Quite true and its because creationists make promises they know they can't deliver :sigh:.This thread seems to have lost its legs.
I was watching TED and Elizabeth Blackburn happened to be speaking about cell ageing. She won a Nobel prize for discovering the enzyme telomerase which lengthens the ends of the chromosomes, protecting them from ageing. Absolutely fascinating, and relevant to human longevity too. We age because our telomeres shorten. But this does not have to happen. The enzyme telomerase maintains the telomeres.
Have y'all heard of this, or is just me in the dark?
https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/2009/press.html
Be careful what you wish for. Cancer cells usually have lots of telomerase, that is why they can keep dividing.
Once again, science is a little more complicated than you wish it to be.
What use are paralyzed legs or uncontrollable stubs? How did legs get their start? Many animals don’t have legs. But if prototype legs worked well enough to confer a small advantage for an animal to get closer to food or to escape a predator, then it doesn't matter how small and un-leglike the first legs were. However slight an improvement can be, it can make the difference between life and death. Natural selection will then favour slightly better, prototype legs. When these inefficient legs have become the norm, then a slight further increase in leg functionality will make the difference between life and death. And so on, until we have proper legs. See Richard Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker, pp. 89-90.I'm hoping that there is an evolutionist here on TOL who would be willing to give a reasonably brief while still conceptually detailed explanation of how legs evolved.
What use are paralyzed legs or uncontrollable stubs? How did legs get their start? Many animals don’t have legs. But if prototype legs worked well enough to confer a small advantage for an animal to get closer to food or to escape a predator, then it doesn't matter how small and un-leglike the first legs were. However slight an improvement can be, it can make the difference between life and death. Natural selection will then favour slightly better, prototype legs. When these inefficient legs have become the norm, then a slight further increase in leg functionality will make the difference between life and death. And so on, until we have proper legs. See Richard Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker, pp. 89-90.
Did you get an adequate answer?I'm hoping that there is an evolutionist here on TOL who would be willing to give a reasonably brief while still conceptually detailed explanation of how legs evolved.
That might sound like a weirdly specific request but I have a reason for asking it. It isn't a trick question. I really do want to focus on legs - any legs! Where did they come? What preceded them? What was the incremental genetic mutation that became legs? Note that legs almost always come in pairs and that there is all kind of various sizes, lengths, and configurations of legs. Did all these different types of legs show up separately or did they evolve from each other? Etc, etc, etc.
My question is not necessarily only about the first appearance of legs but also the current incarnations of legs in general. Where did legs come from and how did we get to the current state of legs. Why, for example, do dogs have four legs while ants have six and spiders eight. Why do some legs have three joints while other have more or less? Just whatever you can think of about legs and how does the theory of evolution explain what we see?
And I don't intend to try to pick apart whatever explanation is offered. It isn't about that. I'm simply curious to know what evolution has to say about legs and why they exist and how they got here. Feel free to just offer whatever it is you understand to be what evolutionary theory has to say on the topic.
Thanks,
Clete
NopeDid you get an adequate answer?
By all means.If not, I'd be happy to explain
Nope
By all means.
I don't see too many critters around with prototype anything dragging behind them.
The opposite argument would be that having something useless hanging off one, till they develop some function, would confer a disadvantage, and contribute to extinction more than to advantage.
Then you aren't looking hard enough.
Mudskippers, lungfish, and many catfish species actually use their fins to walk on land. And in the case of the lungfish, it has a primitive lung too.
There are lizards without legs, and all large constrictor snake species have "claspers" where hind legs used to be. They have one digit with a claw and are primarily used in mating now.
Wings were not around for much of the time that feathers existed. Feathers began as small filaments that covered the body probably for warmth and possibly display for females. And they were on dinosaurs. Small tree-dwelling carnivorous dinosaurs were probably the first to develop broad feathers, as they would help them glide from tree to tree just like a flying squirrel would. And then eventually the still-fingered arms develop feathers that are long, broad, and tough. These are flight feathers, and even still the first "flyers" likely surfed the air waves more than true flying. But it's a small step from that to full-on flight
My point being, in order to be preserved within a population, these weird appendages/mutations must do something good for the organism. They must make its life easier than its non-mutant compatriots in some measurable way within a specific environment (or at the very least not hinder the animal). Otherwise, they will be eliminated via natural selection
Greg, you have done the work for me by explaining how all these things like "claspers" have functions.
If you were to look at animals around today, show me organs which have no uses?
The appendix or tonsils which they used to whip out, do have functions in the immune system, and the appendix stores bacteria. Where do we find today animals with organs that are no use?
