Originally posted by Freak
Can chair be anything but chair. Look at the structure of the word itself. It is absolute.
Maybe maybe not. read my prior post and explain to us how you can be so certain.
Originally posted by Freak
Can chair be anything but chair. Look at the structure of the word itself. It is absolute.
Originally posted by Flipper
Certainly that's true. But it seems like if all the multiplicity of cats with all their adaptions evolved in just 6,000 years, the genome would have incontrovertible evidence for an agressive rate of change, no?
I'm particularly interested in the mechanisms that allowed such dramatic change in such a short time,
the checks that prevented speciation beyond the "kind",
and the mechanics of the ruthless culling that ejected genes from the pool as the animals took on their forms and adaptions.
Unless you're implying that all cats still have the ability to become lions/tigers/servals/housecats/cheetahs/snowleopards/mountainlions etc etc...
Basically, I'm thinking your genome would bear little resemblance to what we actually see.
I'm also thinking that any species genome would clearly and incontrovertibly point to being only 6,000 years in existence.
I also don't see why all cats wouldn't hold the genetic potential to become tigers/lions/cheetahs without even requiring selective pressure.
Will we be able to switch on these primordial genes to restart the 6,000 year speciation mechanism?
The cheetahs likely genetically bottlenecked towards the end of the ice age, 10,000 years ago. What happened to this extraordinary evolutionary mechanism you propose?
After all, the entire diversity of cat-kind evolved from, what, a single pair in just 6,000 years? What happened in the interim?
Luckily, answers may be in the offing. Dr Stephen O'Brien at the Laboratory of Genomic Diversity at the National Cancer Institute is sequencing the domestic cat genome (he's also the guy who IDed the genetic similarity between all surviving cheetah - apparently they're closer genetically than human identical twins which I didn't know).
http://home.ncifcrf.gov/ccr/lgd/comparative_genome/catgenome/whythecat.asp
I look forward to his discovery of the 6,000 year old genome and these genetic mechanisms you are surely proposing.
I'm surprised they haven't found them already, as you are suggesting a much more aggressive rate of genetic section (presumably no mutation, as all the available info would be in the genome, right) than even the most optimistic evolutionist.
I'm just interested to know how you would explain all this in just 6,000 years.
Originally posted by Eireann
They lived together in the Triassic?
Now you have me confused. I thought you were one of those arguing for a 6000-year-old earth?
If the earth is 6000 years old, there wouldn't have been a Triassic.
It is placed approximately 250 million years ago.
Humans didn't appear until the Quaternary Period (the Tertiary, Jurassic and Cretaceous Periods all fall between the Quaternary and Triassic periods).
Originally posted by quip
Maybe maybe not. read my prior post and explain to us how you can be so certain.
Originally posted by PureX
The universe itself is a physical phenomena, as we perceive it, but it's origin is a mystery.
It follows that we would expect a cause. It does not follow that it necessarily has one.
We have no way of knowing how much of reality the universe as we grasp it can represent, physical or otherwise.
I don't think this is an accurate statement. The universe is a single even that is still happening. The delineations between "this" and "that" and the relationships (causes and effects) between them are imposed on the whole event by our own consciousness. They don't actually exist in the event itself.
You have led yourself to this conclusion. The separation you're basing this conclusion on exists only in your mind, as it does with all of us. But the human mind doesn't define reality, it merely perceives it, and then only in it's own limited way.
Originally posted by Soulman
This has already been mentioned, but how do we argue against something if the something doesn’t exist? In other words, if there was no a priori concept of God in the first place, there would be no concept of God to deny or argue against.
I undertood that this is how you meant it, but in my Webster's it says this about the word "absolute": 1. Perfect in quality or nature; complete. 2. Not mixed; pure; unadultrated. 3a. Not limited by restrictions or exceptions; unconditional. b. Unqualified in extent or degree; total. 4. Not limited by constitutional provisions or other restraints. 5. Unrelated to and independant of anything else. 6. Not to be doubted or questioned; positive; certain.Originally posted by Soulman I guess I’m not sure how the word “absolute” is being used. It seems like every time I’ve use it, you’ve objected. For the sake of discussion, absolute and “real” are synonymous. I’ll treat them as non-equivalents if it creates less confusion. Atheists are relativists, and relativists hate absolutes.
Yes, that is pretty much what I meant.Originally posted by Soulman Regardless of space, time, and circumstance, which are relevant, I think the point is that whatever form the chair takes, the form is REAL. Energy to raw material to chair to raw material and back to energy again are all SOMEthing, all states of being, so if you’re saying that nothing is “absolute” because nothing exists in an infinite form, then of course you’d be right, as far as it goes. IF that’s what you mean by “absolute,” and IF nothing exists in an infinite form.
Yes, and this is why people choose to believe in this God. Reality is none of these things, and we long for them, so we choose to believe that there is an absolute that overrides the ever-changing, uncertain, and finite universe in which we live.Originally posted by Soulman I can’t speak for all theists. I can’t even speak for other Christians. (The word “Christianity” has become too broad. I shudder every time I hear the words, “Christians believe…”) The God of the Bible as understood is, as an infinite form, “absolute,” even, I think, by your definition. The absolute, infinite God of the Bible is the fixed, unchanging standard by which the “stuff” of reality is conceived, and perceived.
