Posted on 05/08/2006 1:17:07 PM PDT by mlc9852
Human interaction with animals could be causing evolution to go into reverse, says a report by the Royal Society, Britain's science academy.
A study of finches on the Galapagos Islands in the Pacific finches are the same birds that were said to have inspired Charles Darwin's groundbreaking work on evolution - has shown that some could be losing their distinctive beaks in response to living near humans.
Finches on the islands have developed different sizes of beak - but when people live in close proximity to the birds, their beaks revert to an intermediate size, the report says.
Andrew Hendry, a professor at McGill University in Montreal who led the study, told the Independent newspaper that the evolutionary split within the species was being reversed.
(Excerpt) Read more at english.aljazeera.net ...
I can't find anything wrong with it because I haven't read it. There are lots of things I haven't read. Could you summarize their best argument?
Hi JCEccles! Much admired your post #91, in which you wrote the above.
Indeed, like you I'm concerned with the attitude of some Neodarwinists these days, that Darwin's theory is so "state-of-the-art" it cannot be improved upon in any respect. So one must not look for further improvements. This is such an anti-scientific attitude that I find myself shocked by it.
There is little doubt in my mind that Darwin's theory successfully accounts for certain processes in nature, but not all of them. And as you point out, information theory may hold the key to a fuller understanding.
Although ID has been so politicized that one hardly knows what it really is anymore, all it says basically is that certain features [not all features] of the universe and life are best explained by intelligent cause rather than an undirected process such as natural selection. Which seems eminently reasonable to me.
Thank you so much for your fine post!
Have you read the entire contents of talkorigins.org? If not, get busy.
My point is simple - you trolled into the thread with a silly baseless comment.
Betty, I've asked you politely several times not to ping me to this sort of thing. This will be the last polite request.
Be careful - you are making sense - that makes the evo's angry
My comment was true. You don't have any arguments against the talkorigins article, or you would at least summarize them. There is nothing wrong with the peppered moth studies.
You comment was nonsensical trolling - get over it.
You don't have any arguments against the talkorigins article
I don't need arguments against talkorigins.org - your comment points out the trolling nature of your statement - all I said was talkorigins.org is the womb of the evolution-faithful - if you don't grasp that, there is not much I can do to help you out.
There is nothing wrong with the peppered moth studies.
Which one?
Sorry RWP. I pinged you because JCEccles had pinged you, and I was responding to his correspondence with you. Thought you'd like to stay in the loop. I apologize for being mistaken about this.
There is nothing even debatable about the fact that the frequency of the darker moth has risen and fallen in the last century and a half, correlated with air pollution. This kind of selection isn't even denied by creationists. Reviews of the Kettlewell experiments do not support allegations of fraud.
If creationists think there was fraud, the appropriate thing to do is replicate the experiments. It wouldn't take nearly as much money as building theme parks.
This is how actual scientists examine fraud, as in the recent cloning case.
I am not God, and do not know whether there was data fudging, but such fudging can usually be detected by statistical analysis (which hasn't happened with Kettlewell), or by checking the original raw data. Newton, for example, altered his raw data in his later publications to better conform to his mathematical formulas. It's hard to cheat and not eventually be caught.
Newton's cheating, however, did not invalidate his laws, and selection is not going to be invalidated by any study, no matter how flawed it might be.
Not a problem.
If it's not a reversal, is it more like a, "nevermind, I don't need that after all" kind of change?
This summary is about the best I've read on these threads.
I like your cows...scarey eyes tho...
Hows things on the ranch?...how are the mini horses?
Regarding post #196...a most excellent observation...
Oops...my post #198 was meant for you...tho I agree with Blowfish and his observation as well..
Some IDers may say this, CG -- by that's not what the ID hypothesis says. As already mentioned, all ID says is that certain features [not all features] of the universe and life are best explained by intelligent cause rather than an undirected process such as natural selection. Alamo-Girl's excellent summary of ID bears repeating here:
Intelligent design is not a religion, as certain interested parties have claimed, in that it does not posit articles of faith, morals, doctrine, or Holy writ. Nor does it substitute for evolution theory because it addresses only certain features of the universe, not all features. Nor is it an origin of life hypothesis.You seem to be very impressed with an idea of "progress" (including scientific progress) which basically suggests that people living today are smarter than people who lived in earlier times. (Must be some kind of in-built bias you have, conditioned as you seem to be by Neodarwinist theory.) And thus any new discovery trumps (and demolishes) the older understandings of mankind.Most significantly, it does not specify the intelligent cause, which could be a phenomenon such as an emergent property of self-organizing complexity or fractal intelligence. Neither does it specify a particular agent, such as God, or collective consciousness, aliens, Gaia, etc. The Intelligent Design hypothesis does not specify either phenomenon or agent much less any specific phenomenon or specific agent.
My understanding, however, is scientific breakthroughs rest on past human achievements. Past achievements don't get "trashed" for the simple reason that they are the basis of all "new and improved" additions to scientific understanding.
But I find you are inconsistent in the application of this principle: For it seems you think there is no more "progress" to be made in evolution theory, because Neodarwinism already has all the answers. Certainly you give the impression that you think there is little more "progress" to be made in evolution theory. Which must mean that presently-living Neodarwinists are the smartest people the Universe ever produced, or ever will produce.
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