On 20/06/18 23:05, Rick C. Hodgin wrote:
> On Wednesday, June 20, 2018 at 3:59:31 PM UTC-4, Scott Lurndal
> wrote:
>> Yeah, and RCH is bearing false witness vis-a-vis Professor
>> Dawkins. If it so easy for RCH to lie about Professor Dawkins,
>> well, that says much about RCH.
>
> I have not lied.
(Note - this is a discussion, not an attack. I'd be happy to see a
considered response to the points I make. I would not be happy to be
palmed off with a generic "you are inspired by the devil" or "I teach
the truth" response. I would not be surprised by such a response, but
it would make a mockery of your beliefs.)
Lying implies that you have intentionally and knowingly distorted the
facts. You know very little about the facts of biology and evolution -
that much is apparent in your writings. You /think/ you do, but you get
your information from sources that are either mistaken, or lying.
You are a victim of confirmation bias on a massive scale. Having
decided on a particular viewpoint, you read or watch information that
matches that viewpoint and take it to be evidence in its favour - and
you take everything else as evidence of a conspiracy theory against it.
It is a vicious cycle, and hard to break - it is like an addiction.
Does that mean you are lying? I don't think so - that would imply
different motives. Is it "false witness vis-a-vis Professor Dawkins"?
Yes, it most certainly is - you are attributing opinions, attitudes and
doubts to him that are totally at odds to the man and what he writes and
says.
I have nothing against your believing that the universe and life was
made "as is" some 6000 years ago by a creator god. That's fine -
religious freedom is a human right. (Freedom from religion is also a
human right - one that many in this newsgroup would like respected. But
it's too late for that now in this thread!)
What I disagree with is distorting science and evidence. If you want to
say that biology and evolution show the greatness of your god, with
amazing forward planning skills, then that's fine. If you want to say
that they show the work of the devil, that's okay too. If you want to
say they exist so that we need to find god on faith, not evidence, then
that is another consistent viewpoint.
What is /not/ okay is to say the scientific evidence is against
evolution, or that there is scientific evidence for a biblical
viewpoint. That is not okay, because it is simply /wrong/ - it would be
like saying gravity sometimes makes bricks fall upwards. It is okay to
say we don't know everything about evolution, or how it works, and it is
certainly okay to say that we have only some ideas of how everything
started. But that does not mean you can fill in the gaps with ideas
from thin air and say the evidence supports them!
And what is even less okay is to make claims about what scientists in
general, and particular scientists, say or believe. The overwhelming
majority of scientists consider the theory of evolution to be of a
similar level to the theory of gravity, and the overwhelming majority of
them do not believe there is any /evidence/ for "intelligent design" any
more than there is evidence for "intelligent falling". That /includes/
those who believe in a creator god.
Be very clear here - Dawkins does not believe in intelligent design (by
divine beings) or any sort of god. He does not believe there is any
evidence for such things. Of course he believes that there could be
alien design in the process (after all, the earth is unlikely to be the
sole example of intelligence in the universe), but that we have found no
evidence to suggest it. Distorting his words and taking things out of
context does not change what he believes and says.
> In an interview with Ben Stein for the movie "No
> Intelligence Allowed" he states that nobody knows how life started,
> but includes discussion on how intelligent design might have come
> about:
>
>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BoncJBrrdQ8
Ben Stein is a lawyer and comedian, and is as qualified to talk about
biological science as you and I are to talk about law and comedy. And
he is a man with a very specific agenda of trying to force his point
about intelligent design - he, and the film, are massively biased. I
haven't seen the film myself (I have far better things to do with my
time), but here are a couple of newspaper review quotations:
"a conspiracy-theory rant masquerading as investigative inquiry"
"an unprincipled propaganda piece that insults believers and
nonbelievers alike."
"Full of patronizing, poorly structured arguments, Expelled is a
cynical political stunt in the guise of a documentary."
>
> In The Blind Watchmaker, he says that what we see has the appearance
> of intelligent design, but holds to the idea that it is of random
> Darwinian-like processes.
Yes, exactly. Re-read what you wrote. Evolution is a natural process
with random variations and feedback, resulting in things that are so
complex they /appear/ to have been designed. But they were /not/
designed - they merely /appear/ to be. It is an emergent system.
Have you ever seen one of these "sand picture" frames, where you have a
mixture of different types of sand, coloured water, and some air
bubbles? You turn it over and it slowly produces a picture that looks
like a lovely landscape. That is another fine example of an emergent
system. The pictures produced /look/ like they were designed, or drawn
by people, or inspired by real landscape, but they are the result of
random processes and feedback.
>
>
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0804/18/sitroom.02.html
>
> "Biology is the study of complicated things that give the appearance
> of having been designed for a purpose." -- Richard Dawkins, The Blind
> Watchmaker
>
> You put these two together and he has not flatly dismissed
> intelligent design, stating that life appears to be created by
> intelligent design, but what it does incorporate from Dawkins' is
> that it could not have come from God.
