Posted on 03/22/2012 7:44:32 AM PDT by Moseley
Here is evolution for you:
http://upressonline.com/2012/03/fau-student-threatens-to-kill-professor-and-classmates/ This is very sad. And it seems crazy at first.
BUT THINK ABOUT IT. It is obvious to me what is going on here. Yes, I am guessing / reading between the lines. But I think it is very clear.
The class was being taught about EVOLUTION:
A fellow classmate, Rachel Bustamante, was sitting behind Carr prior to her outburst and noticed she had been avoiding looking at the professor until 11:35 a.m. thats when she snapped. The classmate reported that Kajiura was discussing attraction between peacocks when Carr raised her hand to ask her question about evolution. She asked it four times, and became increasingly upset each time Kajiuras answer failed to satisfy her.
DID YOU CATCH IT? The professor was discussing the evolutionary role of "attraction between peacocks."
In other words, how do animals / people choose a mate?
If you remember what evolution teaches, it teaches that INDIVIDUALS *MATE* BASED UPON PERCEIVED *SUPERIOR* CHARACTERISTICS for evolution.
So this Black woman Jonatha(?) Carr obviously perceives that BEING BLACK IS ASSUMED (by many) to be INFERIOR and that evolution means that men CHOOSE women based upon what is perceived to be SUPERIOR qualities.
What evolution means to Carr -- and who can blame her, logically? -- is that men are going to choose "BETTER" women than her, and she is not going to get chosen as a valuable person or desirable mate.
Hence, the discussion of how animals, like peacocks, CHOOSE A MATE based upon how they other one LOOKS.
So this Black woman is obviously perceiving that evolution means that men will choose the SUPERIOR candidate for mating and reproduction, and evolution produces "improvement" over time by men selecting SUPERIOR women -- meaning NOT HER.
Whereas Christianity teaches the value and infinite worth of E V E R Y human being in God's eyes, and that every man and woman is not only valuable just for who they are, but infinitely valuable in God's heart, evolution teaches that this Black woman is INFERIOR to other women, to be discarded and rejected in the evolutionary march toward perfection.
Buried in her thinking must be the idea that Black men (so the cliche goes, true or untrue) prefer White women over Black women. (I suspect this flows from Blacks being persecuted and wanting the affirmation of being valued by a perceied more powerful class, not because there is anything inherently superior about White women over Black women in an evolutionary sense.)
God looks over the vast diversity of human types and characteristics, and says IT IS GOOD: ALL OF IT. All of the vast differences and variety. There is no "better" or "worse" in God's eyes. There is no human being more (or less) valuable than this Black woman Carr. Everyone is equally cherished in God's heart.
Somewhere, if we can learn to follow God's plans (which unfortunately is much more difficult and mysterious than it sounds, and can be a frustrating search), God knows the PERFECT CHOICE of a man for Jonatha Carr.
NO, the man isn't perfect, any more than Miss Carr is perfect. No one is perfect. Marriage involves the strange situation of two VERY IMPERFECT human beings trying to live a life together without killing each other. Therein lies the challenge of learning to APPLY God's principles in real life. Marriage is like the "lab class" in comparison with the "class lecture." We get to put into practice during the week what God tries to teach us on Sunday.
But God says that if Miss Carr can put her trust in God's hands, there is a perfect choice of a mate for her. God doesn't move on our time table, and God can be frustrating sometimes. But in God Miss Carr lacks nothing.
However, evolution tells Miss Carr that life is a hostile, adversarial, dog-eat-dog COMPETITION in which she is necessarily going to be the LOSER because (in her mind, as she has been bombarded with negativity) being a Black woman puts her at the bottom of the list of choices.
Evolution means survival of the fittest and (she thinks) that ain't her.
Can you see now why she yells "I HATE EVOLUTION!"
The question is:
DO YOU?
DO YOU HATE EVOLUTION, TOO?
For the very same reason that Miss Carr understandably hates evolution, shouldn't we all?
Evolution is not simply an irrelevant side show for those who believe in God.
EVOLUTION IS A DIRECT AND VIOLENT ASSAULT ON THE WORTH AND DIGNITY AND SELF IDENTITY OF HUMAN BEINGS, TEARING DOWN THEIR UNDERSTANDING OF THEMSELVES, AND PITTING BROTHER AGAINST BROTHER AND SISTER AGAINST SISTER, IN AN UNGODLY COMPETITION. Evolution breeds violence, hatred, depression, and despair.
There is not a single human being alive whom God does not want. And there is not a single human being alive whom God wants any more than any other.
Yet evolution tells this young Black woman - and any one else who has ever, temporarily, felt inferior for a moment in time -- that she is destined to be discarded by life, that she is trash to be excluded and rejected by the world.
Do you hate evolution with a passion, yet?
We look at these things in a laboratory environment because it allows us to disregard all of the confounders that one finds outside of a lab. But yes, for the adaptation experiment allmendream described, what happens in the lab would be what we would expect to happen outside of the lab.
Are you using bacteria microscopic, single-celled organisms which do not have either a membrane-enclosed nucleus or other membrane-enclosed organelles like mitochondria as a proxy for all biological systems in nature, in particular of the most highly complex one we know about, human beings?
It is often very insightful to examine processes in simpler organisms before we look at the process in a more complex organism. We can disrupt processes in simpler organisms that we simply cannot do in higher organisms; we do this because often, the purpose of a metabolic function does not become apparent until we can see what happens when it is absent.
It is not the case that humans are the most complex organism we know about. The respiratory system of birds, for example, is far more complex and efficient than the mammalian system. Plant reproduction is far more complex than animal reproduction.
