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A Revolution in Evolution Is Underway
Thomas More Lawcenter ^ | Tue, Jan 18, 2005

Posted on 01/20/2005 12:54:58 PM PST by Jay777

ANN ARBOR, MI — The small town of Dover, Pennsylvania today became the first school district in the nation to officially inform students of the theory of Intelligent Design, as an alternative to Darwin’s theory of Evolution. In what has been called a “measured step”, ninth grade biology students in the Dover Area School District were read a four-paragraph statement Tuesday morning explaining that Darwin’s theory is not a fact and continues to be tested. The statement continued, “Intelligent Design is an explanation of the origin of life that differs from Darwin’s view.” Since the late 1950s advances in biochemistry and microbiology, information that Darwin did not have in the 1850s, have revealed that the machine like complexity of living cells - the fundamental unit of life- possessing the ability to store, edit, and transmit and use information to regulate biological systems, suggests the theory of intelligent design as the best explanation for the origin of life and living cells.

Richard Thompson, President and Chief Counsel of the Thomas More Law Center, a national public interest law firm representing the school district against an ACLU lawsuit, commented, “Biology students in this small town received perhaps the most balanced science education regarding Darwin’s theory of evolution than any other public school student in the nation. This is not a case of science versus religion, but science versus science, with credible scientists now determining that based upon scientific data, the theory of evolution cannot explain the complexity of living cells.”

“It is ironic that the ACLU after having worked so hard to prevent the suppression of Darwin’s theory in the Scopes trial, is now doing everything it can to suppress any effort to challenge it,” continued Thompson.

(Excerpt) Read more at thomasmore.org ...


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: crevolist; unknownorigin
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To: sevry

I didn't twist it at all, you just picked a poorly thought out metaphor. You picked a metaphor that was perfect for my position but absolutely worthless for yours.

I've read what you wrote. I'm repeating myself because that is my position and nothing you've put forth has given me even the slightest reason to change it. Effectively you have posted not a word, at least not a word that had any ability to convince or persuade.


521 posted on 01/22/2005 7:36:03 AM PST by discostu (mime is money)
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To: js1138
I'm not that hard-nosed about terminology, but your words imply that matter behaves differently when it is part of a living thing.

That's a fair statement, js1138; nonetheless I imagine the physical laws are not violated.

522 posted on 01/22/2005 8:03:33 AM PST by betty boop
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To: ThinkPlease
Not seeing anything supporting your claim of a: "Scientist claiming abiogenesis is a part of evolution" in the past ten years.

My claim was that evolutionists didn't start distancing themselves from abiogenesis until about 10 years ago, when it became clear that spontaneous generation of life was very unlikely.

In support I have put up three links each of which quotes famous evolutionists on abiogenesis which indicates that abiogenesis was indeed part of the evolutionary theory in the past.

Here's the list of articles older than 10-15 years that clearly distinquish evolution as being different from abiogenesis...


Oh' that's right.... there are none!!! Can you prove me wrong?

My claim was that evolutionist disclaimers of abiogenesis didn't exist. How do you prove something didn't exist? Y'all could easily disprove me by showing where those same evolutionists or even any other evolutionists prior to 10-15 years ago distanced themselves from abiogenesis or drew a clear distinction between the two. Instead y'all prefer to call me "intellectually dishonest" for not offering evidence that those disclaimers didn't exist. While none of you can offer anything to prove me wrong.

523 posted on 01/22/2005 8:36:26 AM PST by DannyTN
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To: Ichneumon
Ok, but still that one "good" quote plus the direct claims in the first two links by prominent evolutionists do a fair job of establishing that abiogenesis was linked to evolution. I'm certain it was when when I took biology back in the 70's and I'm sure most people over 30 will vouch that it was indeed part and parcel of evolution.

If yall want to separate it now that's ok. I don't think you have evidence for either one but the distancing is occuring because abiogenesis comes under stronger criticism.

Without abiogenesis the philosophical underpinnings of evolution fall away. It doesn't make sense to say everthing happened from strictly natural causes except for the origin of life. If you allow God or intelligent design or ET or anything else other than natural and random processes to generate the origin of life, then you might as well allow those same forces in the development of higher forms of life. I

524 posted on 01/22/2005 8:58:16 AM PST by DannyTN
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To: Ichneumon; betty boop
Thank you for your reply!

I really do want to respond to the points you've both made about quantizing/life/abiogenesis/etc., but it's late (early?) since I've been up all night, and I don't have the time right now to give your posts the attention they deserve, so if you don't mind waiting until tomorrow... (or make that "later today", I guess)

No problem at all. Take your time. Your carefully researched and notoriously thorough replies are always a treat worth waiting for!