If you read what he said - what you quoted - you can see that he /has/
dismissed intelligent design. He says biology gives the /appearance/ of
design - i.e., it was /not/ designed, it just looks that way.
> He states that aliens could've
> seeded the planet, and that it's an intriguing possibility to him.
>
That is an idea with no evidence either for or against - but it is
certainly possible that evidence could be found. One day I hope mankind
will discover life on other planets (or moons), and it will be
fascinating to see how it compares to our own biology.
> Richard Dawkins' primary driving force, though, in his total denial
> of God. He doesn't want to be held accountable to anyone. But, he
> is now getting quite old (77 years) and his time is almost up. He
> will soon learn the truth about the nature of our existence.
>
His primary driving force is to find out the truth, and spread that
information. You might disagree with the answers he gets, but don't
misunderstand his motivations. Like most people, he believes people
should be free to /choose/ their religious beliefs - but not be forced
into them, or to force other people. And he believes that since
religion and science work in completely different ways to attempt to
answer very different kinds of question, they should not be mixed up.
> Something that did embarrass Richard Dawkins' in front of people was
> this panel discussion. Craig Venter, a renowned DNA sequencing ex-
> pert who has sequenced over 60 million genes from ocean sampling, as
> well as many other forms, tells the panel that there is no tree of
> life, but rather a "bush of life" (meaning sources which seem to have
> clearly each originated on their own, as per the intelligent design
> model where each one was crafted for itself, and they did not have a
> common ancestor):
I haven't seen the video, and won't be watching it - I know you like
youtube as a source of information, but I prefer text.
>
>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0ZLJP9Zc9U
>
> Richard Dawkins goes into damage control mode and does a video with
> Craig Venter where he leads the discussion and continuously
> re-asserts Darwinian evolution, and to much disappointment, Craig
> Venter appears to go along with it as he does not refute it, but just
> let's Dawkins speak. This "uncut" version published by the "Richard
> Dawkins Foundation for Reason & Science" YouTube channel:
To my knowledge, Craig Venter is a geneticist and scientist. Of course
he goes along with Darwinian evolution. The "bush of life" idea is not
an alternative to Darwinian evolution, it is simply part of the more
accurate and refined models that we have learned over time. In Darwin's
work and the early days of DNA science, the "tree of life" was thought
to be exactly that - a tree, with neat branches. Over time, we have
collected more evidence, done more experiments, formed new theories, and
we see the details are a lot more complex. Some genetic material passes
across species, not just parent to child (bacteria are experts at this,
but it happens across diverse types of species). Species intermix and
interbreed. It is more like a "web of life" - or at least, the "tree"
gets a bit fuzzy when you look closely and has paths crossing between
branches.
What you say about the "bush of life" sounds like examples of parallel
evolution, which can be fascinating.
But /none/ of this is evidence against evolution - all of it is evidence
/for/ evolution. It is also evidence that we don't know all about
biology or life on earth as yet, but that is hardly news to scientists.
>
> "Craig Venter - The Genius of Charles Darwin: The Uncut Interviews -
> Richard Dawkins"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3E25jgPgmzk
>
> Even the title there makes it sound like Craig Venter is on board
> with evolution. From the earlier interview before the damage
> control mode, he was not. Venter said the tree of life is a holdover
> from an early viewpoint that isn't really holding up to modern
> scientific scrutiny.
>
Think of it like Newton's theory of gravity replacing Galileo's
theories, or Einstein's theory of relativity replaying Newton's
theories. It is a refinement of the theories, with better models. It
does not mean the "tree of life" is wrong, merely that it is an
approximate model and we now have better ones. And Venter's theories
are about evolution - they are not /against/ it.
You seem to imagine Dawkins and Venter are on opposite sides of some
battle - they are colleagues, working in different niches of the same
field, and with a little scientific rivalry going on. I am sure it was
fun for one of them to embarrass the other with newer information.
Like Dawkins, Venter is an atheist and has no belief in any god or
"intelligent design".
> Since then, Craig Venter has gone on to do additional research, but
> has (to my knowledge) remained largely quiet about the issue of the
> origin of life. I've wondered why that is because it seems to have
> been triggered from this panel interview, the subsequent damage
> control video, and thereafter.
He is currently working on synthetic genomics - tailoring bacteria to
specific tasks. His interest appears to be more in genetics and
lifeforms /now/ rather than in evolution as such. (And biogenesis - the
origin of life - is a different field.)
