On Tuesday, July 24, 2018 at 10:25:02 AM UTC-4, Oxyaena wrote:
> On 7/24/2018 9:17 AM, Peter Nyikos wrote:
> > On Monday, July 23, 2018 at 3:35:02 PM UTC-4, jillery wrote:
> >> On Mon, 23 Jul 2018 09:02:04 -0700 (PDT), Peter Nyikos
> >> <
nyi...@bellsouth.net> wrote:
> >>
> >>> This whole thread is based on a misconception. I have always said that
> >>> the evidence for the bacterial flagellum being designed is very weak
> >>> at the present time.
> >>>
> >>> What may have confused some people is my oft-repeated statement that IF
> >>> Directed Panspermia (DP) is true, THEN the circumstantial evidence that the
> >>> bacterial flagellum is designed becomes quite good. But of course, we
> >>> cannot have really good evidence for DP in the next thousand or more years,
> >>> unless life on other solar system bodies all has a genetic code that is
> >>> only slightly different from ours, if at all.
Of course, you said nothing about the above. But your benefactee
Erik Simpson has put his foot in his mouth about DP, so you
can expect more of the above.
I take the time here to remark that the above possibility applies
only if there are at least two other abodes of life in our
solar system, and you gave several in another thread.
That was where you *also* showed your ignorance about when life
could reasonably be expected to arise and evolve in our universe.
Since I pointed it out diplomatically, you simply breezed by the
correction as though it hadn't been there, and even complimented
me about how flame free my posting was.
What you will NEVER admit is that I am ALWAYS courteous to everyone,
even my worst enemies, when they stick to mature discussion of
on-topic issues.
Anyway, to finish my line of reasoning above. The natural expectation
of most scientists, AFAIK, is that if there is life on one of these
worlds (Mars, Europa, Ceres, Enceladus...) it will most likely be
"life as we don't know it," with a radically different biochemistry,
or IF they have a genetic code, it will be radically different from ours.
If on the other hand, they have an almost identical genetic code, then
the only reasonable competitors for the origin of all but one of our
worlds are directed panspermia and the "undirected" panspermia of
Arrhenius/Hoyle/Wickramasinghe. Homegrown abiogenesis won't cut it any more.
> >>> On Wednesday, July 11, 2018 at 5:55:02 PM UTC-4, Oxyaena wrote:
> >>>> Nyikos has been seen sprouting the idea that the flagellum is designed
> >>>> recently, despite the multitude of posts I have made (one very recent)
> >>>> that show otherwise, so in order to get it through Nyikos' thick head
> >>>> that the bacterial flagellum did indeed come about by evolution rather
> >>>> than by design,
> >>>
> >>> If you really believe what you say below is convincing to anyone here,
> >>> you are the one with the thick head.
> >>
> >>
> >> You're just whistling in the dark.
> >
> > I didn't think you and Oxyaena were THAT fond of each other, that you
> > would be convinced by the amateurish logic in the OP. There may be
> > good arguments for the bacterial flagellum having evolved, but the
> > elementary school level generalities Oxyaena used aren't even in
> > the ballpark. [I've preserved them at the end of this post, for
> > the second time around, so people can see what I am talking about.]
>
>
> How exactly are they "elementary school generalities",
I explained that very succinctly, by a *reductio ad absurdum* argument
below. But you are like Ray Martinez, incapable of recognizing such
middle-school level concepts as reductio ad absurdum.
> you shining
> exemplar of the Dunning-Kruger effect?
You are only showing what an insult addict you are here, with this
unsupportable piece of junk.
> You absolutely refused to address
> any of my arguments in the portion you so eagerly dismiss as being
> "grade-school pontificating", as if you are the best one to make that
> claim.
As a research mathematician, I have done hundreds of proofs via
*reductio ad absurdum*, so I believe I am at least as qualified
as anyone else to decide when something belongs to that category.
The only other person who could have been an exception was Richard
Norman, and he is long gone.