I understand how you feel. And I have known lots of folks who feel that same way. They just can't conceive of living without this "absolute" giving order to everything they see, think and do.Originally posted by Soulman If reality was a movie, God would be the screen on which the movie was projected. Take away the screen -- in this case the absolute standard and “background” of reality -- all you’ll be doing is shining a flashlight in a vacuum. There is nothing to “perceive” in this vacuum, until the stuff of reality is “held up to” and “perceived” against the “screen” or background of the infinite form. Without some concept of an overriding infinite form (theistic or non-theistic), I don’t see how the differentiation and order of the universe could be explained, or even possible.
Originally posted by Freak
Be so certain that a "chair" is a "chair"????
:doh:
Originally posted by Scrimshaw
No duh. It is an extrapolation alright - an extrapolation that is logically superior to the naturalistic "extrapolations" of uncaused universes popping into existence out of nothing. Get with the program. :thumb:
Originally posted by quip
As opposed to a deity that pops into existence out of nowhere.
Originally posted by quip
As opposed to a deity that pops into existence out of nowhere.
We both ultimately claim that "something" can come from "nothing" . Seems the "program" leaves us at an impasse, hence the very debate.
Originally posted by Knight
ROTFL... thats great stuff!
If one isn't following the thread these comments must seem awfully strange!
Originally posted by One Eyed Jack
Whose deity does that?
Originally posted by Scrimshaw
Your limited grasp of theology is rearing it's head. Deities are generally not defined has having an origin in the first place. Asking "where God came from" is an invalid question because you're asking about the origin of an entity, that by definition, does not have one. It would be like asking where the "headless" horsemen's head came from. It's a false question.
The universe is a different story because we live in it, and can observe evidences that indicate it *DID* have an origin.
Originally posted by quip
The Christian God.
Originally posted by One Eyed Jack
You're not very familiar with Christianity, are you? God has always existed, and He always will.
You're gonna have to sequence more than just cheetahs and housecats to get the entire cat genome.
Do you not know anything about adaptation and natural selection?
Know anything about genetics? You can't pass on traits you don't have.
You're trying to put words in my mouth. I haven't proposed any genetic mechanisms that haven't already been discovered.
Speciation (which is an example of micro-evolution) doesn't take millions of years -- it can happen quite rapidly compared to macro-evolution. I think that's where you're getting confused.
Know anything about genetics? You can't pass on traits you don't have.
You're gonna have to sequence more than just cheetahs and housecats to get the entire cat genome.I thought you saidYou can't pass on traits you don't have.
So does mutation play a part in your evolution of the cat, or doesn't it? If it doesn't, then there should be the entire genome of your early cats right there.
the genome would have incontrovertible evidence for an agressive rate of change, no?
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Maybe. We'll know when they're done sequencing the cat genome.
Except that they're done sequencing about 120 genomes so far, and no one has yet volunteered any evidence for what you're proposing. Or is it only cats?
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I'm also thinking that any species genome would clearly and incontrovertibly point to being only 6,000 years in existence.
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If it does, you'll just dismiss it out of hand.
Not if it comes from a credible scientific source and is upheld by at least some peers. I will if it comes from some fringe group that barracks other people's research and proposes nothing in return.
Originally posted by quip
No, I am stating that the concept of God claims causa sui (check spelling on that )
Originally posted by Flipper
Not hardly because, according to you, each cat should have some evidence of the cat genome after just 6,000 years.
Yup. But I also know that natural selection couldn't account for the variance of change in the cat population in just 6,000 years.
I'm interested to learn what adaptive mechanisms you're suggesting could account for all the different kinds of cat from a single pair in, lest we forget, 6,000 years.
This new learning amazes me, Bedevere. Explain again how sheeps' bladders can be employed to prevent earthquakes.
So, let's summarize what you've said about the ur-cat genome.
1) All traits that are currently possessed by the genetically varied old and new world cats were contained within a single genome.
2) The variance of the species was driven by selective pressures through different environments.
3) This all happened in 6,000 years.
4) This rate of change has now stopped.
5) Mutation played no part in this diversity. I'm surmizing this because if mutation and natural selection were the main impellers of this change, why then would you not see "macroevolution" and why can't we track these dramatic mutations today?
6) All the extinct forms of cat were also at one time part of this rash of speciation.
7) The ancestral cats migrated from Mount Ararat and their moved to their old and new world stations, speciating frantically along the way and leaving new populations that soon became genetically divergent.
Is that about fair? Please correct any misapprehensions i may have.
Yes, but I know of no one outside the creationist field proposing a rate of change anything like the one you're proposing. I'm still interested to know why we don't see this rate of change today.
I'm not the one postulating a ludicrous rate of genetic change - you are.
Speciation, as I'm sure you know, doesn't have to be genetic. The rapid kinds generally are not.
Significant genetic differences take longer (more on the order of tens or hundreds of thousands of years for the higher species).
The most rapid case of speciation that I'm aware of are the rift valley chiclids, for which I have heard a rate of >7,000 years for some species. Of course, their speciation is exceptionally pressured because of their territorialism and the importance of coloration in mate selection by most females. Genetically, there's not nearly so much variance.
I think you credit yourself too much.
I'm fully aware of the differences involved.
You may try and paint me as ignorant if you wish, but my view point is not at variance with the majority of biologists. Yours is.
I'm not the one avocating impossible rates of change.
I am fully confident that the sequencing of cat genomes will utterly refute your strange suggestions.
So does mutation play a part in your evolution of the cat, or doesn't it?
If it doesn't, then there should be the entire genome of your early cats right there.
Except that they're done sequencing about 120 genomes so far, and no one has yet volunteered any evidence for what you're proposing.
Or is it only cats?
Not if it comes from a credible scientific source and is upheld by at least some peers. I will if it comes from some fringe group that barracks other people's research and proposes nothing in return.