replaced by active hunting and accumulation of wild plants about 55,000 years ago, and agriculture seems to have begun a mere 10,000 years ago. We did a lot of different things during each of these times.

How much of the diet during our idyllic hunter-gatherer past was meat, and what kind of plants and animals were used, varied widely in time and space. Inuits had different diets from Australian aboriginals or Neotropical forest dwellers. And we know little about the details of early family structure and other aspects of behavior. So the argument that we are “meant” to eat a certain proportion of meat, say, is highly questionable. Which of our human ancestors are we using as models?

But the difficulty with using our hunter-gatherer selves as icons of well-being goes much deeper. It is not as if we finally achieved harmony with our environment during the Pleistocene, heaved a sigh of relief and stopped.

Instead, evolution lurches along, with successive generations sometimes unchanged, sometimes better suited to their surroundings in some ways but not others. At any one point, adaptations take place: individuals who can endure heat or cold or famine leave more offspring than their less hardy counterparts. But there is no one point when one can say, “Voilà! Finished.”

Did our cave-dwelling forebears feel nostalgia for the days before they were bipedal? Were hunter-gatherers convinced that swiping a gazelle from a lion was superior to that newfangled business of running it down yourself? And why stop there? Why not long to be aquatic, since life arose in the sea? For that matter, it might be nice to be unicellular: after all, cancer arises because our differentiated tissues run amok. Single cells don’t get cancer.

You might argue that hunter-gatherers were better adapted to their environment simply because they spent many thousands of years at it — much longer than we’ve spent sitting in front of a computer or eating Mars bars. That’s true for some attributes, but not all. Evolution isn’t the creaky old process we used to think it was. Increasingly, scientists are discovering that the rate of evolution can be fast (sometimes blindingly so) or slow, or anything in between.

Take dairy products, one of the classic modern foods we supposedly aren’t meant to eat. Most people who can’t tolerate them lack a gene that confers the ability to break down lactose, the sugar in milk, after the age of weaning. Our Stone Age ancestors couldn’t digest milk as adults either, but a recent study shows that about 5,000 years ago, mutations that keep that gene switched on spread throughout Northern Europe. That’s also when cattle began to be domesticated; being able to drink milk as well as lower-lactose cheese would have been advantageous as a source of nutrition and fluids.

Interestingly, lactose tolerance is also found in some African populations; the mutations for it are different from the ones found in Europeans, but the results are the same. This major change in diet — and genes — happened within an evolutionary blink of an eye.

We have never been a seamless match with the environment. Instead, our adaptation is more like a broken zipper, with some teeth that align and others that gape apart. The paleontologist Neal Shubin points out that our inner fish constrains the human body’s performance and health, because adaptations that arose in one environment bedevil us in another. Hiccups, hernias and hemorrhoids are all caused by an imperfect transfer of anatomical technology from our fish ancestors.

This isn’t to say that we wouldn’t be better off eating fewer processed foods. And certainly we have health concerns that never struck our ancestors. But we shouldn’t flagellate ourselves for having modern bodies, and we shouldn’t assume that tweaking our diets or our posture will rescue us from all our current ills. That’s just a paleofantasy about the future.

Marlene Zuk is a biology professor at the University of California, Riverside, and the author of “Riddled with Life.”

"Set phasers to thrill!" (latebloomer), Wednesday, 21 January 2009 20:08 (seventeen years ago)

Here's a rather long and technical piece on observed instances of speciation. The reason creationists don't believe in speciation is that they expect a chicken to transform into a chimpanzee before our very eyes. Unfortunately the only instances we humans are likely to observe in our lifetimes are on the order of plants, fruit-flies, and bacteria.

ledge, Wednesday, 21 January 2009 22:52 (seventeen years ago)

LOL at "Although the box-office lure of skimpy fur garments cannot be underestimated, movies like “10,000 B.C.” are popular . . ."

