Posted on 06/08/2007 10:45:45 AM PDT by SirLinksalot
How were the oceans, puppies and human beings formed? Was it through evolution, creationism or something in between?
It's a heavy topic that's generated debate for years. That discourse landed in Chesterfield School Board members' laps recently when they set about adopting new science textbooks for middle and high schools.
At issue was the concept of intelligent design, and why none of the proposed textbooks offered an alternative to evolution for how the universe came to be.
Intelligent design proponents urged the School Board to include that theory in the school system's science curriculum so students can consider differing viewpoints in the classroom. But, federal law requires school systems to remain neutral on the topic, making it illegal for teachers to prompt discussions involving intelligent design or creationism.
In the end, members unanimously approved the proposed textbooks, but issued a formal statement saying, "It is the School Board's belief that this topic, along with all other topics that raise differences of thought and opinion, should receive the thorough and unrestricted study as we have just articulated. Accordingly, we direct our superintendent to charge those of our professionals who support curriculum development and implementation with the responsibility to investigate and develop processes that encompass a comprehensive approach to the teaching and learning of these topics."
(To read the School Board's complete statement, visit www.chesterfieldobserver. com and click on the link for "special" in the menu on the left.)
Superintendent Marcus Newsome was also asked to ensure teachers are aware of federal laws regarding any discussions of religion in the classroom. Currently, any discussions of creationism or intelligent design must be raised by students not teachers and teachers must remain neutral on the topic.
But some proponents of intelligent design who spoke before the School Board last week believe limiting discussions to evolution is anything but neutral.
"Our children are not being educated; they are being indoctrinated," said Cathleen Waagner. "Let the evidence speak for itself and let [the students] draw their own conclusions."
Another speaker, Michael Slagle, presented a document containing 700 signatures of scientists worldwide who have questioned the validity of evolution.
"Students are being excluded from scientific debate. It's time to bring this debate into the classroom," he said.
On a personal level, some School Board members appeared to agree that discussions on the beginning of life should encompass more theories than just evolution. Dale District representative David Wyman said limiting discussions to evolution is "counterscientific" and said religious topics are already frequently touched on in classrooms. He cited the Declaration of Independence, the paintings in the Sistine Chapel and the Crusades as examples.
School Board Chairman Tom Doland stressed that students are not discouraged from discussing alternatives to evolution or any religious topic. "They do not leave their First Amendment rights at the door," he said.
"As individuals, as parents, we have the right to instruct our children, and we should never turn that over to someone else," he added.
Clover Hill District representative Dianne Pettitt reminded everyone that "teachers are agents of the government Students are free to initiate discussions but we do have to stay within the limits of the law. We cannot just do what we personally want to do."
Midlothian District representative Jim Schroeder said he didn't want those who attended the meeting to "walk out of here thinking, 'There goes the public schools kicking God out of the schools again.'"
"I believe God is the author of life, and I don't want anything taught in schools that denigrates that," he added.
Bermuda District representative Marshall Trammell Jr. was more cautious, saying he was afraid to have teachers deal with such issues in the classroom because they might infringe on students' personal religious beliefs.
"I don't want that in a public school," he said. "That is a matter for church and home."
Students will begin using the new textbooks this fall.
"Attributed to a power that seems to violate or go beyond natural forces."
No, naturalism merely means no intelligent design. Apparently you admit that mankind is a supernatural creature since man is capable of intelligent design.
"And, according to your definition of evolution invoking naturalism and intelligent design not invoking naturalism, intelligent design in the context of evolutionary biology includes supernatural explanations."
I already explained that intelligent design does not require supernatural explanations because intelligent aliens could have created life on earth. They would be intelligent, use design and not be supernatural if they 'evolved' elsewhere.
"I am merely requesting a direct answer. Just like you've never directly said, "God did it," you've also never directly stated that under the accepted definition of evolution, evolution has occurred. To clarify, I am talking about evolution as fact. The theories of evolution all rest on this fact."
Let me explain again, the 'accepted definition of evolution' is a game where the word is defined to be consistent with observations and the same word is then used to refer to unobserved processes and events. This is a bait-and-switch game that naturalists are quite proud of and actually think means something. It is nothing more than a game, however and many, many people see right through it.
"Also, your comment in Post 220, "You like the game now that the shoe is on the other foot?", indicates that you are playing the game even though you don't like it. It baffles me that you choose to continue."
Lots of things baffle you. Why stop now?
No and no.
There is nothing wrong with assigning a word to represent an occurrence (i.e. defining a word to be consistent with observations.) For example, lets say that I go to a gym and I see a person in a squat position with his hands on a weighted bar that is resting on the floor. A second later, the bar is over his head, and one a second afterward, he squats up. I have just observed this person executing what is known as a snatch. The snatch is defined as a movement where the bar is explosively driven over the head in one movement. Based on my observation, the person did just that. Am I wrong to say that he did a snatch because I used a word that is defined to be consistent with an observation and is also used to refer to unobserved events (i.e. other people snatching in gyms that Ive never been to)? No, he did a snatch because he moved the bar over his head in one movement. What he did fits the definition, therefore he did it.
