Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

The Red Ape

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This month a new study reports that orangutans are particularly resourceful tool makers as they have been found to use a tool for communicating. Orangutans not only are sophisticated but, interestingly, share many similarities with humans. These “people of the forest,” as they have been called, have more in common with humans than do the other great apes. This includes features of anatomy, reproductive biology and behavior. This is interesting because it conflicts with evolutionary expectations. The conflict arises because there is one feature in which orangutans are not the closest species to humans: DNA.

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Comments
bfast, you assume, much.IRQ Conflict
August 19, 2009
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IRQ #31
If your basis for coming to the conclusion of a matter stems from a body of information that is in opposition to a much weightier and substantially more quantitative body of information then I would classify that as being delusional.
I assume you are saying that the first "insignificant" body of information is nature itself (ie, shared disease-producing mutations between human and chimp), and that the "much weightier" body is that of the Bible. You go on to clarify that the "much weightier" is "more quantitative". I believe in this you establish the true delusion. My copy of the Bible renders itself complete in 1095 pages of text. Are you so deluded that you would suggest that all data gathered by the science of biology could be condensed down to 1095 pages of text? What about all of the other relavent sciences: paleontology, geology, zooology etc.? The Bible says that "the heavens declare the glory of God". As such, nature is God's truth as much as any other of His works is.bFast
August 18, 2009
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Wait! OMG! Proteins and enzymes have not been meaningfully applied in biology???. Those @#$% profs. Foolin' us once again! Repeat after me: Proteins and enzymes are not complex, they are not specified, and they surely are not functional.
Why does natural selection have to explain the existence of something that has never been meaningfully applied in biology(SC)and something that apparently only exists in the minds of certain ID advocates(FSC)?
Oramus
August 18, 2009
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Heck Ms. C, we already know what design patterns tell us. They say each organism has a limited adaptive range, which they cannot break through. Now it's time for 'Name that Transitional! Yeeeaahhh. OK, for our first contestant, MeganC: Tell us Ms. C, which genomes are currently whistling past their demise, with legacies in hand? You have 3 minutes to answer. Good luck and don't forget to hit the start button on your TARDIS. Oh, and say hi to the good Doctor while you're at it.
What “design patterns”? And do/can these supposed “design patterns” tell us anything about the designer, or what to expect from possible future designs and/or as yet undiscovered extinct designs?
Oramus
August 18, 2009
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Nakashima, I found a picture of the HAR1F here: http://www.euchromatin.com/Pollard02.htm Its a bit small but it illustrates my point. The change is in the size of the loop labeled C and D (because of regions where there's difference between human and chimp.) You see how it wraps around like a lasso. The "knot" in the lasso is made of attractors between the left and right leg of the rna gene. If these guys are not correct matched pairs, they won't attract, and won't make the loop. That's the "lock and key" effect.bFast
August 17, 2009
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Mr bFast, Do you have a link to that 3D structure of HAR1F? I have never seen it. Is HAR1F the lock or the key in your analogy? Thank you.Nakashima
August 17, 2009
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Lenoxus,
it doesn’t follow that all 18 mutations had to happen simultaneously for an organism to enjoy the benefit of any one (or two) of them.
As we have the genetic experimentation of the fish, amphibians, lizzards, birds, and mammals to prove the required precision of the HAR1F, well, there isn't that much doubt about the stability of this particular gene. If you look at the 3d folding pattern of this gene, you see that the mutated area works like a lock and key, requiring that the 18 mutations happen simultaneously. Lenoxus:
As for the notion of the “two-simultaneous-mutation barrier” thing, well, that seems to be only Behe’s.
Well, this is the result of simple experimental findings. You can dismiss experimentation if you wish, but that's the way that proper science is done. I know there's very little actual experimentation done in evolutionary Biology, however that's the rub that many of us have with evolutionary biology in the first place. For most IDers, and any honest scientist, a good lab experiment blows away 100 "just so" stories.bFast
August 17, 2009
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bFast:
if you consider my post #7, you see that the neo-Darwinian story must produce 18 simultaneous, non-contiguous variations.