It appears from what you wrote that the "marching order" signals are all triggered locally. I.e., they are the effects of local causes. For a bacterium, this may be good enuf.
I recall discussing this some time back. All organisms respond to signals. Those signals can be anything, from any source--environmental, from within the organism, or from other organisms of the same or different species. The signals cause a response. The signals should not, in any way, be interpreted as indicative of intelligent involvement. The sun doesn't decide to irradiate you with UV rays; you don't decide to tan or burn or make vitamin D in response. Those processes all happen spontaneously and without thought.
But what happens with the astronomically more complex higher life forms? Do you believe that the behavior of bacteria really sheds light on the organization of these higher life forms? It seems clear to me that such organization can only be accomplished by a non-local cause, one that coordinates and governs the entire system, not just the behavior of the system's components.
Yes, the functions of bacteria behavior do shed light on human functions. In some cases, the functions are the same (respiration of aerobic organisms, for example). In the case of some organelles, studying bacteria is superior to studying eukaryotes: both mitochondria and chloroplasts are bacteria that took up residence inside eukaryotic cells many millions of years ago. They have their own DNA, arranged in a chromosome that still looks more like a bacterial chromosome than a eukaryotic chromosome. Their proteins resemble bacterial proteins.
As for the control of a multicellular system, it occurs at all levels, from the single cell up to the entire body. If a cell needs more energy, it acts to acquire more energy without involving other cells. If an organism perceives danger, the entire organism reacts.
In short, assuming you can do as you claim in the above italics and I really don't doubt this what relevance does it have for the understanding of complex biological systems in nature? All the bacteria studies can do is to demonstrate local-cause behavior. It sheds no light on the complexities involved in the organization and governance of higher-order biological systems in nature.
Bacterial studies do far more than that. Metabolic pathways that are similar between bacteria and multicellular organisms can be studied without complicating factors. Bacteria talk to each other and coordinate with each other. Bacteria can be used to produce proteins of higher organisms for in vitro studies that wouldn't be possible otherwise. And so on. When I was doing my PhD research, I was interested in the function of a human metabolic pathway, but I used bacteria, yeast, human, mouse, monkey, and hamster cells, as well as protein extracts from a variety of organs from different species. That is because many approaches are needed to find answers.
Neither you or any other Creationist.
Yet you seem to insist that SOME element of the evolution you claim to accept has a physical basis - yet you have absolutely no idea, nor do you care to make a conjecture, as to what the physical basis is.
Is it intellectual laziness?
You have been discussing an issue you don't really understand for many years now. You don't understand the scientific basis for Darwinian evolution or the scientific physical basis for the evolution you claim you believe in either.
Heck, you don't really even understand what DNA is or what it does - yet are quite certain, somehow, that is isn't able to do it on its own.
Would you take the word of someone who doesn't understand an internal combustion engine that burning gas alone was not necessary and sufficient to provide the energy required to make the car go - that there must be some outside force acting upon the car?
I sure wouldn't. Thus I take your conjecture that DNA, which you don't understand, is not necessary and sufficient to producing a living organism without external and somewhat miraculous “marching orders” - with about the same level of confidence - that being zero.
As Sir Karl Popper said, the ability to falsify a theory makes it valuable - not its "explanatory power."
When a theory is generalized so that it can explain most anything - and especially thereafter revised to accommodate new evidence (e.g. punctuated equilibrium) - the theory is more like dogma than a scientific theory. See my post over on this thread for more.
Looking back, we know all that begetting of baby pigeons would end up on the scrapheap of history.
“Failures!”, I say, “Everyone of them useless!”
God, on the other hand is concerned when any sparrow falls.
And about you, too, TL.
Looking back, we know all that begetting of baby pigeons would end up on the scrapheap of history.
“Failures!”, I say, “Everyone of them useless!”
God, on the other hand is concerned when any sparrow that falls.
And about you, too, TL.
Yep, that’s what I said.
Sounds an odd theology to me.
I sketched out this model a few years ago:
You'll note the model contains a "physical basis" and an informational component that looks at the algorithmic complexity of each of the five levels.
This model is based on Alex William's work, fleshed out with a bit of Grandpierre and Chaitin. The proposal of quantum and biological vacuum fields (Fig. 3) is my hypothesis.
But of course, the model does not deal with evolution per se, only "self-making," irreducibly complex biological systems in nature. In short, what biological systems are, not just what they "look like."
I hope you'll find the model interesting.
It does nothing to differentiate the evolution you claim to believe in from the mechanism Darwin outlined.
So I guess the answer to if you could explain the physical mechanism behind the evolution you claim to believe in is still a resounding “No”.
So how would a population “evolve” via a physical mechanism in the evolution you claim to accept?
Can you explain it in a non-”Darwinian” fashion?
Apparently not.
Very amusing.
???
You’re gonna have to explain that one. I don’t understand.
Natural selection is not a "physical mechanism."
When I subject a bacterial population to an antibiotic that targets their ribosomes - the antibiotic is a physical mechanism that will kill the vast majority of that population.
The difference between those that died and those that did not was a physical difference. Variations within some of that population in the relevant DNA for the ribosomes will make the antibiotic not able to physically bind and physically stop protein production resulting in physical death.
How would one attempt to divorce that from being physical? It certainly isn't magical miraculous or metaphysical.
I believe that evolution happened, and I believe in God. It's all just part of the design, and there's no reason to hate the design or anything to be gained from it.
Got it. It’s a theological difference.
Apparenlty, you believe God made humanity with death already on the books for him. I don’t believe that.
There you go. I don’t “hate” eveolution because I have a different theology. In order for the arguments presented to cause me to want to hate evolution, I’d have to change my religious beliefs.
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