Evolution is defined as change in allele frequencies of a population over time. We see this with the moths and bacterial populations that are no longer susceptible to certain antibiotics. Because the allele frequencies of the moth and bacteria populations changed over time, evolution occurred. All the reasoned arguments, papers, and experiments in the world from persons far more intelligent than I cannot convince you that under the accepted definition of evolution, not your definition, evolution has occurred.
Intelligent design is also a game under your definition of evolution, for it is defined to be consistent with observations and is then used to refer to unobserved processes and events.
Lots of things do baffle me. I'm not ashamed to admit it. Are you?
You claim that ID has nothing to do with the supernatural.
OK, given that, let's reword my previous post a tad.
Does ID, in any of its incarnations, admit that natural processes, including but not limited to Evolution, are quite capable of producing the complexity and variety of Earthly organisms?
Does ID suggest that any of the non-supernatural intelligent agents putatively responsible for Earthly life are less complex than Earth life?
I agree with you that it could be argued that Kitzmiller involved censorship of a sort. I agree with you that students should have the freedom to check out a book like Of Pandas and People.
But, censorship was a minor issue in the case. I direct you to the following statement, which was added to the biology curriculum in 2004:
This was problematic. As the defense expert witnesses themselves acknowledged, under the NAS (i.e. accepted) definition of theory, intelligent design is not a theory. Judge Jones used this testimony in his ruling.
That's what I thought, too. Then, I encountered GourmetDan, who to date has not acknowledged that under the most basic definition of evolution, change in allele frequencies of a population over time, evolution has occurred.
In my post 240, I asked the following question that you later quoted in post 250:
GourmetDans response? the 'accepted definition of evolution' is a game where the word is defined to be consistent with observations and the same word is then used to refer to unobserved processes and events It is nothing more than a game, however and many, many people see right through it.
He doesnt even acknowledge that under the simplest, most basic, and least offensive definition of evolution, allele frequency change at the population level, evolution has occurred. Basically, he doesnt like the common definition, so he uses his own definition of evolution that no one in biology recognizes.
Microevolution does not conflict with intelligent design ideology, but GourmetDan simply does not realize that. It is no caricature to say that he denies the validity of microevolution.
I disagree.
According to Campbell and Reece, the authors of an introductory biology textbook, macroevolution is defined as change in allele frequencies at or above the species level.
Origin of life theories are certainly related to macroevolution. They depend on macroevolution, but the opposite is not true. Even if it were shown that the Flying Spaghetti Monster was responsible for creating the first prokaryote, it would not negate macroevolution. Change in allele frequencies at or above the species level has been readily observed. I believe many pages back I provided a novel example about meiosis errors in a plant resulting in offspring with polyploidy. If two organisms cannot produce viable offspring, then these two organisms belong to different species. The offspring with polyploidy cannot reproduce with other members of the parent species. Therefore, it is a different species. Macroevolution has occurred. This is but one example. The textbook I mentioned includes several more.
There is no empirical evidence whatsoever that Random Mutation can create novel cell types, tissue types, organs, or body plans.
Would you be surprised if I told you that one of the defense expert witnesses on your side wrote a paper that actually showed mutation could result in novel cell types?
Does ID, in any of its incarnations, admit that natural processes, including but not limited to Evolution, are quite capable of producing the complexity and variety of Earthly organisms?
"If by the term --- not limited to Evolution, you are opening the way for some intelligent agent that guided or directed the process, then the answer is YES.
No, what I am asking is if ID posits that there is possibly another completely natural (meaning non-guided) process that can produce the kind of complexity we see in Earthly life, or is anything of that complexity limited to intelligent design?
Does ID suggest that any of the non-supernatural intelligent agents putatively responsible for Earthly life are less complex than Earth life?
"Here is where we see VARIATIONS and IN-HOUSE DEBATE within proponents of ID. The simple answer is WE DO NOT KNOW AT THIS TIME. The way I understand ID proponents is this --- they argue by everyday observation -- SPECIFIED COMPLEXITY ALWAYS requires intelligent, purposeful agents."
OK, I can assume by this then that all Earthly life exhibits signs of CSI, is that correct?
How can we objectively identify and measure CSI?
"ID as a science is principally interested in DESIGN INFERENCE and DETECTION. It does not purport at this time to describe WHO the designer is."
How is the determination and detection of design done?
I would have to study alternative splicings more thoroughly before I could give a good answer to your question. However, my initial impression would be that an alternative splicing is just a copy of the original which left out part of the protein coding. I don’t believe that this contradicts what I was saying since (If I correctly understand what you are talking about) no new information has been developed instead a part of an existing protein string has been copied incompletely. This still does not show that natural selection would favor a mutation which produces a new sequence of bases which partially codes for a new protein. Since the partially coded protein cannot yet convey any benefit on the organism.
Bingo. Which answers your question (to paraphrase, since your post is not in front of me at the moment), "What use is half a protein?" In some cases, it's quite useful, although it does not serve the same role as a lengthier protein that shares some of the same sequence.
