Evolution is real. Its a real thing that really does happen and did happen. Gah!

Altorin

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May 16, 2008
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texanarob said:
Altorin said:
texanarob said:
Mine has stood the test of time without any contradicting evidence.
zero times anything is zero
Yes indeed. Are you implying that the Bible offers zero contradict-able pieces of information? I have not claimed that the inability to disprove creationism proves it, merely that it hasn't been changed to fit new facts, because it doesn't need to be.
I'm implying that if you have no evidence that is actually evidence in any real sense of the word, boasting that you have no contradictory evidence is silly.
 

evilneko

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texanarob said:
evilneko said:
texanarob said:
As far as the original subject, Creationism hasn't been destroyed. Many weak willed individuals have succumbed to the pressure and stopped teaching it in their churches, but the science is inconclusive either way. You have many holes in your theory that are constantly being patched up. Mine has stood the test of time without any contradicting evidence.
I'm not quite sure how you can call the entirety of biology and other studies including phylogeny "inconclusive" nor is it "either way" since there is absolutely no evidence for any alternative nor is the alternative that you're likely pushing scientific in any way.


Oh, and bacteria don't take part in macroevolution. Microevolution - the adaptation of a creature to it's surroundings through loss/corruption of genetic information is proven. It has limits though.
There is no macro/micro evolution. There is evolution, full stop. Asserting that there is some sort of difference requires you to show proof of a mechanism to stop micro from becoming macro and is like saying we could never reach the moon because the Wright brothers didn't get there.
Read the above posts. There are thousands of pieces of evidence we can use to reach a conclusion of our origins. However, these pieces can fit together in multiple ways, one of which is atheistic evolution. Another theory is theistic evolution, which doesn't match up biblically, which I presume holds little sway in your opinion. My personal theory of choice is described perfectly in Genesis, and all evidence supports the genesis account of the early days of the planet and of man.

There is a huge difference in macro and micro evolution. Micro evolution tells me I can make a better bicycle by changing a few design parameters. Macro evolution implies that if I change enough basic design parameters, without adding any new information, I can make the bicycle into a motorbike, into a car, into a jet engine.
You have some serious misunderstandings of what evolution actually is, and what the theory of evolution actually means. Likely this is because you've spent too much time listening to the likes of Ken Ham, Kent Hovind, and/or Ray Comfort.

Here, have a look at the NCSE's evolution primers [http://ncse.com/evolution/science/evolution-primers], and/or the evolution FAQs at Talk Origins [http://talkorigins.org/origins/faqs-evolution.html]. If you prefer audiovisual material, I suggest potholer54's Made Easy series [http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDB23537556D7AADB&feature=plcp], or for more detail, cdk007's evolution playlist [http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLF626DD5B2C1F0A87&feature=plcp]. Of particular interest is cdk007's How Evolution Causes an Increase in Information [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I14KTshLUkg&feature=plcp].

However if you want to directly address the creationist mistakes, misrepresentations, and outright fabrications that you seem to cling to, you may want to look at the following:

Textual:
The Talk Origins Index to Creationist Claims [http://talkorigins.org/indexcc/]

Audiovisual:
AronRa's Foundational Falsehoods of Creationism series [http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL126AFB53A6F002CC&feature=plcp]
Thunderf00t's Why Do People Laugh at Creationists? series [http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLAC3481305829426D&feature=plcp]
 

texanarob

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evilneko said:
texanarob said:
evilneko said:
texanarob said:
As far as the original subject, Creationism hasn't been destroyed. Many weak willed individuals have succumbed to the pressure and stopped teaching it in their churches, but the science is inconclusive either way. You have many holes in your theory that are constantly being patched up. Mine has stood the test of time without any contradicting evidence.
I'm not quite sure how you can call the entirety of biology and other studies including phylogeny "inconclusive" nor is it "either way" since there is absolutely no evidence for any alternative nor is the alternative that you're likely pushing scientific in any way.


