I'm confused. I don't think the taint has been removed. I was saying it is evolutionists who think new data removes the taint.
So am I. What do you mean when you say "taint", exactly? And what does it have anything to do with your apparent contention that birds evolving from dinosaurs is merely a hypothesis despite the available evidence?
Sandwiches brought this up. You'll need to go back to post #49.
And you've hardly given a satisfactory reply. You posed one possibility that, if fulfilled, would be convincing evidence for evolution. It turns out that the possibility was indeed fulfilled. What say you now?
Yes, you've got the idea. When someone tests the aerodynamics of a new car (or plane wing), they don't start with a full size model. It's easier to cut it down to a smaller scale (say, 1/4 scale). But, it is improper to say that cutting the car down to 1/4 scale means the wind should move at 1/4 speed. One must understand the equations of fluid dynamics and change all the variables in a dimensionally consistent manner.
That such an idea has not been introduced to biology is telling (sorry if that sounds a bit pompous).
So, I'm saying time is the unmanageable variable in evolution (and maybe population size as well) that needs to be cut down for a reasonable experiment. The fact that the paper you cited moved 10 organisms from one island to another and concluded they had witnessed evolution was, to be honest, a bit disturbing to me. But I don't know biology well, so maybe there are reasons to think that is acceptable. I can just tell you that such an approach in other fields would be laughed at. There is the issue of statistical significance that needs to be dealt with here.
First off, I believe you've mistaken me for someone else, as I haven't cited any papers here. I believe my posting privileges still do not allow me to post links.
Second, I don't think your analogy is a valid one. Since I don't know which cited paper by who you had in mind, I assume from your description that you're talking about speciation, which is one of the mechanisms of evolution. In that case we were not trying to
test the degree to which speciation occurred, I'll assume It was given as proof that speciation actually occurred at all. If we carried out an aerodynamics test using a model we'd need to tweak the parameters to ensure that the test results are applicable to the actual object, but the
principles of aerodynamics still apply to the model all the same! If you were proposing an experiment to simply test for the presence of aerodynamic effects on objects instead of testing the degree of aerodynamic effects on objects of various geometry, you would be able to achieve that aim by testing with a scaled-down models just as well as with full-size objects.
No, I don't think he would. I was just taking a stab at your rather purist presentation. As an engineer, I do science in the real world.
I'm a (mechanical) engineer as well, just one with interests in biology and computer science as well, not just the physical sciences.
Most people learn method as a verification process rather than a falsification process. In an Internet forum we can all nod our heads and say we agree with falsification, but in my experience that is not what is taught and practiced in the real world.
There is not "the one method" where I can go to ISO and ask for a document detailing "the one method." So, in the real world, scientists are actually following many and varied methods particular to their field. They may share similarities but all that really makes is a nice statue to put in the front hall. It doesn't speak to the difficulties of executing science.
You're free to name
any part of
any scientific methodology, as practised in the real world, that needs to be questioned. Having done that, you're free to name
any discovery that the theory of evolution is based on, that was arrived at using those questionable scientific methods.
I would say that you are mistaken. So I guess this brings us to assumptions about what constitutes "evidence."
It would appear so. What then do you think constitutes as evidence for creationism? Or do you think that's a topic left for another thread (I apologize if I've gone off-topic here)?
Are you not familiar with Laetoli? I'd assume you're familiar with the Paluxy hoax that was a black mark on creationists. Laetoli was the evolutionist debacle. I don't have the details at hand, but off the top of my head what I recall is that some footprints were found in a geological layer that indicated they were older than the oldest known human. Creationists jumped on it as evidence that humans co-existed with dinosaurs. A prominent evolutionist lashed back that they were obviously australopithecus (I think) and not human. Then someone pointed out that australopithecus supposedly didn't coexist with dinosaurs either. There was then some red-face hemming and hawing about how it must be an undiscovered species.
So, the reasoning revealed in that incident is: There is no evidence that humans and dinosaurs co-existed. Therefore, if footprints are found, it cannot be evidence that humans and dinosaurs co-existed.
I agree, that line of reasoning sounds completely dubious. Though while I am in agreement that the door should not be closed entirely to the possibility that humans and dinosaurs co-existed, I don't think the only option we have is to leap to the conclusion that humans and dinosaurs co-existed either without further evidence.
Even so, I don't see how the Laetoli footprints conclude that humans and dinosaurs co-existed at all (though, as I've said, I don't believe in throwing that idea out of the window wholesale if evidence for it exists). The footprints date to the Pliocene age, while dinosaurs were well on their way to extinction during the Cretaceous. If the footprints were truly made by H. Sapiens as opposed to an upright bipedal hominid, we have yet to discover any indication of culture or intelligence on the level of H. Sapiens in the Pliocene era, nor any fossil remains to indicate their existence at all.
If such circular reasoning is to be used, what would be made of your example?
Notice how I said
fossil remains in my example. That would indeed leave evolutionists with very little wiggle room at all other to have a long, hard look at the theory of evolution.