Draco said:
so tell me... how is it that the biological reactions in the codon know when to and how to react to a certain acid way back in the beginning... how is it that the DNA was able to be interpreted and read when it was just formed? Thats like comming up with the CD before the CD player or wrighter...
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Once again, I don't know. I'm not sure if biologists know this yet or not. We know the process by which codons are translated into amino acids, however I don't know the evolution of this process. We know that it happens. That is enough. You don't actually need to know how the process of converting codons into amino acids evolved for providing evidence for
biological evolution (note, that the evolution of the process of coding amino acids from DNA and biological evolution are not the same thing).
I suppose it would be nice to know the evolution of the process in order to develop a comprehensive theory of spontaneous generation, but as far as biological evolution goes it is irrelevant.
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I did not say the random letter drawing would make a word...
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Quite right. You said that it most likely would not make a word.
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I was merely stating the fact that randomly drawing any two letters would have no meaning unless it was predetermined....
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Predetermination does not require the intervention of God. For instance, the oscillation of a perfect pendulum can easily be modeled by the following equation:
From this you can derive equations for the pendulums position given you know the initial conditions of the pendulum. The motion of the pendulum is predetermined. It follows physical laws. The predetermination of the pendulum's position at any time has nothing to do with God.
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what could have possibly read the DNA and understood what was going to happen if there was nothing but DNA and random collections of non-living matter floating around?
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The same thing that dictates a pendulums motion. Physical and chemical laws. How can a pendulum possibly understand that it wants to settle into equilibrium if its just a random collection of inorganic matter? If you answer that question, you will find it is the same as the answer to your question Though a pendulum is mathematically far simpler to model than a biological system, they both follow the same principles of our natural world.
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But what determined that the random collections of three letter words stood for somthing? thats my point... you cannot have meaning unless something gives it meaning....
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If a tree gets struck by lightning and ignites, that does not mean that a tree
means the production of fire. Even if every tree on a particular planet got struck by lightning and ignited, it does not mean that a tree "stands for" fire. It simply means that a tree will ignite when its hit by lightning -- a chemical process. Again, the chemical reactions in a biological system are more difficult to model, but they follow the same principles. Codons don't actually translate into amino acids any more than a tree translates into fire on that particular planet.
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Yes, but in order for one group to dominate they had to have the bigger gun... in this case, the atomic bomb...
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Science is not responsible for answering questions of ethics. It only answers questions that pertain to fact.
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Well, the earth had to be here in order for life to exist... all he was pointing to was that if there is no creator then this is the way it had to have started...
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I thought this was supposed to be a video on the theory of evolution? Colloquially, this has always implied biological evolution. Presenting facts on anything else is a misrepresentation of the term. The formation of the earth has nothing to do with biological evolution.
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So why do they call it the BIG BANG? If there was no bang, then why do they call it that?
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They could have called it orgasm X for all it matters, that doesn't mean the started started by an orgasm. It's simply a name.
Matter did not explode outwards and fill an empty universe. The universe was never empty.
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Hey.. I googled it... all I could find were pages that supported creation using the beetle in their arguments... seriously, check it out for yourself....
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What the hell did you search? I searched Bombadier Beetle and the first three links google popped back at me rebuked your (*laughs*) "doctor," as did the first four links when I typed in "bombadier beetle evolution."
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Really? I would like to see the evidence for evolution... oh wait, there isn't any.... sorry....
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Okay. You fucking say this over and over again like a retarded broken record. I say a retarded record because it's a record that keeps repeating something THAT ISN'T FUCKING TRUE. I've presented the evidence. You refuse to acknowledge it. Since you insist on doing this, I would like you to either rebuke these each point by point, not by simply saying "DURR DURR ITS NOT TRUE DURRR" but by backing it up with information, and evidence where necessary, or acknowledging that they are valid examples of evidence for evolution. Any point that you fail to rebuke, I will then take as you saying that it is not possible for you to rebuke them and we will therefore agree that they are valid examples.
Remember. Respond to each of these excerpts individually, or I will take that as you acknowledging them as a valid example:
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. . speciation has been observed. Here are four well-known examples. These do not encompass all or most of the available examples:
Drosophila paulistorum developing hybrid sterility in male offspring
A species of firewood that was formed by doubling the chromosome count from the original stock
The faeroe island house mouse speciated in less than 250 years after being brought to the island by man
Five species of cichlid fish formed after being isolated from the original stock.
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. . .fossilized evidence towards evolution . . .
Archaeopteryx fossils
coelacanth fossils
Fish Fossils
Gish on Precambrian fossils
Hominid Fossils
Horse fossils
Polystrate fossils
punctuated equilibria
trilobites
whale fossils
and oh yes...transitional fossils
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phylogenetic tree . . .[supported by both anatomical and molecular evidence]
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. . .bacteria's increasing resilience to antibiotics is an observation of evolution.