Oh, and bacteria don't take part in macroevolution. Microevolution - the adaptation of a creature to it's surroundings through loss/corruption of genetic information is proven. It has limits though.
There is no macro/micro evolution. There is evolution, full stop. Asserting that there is some sort of difference requires you to show proof of a mechanism to stop micro from becoming macro and is like saying we could never reach the moon because the Wright brothers didn't get there.
Read the above posts. There are thousands of pieces of evidence we can use to reach a conclusion of our origins. However, these pieces can fit together in multiple ways, one of which is atheistic evolution. Another theory is theistic evolution, which doesn't match up biblically, which I presume holds little sway in your opinion. My personal theory of choice is described perfectly in Genesis, and all evidence supports the genesis account of the early days of the planet and of man.

There is a huge difference in macro and micro evolution. Micro evolution tells me I can make a better bicycle by changing a few design parameters. Macro evolution implies that if I change enough basic design parameters, without adding any new information, I can make the bicycle into a motorbike, into a car, into a jet engine.
You have some serious misunderstandings of what evolution actually is, and what the theory of evolution actually means. Likely this is because you've spent too much time listening to the likes of Ken Ham, Kent Hovind, and/or Ray Comfort.

Here, have a look at the NCSE's evolution primers [http://ncse.com/evolution/science/evolution-primers], and/or the evolution FAQs at Talk Origins [http://talkorigins.org/origins/faqs-evolution.html]. If you prefer audiovisual material, I suggest potholer54's Made Easy series [http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDB23537556D7AADB&feature=plcp], or for more detail, cdk007's evolution playlist [http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLF626DD5B2C1F0A87&feature=plcp]. Of particular interest is cdk007's How Evolution Causes an Increase in Information [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I14KTshLUkg&feature=plcp].

However if you want to directly address the creationist mistakes, misrepresentations, and outright fabrications that you seem to cling to, you may want to look at the following:

Textual:
The Talk Origins Index to Creationist Claims [http://talkorigins.org/indexcc/]

Audiovisual:
AronRa's Foundational Falsehoods of Creationism series [http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL126AFB53A6F002CC&feature=plcp]
Thunderf00t's Why Do People Laugh at Creationists? series [http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLAC3481305829426D&feature=plcp]
Honestly, it will take me a while to read all that. I'm sure it will be interesting, but I'm unlikely to hunt out this thread again once I'm finished. Thanks for the links, whether I agree with them or not I'm sure they will prove informative, and I always like to learn something new.
 

gNetkamiko

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evilneko said:
Why are there still monkeys?

Because my friend, we are monkeys.

Also,



This thread will reach 20+ pages.
We're members of the great apes, actually.

The most significant difference between apes and monkeys is that the latter have tails.
 

Lexodus

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Stagnant said:
Lexodus said:
Stagnant said:
I love you, and thank you.
Yeah, my BTL (Bullshit Tolerance Level), especially when it comes to homosexuality, is EXTREMELY low.
I've screen capped the whole post, and am currently sharing it around. Hope you don't mind, all credit is given to you :)
 

Jegsimmons

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Stagnant said:
by the way, im not a creationist. i just hate when people whine about other people being a creationist because like in the original post, it comes off as narrow minded whining.
If they so choose not to believe in Evolution, let them, it isnt hurting you. if it is, you need some thicker skin.
 

evilneko

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Jun 16, 2011
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Jegsimmons said:
Stagnant said:
by the way, im not a creationist. i just hate when people whine about other people being a creationist because like in the original post, it comes off as narrow minded whining.
If they so choose not to believe in Evolution, let them, it isnt hurting you. if it is, you need some thicker skin.
Assuming they keep it to themselves, and don't try to subvert education or science.
 
