On Tuesday, November 6, 2012 9:02:53 PM UTC-5, Ray Martinez wrote:
> On Nov 6, 4:22 pm, hersheyh <
hershe...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > On Tuesday, November 6, 2012 4:57:54 PM UTC-5, Ray Martinez wrote:
>
> > > On Nov 6, 9:07 am, hersheyh <
hershe...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> >
>
> > > > On Monday, November 5, 2012 4:47:56 PM UTC-5, Ray Martinez wrote:
>
> >
>
> > > > > On Nov 5, 11:37 am, hersheyh <
hershe...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> >
>
> > > > > > On Friday, November 2, 2012 8:53:05 PM UTC-4, Ray Martinez wrote:
>
> >
>
> > > > > > > On Oct 31, 3:53 pm, "
g...@risky-biz.com" <
gdguar...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >
>
> > > > > > > > On Oct 31, 3:58 pm, Ray Martinez <
pyramid...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
[snip]
>
> > You asked how you would identify NS in your lawn or the woods. To do so, you would have
> > to identify a *population* of organisms, identify phenotypic variation, and follow the fates
> > (on a useful metric of reproductive success) of those populations between conception and reproduction.
> > You can do this with any variable trait. That requires following a population for at least one generation.
> > I gave you some examples. Look at a region which has both agouti and melanic mice in a desert with
> > brown sand and in a desert with black sand.
> In other words, natural selection is a wad of inferences. It is not
> directly seen anywhere (my only point).
You seem to have a very strange definition of "seen". In your world,
processes cannot be "seen", only objects can be "seen". NS is a process.
That means there is a time element. By your definition of "seen", one
cannot see that the length of day and night change over the course of
a year (in the temperate zones) because you cannot see anything other
than either day or night when you look outside.
> > > > And, for the case of male guppy tail color and length there are 'natural' experiments
>
> > > > based on whether the guppies exist in a pond with few or many predators. Ditto
>
> > > > for simple melanic camouflage (how well individuals match their background).
>
> > > > Ditto fro the change in beak size in the Galapagos finches dependent on the
>
> > > > environment (drought selects for thicker, shorter beaks; more rainfall selects
>
> > > > for thinner, longer beaks) -- all the better to match the changes in food
>
> > > > resources (thick latge seeds or small less thick ones).
>
> >
>
> > > > Moreover, we have examples of frequency-dependent NS in any number of
>
> > > > organisms in nature. For example, self-sterility markers in plants that
>
> > > > encourage out-breeding. The presence of two male morphs (small,
>
> > > > sneaky maters vs. large harem holders).
>
> >
>
> > > > And, of course, if you (being part of nature yourself) treat your lawn with fertilizer,
>
> > > > herbicide, or insecticides, you are doing so for the express purpose of introducing
>
> > > > a "selective bias" to affect the number of dandelions (or whatever) present. You
>
> > > > are also, inadvertently, selecting for resistance to those toxins.
>
> >
>
> > > Incomprehensible nonsense. Since Howard shows no signs of sobering up,
> > > let me interpret: When a dog eats a fly that has been buzzing around
> > > his or her snoot the same is natural selection.
> > That is NOT what I said. You are lying about what I said. I *specifically*
> > require a significant difference in a population. It is not possible to
> > identify whether NS occurs from a single individual.
>
I also specifically pointed out that NS requires a difference in phenotype.
But perhaps I am being hasty in saying you are 'lying'. Perhaps you have
a mental defect like the man who mistook his wife for a hatrack. I specifically
present a definition that states that there must be a significant difference
related to alternate phenotypes and you see "a dog eats a fly".
I can help you. There is this little tool called "cut and paste".
You seem to be able to use it. Rather than misinterpret my
words so you can argue against things I do not say, cut and
paste my actual words and argue against what I actually do
say. Keep in mind that sometimes, like anyone else, I use
shorter definitions that leave out some of the details. For
example, I might say NS is "differential reproductive success"
as a short-cut to saying "significant differential reproductive
success of alternative phenotypes in a local environment".