I dont believe that this contradicts what I was saying since (If I correctly understand what you are talking about) no new information has been developed instead a part of an existing protein string has been copied incompletely.
I see the supposed information problem popping up. There are many creationists who say that mutations cannot add information because all of the big creationists keep saying this. It's not true. We can look at this several ways:
It is simply not true that mutations cannot add information in the form of new function.
This still does not show that natural selection would favor a mutation which produces a new sequence of bases which partially codes for a new protein.
Certainly it does. Take the initial gene we spoke of, which produces variants through alternative splicing. Copy the gene (we know gene duplication events take place). Mutate the gene to produce a new stop codon and truncate the protein product (creationists would definitely allow this). Now it codes for the same shortened protein produced by the first gene by alternative splicing and the new gene does serve a role. If you like you can mutate that (as shown above, such mutations can produce new function) and voila, completely new protein that may have a completely new function.
Now that we've considered alternative splicing, the objection to "a new sequence of bases which partially codes for a new protein" is groundless since truncated proteins may be just as functional as longer ones sharing some of the same sequence. A "protein" is not an absolute thing where you can look at one polypeptide and say "Now that's a protein" and look at another and say "Oh, that's only half a protein." A protein is just a polypeptide that serves some purpose, and some are big and while some are smaller.
I read the abstract of the web page you gave...
I think you are mis-reading Michael Behe. If he indeed believed in macro-evolution, he would have said so. That paper you cited does not in any way show how novel cell types, tissue types, organs, or body plans could be created by random mutation.
In Michael Behes Recent Book : The Edge of Evolution. He offers hard evidence for what most people recognize. (Those who have been blinded by Darwinist indoctrination are obviously excluded.)
Mutations break things. However, on occasion, with huge probabilistic resources, a broken thing can promote survival in a specific environment (e.g., bacterial antibiotic resistance).
But broken things represent a downhill process, informationally, and cannot account for an uphill, information-creating process, not to mention the machinery required to process that information.
Understanding this is not difficult, unless one has a nearly pathological commitment to the notion that design in the universe and living systems cannot possibly exist.
Don’t get me wrong Michael Behe Behe accepts that cumulative selection happens. At issue is the SUFFICIENCY and UBIQUITY of the mechanism. Behe make a good case that what is claimed as innovation is more akin to DESTRUCTION.
It is like one army blowing up its own bridges in an attempt to slow and invasion. The affects of blowing up multiple bridges are cumulative, but not innovative.
In fact When Behe discusses pyrimethamine for instance, he is not only acknowledging the effects of cumulative mutations, but also highlighting with the specific case that even these beneficial mutations can have a net negative effect on the organism. In order to achieve the added resistance of the new mutations protein function is lost.
In order to make the new mutations selectable the virus must simultaneously acquire an independent mutation to compensate for this loss.
Behe acknowledges the existence of the cumulative effect, investigates the actual empirical evidence, compares this to the huge population of mutating malaria, and draws his conclusions based upon the relevant data.
He also discusses in one chapter of his book the very Darwinian hypothesis for the existence of anti-freeze in the blood of the Notothenioids. Gene duplication, cumulative beneficial mutations, and even a serendipitous deletion.
Here is what he said :
Instead of pointing to greater things, as Darwinists hoped, the antifreeze protein likely marks the far border of what we can expect of random mutation in vertebrates. -— page 82
This is what his book is about - what Darwinian evolution can do, and WHAT IT CANNOT. What it cannot is what I said — create NOVEL TISSUE TYPES, ORGANS OR BODY PARTS.
Behe also said :
random variation doesnt explain the most basic features of biology. It doesnt explain the elegant, sophisticated molecular machinery that undergirds life. To account for that - and to account for the root and thick branches of the tree of common descent - multiple coherent mutations are needed.
Most mutations that built the great structures of life must have been non-random.
page 83
So please, don’t use Behe as your advocate. He knows what he’s talking about and he has researched the issue and is quite honest about it. If he agreed with you, he would have
not have been an ID proponent. The man may be many other things but he ain’t stupid.
I'm not sure, but I'm hardly an exquisite original thinker. My question was/is an attempt to build a path through ID that does not ultimately source from some God. I'm not sure that it can be done, it seems to me that,logically at least, ID has to end up with some supernatural initiator.
Of course that does not mean that ID cannot develop an objective, reliable methodology to differentiate Specified complexity from unspecified complexity which would be independent of the source of complexity.
My interest is in how that can be done without relying on purely subjective criteria. If ID is restricted to just 'proving' that evolution could not accomplish the same thing then it is not showing that ID is the only possible alternative. There must a methodology used by ID that is completely independent of Evolution
"I refer you to a lecture given by William Dembski in response to this question. He says things better than I ever could. See here :
http://www.arn.org/docs/dembski/wd_anotherwaytodetectdesign.htm"
Let me digest this before I get back to you.
We are not allowed to proselytize, certainly, but I'm not aware of any laws of that sort.
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