>
> ----- Modern genetics has revealed such complex patterns in our DNA
> that it is no longer possible to hold to evolutionary theories. The
> reason is because our DNA is sequenced in multiplexed ways, meaning a
> single strand of DNA, that's copied to RNA and processed, can go
> through more than a single processing machine. In one machine it may
> use a section from here to there, and in another, it may use a
> different section. And yet a third it may use another. And to date
> they've discovered up to twelve separate uses for a single strand of
> DNA through twelve sep- arate machines. To make a single change to
> that DNA would result in having to make a change that aligns with all
> twelve machines simultan- eously, and that's just not possible.
>
It is not at all clear if you are making a quotation here, and if so I
can't see the source or where the quotation ends.
Some bits of DNA are used in several different ways. Most is not.
There may be 12 different mechanisms that use DNA - that does not mean
that any particular piece of DNA is used in 12 ways. We know that some
parts of DNA are particularly critical to life, and even small changes
render the organism non-viable. We also know there are parts where
there can be many changes without having serious effects. And we know
there are parts that could have certain changes but the risk is high of
causing failure - perhaps other changes are needed at the same time.
All in all, it is a game of chance - and big changes to important parts
of the DNA happen only rarely. But they do happen.
> In addition, we now know the cause of many genetic diseases and some
> of our abnormalities. Single bit errors in our entire strand of DNA
> can result if fatal or severely debilitating diseases.
>
Yes. As I said, some bits are critical. Other bits are not.
Differences in hair colour involve a lot more than one bit change - but
are hardly debilitating.
> The "junk DNA" they used to believe was leftover as a type of evolu-
> tionary baggage, has now been found to be 80% expressed in our
> bodies, and that's only what they can rigorously prove. The
> remaining 20% is believed to also be used, but they cannot prove it
> yet.
Lots of DNA is left over from the past. Some of it is still used,
especially in embryo development (that's why humans go through stages of
having gills and a tail). Some of it is not, but can be re-activated
artificially (such as triggering old DNA in a chicken embryo so that it
grows a dinosaur mouth and teeth).
In the early days, it was thought that the only important part of DNA
was the bits that coded for proteins. The rest, around 80% in humans
(the value differs greatly for different species), was unhelpfully
called "junk". The preferred term now is "non-coding DNA". And at
least some of it has other known uses, such as controlling the
activation of different coding parts.
I would expect that most of our DNA is useful at some point or in some
circumstances, while a small proportion is leftovers from the past.
This is normal in biology. Small leftovers, mistakes, or inefficiencies
hang around because there is not enough evolutionary pressure to make a
change in the general population. Big wastage (as it would be if 80% of
the DNA was actually junk) get tidied up eventually, by evolution.
This is just normal science - it progresses as we learn more. There is
no crisis going on here, no revolution.
>
> There are scientists who look at the data in DNA and still believe
> in Darwinian evolution, but their arguments are very easily dismissed
> as non-science when they are scrutinized. When you begin to question
> how you get from A to B to C in the few million years that are
> stated, there is not one viable model. They have not found any
> transition fossils.
Transition fossils have been found for a great many cases. You do your
case no help by making up easily exposed nonsense.
<
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_transitional_fossils>
The nature of evolution and development of species is to have long
periods of relative stability, punctuated by short periods of speedy
change due to environmental disruption. Transitional species are mostly
short-lived in geological and evolutionary terms - they leave behind
fewer fossils than long-lived species. The fact that transitional
fossils are found, but only rarely, is evidence for Darwinian evolution.
> Thy have found incredible explosions of life
> which seem to have just appeared out of nothing. And they do find
> evidence of Noah's Flood,
There is /no/ evidence of a flood anything remotely resembling the
description in the Bible - and /massive/ evidence that it could not
possibly have happened. There is plenty of evidence for big floods,
some of which could have been very dramatic and re-arranged cultures and
social balances in their areas - certainly enough to inspire legends
like the flood story in the Epic of Gilgamesh, and later copies in the
Torah.
> and the creation of different kinds of
> animals in the laboratory today. Those things can be proven with
> scientific methods which lend credence to the Biblical account.
We can mess around with genetics, cross-breeding, etc. Humans have done
so for 15,000 years at least, though we are far more efficient now.
That gives absolutely no credence to the bible.
> There simply is no such evidence for the evolutionary account. In
> fact, the belief in evolution is even more of a matter of faith than
> creation is because we see point after point after point which backs
> up the Biblical account of creation.
Evidence for evolution is so overwhelming and persuasive that there is
no doubt about it. It is not a belief, any more than gravity is a belief.
Surely you are joking? I had a look at that page - it is absolutely
ludicrous, even by the standards for that website (which are /not/ high).
> The symbols used for some of the words are comprised of symbols
> which talk about Noah and his family on the ark, for example, and
>
It says that one possible etymological derivation of the Chinese symbol
for "boat" is "vessel eight people". And you take that as evidence for
Noah and his ark? Really?