While it may be the case that HAR1F cannot be improved upon, it doesn't follow that all 18 mutations had to happen simultaneously for an organism to enjoy the benefit of any one (or two) of them. As for the notion of the "two-simultaneous-mutation barrier" thing, well, that seems to be only Behe's.Lenoxus
August 16, 2009
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bfast "If God is not the author of confusion, then I cannot see how the “God did it” hypothesis can be valid. " There is a difference between "delusion" and "confusion". The former being that the person(s) are not at all confused as to what they believe to be true. If your basis for coming to the conclusion of a matter stems from a body of information that is in opposition to a much weightier and substantially more quantitative body of information then I would classify that as being delusional. At least in part. Self delusional, out of a desire for a certain outcome. There will be no confusion in what will appear as certain and irrefutable evidence that God (could) provide someone he knows won't turn to Him, regardless of the evidence to the contrary. This does not necessarily mean it has to be yet another intermediate fossil(YAIF)TM. It could be something along the lines of the hardening of Pharaohs heart. Which, in his case was a good thing as it lead to repentance. I can see this as a means to do away with agnosticism but that is just speculation on my part. As God isn't, to my knowledge any clearer on it other than the statement. "Revelations 3:15 I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth." Are you familiar with the story of Lazarus and the rich man?IRQ Conflict
August 16, 2009
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IRQ, your numbers don't add up. In post #27 you suggest that the interloper hypothesis is unbelieveable because "I do not believe Satan or his followers have this ability." In post #28 you suggest that the God did it hypothesis is believeable. but in #26 you say, "To paraphrase, God is not the author of confusion." If God is not the author of confusion, then I cannot see how the "God did it" hypothesis can be valid. Lenoxus, "As far as I know, no part of the evolutionary story does require that two different species undergo the exact same series of mutations." I agree with you, this particular impossibility is not part of the neo-Darwinian story, but if you consider my post #7, you see that the neo-Darwinian story must produce 18 simultaneous, non-contiguous variations. No big deal for Darwinism. A bit easier than 80 specific disease producing point mutations being seen as "convergence", but in the same ballpark, in the ballpark called "impossible".bFast
August 15, 2009
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bFast:
Alas, this would imply the same level of “luck” that the darwinists count on to come up with humans without using intelligent agency.
As far as I know, no part of the evolutionary story does require that two different species undergo the exact same series of mutations (not just similar, as with those mutations that lead to wings, for example). That is a totally different domain of "luck" than the one whereby one species undergoes a series of individually unlikely mutations — especially if the mutations in the first case are non-functional and thus immune to selection for either species.Lenoxus
August 15, 2009
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"The designer intentionally implanted the exact same distructive mutations into the human line as in the chimp line ostensibly to make things look as if common descent is the truth when common descent is not." This, theologically speaking, I find plausible. 2Th 2:9 Even him, whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders, 2Th 2:10 And with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish; because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved. 2Th 2:11 And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: 2Th 2:12 That they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.IRQ Conflict
August 15, 2009
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"An interloper (satan) intentionally implanted the exact same distructive mutations into the human line as in the chimp line ostensibly to make things look as if common descent is the truth when common descent is not." I do not believe Satan or his followers have this ability. Deception is the name of his game. And hes had a few thousand years to brush up on it. As a matter of fact "chance" is a very, very old idea. Another paraphrase, marvel not as even Satan can appear as an angel of light.IRQ Conflict
August 15, 2009
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bFast, Please forgive my ignorance. "I do not use common features (except common diseases) to conclude common descent" But if I'm hearing you properly, if you look at it the way I do, the very fact that God (could have) created man and chimp with similar properties, it seems to me it would make sense from a biological point of view that they would/could suffer similar ailments no? Are you very familiar with the Word? There are many Scriptures that allude to the problem of origins from an theological point of view. To paraphrase, God is not the author of confusion. :)IRQ Conflict
August 15, 2009
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IRQ Conflict:
That is interesting. Could one not presuppose common design rather than common decent? Why should one say that we have a common ancestor rather than a common Creator?