Budget
$105,000,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend
$35,867,488 (USA) (9 March 2008) (3,410 Screens)
Gross
$94,770,548 (USA) (15 June 2008)

Pancakes Hussein Obama (Pancakes Hackman), Wednesday, 21 January 2009 23:32 (seventeen years ago)

one year passes...

really interesting article

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2010/mar/19/evolution-darwin-natural-selection-genes-wrong

Take, to begin with, the Swedish chickens. Three years ago, researchers led by a professor at the university of Linköping in Sweden created a henhouse that was specially designed to make its chicken occupants feel stressed. The lighting was manipulated to make the rhythms of night and day unpredictable, so the chickens lost track of when to eat or roost. Unsurprisingly, perhaps, they showed a significant decrease in their ability to learn how to find food hidden in a maze.

The surprising part is what happened next: the chickens were moved back to a non-stressful environment, where they conceived and hatched chicks who were raised without stress – and yet these chicks, too, demonstrated unexpectedly poor skills at finding food in a maze. They appeared to have inherited a problem that had been induced in their mothers through the environment. Further research established that the inherited change had altered the chicks' "gene expression" – the way certain genes are turned "on" or "off", bestowing any given animal with specific traits. The stress had affected the mother hens on a genetic level, and they had passed it on to their offspring.

it is just like an unknown puzzle till the end of the world (dyao), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 01:46 (sixteen years ago)

last night I watched a show on this exact subject on pbs

iatee, Wednesday, 24 March 2010 01:48 (sixteen years ago)

they used the same Swedish story too

iatee, Wednesday, 24 March 2010 01:49 (sixteen years ago)

if the article is right then by posting on ilx you're guaranteeing your children are going to end up as shut-in aspie weirdoes

it is just like an unknown puzzle till the end of the world (dyao), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 01:53 (sixteen years ago)

I sorta wish that I still didn't know that eating junk food / living poorly is gonna give my grandkids cancer!

iatee, Wednesday, 24 March 2010 02:00 (sixteen years ago)

It would be an interesting article if it didn't feel the need to equate 'it's more complicated than we previously thought' with 'omg Darwin ur dumm!!!' I realise that he only uses this to get a hook into the reader with controversial talking-points (and then BIG REVEAL at the end - maybe Darwin wasn't so dumb after all!), but it makes it impossible to take him seriously.

For instance: What if Darwin's theory of evolution – or, at least, Darwin's theory of evolution as most of us learned it at school and believe we understand it – is, in crucial respects, not entirely accurate?

Anyone who knows even one iota knows that the scientific consensus is NOT 'Darwin's theory of evolution as most of us learned it at school'.

For much of the late Noughties, a week never seemed to pass without one new book or news story attributing some facet of modern-day life to the evolutionary past: men were more prone to sexual jealousy than women because a woman who conceives becomes unavailable for imminent future acts of reproduction; men preferred women with waist-to-hip ratios of 0.7 because of natural selection.

Most of these stories were financed by companies attempting to promote a product by news coverage (see also: most miserable day of the year). The fact that they were ever taken seriously is the fault of writers like this.

Referencing Coulter = UH

Also, Fodor appears to be either inserting a straw-man semantic interpretation or making a wild logical leap in his argument, but I'm not sure whether to blame him or Burkeman, here.

So yeah, interesting research but terrible article.

emil.y, Wednesday, 24 March 2010 02:19 (sixteen years ago)

yeah really didn't understand wtf that coulter quotation was there for

iatee, Wednesday, 24 March 2010 02:23 (sixteen years ago)

It would be an interesting article if it didn't feel the need to equate 'it's more complicated than we previously thought' with 'omg Darwin ur dumm!!!' I realise that he only uses this to get a hook into the reader with controversial talking-points (and then BIG REVEAL at the end - maybe Darwin wasn't so dumb after all!), but it makes it impossible to take him seriously.

^
seriously.

here come the friday afternoon dick emoticons (latebloomer), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 02:24 (sixteen years ago)

re the Coulter, I'm pretty sure there have been takes on evolution since at least the early part of the 20th century (and since it is v. far from my area of expertise, probably much farther back) that have focussed on how survival of the fittest isn't a useful way to think of it, because in reality through lots of chance happenings (i.e. natural disasters, living somewhere with unusually abundant food supplies and no predators - it really is in a large way just a matter of who happens to not end up dead) lots of weird, not particularly 'fit' mechanisms survive and that's where the interesting things happen and peculiar things come into being. So (shi that was a long sentence) to give it any credit as a criticism seems kinda crazy to me.