Let's take an example - say an albino crocodile. That has selective advantage against it for sunburn reasons, and easy to spot reasons. And two headed snakes barely survive, not to mention survive long enough to breed more two headed snakes. And two heads is better than one
So find me organisms with vestigial and useless whatevers around today.
I like you. You can think. Respect.
In humans, I think the best example of a truly vestigial feature would be goosebumps. For mammals, goosebumps are little skin pockets that can fill with air to help fluff the fur, making the animal appear bigger and possibly warming it as well. In humans, we simply don't have enough hair to make that happen. In fact, you could argue that human body hair itself is vestigial, as it serves no purpose other than on top of our heads where it keeps heat in.
We also have the remnants of a nictitating membrane (the foggy lens that reptiles and birds can use to shield their eyes in water. You can see it in the outside corner of your eyeballs. It serves no real purpose now.
In whales, I'm sure you've heard of the fingers inside a whale fin, a vestige from their terrestrial ancestors like Andrewsarchus (which is interestingly a wolf-like hoofed predator related most closely to sheep). They also have small hindleg remnants at the pelvic line.
This isn't vestigial I know, but a support for bird-dinosaur evolution has come from genetics labs working on chicken embryos. By turning certain genes on or off, the produced chickens with teeth and a long bony tail.
You believe in an weak god who can't get things right. The Bible tells us about a Creator who is perfect and created all the land animals in one day. Nothing about tweaking in God's Word.iouae said:If I were God, I would not reinvent the wheel every time I engineered a new animal. I would take existing code, and tweak it, to create the change I wanted
Again, thank you for saving me much thinking, by the reference to genes which switch on and off.
If I were God, I would not reinvent the wheel every time I engineered a new animal. I would take existing code, and tweak it, to create the change I wanted.
And if in the process it leaves a nictitating membrane in the eye which seemingly has no use, but does not bother anyone, then so be it.
It is like a programmer who writes code. When I write code, I leave useless code in which I might use later. Or it just may be leftover, and doing no harm, so why try to remove it to make perfect code, when in the process I might upset another bit of code dependent on the code I am removing.
I am sure there is tons of dormant code in all computer programs for historical, or future use reasons which only the Programmer can account for. And whereas we may settle for "good enough" thank goodness God has high standards where "good enough" is pretty amazing. But I am one of the few around here who would actually say that sometimes God DOES just settle for "good enough" and not perfect.
Your BEST example fails, just as claims about Junk DNA has failed (Likewise claims about pseudogenes, useless appendix, etc).Greg Jennings said:In humans, I think the best example of a truly vestigial feature would be goosebumps
Your BEST example fails, just as claims about Junk DNA has failed (Likewise claims about pseudogenes, useless appendix, etc).
Your Best example is based on a false belief system. Goose bumps in humans do serve purpose, and your belief that they are evolutionary remnants, is simply a belief... not science.
Very cool! I like the philosophy of this stuff.
My personal thoughts on evolution and God are thus (assuming God's existence of course):
God is certainly the most intelligent being of all time
God can tire, as we learn from the Genesis account.
Static creation is not an intelligent design. Making creatures that are screwed whenever the habitat changes a little bit, then having to create a bunch of new ones to replace them every time an extinction event occurs is just silly. I forget the exact number, but there have been a minimum of 4 mass extinctions through history (from the fossil record). If creation is really that taxing, and knowing there have been several events that nearly wiped out life here in the past, making static creatures that are doomed when change occurs is inefficient and arguably cruel.
It makes sense to me that the most intelligent being would use a highly efficient, off-hands approach to all creations. God gives creatures the ability to mutate and adapt to their environments. That way, even if 99.9999% of all life is wiped out, Earth will repopulate itself in time. Creatures will evolve and grow to fill the ecological niches opened up after an extinction. In fact, without the Cretaceous extinction that ended the dinosaurs reign, mammals would not have been able to grow and diversify, and humanity would lithely ever exist.
Perhaps, instead of creating again every time His creation is obliterated by a cosmic accident, God has engineered life to be (as a whole) basically indestructible. Evolution can make any Earth environment habitable.
Because that's what a loving creator would do. He would not sentence his creations to hopelessly die without a chance. He would give his cherished creation of life a chance.
Static creation with extinction events is simply not smart. Now, your add-on that God is basically driving the mutations changes that. But I prefer a more hands-off approach personally.
By making creatures with the ability to change and adapt to whatever is thrown at them, life is guaranteed to last