E
edwest211
Guest
Right. However, staying ‘on message’ is also designed to deflect legitimate questions or ignore them.
Read comment #4 after the article. It is a very good criticism of the conclusions one might draw from these experiments.Have you come across this article?
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/enriched-environments-memory/
No need to “pretend to know” - God explains what he did in Genesis 2 … He created Adam from inanimate matter.I (for one) don’t pretend to know precisely what God did.
This a priori position leads to all sorts of untestable nonsense and stories being offered as “science”. I like the example of a piece of a reptile’s jaw supposedly evolving into the inner-ear bones of a mammal: No one can prove that such a transition is even possible - it is simply assumed that it is - because evolution is true. And no one can sensibly explain how or why such a transition happened … no real need to - evolution is true so the “how” and the “why” are of no great importance.Everything can be explained by evolution. It has to be because evolution had to occur. We just know it, and that is that.
Science has, but the claim that all life evolved from microbes is still stuck in nineteenth century “story telling” mode.Science has advanced a long way since 1859.
In evolution “science”, things don’t even have to be known to be possible to be probable.Because something is possible does not mean it is probable.
Whether that is to be understood literally as a direct creation from dust one moment to adult male the next - or as something different, matters not one jot. It would matter if science were able to discover the answer to be “direct”. It would cause a greater focus on the Bible. Some feel that without such literalness, faith evaporates, as people emulate the doubting Thomas.No need to “pretend to know” - God explains what he did in Genesis 2 … He created Adam from inanimate matter.
So far there is no evidence of that. Are Jewish males born ready-circumcised or do they still have foreskins despite thousands of years of circumcisions?The inheritance of an acquired characteristic would also be “just another variation introduced into the genome.” Would that also be “no big deal”?
Common descent for land creatures exists. It is observable.A common design for land creatures exists. It is observable.
Your problem here is that tetrapod wings are very different. All are based on the standard tetrapod forelimb, but all three are different:If a designer used the same basic building blocks: head, upper and lower torso and four limbs, including wings, …
Having a working design in the pterosaur wing, why did any proposed designer switch to a different design for birds and yet another different design for bats? Design proponent often claim that reuse of the same ideas shows design. Here is an example where the same ideas were not reused. On the same basis is that to be taken as evidence against design?I’m not sure why this favours random changes over design.
(Please Note: This uploaded content is no longer available.)So a giraffe is a freak of nature that got lucky finding food ?
OK, here is an even more detailed explanation of Waddington’s experiment. If you want to read the original paper you’ll have to find it yourself, but there is a footnote referring to it.This is still someone saying there is evidence. But it is far from evidence because there is no mention of a specific characteristic or the description of an experiment.
To the last question: yes, that is not what is meant by an acquired characteristic. What is being shown is that evolution can be influenced by the environment in which the organism lives; it is not determined solely (if at all) by mutated genes.Evidence would be a single instance of a characteristic of a organism that is acquired through experience passed on to the offspring genetically (not through the parent teaching the child.) Or do I have a mistaken idea of what an acquired characteristic means?
As I said before, Darwin himself did not insist that evolution was a bottom up, gene centered process. That part was added later, and is part of neo-Darwinian dogma.Why “neo?” Isn’t this what happens in plain old garden variety Darwinian evolution?
I think this accurately sums up the rationale of the neo-Darwinian: no matter how implausible, it just has to be true. This is a matter of faith, not science.I see. You are omitting natural selection. Of course mutations are generally harmful or neutral. But when you add natural selection to the process, you favor the mutations that are beneficial. Just because you never saw a beneficial mutation arising by chance does not mean it can’t happen. In fact, given enough instances of mutations, it has to happen.
No, this is not what Lamarck proposed. According to Denis Noble it is:Lamarckism is the principle that a specific characteristic that is acquired through experience can be passed on to the offspring.
Of course there is evidence for it. You may disagree with the interpretation of the evidence, but the evidence exists nonetheless. And the comment on circumcision shows a fundamental misunderstanding of what Lamarck proposed. He claimed that organisms evolved changes in response to the environment. Circumcisions do not represent any change to the environment.So far there is no evidence of that. Are Jewish males born ready-circumcised or do they still have foreskins despite thousands of years of circumcisions?
It is a statement of scientific fact, just like this one:I think this accurately sums up the rationale of the neo-Darwinian: no matter how implausible, it just has to be true. This is a matter of faith, not science.I see. You are omitting natural selection. Of course mutations are generally harmful or neutral. But when you add natural selection to the process, you favor the mutations that are beneficial. Just because you never saw a beneficial mutation arising by chance does not mean it can’t happen. In fact, given enough instances of mutations, it has to happen.