Wormwood said:
This was my very first post on this topic. Here I clearly point to the type of mutations I am talking about that are not the basis of modern medicine. Now you may want to argue what constitutes "greater complexity" (to which I would say bacteria giving birth to bacteria after 50,000 generations is not "greater complexity" whereas a species developing a blowhole to exist in water more efficiently IS greater complexity).
Of course I would ask what you mean by "greater complexity". As with your previous incorrect argument about "increase in genetic information", you are again making a
quantitative argument (more, less, or the same amount of "complexity"). Are the examples I provided not the observed evolution of increased complexity? The evolved organisms have new traits that weren't present in the original population, so does that make them more complex? If not, then like "genetic information" you need to provide a means by which you are measuring "complexity". Absent such a means, then all your quantitative claims are by definition, meaningless.
I mean, I don't know why (actually, I think I do) this is soooooo difficult for you and UD to understand.
If you make quantitative claims, you have to have a means of measurement. That basic fact should be obvious to
anyone.
Yet I qualify the statement even more by saying "a complete transformation of a species."
Yep, and again you were provided with observed examples of the evolution of new species.
So how can you say I moved the goal posts and I was originally talking about new information and only later started talking about cows into whales. No, I STARTED the conversation by talking about "complexity" and a "complete transformation of a species." You simply have no answers for my arguments so your only recourse is to try to discredit me. The record of the conversation is clear for all to see. Maybe you should revisit it?
Seriously? I have no answers? Again, to review...
all your arguments about evolutionary biology in this thread are demonstrably false. We know for a fact that 1) mutation and the evolution of new traits are very important to modern medicine; 2) evolution produces novel genetic sequences that produce new traits, which confer a selective advantage; 3) the fossil record does include gradual transitions; and 4) natural selection is an important factor in the evolution of new species.
Do you still dispute any of that?
In my second comment to you I said,
"The word "evolution" here is entirely misleading. So, bacteria becoming more resistant to antibiotics is very different from a cow spending a lot of time in the water and, by the unobserved guesswork of the theory of punctuated equilibrium, happens to give birth to a cow-whale with a blow hole on its head so it can be more at ease in the water than its mother. "
Ah, but you're forgetting where you started. Your first post in this thread stated...
"
Darwinian evolution is not the foundation of modern medicine. All creationists believe in adaptation and variation within kinds based on the limits prescribed in the genetic code. There is no scientific observation of a species receiving additional information in their DNA that permitted new abilities by way of natural selection or mutation. Modern medicine is not based on this theory of mutating DNA which leads to greater complexity or a complete transformation of a species. You are misrepresenting your case."
After you posted that, I responded by pointing out that 1) Darwinian evolution is very important in modern medicine, 2) "kinds" is a meaningless term, 3) no one has said what this "limit in the genetic code" is, and 4) from our earlier discussion you still have yet to define "information in the DNA" or provide a means to measure it. Only then did you post your childish version of "a cow giving birth to a cow-whale". Rather than admit your arguments were demonstrably wrong, you immediately retreated to this absurdity.
But I'll tell you what....we can drop all this right now. I apologize for accusing you of moving the goalposts. Now, let's both participate in this discussion in good faith and answer each other's questions.
Let's start by clearing up a very simple issue, i.e., "new genetic information".
If I have a single-clone population (population A), culture it for several generations until I have a descended population (population B ), and population B has a functional genetic sequence that wasn't present in population A, and the sequence produces a trait that confers a selective advantage, is that the evolution of "new genetic information"? If not, why? If it's not "new", where was it before? If it's not "genetic information", what exactly is "genetic information"?
Even if we say that the mutated bacteria have "new" information that allows them to become resistant to antibiotics, this is NOT Darwinian evolution.
What exactly do you mean by "Darwinian evolution"?
Most of the DNA changes of bacteria occur from present DNA being swapped and transferred through various means. It is not new information, but adopting DNA from elsewhere.
As I posted to UD, is this your position?
My mom went to the dairy store.
