Only evolutionists (including theistic evolutionists) think that popularity has any meaning regarding the history of life on earth.Creationism isn't only declining in America:
https://evolution-outreach.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12052-018-0083-9
Only evolutionists (including theistic evolutionists) think that popularity has any meaning regarding the history of life on earth.
So if I note that public acceptance of abortion is declining, your response would be "only Christians think that popularity has any meaning regarding the sanctity of life?"
Maybe so. But you'd be just as off-center on that as well. The fact that more and more people are rejecting creationism is merely a consequence of increasing evidence that it's a bad doctrine.
So if I note that public acceptance of abortion is declining, your response would be "only Christians think that popularity has any meaning regarding the sanctity of life?"
BTW, I'm still trying to find that museum that showed Pakicetus with a blow hole.
Even the fragmentary skull first found clearly showed it had nostrils, not a blowhole.
The only uncertainty was whether or not the nostrils were at the tip of the jaw, or very slightly back.
My response would be that I would be glad it's acceptance is going down, but that it has no bearing on whether abortion is right or wrong (it's wrong, by the way, in case you didn't know, because it's a baby, and it's always wrong to kill a baby).
Was there a point you were trying to make?
You've been shown that the evidence does NOT support an old earth,
My point was that the increasing amount of evidence regarding evolution is causing a decrease of acceptance of YE creationism.
Even some creationists admit this fact.
Like a broken record.... Like a broken record.... Like a broken record.... Like a broken record....Then engage sensibly over the evidence. :up:
And straight back into it.
News flash: The popularity of an idea is no evidence for its veracity. Darwinists love a discussion where the focus is on who and how many believe what. They think it is evidence.
News flash: The popularity of an idea is no evidence for its veracity. Darwinists love a discussion where the focus is on who and how many believe what. They think it is evidence.
Happy to have you onboard at last.Hence, the "evolutionist" responsible for the OP; "Does anyone believe in Evolution anymore?"
And straight back into it.But the OP should have been "does anyone believe in creationism, anymore" seeing as it's a declining belief system.
...does anyone believe in creationism, anymore ....
Natural selection works in both YEC and common descent. But the challenge is how natural selection can improve a message. Shannon says it can't. He said, "The fundamental problem of communications is that of reproducing at one point either exactly or approximately a message selected at another point."Barbarian observes:
And yet, we see fitness in natural populations increase.
Even your creationist masters admit that's a fact...
Natural selection, or “survival of the fittest,” is the observable process by which organisms with specific characteristics survive and reproduce better in a given environment.
https://answersingenesis.org/search/?refinement=&language=en&q=natural+selection
You're not just ignorant of biology, you're in the dark about creationism as well. AiG doesn't deny it, because there's no point; it's demonstrably true. Maybe you should go update a bit?
In the phrase "improving fitness". A message that was changed by noise is not the message that the sender sent. You may not say that a machine that sends a message does not desire a certain message, but a machine that sends a message cannot be described by humans studying said message without using anthropomorphic language. Go ahead and try it.Where in genetic transcription, translation, or protein synthesis, is there "intent?"
Because in the amazing designs we see in living things today, there are a lot of bridges to burn.Or, as in the cases you learned about, improve the system. How do you figure such information is "degraded" when it actually works better than the original?
Because you can't get a drawbridge with 1-3 changes. And the Edge of Evolution shows this is also true in biology.Sounds like a testable assumption. How does the HPAS allele in Tibetans "degrade" them? (it's the gene that allows them to live at very high altitudes without the drawbacks of increasing hematocrit levels). Tell us about that.
Suppose that instead of burning bridge, the defenders built a pulley system to swing it up so it coudn't be used until they lowered it again? Yes, burning the bridge was a feasible solution, (like a lizard sacrificing a tail to escape) but then they had to rebuild it. Building a bridge or regrowing a tail takes resources. The drawbridge was a mutation that improved the process of keeping the enemy on the other side of the river. Deceptive coloration would be an improvement for the lizard. That's how evolution works.
You can keep calling the nutrient part of the machine, but it isn't.Doesn't matter. The fact is, by Behe's definition, the evolved system is irreducibly complex. To make it work, you have to have three factors, the nutrient, the allele, and the regulator. Remove one of those and it won't work.
Behe merely says "part." So any part that works in the system applies. I understand that you don't like his definition, but that's the one you have. This is why Behe has admitted that it's possible for irreducible complexity to evolve, even though he thinks it doesn't.
(attempt by Yorzhik to modify Behe's definition by excluding "inefficient" systems that work)
"Work inefficiently" is not part of Behe's definition. Nice try. You're between a rock and a hard place here.
You don't understand the challenge of irreducible complexity. My example has three factors. An inefficient precursor has nothing to do with Behe's definition. I understand why you want to change it, now that you've been shown an example of an evolved irreducibly complex system, but you'll have to do with Behe's definition.
