"Magic" isn't a scientific term. However it is a term used by the religious. Magic is the basis of all religion, actually - not science. — Harry Hindu
Mutations happen — Harry Hindu
his kind of stuff gives me a headache, but for those so inclined here is one perspective of the current state of the evolution of evolutionary theory: — Rich
Wrong. It has plenty of evidence. You are just to frightened to look into it. It is religion and unfalsifiable philosophical claims (which would be most of philosophy) that have not a shred of evidence.Natural selection is just a nice story, without a shred of evidence, that appeals to those seeking fitter and not fitter. The Nazis loved it. — Rich
If you had a better understanding of evolution by natural selection, the answers would be easy. I'm sure you understand how difficult it is to have an intelligent conversation with someone who doesn't have the slightest idea of what they are talking about.A brief survey of life will reveal that everyone is living, everyone is dying, some a bit earlier than others and some a bit later than others. No big deal either way and as far as humans are concerned, much sooner than turtles and trees. That's about it after billions of years. Lots of variety and as always lots of surprises. The one thing I haven't figured out is why elephants haven't evolved to shoot guns back at the hunters and why we haven't evolved into cockroaches? — Rich
So what is your point? - That any idea that is funded is hogwash? - That making any explanation for ours and the universe's existence is a waste of time? What is it exactly that you are making an argument for?Yeah, it is regulated by money and dogma which puts it well within the sphere of religion.
More money begaths more theories. A Genesisl story of a different sort. — Rich
Materialism is fundamental to these drug scandals. The industry needs to propagate the myth that chemicals are beautiful things because that is all humans are. — Rich
Hey, when you put it like that, you have an argument that works. — apokrisis
But what would make some variant useful under the CEM, if not great environmental change?" — Harry Hindu
It seems that you are arguing that mutations crop up as the result of some intelligence, instead of the random miscopying of genes. — Harry Hindu
Most mutations are a hinderence to survival, and are rejected in the current environmental conditions and most other conditions that exist on Earth, past, present, and future. So where is the intelligence in that? — Harry Hindu
Is there an intelligence behind the changing of environments throughout Earth's geological history? You'd have account for that change and the cause of it. Is it the same intelligence evolving organisms, or are there two intelligences - one that controls the evolution of organisms, and one that controls the changing environment and both are in a never-ending battle against each other? — Harry Hindu
The less fit an individual is, the less likely it is to survive, and the more variance there is, the more there are unoptimal individuals. Thus, as the species in stable conditions approaches their optimal form, the weaker the survival of the fittest as a force driving them towards that stage of existence gets. — BlueBanana
So natural selection would have to be countered by a matching capacity for creative (that is, intelligently tuned) variety production. — apokrisis
I haven't read your paper in a lot of detail yet, I will save that for the weekend, but on the face of it calling Natural Selection 'baggy' is really just saying that Survival of the Fittest didn't really fit isn't it? — MikeL
right, you are suggesting conservation of the allele diversity in the population, which I am arguing we should expect to see in the survival of the fittest model. — MikeL
So, how does that fit into divergent evolution where this 'approaching optimal form' says: 'You know what, stuff being a possum, I want to be a kangaroo.' — MikeL
But it was all good. Science is still rigorous, — MikeL
The kangaroo, for some reason, must be the fittest possibility for this to happen — BlueBanana
The kangaroo, for some reason, must be the fittest possibility for this to happen - probably because of existing space for it. — BlueBanana
Then why the wombat? — MikeL
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.