As predicted, you have no formal education in matters you are laughably pretending to be an expert in.
Your act is transparent bud
Liar.
As predicted, you have no formal education in matters you are laughably pretending to be an expert in.
Your act is transparent bud
Buy this book "The Gene" by Siddhartha Mukherjee. A world leading expert explains evolution and shows the mis-conception trumpeted in popular media.
Very briefly: Change requires two things:-
1. A non harmful mutation in a gene.
2. An environment where the life form with a mutation has an advantage and so survives in larger numbers.
Evolution is a quick process, nothing like the popular version put out in the mainstream.
Siddhartha Mukherjee's book is excellent: Informative to the non-expert; Authorative; At times, heart breaking.
Liar.
:up:Ink is not a code...although intelligence can use ink to create a code. Codes that transmit information requiring to be transcribed and acted upon ALWAYS have a code maker.
:up:
Whatever capacity we have for surviving, must have a 'reason' for surviving
No too few seem to understand Colossians 1:17 very well, nor John 15:5. It is like seeing a painting and ignoring the painter or denying existence while coming up with theories of 'how' that painting came into existence in such an incredibly complex manner. Some things are their own evidence and explanation. Looking for the absurd 'theory?'
Great. Then read my answer. :up:I can only read what is written.
There's an accusation you can't back up. Link to one post where I have said I already answered something but didn't.You have a track record of lying about answering in some unspecified past post.
When you present a way to measure information based on your ... description, then we will have something to discuss.
Colossians 1:17 ONLY for the glory of God.What reason does a frog have for surviving?
Either that frog has a lot of information to be able to survive (DNA) or something outside itself (whatever life it happens to be) desires it to continue to exist or some combination, but NONE without reason or purpose to do so.What makes you think that Christians don't generally accept this?
Agree. However, there are no few that embrace Colossians 1:17 in entirety. A few think that God isn't involved with His creation. I believe Colossians 1:17 means without Him, atoms are no longer functional. He sustains it all.It's not just the relative few that reject evolution.
Yes, it is interesting, although what I said was "mutations generally are all considered to nearly neutral, or slightly deleterious.... they destroy pre-existing info."gcthomas said:it is interesting that you assert that virtually all mutations are deleterious...
I only provided one reference saying "Many articles, even those from the evolutionary belief system will say something like "In all populations, genetic drift occurs constantly—species gradually lose genetic variation"gcthomas said:Your references also don't refer to loss of information, so I don't know where you got that idea.
Mutations destroy the pre-exisiting information.gcthomas said:The paper says this; "We have known for some time that genetic variation is an absolute necessity in order for species to be able to thrive." Where do got think this variation in populations comes from if it isn't mutations?
Yes, it is interesting, although what I said was "mutations generally are all considered to nearly neutral, or slightly deleterious.... they destroy pre-existing info."
I only provided one reference saying "Many articles, even those from the evolutionary belief system will say something like "In all populations, genetic drift occurs constantly—species gradually lose genetic variation"
It is odd that you seem to suggest that a loss of genetic variation in a population is also not a loss of genetic information.
Mutations destroy the pre-exisiting information.
And as shown, variation is bad.Mutations increase populating genetic variation.
Since you insist that decreased genetic variation corresponds to loss of information then you must conclude that mutations do the reverse.
And as shown, variation is bad.
Looks like you're making things up again.
Mutations are always bad for information.We are not discussing 'goodness', but whether mutations can increase information.
Variation is bad for information.6days seems to accept both that mutations can increase genetic variation and that more generic variation corresponds to more information, while denying that mutations can increase information.
I've laid out very clearly what we believe and how it can be tested.You, on the other hand, keep trying to prevent discussions getting to the critical issues for the purposes of obfuscation. But I'm not surprised.
Mutations are always bad for information.
Variation is bad for information.
I've laid out very clearly what we believe and how it can be tested.
You most certainly haven't laid out how it could be tested.
Of course I have.
As with every other Darwinist available, you run for the hills whenever the topic of science emerges through the spam.
Yep, the sort of running for the hills that has me trying to get you to stick to the discussion and to substantiate assertions, whilst providing mathematical demonstrations of my own claims.
You are quite unhinged, Stripe.
Correct. Spelling mistakes in a Winnie the Pooh book, will never produce a manual for the next space shuttle.Stripe said:Mutations are always bad for information.
I think what you mean.... and what GC and Jose don't understand is that selection / breeding produces variety, through a process of elimination? We could theoretically eliminate information from a wolf by breeding until we end up with some type of a mutant wiener dog. The mutations have produced variety of dogs who do not have the full complement of genetic variation that the original kind had.Stripe said:Variation is bad for information.
No, what I don't understand is how creationists can keep making claims about relative amounts of "genetic information", even though they have no idea at all how to measure such a thing.what GC and Jose don't understand is that selection / breeding produces variety, through a process of elimination?
Nope.Yep, the sort of running for the hills that has me trying to get you to stick to the discussion and to substantiate assertions, whilst providing mathematical demonstrations of my own claims.
You are quite unhinged, Stripe.
If there's a guy on the street corner yelling at the fire hydrant, who's crazier, him or the guy who tries to engage him in a rational discussion? :think:
No, what I don't understand is how creationists can keep making claims about relative amounts of "genetic information", even though they have no idea at all how to measure such a thing.
I think that's essentially correct, but worded a little awkwardly.I think what you mean.... and what GC and Jose don't understand is that selection / breeding produces variety, through a process of elimination?
Right.We could theoretically eliminate information from a wolf by breeding until we end up with some type of a mutant wiener dog. The mutations have produced variety of dogs who do not have the full complement of genetic variation that the original kind had.
No, what I don't understand is how creationists can keep making claims about relative amounts of "genetic information", even though they have no idea at all how to measure such a thing.