ironduck
Deity
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2002
- Messages
- 6,561
Bozo Erectus said:Get a million pigs. Make them jump out of airplanes without parachutes. When youve got two pigs that can fly, youve got natural selection.
I already have. So have several others. Kindly provide a link to a scientific journal or textbook showing that mutations only remove information. You are saying one thing; several people have provided information that shows another; please show us some proof for your argument.Zany said:It's a myth that it's a myth.:shakehead Mutations do not add information in increasing complexity, all it can do is alter existing information or take away existing information. Prove otherwise.
Saga of Gemini said:oh..but you didnt say "draw" your own coclusion you said something like: "read what the big guys think about it" so if my own conclusion its that it dosnt explain origins Im wrong rigth? so its basically wrong to follow the bible because you ahve to follow teh FACTS and what are the FACTS? what the big guys tell you are the FACTS and how you should look at them rigth?
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How funny how one can contradict itself in a mere 2 min break:
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So instead of saying why its an obvius consecuence you just rely that the "big guys" think its an obvius concecuence therefore any other person that thinks differently is inherently wrong...dosnt that sounds you as DOGMA??
Technically correct.Zany said:Natural selection is NOT evolution, it is a PART of evolution.
This is a rather idiotic statement from someone who just said natural selection is part of evolution.(by the way, evolution is supposed to be random mutations, right? So there can't be any environmental pressure, can there?).
This doesn't mean anything, and won't till you deign to tell us exactly what you mean by "information" and "complexity" in this context.Evolution requires random mutations to add information in increasing complexity to DNA, not altering existing DNA or take away information.
Same.Natural selection takes away information, speciailizing creatures to specific environments.
Unless you're gonna invoke God tinkering with their gametes, they couldn't have had more than four alleles of anything, which doesn't make for a rich gene pool.So for example, there was probably one pair of bears on Noah's Ark. They had a rich gene pool, so to speak.
But bears in Noah's day did? Reference?So a bear with fur better suited to the cold passes on more of its genes and those less suited the cold pass on fewer. In the end, you have polar bears. Polar bears have LESS information than the Noahic bears, because they aren't all of the sudden going to give birth to a panda or a grizzlie.
There's no such thing as "the red hair gene".Just like I won't have a red-haired kid, I've lost the red hair gene in my DNA
I'd love to hear how confusion of language changes skin pigmentation and blood groups.(humans aren't really subject to natural selection, various races and ethnicities arose because of the confusion of languages at Babel and groups marrying only amongst themselves).
Unlikely, but it could happen.If my kids don't marry anybody with red hair in their gene pool, then my grandkids won't have red hair. If cousins marry, no more red hair. It is obvious how it works, but no mutation is all of the sudden going to give my kid a brand new hair color or bring back old lost genes.
See above.Mutations do not add information, they alter existing information or take it away.
There won't be a mutation giving it fins, because a complex organ like a fin needs modifications to a great many genes to evolve. Oh, and of course, there's hard to imagine a reason why beetles with fin-like extremities would get preferentially selected.So a flying beetle might get its existing information altered and get more wings, or take away the wing code. There won't be a mutation giving it fins. End of story.
Assuming you by information here mean simply genetic code, it's a good thing, but not enough of a good thing to prevent the genomes of most organisms to be stuffed with junk.El_Machinae said:As well, taking away unneeded information (via mutation) reduces the biological cost on the organism. The leads to a speedier and cheaper growth. That, in itself, is a good thing.
True junk DNA is the non-preserved part. That various other non-coding bits have been found to have function doesn't mean that the non-perserved bits aren't junk.El_Machinae said:That's just because a) redundancy works! and b) 'junk' DNA is becoming less junkish every time I read a study. Anyway, I was refering to mitochondrial DNA, but I assume we can extrapolate upwards.
Nope. For most creatures, the pressure to get rid of junk DNA is minimal (exceptions include parasites in need to shrink and things like Pelagobacter ubique that absolutely minimize their metabolic needs), but a any noticeably good mutation has significant selection pressure going for it.As well, breeding out (actual) junk DNA takes just as long as breeding in a good mutation. Evolution is a slow process.
My points (about the evolution of fins) exactly! It was just an example, since no bugs I've seen have fins. It requires many, many, many mutations (apparently all random, but you don't see many crazy-looking half-evolved fossils, considering there should be billions of "failed" species like that) to make something fully functioning. If this thing in question, a vein for instance (various tubes, such as veins or intestines, need to be 100% complete and functioning or else they are useless, and thereby, must be planned out and also how does natural selection favor unecessary traits that will a long time in the future become necessary?), is not fully evolved it is useless. So if something is needed, the need for it will kill the creature before it can face up to this environmental pressure.There won't be a mutation giving it fins, because a complex organ like a fin needs modifications to a great many genes to evolve. Oh, and of course, there's hard to imagine a reason why beetles with fin-like extremities would get preferentially selected.
Why is it that you creationist can't seem to get your heads around the concept of gradual change? Denial?
Phew. Now, would you kindly stop brandishing big words and engage in actual debate?