525 posted on 01/22/2005 9:23:59 AM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: Nebullis; betty boop
Thank you so much for your reply!

Two points, quickly: 1) Information theory is used in molecular biology to discern meaning between molecules and their environment. Shannon did not concern himself with this, but this is one of the applications of his theory and useful in drug design, sequence comparisons, etc.

2) The simplistic "Where successful communications occur in nature, there is life." is not helpful at all for the fringes where the difficulty arises. By this definition, prions are alive (they are pieces of protein) and self-organizing automata are alive.

I certainly agree with your first point! The second however I thought I had already addressed in post 498 to which you were replying; that, and your mentioning of “self-organizing automata” are good indications that we are speaking past each other.

Self-organizing complexity (aka cellular automata) is a mathematical model proposed by von Neumann which is applicable to a wide range of disciplines – much like the Shannon mathematical model for communications. Self-organizing complexity may be useful in describing how complexity arose in natural systems – living or non-living. It is also very handy for designing artificial intelligence. It is not however “alive” in our four dimensions if space/time – it is, simply put, a mathematical structure with a wide range of application - like various geometries.

Math and the physical world are images of one another. Wigner called this the “unreasonable effectiveness of math”. Max Tegmark's Level IV theory proposed that existents in four dimensional space/time are mathematical structures in parallel universes. "Why pi?" asks Barrow, etc. Most recently we have seen this unreasonable effectiveness in physical dualities and mirror images of string theory.

Stephen Wolfram was so taken back by the broad applicability of von Neumann’s theory, that he proposed A New Kind of Science based on it. And today, Kolmogorov complexity and algorithmic information theory is also causing a kind of sea change in our view of the physical world and abstractions thereof.

We ought never to be surprised when a mathematical theory fits the physical world hand-in-glove. A prime example is when Einstein needed to describe his theory of general relativity he was able to literally pull Riemannian geometry off-the-shelf. That particular application of his geometry was surely not the intention of the mathematician.

Likewise with Shannon’s mathematical theory of communications. It was not formulated to define life which occurs in nature. But it is amazingly effective in making a bright line distinction between life and non-life/death:

Where successful communications occur in nature, there is life. When there is no successful communications in nature there is death or non-life.

Biochemical characterizations lack this purity or elegance – leaving viruses and prions and dormant life cycle phases outside the definition of life and thus an argument against evolution, centering on their lack of autonomy rather than their function. In the Shannon model, viruses etc. are part of the communication for good or ill (noise, etc.) and life cycle phases are moot, as in a spore which remains communicative in dormancy (anthrax for instance remaining dormant until breathed, and then changing states).

At the root, the biologist/chemist worldview is fundamentally different from a mathematician’s. The mathematician looks for structures. The absence of universality is a weakness in a model. In fact, to a mathematician, the absence of evidence is evidence of absence. Not so with the biologist whose theories can span geologic time frames with many absences of evidence.

Likewise, in looking at abiogenesis – the biologist/chemist focuses on the physical components – primordial soup v primordial pizza and the ilk. The mathematician, on the other hand, looks for the rise of information [Shannon, the successful communication itself], autonomy, semiosis and complexity.

And here, in looking for that which distinguishes life from non-life/death – when both consist of the same “stuff” – the biologist/chemist approach is characterization, the mathematician’s approach is mathematical structure. Hence, the difficulty in our making a “connection.” Perhaps we ought to quit trying?

526 posted on 01/22/2005 10:49:46 AM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: PatrickHenry
Evolution professes to account for sin; but it has no proper remedy for it.

Kewl.

527 posted on 01/22/2005 12:21:23 PM PST by js1138
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To: js1138

Yup. Devastating argument.


528 posted on 01/22/2005 12:24:18 PM PST by PatrickHenry (<-- Click on my name. The List-O-Links for evolution threads is at my freeper homepage.)
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To: Ichneumon
...creationists (or anti-evolutionists) need to get it out of their heads that the two topics are somehow inextricably intertwined...

They are intertwined by the fact that creationists and IDers cannot accept either.

529 posted on 01/22/2005 12:26:22 PM PST by js1138
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To: DannyTN
...Most enlightened persons now accept as a fact that everything in the cosmos...p>If you substitute "most persons holding advanced degrees in physical science" for "most enligntened persons" the statement is undeniably true.

In any case, it is presented as an opinion.

530 posted on 01/22/2005 12:33:29 PM PST by js1138
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To: Ichneumon
Finally, it turns out that people's "common sense" experiences with motion often result in misunderstandings about how moving objects actually behave...

It is the verbal descriptions that are mistaken, not the "intuitive/learned" sense of trajectory. The behavior of baseball/frisbie catching humans and dogs is quite in tune with reality.

