River Jordan
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- Jan 30, 2014
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Axe's paper is about the ability of a modern organism that exists today to evolve (from a backwards perspective) one piece of a very specific enzyme that confers resistance to antibiotics. Do you understand how that is totally unrelated to the origin of the very first life forms? Surely you're not arguing that the organism Axe experimented on is the same that arose 4+ billion years ago, or that the first organisms on earth had to have been antibiotic-resistant, right?Wormwood said:The focus on Axe's paper, as I pointed out, is the ability for protein sequences to vary and retain function. The issue is not whether or not the paper is referring to the origin of life or not.
If you're not arguing either one of those, then citing that work as at all relevant to origins hypotheses is either a deliberate attempt at deception on your part, or an indication that you don't understand the subject.
First, we know for a fact that there is functional redundancy in amino acid sequences, so it's not something that "Darwinists argue"....it's just a fact.The point was referring to the specificity of proteins which relates to their ability to retain function. Many Darwinists argue that there is flexibility in the protein structures and that they do not have to be exact to retain function (which, they argue, suggests the odds are not that great for such things to form by chance).
Second, please show where any "Darwinist" has argued that "such things form by chance".
Are you actually arguing that the math in Axe's paper should be applied to origin of life hypotheses?Axe deals with this issue in a particular case scenario to show how that although there is a small amount of room for error in protein sequencing, this still does not open things up to the likelihood that such constructions could occur by chance. You were asking for mathematics behind the chances of functional elements of the cell to form by chance. I provided that information as a resource.
Let me see if I have this straight. Your argument is basically, "Axe has shown that if you take a modern E. coli, and degrade an enzyme that confers antibiotic resistance, the odds of random amino acid substitutions fixing the enzyme via a particular pathway (artificially limited due to experimental constraints) are 1077. Therefore, the first life on earth could not have arisen by natural means."I just dont understand how you arent connecting the dots here. In order to have a functional, basic cell that is would even remotely be capable of the type of darwinian evolution claimed by biology textbooks, you need a cell that has a system for producing functional proteins. Axe's work shows that functional proteins, even with the small amount of flexibility in sequences that retain the protein's function, are highly improbable (essentially impossible) to occur by scenarios based in chance.
How does that make any sense at all?
A few things....Well, it seems to me that you are the one shifting your argument. My original statement was that your demand for the exact science behind the flood seemed silly since Darwinists put random chance scenarios as the rationale behind the origin of life and no one bats an eye. Even though it is mathematically impossible based on what we know of protein sequencing and the basic elements of the cell for such a construction to occur by chance scenarios, it is still implied in textbooks that this is what happened. So my point is simply this, "Why is it okay to imply that this is what happened, but its NOT okay to imply that possibly there was a worldwide flood?"
1) What was my original argument, and what did I shift it to? Back up your accusations.
2) I didn't ask for anything like "the exact science behind the flood". I simply noted that what had been posted would cause the oceans to boil off, the atmosphere to evaporate, and the entire crust of the earth to be molten lava. If you think those are just little details, then I really don't know what else to say.
3) You continue to repeat the straw man that "Darwinists put random chance scenarios as the rationale behind the origin of life", despite not being able to show a single source doing anything like that. Frankly, I'm tired of asking you to show where any "Darwinists" have done that. All I can conclude is that you're sticking to this talking point no matter what, and nothing will change that. More's the pity.
4) You've not shown how any origin hypothesis is "mathematically impossible".
5) You've not shown where any textbook describes origins as occurring by "random chance scenarios". But as before, I get the impression that you're going to stick to this false creationist talking point no matter what.
It's not. It's just another dishonest creationist straw man.The fact is simply this: Science does not support chance abiogenesis. So why is it taught?
You've got this sooooo twisted up in your head, you can't even keep things straight. Again....Yet here we have scenarios that are so mathematically ridiculous and so unlikely that we cannot even create such scenarios under controlled and forced conditions...and yet this can be taught as the likely means by which life most probably developed.
1) You've not shown how any origins hypothesis is mathematically impossible.
2) No one is teaching any origins scenario "as the likely means by which life developed".