FC Tom Tomsk Club (Merdeyeux), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 02:31 (sixteen years ago)

I'm staggered that newspaper journalists can't understand evolutionary theory tbh

Benday Bully (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 02:34 (sixteen years ago)

hate the game, not the player

it is just like an unknown puzzle till the end of the world (dyao), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 02:37 (sixteen years ago)

can we go back to talking about how eating big macs may make your grandkids fat

it is just like an unknown puzzle till the end of the world (dyao), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 02:37 (sixteen years ago)

or worse!

iatee, Wednesday, 24 March 2010 02:40 (sixteen years ago)

Nah sorry obviously those dudes are qualified to talk about the world outside their own crippling alcoholic haze

Benday Bully (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 02:42 (sixteen years ago)

anyway I want my kids to be race car drivers, so I've resolved to always drive above the speed limit, also to save up money and buy a japanese sports car

it is just like an unknown puzzle till the end of the world (dyao), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 03:13 (sixteen years ago)

I would rather schools teach students that we were all formed from magic LEGOs than teach creationism

Usain Bolt Cola (Cattle Grind), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 04:59 (sixteen years ago)

I'd rather they teach creationism but giggle throughout

hope this helps (Granny Dainger), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 05:52 (sixteen years ago)

it's fine to teach creationism imo, but only on the morning of April 1st.

tomofthenest, Wednesday, 24 March 2010 09:32 (sixteen years ago)

There shd be space to teach Creationism in the context of some kind of Philosophy of Science/Epistemology course, which ought to be considered as important as yr basic GCSE-level science classes.

Benday Bully (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 09:36 (sixteen years ago)

ah yer bugger, I'd just written the same thing but less succinctly

tomofthenest, Wednesday, 24 March 2010 09:37 (sixteen years ago)

Have been reading about Fodor's thesis + book in philosophy and science blogs for months now. I still don't understand his basic point and the overwhelming consensus on both sides is that he's an idiot.

the big pink suede panda bear hurts (ledge), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 09:38 (sixteen years ago)

I've always been of the opinion that there must be some measure of genetic passing-down of what are perhaps non physical traits. Look at how cats know how to clean themselves maybe. Instinct stuff, I guess I mean (someone will probably correct me and say theyre taught by mummy cat).

Anyway - it doesn't seem outside the realm of possibility that behaviours and other mental traits aren't passed along genetically! But then I get into the idea of the collective unconcious and everyone's gonna glaze over, so.

PS I didnt go to college.

ABBAcab (Trayce), Wednesday, 24 March 2010 09:39 (sixteen years ago)

some of that, like cats cleaning, might be acquired through play. eg, if a newborn baby was left alone in a house for 10 years ( being fed, cleaned etc by a robot ) would it learn to use a computer, a tv, to play ball or strum a guitar, assuming these items were available?

(nb this is a thought experiment, please do not try it at home)

tomofthenest, Wednesday, 24 March 2010 09:48 (sixteen years ago)

no. it would be a fucked up feral child.

iatee, Wednesday, 24 March 2010 12:10 (sixteen years ago)

two weeks pass...

almost like a welcome-home present, i arrive in knoxville just in time for an attempted book-banning:

http://www.metropulse.com/news/2010/apr/08/ban-science-book-school-board-delays-action/

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 8 April 2010 15:18 (sixteen years ago)

(certainly can make a case that the use of the word "myth" here is almost deliberately provocative, but it's also sort of comical to me how flimsy people must think their children's faith is if it can be shaken by seeing one word on one page of a textbook. also, christians in the bible belt playing persecuted and using civil-rights language -- bias, intolerance, discrimination -- is always good entertainment.)

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 8 April 2010 15:22 (sixteen years ago)

and now it's on fox news. (or at least, the complaining dad is. nobody from the school system or anyone else. of course.)

yup this might get fun.