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- Bacteria's resilience to antibiotics
- Mutations in humans confer resistance to AIDS
- Mutations in humans confer resistance to heart disease
- mutations in humans makes bones stronger
- Transposons are common, especially in plants, and help to provide beneficial diversity
- Ribozymes
- Adaptation to high and low temperatures in E. Coli
- mutation which allows growth in the dark for Chlamydomonas
- mutation which allows yeast to grow in a Low Phosphate Chemostat Environment
- new enzymatic functions by recombination
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- The flying squirrel, which could be on its way to becoming more batlike
- The euglena, which appears well on its way to becoming a plant
- Aquatic snakes
- any animal with an "infrared eye"
- various fish that can survive on land for extended periods of time
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That is the evidence simply
from the first four pages of this thread. Either give me a rebuttal on each point individually, or it will be taken as a concession that you admit it is valid evidence. Claiming that fossils are fake is not a valid rebuttal without some presentation of
proof that fossils are fake. Claiming that transitional animals are not transitional by decree is not sufficient. You must provide evidence, or at least a valid explanation as to
why they are not changing.
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God does not blaim us for the flaws... we are responsible for it, not him...
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Is the pot also responsible for any blemishes on its paint?
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Look, if the flood is your worry, blaim the parents for just sitting there and just watching the water slowly rise around their child...
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So what you're saying is if a thug enters my house while my parents are homd and shoots me, it is my parents fault that I'm dead?
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the pharoh knowingly and willingly killed innocent children, blame him for his actions not God...
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I'm not blaming God for the deaths of the children, I'm blaming God for being a passive bystander while having the power to end the torture.
Note, that I'm referring to God as I would refer to any literary character. I am in no way acknowledging his existence.
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as you said before, "he holds them accountable", maening you are responsible for your own actions, not someone elts...
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That statement was not meant as a matter of fact, it was meant to convey my incredulity at God's apparent lack of logic.
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So your saying that Hitler was right? Twice? What are you trying to say?
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If Hitler believed in evolution, then yes, he was right. I'm sure he was right far more than twice.
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I said nothing about the space race...
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Again, an example.
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You are right, science does make death quicker, but most people want that technology to blow up the enemy country, then the enemy country wants to stop them from using the technology, so they go over and try to stop them... thats how a war starts sometimes...
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Most people want that technology just in case. We have many thousand nukes in our arsenal. I doubt we actually plan on using all of them at any time.
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How did Hitler get his ideologies?
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The only way to effectively answer this in a post is:
Read, if you actually want to know where he got his ideologies.
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For someone who does not believe in God, you certainly use his name alot...
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And you're an idiot. Oh, wait, sorry. I thought we were playing the "state the obvious" game.
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Anyway... the toy poodle would only have the genes of a toy poodle and its genetic variation... the genetic variation would only be that of a toy poodle, it would not have gained any new information... basically, the variation would not cause any differences in the dog that is not already there... the variation could cause the dog to have two different colors of fur(one color from each parent) or something of that nature, the dog would not gain something unless that trait it bred in...
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Just because a black mouse mates with a black mouse doesn't mean that its offspring will also be black. It's offspring could be black, brown, or white. I'm moving to mice instead of dogs because mathematically this is far simpler to model, yet it effectively demonstrates the pertinent principles of genetics that I think you're failing to grasp.
Somatic mice cells are all dihaploid indicating that they have two alleles for each characteristic. In the case of mice coats, the black allele is completely dominant to the brown coat. This means a mouse will have a black coat whether it has two alleles for a black coat or one allele for a black coat and one for a brown coat. Two parent hybrids will be black, but if they have four offspring, one should be brown. But there's a twist. There's an additional gene which codes whether or not the mice get any pigment or not. The recessive allele does nothing, while the dominant allele gives them pigment. Again, the dominant allele is completely dominant to the recessive allele. Now what happens? If the parents were dihybrids and had sixteen children, they should have nine black children, three brown children, and four WHITE children, even if they've never had a white mouse anywhere along their ancestral tree, although this would be highly unlikely.
Similarly, just because two dogs look like toy poodles does not mean that their children will also be toy poodles, or be smaller than the parents. Size is not only dependent on genes, but on environment as well. Size is a quantitative trait, meaning it lies along a continuum rather than being
fixed by genes.
Of course, none of this is an example of an increase in information. Mutations, however, do account for increases in information. For instance, searching "gene duplication" at
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi gives over 5000 examples of an increase in genetic information. If that doesn't suffice, I'm sure that searching point mutations or recombination would give similar results.
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No, breeding is not natural selection...
The dog would already have that gene if the offspring were taller than it, the variation would be the different hights of the dogs...
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I'm not sure how to respond to that, because I have no idea what it means. You seem to be giving contradictory accounts of the same situation. Brush up on your terminology. Remember, you already admitted to agreeing that a new species can start from evolution in this thread probably because you didn't know meaning of the word "speciation."
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Yeah, they were humans...
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That wasn't the point of my statement, I was correcting your terminology. It's really confusing when you misuse words in this type of discussion.
And of course our ancestors were humans. I never claimed they weren't. I simply claimed that at one point they were also microorganisms.