Yet again you rely on that dishonest creationist straw man that the origin of life occurred "by chance". You've been corrected on this so many times yet continue to repeat it, the only thing I can conclude is that you're not really interested in this subject beyond parroting creationist talking points and defending them no matter what.The fact is that you scream foul at creationists as being "unscientific" or "irrational" and yet the textbooks are allowed to teach the same unscientific hypotheses without challenge because naturalism has been deemed "science." It is not. A naturalistic explanation can be even MORE irrational and unscientific as an explanation based in intelligence. If you see a crime scene and a dead body with 5 bullet wounds in the chest, it is not more "scientific" to try to find a way that the event happened by mere chance.
If we understand your undying adherence to ridiculous creationist straw man arguments, yes it makes sense.My argument is not so much that this is your claim (I think I have understood your position is that God created life). It's actually why im a bit perplexed you have been arguing with me about it. My argument is that darwinists are guilty of the same bold claims without the backing of science....and these claims are published in biology textbooks for mass consumption. A creationist is ridiculed for believing in a world-wide flood because they might not have all the answers for the physics behind it, yet a darwinist can write in a textbook that life arose from chance connections of non-living bases in a mud-puddle billions of years ago without answers to the science to back it. You took the role of defending abiogenesis taught in textbooks...which assumes this is how it happened as if it were inevitable given the right environment and enough time. In sum, the textbooks teach it and you were defending the teaching in the textbooks....make sense?
To what degree? Again, are the odds of winning the lottery the same if I buy one ticket versus if I buy 1077 tickets? If not, how does the number of tickets purchased relate to the probability of winning?Yes, trials do relate to probability, to a degree.
So your argument really is that the Axe paper on the ability of modern E. coli to backwards evolve an artificially-degraded antibiotic resistance enzyme directly speaks to the origin of the first life forms 4+ billion years ago.However, the point behind the work of the mathematicians and biologists I have cited argues that the more we have discovered about the cell reveals that the chances of such things forming by the above cited scenarios are so small, that history and space does not allow for even close to enough possible trials to make up for the overwhelming odds.
Honestly, there's not much else I can do. I've tried explaining it to you, but you seem determined to stick to this creationist talking point no matter what.
Again we see the creationist straw man of "it occurred by random chance". I don't know what else to say.It would be like me asking you to win the lottery 20x in a row. The odds at such a thought are so proposterous that even giving you 100 lifetimes and a lottery ticket for every drawing every day in which to accomplish such a feat is meaningless compared to the ridiculous probability such an event would EVER occur. At some point, someone just has to say, "You know, we can add a 100 billion years of trying every single day....but this just would never happen, no matter how many times you try." That is what these researchers and mathematicians have argued. Its not even that most biologists dont recognize how impossible such an event would be....its just that because intelligent design is not an option, they default to random chance. My view is NEITHER should be taught because NEITHER is science.
Yet you can't point to a single textbook that says life "arose due to chance". But even the complete lack of support for this claim plus my essentially screaming at you "NO ONE IS SAYING IT HAPPENED BY CHANCE" isn't enough to get you to consider the possibility that you're wrong.I dont doubt that. Yet it is taught in biology textbooks as arising due to chance. I think that is wrong and unfair.
Bull. Now you're backpedaling without retracting your accusation or apologizing for making it in the first place. Instead you repeat it, but still completely fail to support it in any way. That's a terrible way for a Christian to behave.I am not intending to make you angry. I am not referring specifically to any comment you have made in this particular discussion. I am referring to past discussions where they usually seem to end with you discounting something I quote from Behe, Meyer, or others and write them off as "documented liars" or something to that effect. At that point, it becomes and issue of defending integrity of individuals rather than dealing with the content of their arguments. I dont feel the need, nor do I have the desire to get into a discussion over each individual's integrity that I cite. So, I am not lying. I am referring to the dozens of conversations we have had in the past and am simply anticipating that will be the final direction of this discussion. Although, I am hopeful that will not be the case.
What in the world is wrong with you? It could only be a "cop out" if I ignored the material you posted. Since I didn't, it couldn't have been a cop out. But you just re-stated the same accusation based apparently on what you imagined I was about to do?It seemed evident to me that once again you were going to start dismissing everything with claims that I am ignorant and my information is "copied from [my] creationists sources."
That just seems like a cop out to me.
That's.........just stunning in both its detachment from reality and hubris.
Finally, you didn't back up your accusation of slander against me. Who did I slander and where?