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 8 April 2010 16:46 (sixteen years ago)

five months pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dgZUV-_S5zM

This is the fellow who's book, snappily titled 'The Origin Of Species Nonsense' was going to be launched by the Irish science minister before someone told him it might look a bit...you know...mad.

Comedy Gold.

Duncan Donuts (Ned Trifle II), Tuesday, 14 September 2010 10:38 (fifteen years ago)

oh, you can laugh about it.

our minister for science is the brother of our minister for finance, FYI. they apparently share a grá mór for outlandish and ridiculous theories

k¸ (darraghmac), Tuesday, 14 September 2010 10:43 (fifteen years ago)

Well, I was going to post it to the Irish politics thread...

Duncan Donuts (Ned Trifle II), Tuesday, 14 September 2010 11:31 (fifteen years ago)

it's there already, don't worry :)

k¸ (darraghmac), Tuesday, 14 September 2010 11:32 (fifteen years ago)

Ha! Well if you can't laugh at yourself who can you...etc.

Duncan Donuts (Ned Trifle II), Tuesday, 14 September 2010 11:40 (fifteen years ago)

it's all a bit irish

k¸ (darraghmac), Tuesday, 14 September 2010 11:56 (fifteen years ago)

one year passes...

South Korea surrenders to creationist demands

Mention creationism, and many scientists think of the United States, where efforts to limit the teaching of evolution have made headway in a couple of states1. But the successes are modest compared with those in South Korea, where the anti-evolution sentiment seems to be winning its battle with mainstream science.

A petition to remove references to evolution from high-school textbooks claimed victory last month after the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MEST) revealed that many of the publishers would produce revised editions that exclude examples of the evolution of the horse or of avian ancestor Archaeopteryx. The move has alarmed biologists, who say that they were not consulted. “The ministry just sent the petition out to the publishing companies and let them judge,” says Dayk Jang, an evolutionary scientist at Seoul National University.

The campaign was led by the Society for Textbook Revise (STR), which aims to delete the “error” of evolution from textbooks to “correct” students’ views of the world, according to the society’s website. The society says that its members include professors of biology and high-school science teachers.

The STR is also campaigning to remove content about “the evolution of humans” and “the adaptation of finch beaks based on habitat and mode of sustenance”, a reference to one of the most famous observations in Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species. To back its campaign, the group highlights recent discoveries that Archaeopteryx is one of many feathered dinosaurs, and not necessarily an ancestor of all birds2. Exploiting such debates over the lineage of species “is a typical strategy of creation scientists to attack the teaching of evolution itself”, says Joonghwan Jeon, an evolutionary psychologist at Kyung Hee University in Yongin.

Elvis Telecom, Monday, 11 June 2012 19:30 (fourteen years ago)

one year passes...

ffs, harry anderson, why?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZ6bUfOVf1g

Daniel, Esq 2, Sunday, 4 May 2014 22:52 (twelve years ago)

Should be worth the watch if only for laughs.

tsrobodo, Sunday, 4 May 2014 23:10 (twelve years ago)

WHO WILL WIN THE BIG DEBATE?

Daniel, Esq 2, Sunday, 4 May 2014 23:15 (twelve years ago)

The winners will be the people who ignore this completely.

Everyone else is a loser. That includes people watching it/blogging about it for laughs/ironically.

▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 4 May 2014 23:39 (twelve years ago)

Well then we've all already lost but the melodramatic bathos of the trailer music plus the hokey, adds up to blue kryptonite for me.

tsrobodo, Monday, 5 May 2014 01:33 (twelve years ago)

two years pass...

Punctuated equilibrium comin' at you in the Anthropocene

El Tomboto, Sunday, 27 November 2016 16:23 (nine years ago)

https://aeon.co/essays/on-epigenetics-we-need-both-darwin-s-and-lamarck-s-theories

epigenetic information transfer sounds like stochastic resonance for your phenotype

El Tomboto, Friday, 9 December 2016 02:02 (nine years ago)


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