I do not use common features (except common diseases) to conclude common descent. However, there are about 80 diseases which have been traced to specific point mutations which exist both in chimps and humans. The possibilities I see are as follows: Humans developed from a common ancestor who already had these 80 diseases. Humans were transformed from their previous types in large enough populations to maintain all 80 of these diseases. IE, no Adam or Eve. or The designer intentionally implanted the exact same distructive mutations into the human line as in the chimp line ostensibly to make things look as if common descent is the truth when common descent is not. or An interloper (satan) intentionally implanted the exact same distructive mutations into the human line as in the chimp line ostensibly to make things look as if common descent is the truth when common descent is not. or These mutations were just unlucky. Alas, this would imply the same level of "luck" that the darwinists count on to come up with humans without using intelligent agency.bFast
August 15, 2009
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Frost122585, "The same ones for common ancestry. Formal similarity and homology." Are those the only factors shared with common descent/ancestry? You do realise that there is much more to common descent than just apparent similarity and homology? "Evo I am sure tests it against speculative fossil analyses- ID tests it against design patterns." What "design patterns"? And do/can these supposed "design patterns" tell us anything about the designer, or what to expect from possible future designs and/or as yet undiscovered extinct designs? "That is we look for systems that pass the test of specified functional complexity when comparing and looking for design commonality." Can you give a working example of a system/s passing/failing "the test of specified functional complexity"? And how does such a test (as supposed) help "when comparing and looking for design commonality", or just furthering our understanding of biology? "And i might add this complicates the matter further because DE looks for such specified complexity itself when it stipulates that functional advantage explains preserved continuity in the synthetic DE model." DE? Design Engineering? "Of course NS does not, and cannot, explain the origin of novel FSC- or SC in general..." Why does natural selection have to explain the existence of something that has never been meaningfully applied in biology(SC)and something that apparently only exists in the minds of certain ID advocates(FSC)? "...- fossil record or no- De regresses back to a point where you either have an uncaused cause which is problematic for a mechanical materialistic view of nature and science- and or you run out of probabilistic resources. Hence there is no free lunch in physics without essentially stipulating and alllowing for the existence of miracles or thereabout- which is why the controversy ensues." Don't quite see how this little rant relates to the question of common descent/design (were you perhaps addressing the 'talking donkey' issue?). Anyways, you appear to oppose methodological naturalism in favour of miracles for doing science. Well, my response to that, as always, would be: If you're not doing methodological naturalism you're making sh*t up...and 'scuse my French, but that's exactly how I say it in my head. Then you said something about running out of probabilistic resources, and I assume this the tired old long-refuted argument about how the first cell/DNA couldn't have formed spontaneously...to which you probably know the answer already, but which I can repeat if you (or anyone else) haven't? One more thing: are you proposing "miracles" as the mechanism for implementing "common design" and/or explaining "design commonality"?MeganC
August 15, 2009
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MeganC, The same ones for common ancestry. Formal similarity and homology. Evo I am sure tests it against speculative fossil analyses- ID tests it against design patterns. That is we look for systems that pass the test of specified functional complexity when comparing and looking for design commonality. And i might add this complicates the matter further because DE looks for such specified complexity itself when it stipulates that functional advantage explains preserved continuity in the synthetic DE model. Of course NS does not, and cannot, explain the origin of novel FSC- or SC in general- fossil record or no- De regresses back to a point where you either have an uncaused cause which is problematic for a mechanical materialistic view of nature and science- and or you run out of probabilistic resources. Hence there is no free lunch in physics without essentially stipulating and alllowing for the existence of miracles or thereabout- which is why the controversy ensues.Frost122585
August 15, 2009
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David v. Squatney (13):
I would be interested in hearing about your own views.