531 posted on 01/22/2005 12:37:53 PM PST by js1138
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To: betty boop
JS: I'm not that hard-nosed about terminology, but your words imply that matter behaves differently when it is part of a living thing.

BB: That's a fair statement, js1138; nonetheless I imagine the physical laws are not violated.

JS: And electrons behave differently in a tunnel diode than they do in a wire of pure copper. Again, no physical laws are violated. (What does that mean, anyway? If physical laws appear to be violated, the laws are incorrectly formulated, by definition.)

Matter is neither alive nor dead. A physical object or structure can be alive or dead, just as a physical object can be a pile of rubble or a cell phone. It is not the physicalness that is important, but the structure.

Structures and assemblies can have properties that the constituent components do not have. Salt has properties that cannot be derived from the properties of chlorine and sodium.

For this reason, you cannot prove, from first principles or from statistics, that abiogenesis is impossible. You might be able to prove that a given hypothesis is faulty, but you can't derive all possible routes from the properties of known elements.

Science is a creative, and I daresay, iterative and evolutionary process. It proceeds through cycles of guesswork and testing. ID is one of those guesses. Unfortunately, it is the wrong kind of guess. Rather than guessing that something is possible and attempting to demonstrate the possibility, it guesses that something is impossible and engages in mathematical argumentation. You can't prove that something is impossible. You can only make repeated attempts and succeed or fail. In particular, you cannot prove from first principles, what the properties of a new complex organic compound will be. You cannot prove from first principles that chemical evolution cannot produce a replicator.

532 posted on 01/22/2005 1:04:20 PM PST by js1138
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To: DannyTN
Here's the list of articles older than 10-15 years that clearly distinquish evolution as being different from abiogenesis...

1... 2... 3...

Oh' that's right.... there are none!!! Can you prove me wrong?

If you go back 145 years to Darwin's Origin Of Species, you will find the first statement clearly distinguishing the origin of life via the creator, and subsequent evolution. Is that far enough back?

533 posted on 01/22/2005 1:08:07 PM PST by js1138
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To: DannyTN
I'm sure most people over 30 will vouch that it was indeed part and parcel of evolution.

I'm 59, and I say your statement is a lie.

534 posted on 01/22/2005 1:09:29 PM PST by js1138
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To: js1138; betty boop; Alamo-Girl
You cannot prove from first principles that chemical evolution cannot produce a replicator.

It seems that research is underway. I haven't studied this stuff, but it looks serious, and the author is for real:
The Artificial Self-Replication Page.

535 posted on 01/22/2005 1:16:06 PM PST by PatrickHenry (<-- Click on my name. The List-O-Links for evolution threads is at my freeper homepage.)
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[Silent placemarker]
536 posted on 01/22/2005 1:25:23 PM PST by balrog666 (A myth by any other name is still inane.)
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To: PatrickHenry

A google search on "Synthetic self-replicating molecules" is interesting.


537 posted on 01/22/2005 1:28:05 PM PST by js1138
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To: DannyTN
Without abiogenesis the philosophical underpinnings of evolution fall away. It doesn't make sense to say everthing happened from strictly natural causes except for the origin of life. If you allow God or intelligent design or ET or anything else other than natural and random processes to generate the origin of life, then you might as well allow those same forces in the development of higher forms of life. I

Dataman makes the same argument. It isn't any more intellectually honest when you make it, though.

Your entire argument boils down to "If we allow for miracles, then evolution might be false". If we allow for miracles, all of science suddenly comes into question, because we cannot trust that the functioning of the universe is consistent without occasional outside intervention. However, the fact remains that ultimately, the study of evolution is not dependent on any one particular means by which life came to exist. I have repeatedly asked how proving that it is impossible for "life" to emerge from "non-life" would prove, without doubt, that evolution is false and I have not received a single rational answer. The best that was offered was Dataman's attempt to turn "maybe" into "definitely" with sloppy semantic sleight of hand.
538 posted on 01/22/2005 1:38:29 PM PST by Dimensio (http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
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To: balrog666; betty boop; Alamo-Girl; PatrickHenry

It appears to me that self-replication occurs at a fairly low level in chemistry, almost as if nature were biased towards self-replication.

I don't know exactly what to make of that, but I would like to know exactly what the difference is between a universe in which a bias towards self-replication is "natural" and one in which it is exactly the same except "designed". I mean, after the moment of creation, what's the difference.


539 posted on 01/22/2005 1:42:34 PM PST by js1138
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To: js1138
I mean, after the moment of creation, what's the difference.

It means that when the salmon swims upstream to spawn, the cosmos rejoices.

540 posted on 01/22/2005 2:00:12 PM PST by PatrickHenry (<-- Click on my name. The List-O-Links for evolution threads is at my freeper homepage.)
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