Ever hear of an example? They usually aren't perfectly applied to the situation, they are figurative.There's no such thing as "the red hair gene".
Failed species? Sir, I cannot quite tell if you're erecting strawmen or are just entirely clueless.Zany said:My points (about the evolution of fins) exactly! It was just an example, since no bugs I've seen have fins. It requires many, many, many mutations (apparently all random, but you don't see many crazy-looking half-evolved fossils, considering there should be billions of "failed" species like that) to make something fully functioning.
This is false, as evidenced by the various critters without complete intestines and the like.If this thing in question, a vein for instance (various tubes, such as veins or intestines, need to be 100% complete and functioning or else they are useless, and thereby, must be planned out and also how does natural selection favor unecessary traits that will a long time in the future become necessary?), is not fully evolved it is useless.
If you by needed mean necessary for survival, systems start out as optional and gradually become necessary.So if something is needed, the need for it will kill the creature before it can face up to this environmental pressure.
If so, you're doing a good job of hiding it.Denial about gradual change? No, we understand gradual change fully.
Actually, there is a protobird found with a sort of protofeathers. Not an ancestor of Archy - it's too late - but probably a good model for the covering of Archy's ancestors.However, there are no signs of gradual change. There are no fossils of (for EXAMPLE, don't run with this) a dinosaur with scales slowing evolving into feathers (and again, why would natural selection favor unecessary traits?).
There's plenty of links before and after Archy, I'm afraid.There are fossils of the archaeopteryx, but that's an example of a link between missing chains. Not a complete chain with a missing link, a link with chains in both directions completely missing.
I'm not accusing you of trying to sound smart, I'm accusing you of using big words to camouflage the fact that you are making claims too vague to evaluate.Sorry if I came off as using big words intentionally, I did not intend so. I hate when people do that to sound smart.
We're not having a debate. You're spouting nonsense, and I'm calling you on it.And I think there is a debate going on here, no need to ask for it to start, good sir.
Well, the fact is that partially functioning units can be useful.Zany said:My points (about the evolution of fins) exactly! It was just an example, since no bugs I've seen have fins. It requires many, many, many mutations (apparently all random, but you don't see many crazy-looking half-evolved fossils, considering there should be billions of "failed" species like that) to make something fully functioning. If this thing in question, a vein for instance (various tubes, such as veins or intestines, need to be 100% complete and functioning or else they are useless, and thereby, must be planned out and also how does natural selection favor unecessary traits that will a long time in the future become necessary?), is not fully evolved it is useless. So if something is needed, the need for it will kill the creature before it can face up to this environmental pressure.
Zany said:Denial about gradual change? No, we understand gradual change fully. However, there are no signs of gradual change. There are no fossils of (for EXAMPLE, don't run with this) a dinosaur with scales slowing evolving into feathers (and again, why would natural selection favor unecessary traits?). There are fossils of the archaeopteryx, but that's an example of a link between missing chains. Not a complete chain with a missing link, a link with chains in both directions completely missing.
Zany said:Natural selection is NOT evolution, it is a PART of evolution. Seeing natural selection in action is NOT seeing evolution in action. N.S. is seeing a polar bear dying in the jungle and not having any offspring, the polar bear isn't evolving away its coat (by the way, evolution is supposed to be random mutations, right? So there can't be any environmental pressure, can there?). Evolution requires random mutations to add information in increasing complexity to DNA, not altering existing DNA or take away information.
by the way, evolution is supposed to be random mutations, right? So there can't be any environmental pressure, can there?
Evolution requires random mutations to add information in increasing complexity to DNA, not altering existing DNA or take away information
classical_hero said:http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v23/i3/muddywaters.asp
Is this what Evolution is about? Natural selction seems to be a losing of genetic material rather than gaing of infomation.
So now deformities prove evolution. I always thought the opposite was true.Bill3000 said:People already gave an example - Hox gene.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hox_gene
http://www.homeobox.cjb.net/
So let me get this straight, you are saying that a defect gene is evolution. This goes in the face of evolutionary thought that mutations cause additional genetic material to go to the species. Hox gene mutation in vertietrates, will result in the loss of life of the individual even before the chance of getting out of the womb. This is what natural selection is about, this is getting rid of those who are not fit to survive and that Hox gene mutation is removed from the gene pool, not added to it. So that means it is impossible for us or most mammals to every have Hox mutation without suffering serious consequences. Again this goes again traditional evolution and support Creation. Basically this means that it is impossible for man to have evolved from Hox mutation.A particular subgroup of homeobox genes are the Hox genes, which are found in a special gene cluster, the Hox cluster (also called Hox complex). Hox genes function in patterning the body axis. Thus, by providing the identity of particular body regions, Hox genes determine where limbs and other body segments will grow in a developing fetus or larva. Mutations in any one of these genes can lead to the growth of extra, typically non-functional body parts in invertebrates, for example aristapaedia complex in Drosophila, which results in a leg growing from the head in place of an antenna and is due to a defect in a single gene (this mutation is also known as Antennapedia). Mutation in vertebrate Hox genes usually results in spontaneous abortion.