I don't hold very many strong views because I don't think the evidence supports many strong views. Clearly evolution is not good science and is underwritten by metaphysics. But once we clear away the metaphysics and look at just the science, it is not obvious (to me anyway) what the right detailed answer is to the question of origins. As a scientist I would like to convey to folks the state of the scientific evidence. I think it is OK to say that the evidence doesn't hold great clarity, and therefore we cannot at this time present a scientific explanation, with high confidence, of the details. That said, we of course can glean some solid information from the scientific evidence. For instance, we can identify the scientific problems with the existing views. Every view has its problems. What is concerning is that evolution, though it has tremendous problems and is not a good scientific theory by practically any measure, is in denial of the evidence. And it makes the unrealistic claim of being a fact. It is one thing for a person to say "well I have this faith, and I think the evidence fits my faith well." It is quite another for a person to make strong religious arguments which lead to bad science, and then deny that he argued any such thing and mislead folks about the scientific evidence.Cornelius Hunter
August 15, 2009
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What are the testable scientific predictions of 'common design' again?MeganC
August 15, 2009
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Nakashima-san: In a world of mosaic animals and "horizontal gene trasfers" commonalities do not imply common ancestry. Thyey may easily imply common DESIGN. Cf Berra's Blunder. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
August 15, 2009
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Read the falsification of rapid evolution here: http://www.darwinspredictions.com/#_5.2_Biological_variationIRQ Conflict
August 15, 2009
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Dr Hunter, In other words, similarities indicate evolution--except when they don't. I'm sure you've heard of convergent evolution before, why act so surprised? This is exactly why morphology and behavior have been replaced by DNA/RNA for constructing relatedness trees.Nakashima
August 15, 2009
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Nakashima, "the secret is" is a statement of fact. If she were honest she would speak the truth of the matter thusly: 'It may be', 'it could be' etc. But, no. The arrogance is thick with these people.IRQ Conflict
August 15, 2009
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Dr Hunter, It is hardly a free pass if she taking the trouble to point out the improbability and working hard to develop an explanation. What is the ID explanation for differential rates of change in the genome?Nakashima
August 15, 2009
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Nakashima (9):
The second is strong positive selection. Yes, better cortical development lets you have more babies and raise them to reproductive age.
18 residues selected for. In Pollard's own words:
the secret is to have rapid change occur in sites where those changes make an important difference in an organism’s functioning.
Within evolution, even highly unlikely explanations get a free pass, so long as they are evolutionary.Cornelius Hunter
August 14, 2009
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JunkDNA was a major failure for the Darwinist paradigm. For anyone to try and sidestep that by saying "they knew about non-coded" genes is a farce. It is an attempt at disinformation and silly to try to rewrite history. Darwinism caused the failure of the prediction due to the overarching theory of mutational accumulation over long periods of time. It was spurred on by former predictions about vestigial organs, which are now failed predictions as well. I knew Darwinist were good story tellers, now they rewrite history in their image. Hilarious, but a dangerous act. Frankly, it means you cannot be trusted.DATCG
August 14, 2009
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Cornelius, I would be interested in hearing about your own views. Do you think it’s more probable than not that humans, chimps, and orangutans share a common ancestor? And if the evidence we have so far is inconclusive, what sort of research needs to be done in order to answer the question?David v. Squatney
August 14, 2009
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hdx (6):
In evolution-dom, DNA is king. Long ago evolutionists settled on DNA as the explanation of how the information for macro evolution could be stored and passed on
There are decades of evidence that shows that DNA stores genetic material. There was no ’settling’.
It is not a matter of whether or not DNA is an explanation for inheritance. It is a matter of whether or not DNA is the explanation for inheritance. For years evolutionists have resisted evidence that it is not the only explanation because of their prior commitment to their theory.
There has been no fundamental failure. [...] Yet evolution affect epigenitic inheritance since that can be controlled by parental DNA.
Of course there has been a fundamental failure. Evolutionists will deny and deny the evidence, and then turn around and take credit for the evidence. Incredible.Cornelius Hunter
August 14, 2009
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Another perspective that Pollard brings is that the rapid evolution can reflect the loosening of a functional constraint. From mice to chimps these regions were strongly conserved. Then a flag dropped, and they started to change rapidly. Here is one way of looking at that - our brains stopped trying to be good mice, and then were free to drive towards another local optimum. This aligns with the discussion we had recently about the experiment that modified the mouse genome withsome of these HAR1 substitutions. The resulting mice did less well on some standard tests, they were actually poorer at being a mouse.Nakashima
August 14, 2009
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Mr bFast, Pollard 2006 shows just how fast these regions have changed in the past, and notes that they are now almost completely fixed in the population. What is improbable is that they changed under neutral drift. Pollard notes two probable mechanisms to account for the rapid evolution. BGC is a chemical preference for GC over AT during recombination. (Mr Upright BiPed take note! You've been talking about the lack of such biases for a while, but here is one.) The second is strong positive selection. Yes, better cortical development lets you have more babies and raise them to reproductive age. Revenge of the Nerds! :)Nakashima
August 14, 2009
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