May 29, 2011
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EcoEclipse said:
Evolution is (currently) only a theory. For you to take it as irrevocable fact and cry foul at those who don't believe this theory to be plausible (as no theory can in truth be considered correct) is to be a little arrogant and a little closed-minded. Who's to say any other theories aren't just as plausible? You may certainly have your preferred theory, but don't talk down others. Might just so happen that you are proven wrong someday.
Evolution is not a theory. There have been significant experiments proving both micro and macro evolution, and it's apparent through fossils that help map out how species developed. Evolution is a fundamental fact of biology with several fields of research dedicated to studying it.

And you shouldn't accuse someone of arrogance for relying on evidence. It's the opposite of arrogance, the arrogant people are the ones who believe in something with no evidence for it when there's an extremely likely scientifically proven explanation.
 
May 29, 2011
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lacktheknack said:
"Where'd the first incidence of life come from, and how did it come up with a method of reproduction over one lifespan?", "Where are the millions of missing links?", "How did the universal constants end up so finely tuned?" and "How, exactly, does a species evolve a wing without becoming excessively clumsy, and thus die?"
1. Resent experiments seem to indicate that proteins necessary for the development of life develop naturally under certain conditions from certain chemicals that were pretty much covering the oceans around exactly the time when life started to develop. As for the reproduction, well there we're probably about a billion dead micro organisms before the ones that could reproduce started getting around.

2. They died. They were inferior members of a species and thus didn't get to reproduce, there was no place for them. The fossils are still there.

3. I observe, therefore the universe is. You wouldn't be asking that question if the universe wasn't fine tuned enough for you to ask that question, therefore the question is only asked when the universe is fine tuned.

4. I'll admit I'm not exactly an expert on the subject but I'm fairly sure it was the fact that there were millions of things mutating into millions of things and only the things that mutated something usefull that actually worked are still there because the rest died. So only the rat that evolved perfectly into the bird lived, and the rat that evolved a slight physical mutation that resembled a wing but didn't actually allow flight was abandoned by the herd and eaten by predators.

Keep in mind that I didn't go to high school, but the point is all of these questions are answered or being answered, and that you shouldn't deny evidence because some bits of the larger picture are missing. As long as nothing is contradictory with nothing else it's probably not a scam.
 

Altorin

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Use_Imagination_here said:
lacktheknack said:
"Where'd the first incidence of life come from, and how did it come up with a method of reproduction over one lifespan?", "Where are the millions of missing links?", "How did the universal constants end up so finely tuned?" and "How, exactly, does a species evolve a wing without becoming excessively clumsy, and thus die?"
1. Resent experiments seem to indicate that proteins necessary for the development of life develop naturally under certain conditions from certain chemicals that were pretty much covering the oceans around exactly the time when life started to develop. As for the reproduction, well there we're probably about a billion dead micro organisms before the ones that could reproduce started getting around.

2. They died. They were inferior members of a species and thus didn't get to reproduce, there was no place for them. The fossils are still there.

3. I observe, therefore the universe is. You wouldn't be asking that question if the universe wasn't fine tuned enough for you to ask that question, therefore the question is only asked when the universe is fine tuned.

4. I'll admit I'm not exactly an expert on the subject but I'm fairly sure it was the fact that there were millions of things mutating into millions of things and only the things that mutated something usefull that actually worked are still there because the rest died. So only the rat that evolved perfectly into the bird lived, and the rat that evolved a slight physical mutation that resembled a wing but didn't actually allow flight was abandoned by the herd and eaten by predators.

Keep in mind that I didn't go to high school, but the point is all of these questions are answered or being answered, and that you shouldn't deny evidence because some bits of the larger picture are missing. As long as nothing is contradictory with nothing else it's probably not a scam.
basically, but #2 can also be blamed on the fact that fossilization is rare. It seems like it happens a lot because we have lots of fossils, but that's from the trillions and trillions of creatures that have died over millions and millions of years.