There were more than that.
Scaffolding is one way. Sometimes an optional feature can later become required. Sexual reproduction is like that. Would you like to learn more about those?
:darwinsm: Yeah, you understand that Behe meant 'writing' could be part of irreducible complexity in his mousetrap example. :darwinsm:I never considered writing to be a "part." But in some cases, I suppose it could be. As you now see, a mousetrap can work without many of the parts found on a normal mousetrap.
Nope. It has fewer parts, read it again, carefully.
No, each mousetrap was redesigned with the same 5 parts all of them have.But it does. Each succeeding trap has another part added.
The reason no one talks about it anymore is because common descentists have no answer. Ask Behe if he still supports the notion, and he says now more than ever - go to 2:38No, that's wrong. The irreducibly complex enzyme system I showed you, had more than that.
As I said, even Behe now admits in principle that irreducible complexity can evolve. This one just never worked for ID, and few IDers say much about it, any more.
coagulation as viewed from a comparison of puffer fish and sea squirt genomes
Yong Jiang and Russell F. Doolittle
PNAS June 24, 2003 100 (13) 7527-7532
Abstract
The blood coagulation scheme for the puffer fish, Fugu rubripes, has been reconstructed on the basis of orthologs of genes for mammalian blood clotting factors being present in its genome. As expected, clotting follows the same fundamental pattern as has been observed in other vertebrates, even though genes for some clotting factors found in mammals are absent and some others are present in more than one gene copy. All told, 26 different proteins involved in clotting or fibrinolysis were searched against the puffer fish genome. Of these, orthologs were found for 21. Genes for the ``contact system'' factors (factor XI, factor XII, and prekallikrein) could not be identified. On the other hand, two genes were found for factor IX and four for factor VII. It was evident that not all four factor VII genes are functional, essential active-site residues having been replaced in two of them. A search of the genome of a urochordate, the sea squirt, Ciona intestinalis, did not turn up any genuine orthologs for these 26 factors, although paralogs and/or constituent domains were evident for virtually all of them.
No, each mousetrap was redesigned with the same 5 parts all of them have.
The reason no one talks about it anymore is because common descentists have no answer. Ask Behe if he still supports the notion, and he says now more than ever - go to 2:38
Natural selection works in both YEC and common descent.
But the challenge is how natural selection can improve a message.
Shannon says that it's the increase information in a population that does this.
Let's take this into an actual situation. Suppose that in a population, there are two alleles for a given gene locus, each with a frequency of 0.5. Suppose a mutation causes a third allele, and over time, it increases in frequency so that each allele has a frequency of 0.333...(one-third).
Use Shannon's equation to show the information when there was just two alleles, and then when there were three.
Hint: H(x) is the information. The equation is:
Where N is the number of alleles, and p(i) is the frequency of the ith allele. Let's see what you get.
Barbarian asks:
Where in genetic transcription, translation, or protein synthesis, is there "intent?"
In the phrase "improving fitness".
Show us where the phrase "improving fitness" occurs in genetic transcription, translation, or protein synthesis, and explain how molecules have intent.
A message that was changed by noise is not the message that the sender sent.
For example, the mutation that gave some people in a clan in Italy resistance to hardening of the arteries was not the original allele. The increased information in the population resulted in increased fitness for the people with the new mutation.
You may not say that a machine that sends a message does not desire a certain message
Nor does DNA.
but a machine that sends a message cannot be described by humans studying said message without using anthropomorphic language.
So then it should be easy for you to show how molecules have "intent." Go ahead and try it. But first show us the result you get from applying Shannon's equation to population genetics. If you don't know enough about Shannon's work to apply it, just tell us, and I'll show you.
Barbarian, earlier:
Sounds like a testable assumption. How does the HPAS allele in Tibetans "degrade" them? (it's the gene that allows them to live at very high altitudes without the drawbacks of increasing hematocrit levels). Tell us about that.
Suppose that instead of burning bridge, the defenders built a pulley system to swing it up so it coudn't be used until they lowered it again? Yes, burning the bridge was a feasible solution, (like a lizard sacrificing a tail to escape) but then they had to rebuild it. Building a bridge or regrowing a tail takes resources. The drawbridge was a mutation that improved the process of keeping the enemy on the other side of the river. Deceptive coloration would be an improvement for the lizard. That's how evolution works.
Because you can't get a drawbridge with 1-3 changes.
And the Edge of Evolution shows this is also true in biology.
You can keep calling the nutrient part of the machine, but it isn't.
Yeah, you understand that Behe meant 'writing' could be part of irreducible complexity in his mousetrap example.
Ask Behe if he still supports the notion,
Originally Posted by Yorzhik View Post
No, each mousetrap was redesigned with the same 5 parts all of them have.
The reason no one talks about it anymore is because common descentists have no answer.