> Everyone here agrees my explanation is succinct,
You are taking the adage "silence gives consent" literally here
in a blatantly self-serving way.
Consider this: Casanova has repeatedly pointed out how Ray
Martinez cannot fathom *reductio ad absurdum*, but he is too fond
of jillery, who in turn is too fond of you, to break the news to you.
Others, seeing what a violent temper you have, would not take the
risk of crossing you, seeing how jillery sticks with you despite
your irrationality and hypocrisy.
> and you have to
> resort to a blatant ad hominem in order to wave away what I wrote, you
> intellectually dishonest cretin.
A demonstration via *reductio ad absurdum* is as far from an ad hominem
as can be, you hypocritical flinger of ad hominem fallacies (like
the one you have just uttered).
<snip to get to the reductio ad absurdum after a bit of context>
> >>>> Peter, this may be hard for you to comprehend, but there is an easy way
> >>>> for the flagellum to evolve from the Type-III secretory system.
Note that this allegation was designed to promote the mistaken
impression that you were refuting a belief of mine that the bacterial
flagellum was designed.
> >>> Oxyaena, what you have given me below is a purely theoretical description
> >>> of evolution in general, with the flagellum conveniently grafted on to it.
> >>> Just about any example of hypothesized ancestor-descendant relationship
> >>> could just as easily have been grafted on to it.
<snip of later additions>
> >>> For instance, I could just change a few details and "easily" "show" that
> >>> birds weren't designed because they evolved from sphenosuchid crocodilians.
There you have it: the extremely general talk of yours could easily
be adapted to do this. But as you know, the result is absurd: there
is a consensus that birds are NOT descended from sphenosuchid crocodilians,
but from theropods. That consensus is FAR more widespread than the
"consensus" that the flagellum evolved from the Type III mechanism
rather than the other way around.
> >> Another non-sequitur; birds aren't designed.
> >
> > That's your non-sequitur, all right.
> >
> > In the part to which you are reacting with Pavlov-dog reflexes, I was
> > exposing the illogic and ignorance of Oxyaena: the ignorance of
> > thinking that I believe the bacterial flagellum to be designed, and
> > the illogic of thinking that grade-school level expositions on
> > evolution in general *prove* that the bacterial flagellum evolved.
And now, with NO sense of irony whatsoever, you deliver one
vicious ad hominem after another:
> Go fuck yourself, you Machiavellian deceiver. I am not going to waste my
> breath explaining why this is an ad hominem. Go to hell, asshole.
Instead of squandering your integrity like this, why don't you
REFUTE my use of adjectives about what you claimed that you
had done? "illogic" and "grade-school level" are FACTUAL assertions
that could be disproved, or shown that they don't fall under
Casanova's very broad use of "talk.origins is an informal venue."
Keep in mind that the latter is a very high bar: Casanova
used it to excuse the use of "every" where "ca. ten percent"
would be more true to the facts, on that very basis.
I've left in a temper tantrum of yours below. It goes far to explain
why I said what I did about your "violent temper" up there.
> >> More to the point, the
> >> argument for IC is based on the claim that IC systems are too complex
> >> to evolve.
> >
>
> [snip slander made against me, snip baseless assertions asserted as fact
> without evidence, snip grade-school pontificating by Nyikos, snip
> mindless drivel, snip ad hominems against me, snip all the shit this
> dunderhead wrote]
Funny thing: you also snipped away your grade school level generalities,
about which you were so proud of up there. Contrast that with the
way I left them in twice running, so that everyone could judge the
truth of what I was saying for themselves.
Did you realize, deep down inside, how they wouldn't cut the mustard?
Peter Nyikos
Professor, Dept. of Mathematics -- standard disclaimer--
University of South Carolina
http://people.math.sc.edu/nyikos/
PS If the stuff by ME that you snipped actually fit your description of it,
you should have no trouble demonstrating that. But of course, you are
powerless to justify the description.
But don't worry -- Casanova is almost sure to dismiss all criticism
of your tantrum by saying you were just taking advantage of the way
"talk.origins is an informal venue."