And even if every single thing that ever lived was fossilized, there would still be "missing links" because evolution isn't a 3 step process. It's not like it's a straight line from one thing to another through an intermediary. Life just fills whatever niches are in an environment. If there's food that can be eaten by something, something will be there to eat it. And something to eat that, getting bigger and bigger in either size or social complexity until there are apex predators, which in the end are eaten by bacteria.

You can track their evolutionary past backwards, but you'd only ever get single frames in the moving picture of evolution. To paraphrase AronRa, try to find the one picture that shows me going from a baby into a man - if you can't find it that somehow is evidence that I poofed into existence as a grown man? No. Even if you had a picture from every second of my life, there'd never be a noticable change from one picture to the next. You'd never find the picture where I changed from a baby to a man. That's how evolution works.

number 4 is just a simple matter that the different "stages" of evolving wings had either benign effects, or positive effects, and whatever amount of "flight" the wings could do, that's what they did, and the creature benefited from it. It's not like an animal that didn't have wings one day had a kid that had wings. That's again, not how evolution works. Fins evolved, then they evolved into arms, and then they evolved into wings.

You got #3 basically spot on - We live in our universe, and they're the only set of constants we get. If the constants were any other way, we wouldn't be here to observe them. This speaks to a fundamental difference between the mindsets. Creationists tend to believe in a single universe, scientists tend to be more open to the idea of multiple universes. You may have a billion universes, completely seperate from eachother, each with randomly variable constants. The ones that form into suns and planets, with animals on them have constants like ours. Other universes are completely different. These ideas are a little up there, but they're interesting, and they do help to work out other major problems scientists are curious about, like the ridiculous weakness of gravity compared to the other forces. One thought is that each universe might have their own EM/Weak/Strong force, but gravity is shared between them, so it's ridiculously weak. It's mostly just a thought right now, but at least it shows them trying to work out the problem.

As for number 1 (may as well do all 4), Life was a different thing before the first cellular bodies formed. It was mostly a mishmash of particles and molecules that could replicate themselves (by being next to other particles, pieces of the whole that they were made of, in the right chemical medium, they could replicate themselves in the same way that our own DNA replicated itself for mitosis. Attrition dictated that some of these molecules would have strong bonds and good designs, and those specimens survived to replicate, and the broken ones died, returned to the primordial factory that the successful molecules, the ones that survived to copy themselves used to fuel that duplication. That basically explains how the first life cycle worked. At least that's my interpretation of the information I've gotten, and it logically and fairly soundly describes a universe that could exist, and in all probability did exist.
 

Roggen Bread

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azukar said:
Roggen Bread said:
Nah.
Doesn't do any harm either.
Don't you agree?
I wonder if it does cause harm, though. In terms of explanatory power, once you reach the point where you accept godly interference, people tend to stop looking any further. I for one don't want my biochemists to stop researching something because they reach a point that "looks like god did it" and don't feel the need to keep exploring. And if you never plan to reach that point, then what's the point of even considering the intervention of a deity?
I don't think interference or intervention is the right word.

I was thinking of an original design of certain properties that went wildfire an evolved (there! evolution!) on their own.

Also, I don't share your point of view. The point that "looks like god did it" where you just stop cannot exist for a (true?) scientist.
If something exists (even if "created by god"), it has a mechanism. A mechanism we can use.

This might be due to my training as an engineer, but my scientific goal is finding mechanisms (probably not by myself) and using these found mechanisms to create and mimic. So I don't care "if god invented" the mechanism. I need to know how it works, so I ca use it.

Look at artificial hearts and organs (I differentiated them, because the heart is a solely mechanical organ(generalized)).

We need to find out how they work, we need to reproduce them, and afterwards, we even might be able to IMPROVE them.
 

azukar

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Roggen Bread said:
Also, I don't share your point of view. The point that "looks like god did it" where you just stop cannot exist for a (true?) scientist.
If something exists (even if "created by god"), it has a mechanism. A mechanism we can use.