> We have been told repeatedly by other Evolutionists that when an
> animal is eaten by another the same is bare bones natural selection.
One will likely find that any quote that says the above is followed by
more words that describe or discuss that they are talking about
"significant differential reproductive success of alternative phenotypes
in a local environment". I doubt that you will find a legitimate
science textbook that includes the above that doesn't further
describe it.
> Howard's response, seen directly above, supports a claim that any
> given Evolutionist does not understand natural selection either.
You will have to cite the source of whoever you think said the above
and nothing more.
> So, according to Howard, he was not advocating what others advocate on
> a routine basis. My interpretation of Howard's comments were wrong.
Indeed they were. They were FALSE, as in NOT TRUE. Whether that is
from intentional lying or massive selective perception of the sort described
as a man who mistook his wife for a hatrack. So distorted that one
suspects the person of either lying or being seriously mentally ill.
> Yet he calls me a liar. In other words, I understood exactly what
> Howard was saying but chose to misrepresent him deliberately.
I concede that you could be seriously mentally ill and unable to read
for comprehension. Again, you should recognize this problem and
not try to rephrase what I say. Use cut and paste.
> Yet very
> recently I have INITIATED and admitted that I do not understand
> natural selection, which confirms years of accusations by
> Evolutionists here at Talk.Origins.
You are not 'accused' of being unable to understand NS. We are simply
pointing out an obvious fact. Ignorance is not a crime. Willful ignorance
is either due to perception illnesses (like the man who mistook his wife
for a hatrack), self-deception (lying to oneself), or lying to others.
> Since I have posted evidence
> showing that even scientists did not understand natural selection, I
> don't feel the least bit inferior (so Howard has jumped to a false
> conclusion concerning bearing false witness).
No. You have pointed out that there were, in Darwin's time, scientists who
did not understand that NS could lead to change over time. Some, perhaps,
even denied the existence of variation within species at that time. None had
a modern understanding of genetics.
>
> > > Death of a creature,
> > > in other words, is natural selection!
> > Why are you lying about what I said? I NEVER said that the
> > "death of a creature" is natural selection. I NEVER would say
> > that! NS isn't about the life or death of individuals it is about
> > a "significant difference in the relative reproductive success" of
> > different PHENOTYPES, all else being equal.
> Addressed above.
The fact remains that you intentionally put words in my (metaphorical
since I wrote rather than spoke them) mouth that I not only did not
say, but never would say. *If* you had said that
your understanding of what I did say (NS is a significant difference
in the relative reproductive success" of different PHENOTYPES, all
else being equal) is that any death of a creature is NS, that would
not be putting words in my mouth. It would then be obvious that
your interpretation was wrong and I would point out all that was
wrong with your interpretation. But instead you put words in my
mouth that were utterly false and not true.
> > > Why, then, all the
> > > unintelligible nonsense?
>
> >
>
> > What I said was perfectly intelligible. You are simply lying about what
> > I said.
>
Again, I will concede that you could be mentally ill with a severe problem
with perceptional distortion and failure of reading comprehension rather
than intentionally lying.
> Addressed above.
>
>
>
> > > This is what happens when God is eliminated
> > > as Creator of species. Why is our Evolutionist unable to make natural
> > > selection simple and intelligible? Again, this is what happens when
> > > Intelligence is not involved: nonsense ensues (or unintelligence,
> > > which is the main characteristic of natural selection).
>
Well, you seem to think that NS is an object that can be seen rather than a
process that can be observed over time. Recognizing that NS is not an
object but a process (and processes can be observed) would be a start.
>
> > What about the phrase "significant difference in the reproductive success
> > of alternative phenotypes" that you don't understand?