--has the same information content as--
My mom went to the dairy store on Monday.
Even though "on Monday" seems to be new, the letters that make up those two words were already in the original sentence. The letters were just copied and rearranged to make "on Monday". Thus no new information was added to the second sentence.
Is that about the same way you're thinking about genetics?
First it was cows and whales and now its immune systems? No, my point has always been the same. The complexity of many of these systems simply do not allow for gradual mutations that can account for their existence. You cant have slowly evolving breathing/eating systems in a whale. You either have it or die. You cant have a blood system that slowly develops clotting. You either have it or bleed out. I have made this claim from the beginning...and you refuse to see it and continue to claim Im lying and changing my position.
Why not? Please forgive me, but your say-so isn't enough to convince me. Please explain in specific detail the basis for these assertions.
Ah, yes. Punctuated equilibrium is well documented. Sigh. Your blindness to your own presuppositions is staggering.
????????? That doesn't even address my point. We know for a fact that the creationist arguments you've posted here are wrong, yet you and other creationists continue to repeat them. Thus, creationist arguments are not legitimate and the people who continue to make them are not highly regarded. And of course that leads to an obvious question...why do you and other creationists continue to repeat arguments even after you've been shown that they're false? Well, many creationists and the organizations they belong to tell us. It's because of their belief that everything must conform to their reading of scripture, and if something seems to contradict that reading, it is deemed to be wrong.
What part of that strikes you as unreasonable?
No I am saying that naturalists pretty much overwhelmed the discussion of origins when organic material was discovered to be based in non-organic elements. This led to very simplistic assumptions about the cell that have since been proven false. Yet now the claim is that science and naturalism are essentially one and the same. It was never viewed this way before.
Are you saying that science and philosophical naturalism are now one and the same? If so, then how is it that so many scientists are not philosophical naturalists?
This is a head-scratcher. Are you still working to discredit me as a means of dismissing my points? Let me ask you something. When you were in your first year of undergrad and were learning things in your textbooks, would it have been inappropriate for you to post something you read in a textbook because you were merely a freshman in a class. At what point are we allowed to have opinions or be informed by scholars in various fields? According to you, people can read all sorts of books and learn from PhDs in person and through literature, but they cannot hold a valid opinion on any such matters until they are at a point where they could label themselves as "experts" worthy of being published. Wow. Do you realize how scary this proposition is? Sounds like some sort of Communism where the authorities will determine who is an authority and only the authorities hold valid views worth being taught. How convenient for the authorities...and how utterly dangerous for "science."
All that and you
still didn't answer the question. Do you see how such behavior comes across as not operating in good faith? Let's try again...
Do you think of yourself as an expert in evolutionary biology? Is your knowledge of it at such a level that not only are you able to make such declarations, but that others should pay heed to them as well?
The assumption is Darwinian evolution.
What specifically do you mean by that?
If microbiologists decoded within the DNA a message that said, "created by intelligence" they would try to figure out how that message was formed in the DNA over millions of years by bottom-up processes. No matter how complex biological systems are proven to be, there will always be the assumption that it started from nothing through an unguided process. I will always assume it was created for a purpose. Both are assumptions, but neither wants to ignore the beauty of understanding these systems and use that understanding to better life today.
Ah, but here's where your problem is. As we've seen, the evolution of new traits, abilities, genetic sequences, and species by natural mechanisms are directly and repeatedly observed facts.
Every new trait, ability, genetic sequence, etc. we've ever seen arise has come about via natural mechanisms. Not one time have we ever seen the supernatural, instantaneous creation of....
anything.
So essentially what you're doing here is saying that even though every new trait, ability, genetic sequence, and species we've seen arise since the first days we started looking has done so naturally, in the past everything was completely different and all those things arose via supernatural creation...something we've never seen. And not only that, you are trying to say this position is on equal footing with the conclusion that since all we've ever seen is those things arise naturally, the same is probably true in the past.
Do you apply this sort of thinking to other areas of your life?