This might be due to my training as an engineer, but my scientific goal is finding mechanisms (probably not by myself) and using these found mechanisms to create and mimic. So I don't care "if god invented" the mechanism. I need to know how it works, so I ca use it.

We need to find out how they work, we need to reproduce them, and afterwards, we even might be able to IMPROVE them.
Why invoke a god when it's not needed, then? Let's not blunt Occam's Razor with unnecessary hypotheses.
 

IamLEAM1983

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Aug 22, 2011
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It might be a theory, but it's the most sound theory we've got. Whenever someone pulls the misinformed shortcut of assuming we "came from monkeys", I want to facepalm.

Yes, we're primates. We're from a DIVERGENT primate branch that got lucky. We learned to walk upright, we learned to build and use tools, our tools grew more and more sophisticated and, well, fast-forward to the present day, where people are STILL getting taller on the average and our cranial capacity is suspected to be still expanding.

Evolutionary stress might change shape, but it'll never completely disappear. The only thing that keeps micro-organisms in check is the immune systems of bigger organisms, and even then these microbes can adapt to our defenses. SARS and AIDS aren't blights sent by God, they're smaller beings trying their hardest to live off us - seeing as this is how Life goes.

Hence, yes. The great apes are our cousins, not our ancestors. Our ancestors, much like in any standard genealogy, are long gone.

To be honest, I never got while the evolutionary theory gets so many jimmies rustled. The Bible was written thousands of years before we'd have anything resembling modern scientific processes or research methodologies, much less the technology to interpret things like fossils or cave paintings appropriately. It stands to reason that the whole Genesis thing is an approximation of evolution - folks taking a stab at the birds-and-bees debate with no real means to approach it in any other way than by inventing their own fables.

So now we have the tools and means to maybe understand how we really came to be. Why couldn't that just be integrated into a revised version of the Bible? I'd rather be told I need to believe that God designed us in iterations through biological processes that make sense than go with the "Derp, mud shaped into a man, and then we take the mud pile's rib and shape it into a woman, herp!" route.
 

Naeras

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Navvan said:
There has been evidence for Neanderthal culture (art) [http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/06/120614-neanderthal-cave-paintings-spain-science-pike/] which would mean that they did indeed have the ability to reflect on the world. Most researchers now believe that Neanderthals were of about the same intelligence as the homo-sapiens of the time. However it isn't a universal consensus as there are still some who believe them to be little more than animals.

To confuse the issue even more CaptainMarvelous actually has it backwards. Neanderthals are thought to develop quicker than humans [http://news.discovery.com/history/neanderthals-aging-maturity-development.html]. Although that isn't necessarily a disadvantage as noted in the article.

The answer likely boils down to numbers. Homo-sapiens had them and Neanderthals did not. The most popular hypotheses are that we either mated them to extinction, or we killed them to extinction [http://discovermagazine.com/2009/nov/30-did-we-mate-with-neanderthals-or-murder-them]. Our larger population either interbred with the Neanderthals and those offspring interbred with more Sapiens, and so forth until you have a very dilute Neanderthal that is predominately homo-sapien (whose descendents would theoretically still be around). That or we simply killed them with our larger numbers. We may also likely had better technology that we developed to compensate for our smaller body size in addition to our longer lifespan. That is we needed to defend our-self from things like lions or kill wild game, and our longer lifespan allowed us to learn more and utilize it.

Also Natural Selection is only one means of evolution. There are a number of other things that can cause evolution (Genetic Drift and Gene flow for example)
Wow, one learns something new every day. Thanks for the insight. =)
 

Woodsey

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darthzew said:
The smarter Intelligent Design supports I've come across are the ones who don't deny the Theory of Evolution in its entirety. They acknowledge micro-evolution, that being that individual species can adapt and improve over time, but they deny macro-evolution, that being that an organism can become an all-new species.
It's only 'smarter' in the sense that it helps them con more people into being suspect of religion. In the same way that it was smart of them to rename 'creationism' to 'intelligent design'.