>
> Direct question, direct answer: Since you have said, in a different
> message, that natural selection is differential reproduction, and that
> alone, which in response I said the same must be true since I've seen
> other scholars who have said the exact same thing; and now you're
> saying natural selection is "significant difference in the
> reproductive success of alternative phenotypes," you must be saying
> the former and the latter to be exactly synonymous,
No, the former phrase is meant to be a shorter version of the latter, leaving
some of the details out. That is hardly unusual. But in a NUMBER of places
I clarified what I meant. You apparently completely ignored all that and
simply focused on the literalistic meaning of the shortened phrase.
> which means I
> probably had a false conception of differential reproduction, which
> explains why I don't understand.
Again, that is because you have the creationist metaphor-deficiency syndrome.
You focus on a simple phrase and do not remember the surrounding
explanation of that simple phrase.
> I've just scanned some websites that explain differential
>
> reproduction. I don't understand. But neither did certain scientists
> whom Darwin tutored personally. The concept is basically
> incomprehensible until your mind has been initiated into Materialism.
>
Do you attribute the change from day to night to Apollo's chariot
moving across the sky or do you attribute it to the Materialistic
idea that it is due to the rotation of the earth relative to the position
of the sun? Do you attribute the fact that your car didn't start to
magic and call upon a priest to exorcise the demons or do you
attribute it to the Materialistic idea that the battery died because
you left the lights on and call AAA? Materialism in biology is
not any different than the materialism you use in your daily life.
> I'm a Paleyan IDist.
>
>
>
> Moving on....
>
>
>
>
http://library.thinkquest.org/C004367/be2.shtml
>
>
>
> "In a very real sense, natural selection is the driving force behind
> the evolutionary process as we currently understand it. The concept
> has its roots in the idea of the survival of the fittest, which states
> that those organisms that are best adapted to their environment are
> those that are most likely to survive. In other words, the organisms
> most capable of existing in a given environment will tend to outlive
> those that are less capable or surviving in the same environment."
>
I notice that you did not read or comment on the following paragraphs.
I presume you did not read them. And I agree that the *roots* of ideas
about NS arose from ideas about 'survival' and the consequences of
differential survival. But right from the start, Darwin knew about and
wrote about other ways for NS to occur -- specifically sexual selection.
He eventually chose 'survival of the fittest' over NS in later editions in
part due to counter the idea that 'selection' implied a 'selector' like
occurs in artificial selection rather than being merely a causal consequence
of the interaction of different phenotypes with the local environment.
Again, the difference is between *chance* and *cause*, not chance and
*design*. Design is cause due to the action of a designer and is a
subset of cause. But unless one has independent evidence of a designer,
all one can say is that a significant difference from chance is due to
cause.
> Within the philosophy and logic of the proposition no other conclusion
> can be reached. Therefore the claim is pointless and not falsifiable.
>
>
>
>
http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evosite/evo101/IIIENaturalSelection.shtml
>
>
>
> "If you have variation, differential reproduction, and heredity, you
> will have evolution by natural selection as an outcome. It is as
> simple as that."
And if you have variation and heredity and no significant differential
reproduction, you do not have natural selection. It is as simple as
that.
> Good evidence supporting the claim that natural selection is true by
> definition (something Howard does not deny, unlike Greg Guarino and
> other evos).
>
No. I do say that NS does indeed have a definition. And when all the
conditions for NS are met, we have what was defined as NS. And
I said that variation is a necessary but not sufficient requirement for
there to be NS and that heredity (that causally affects the variation)
is a necessary condition for the evolutionary consequence of NS. But
that the *definition* of NS is a significant difference in the relative
reproductive success of different PHENOTYPES, all else being equal.
>
> Ray
>
>
>
> > A 'phenotype'
> > is any visible or detectable trait. 'Alternative' means that the traits are
> > mutually exclusive (you cannot be both agouti and black; you cannot be
> > both 6' tall and 5'2" tall). 'Reproductive success' is a measurable feature
> > of a population. 'Significant difference' has meaning in science.
> > Which of those terms do you not understand?
>
>[snip]