They've just latched on to two terms that I believe most biologists rarely even use, because there's not much point; there's little important distinction to be made between the two.

Jegsimmons said:
I don't know, why to people think its ok for them to call people stupid because a few dont believe in a theory that cant be tested unless we observe for thousands of years when they're other hypothesis that also have merit, but it doesnt matter in the grand scheme of thing whether you believe it or not because we're already here so fuck it.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn14094-bacteria-make-major-evolutionary-shift-in-the-lab.html

I think we think it's OK because one has had 100 years of Scientific, evidence-based research, fact-checking, and, yes, observations in labs, whilst the other is simply a 4000-year-old myth that has suffered many, many translations from a time where people knew virtually nothing about the world, universe, their own bodies, etc. etc.

They're not equal in any way whatsoever.


Jegsimmons said:
3. evolution is not 'fact' or scientific law. it is a theory and still has room for improvement or even the possibility of being disprove altogether.
Theories are the process. The scientific definition of the word 'theory' is not the same as the everyday usage of the word.

Facts are the what - the thing that happens. Evolution is a scientific fact inundated with overwhelming amounts of evidence. There is no serious debate whatsoever, for the time being, within the scientific community over whether or not evolution occurs.

Theories are a collection of observed facts which are then used to explain a phenomenon. Evolution is a fact itself, natural selection is the theory part. Creationism is a 'just a guess' everyday 'theory'; no true scientific observation has taken place, they've instead come up with an idea first and moved to have everything fit within it.

Definition for scientific fact:
Web definitions:
an observation that has been confirmed repeatedly and is accepted as true (although its truth is never final).


Definition for scientific theory:
Web definitions:
a theory that explains scientific observations


You are correct in that this obviously doesn't mean that it can't later be disproven, but there is no reason to not treat it as true at this time. Conversely, there is absolutely every reason at this time to totally ignore creationism.
 

Roggen Bread

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azukar said:
Roggen Bread said:
Also, I don't share your point of view. The point that "looks like god did it" where you just stop cannot exist for a (true?) scientist.
If something exists (even if "created by god"), it has a mechanism. A mechanism we can use.

This might be due to my training as an engineer, but my scientific goal is finding mechanisms (probably not by myself) and using these found mechanisms to create and mimic. So I don't care "if god invented" the mechanism. I need to know how it works, so I ca use it.

We need to find out how they work, we need to reproduce them, and afterwards, we even might be able to IMPROVE them.
Why invoke a god when it's not needed, then? Let's not blunt Occam's Razor with unnecessary hypotheses.
Actually, I think there is no simpler explanation than "it's t3h magix!!!1"
Look at all the hyperreligious fucknuggets.
They are the simplest simpletons you could think of.

Looking beyond this is work. Hard work.

In the mean time, I looked into some articles on ehtics and stuff.

It seems to be a common "scientific" trait, that the different kinds of scientists, believe in different kinds of origin stories.

As I mentioned, I am an engineer. So it's only "natural" I keep the possibility, that the basic mechanics were engineered by some"one".

A very interesting article was written by a biotechnologist (?). He is one of the people, that look for certain antybodies that might be produced by certain bacterias.
If you are not familiar with it:

(In a nutshell). You harvest and cultivate hundreds of different kinds of bacterias, and infect them with a disease you want to cure. You look what type of bacteria has your antigen.

It's try and error at it's finest. Sometimes you have 300 different stems of bacterias, and no positive results. And this biotech-dude stated his opinion, that nature has tried and errored his way to these starting mechanisms, that I think might be engineered.


Against my "hypothesis" stand more things than for it. Just one: Why is our planet the only (we know of) that was engineered?

So yeah. Most likely it was all just coincidence, that by magical means, the water molecules have this exact angle.

But thinking, someone might have created it that way is more convenient (that is, unscientific, as I stated before. Science is work.)

captcha: forbidden fruit.
Kinda fitting.