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Creation Science Debunked

Hank

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Originally posted by ocean
Creationism is not a science, it is a religious belief.

Speaking of which; are ALL theist, me included, who believe in God and subsequently that He created humans classified as creationists? :confused: 
 
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ashibaka

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Originally posted by Hank
Speaking of which; are ALL theist, me included, who believe in God and subsequently that He created humans classified as creationists? :confused: 

If you believe that humans have always been humans and your ancestors a billion years ago weren't some earlier species, then yes, you are a Creationist.

If you didn't realize this, well, welcome to the Science forum! :D
 
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DNAunion

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Lenny Flank: The creationists assume that this tendency towards disorder and disorganization is a universal principle of all systems:


"All processes manifest a tendency toward decay and disintegration, with a net increase in what is called the entropy, or state of randomness or disorder, of the system. This is called the Second Law of Thermodynamics." (Morris, 1972, p. 14)


"There is a universal tendency for all systems to go from order to disorder, as stated in the Second Law." (Morris, 1972, p. 19)


"The Second Law (Law of Energy Decay) states that every system left to its own devices always tends to move from order to disorder, its energy tending to be transformed into lower levels of availability, finally reaching the state of complete randomness and unavailability for further work." (Morris, Scientific Creationism, 1974, p. 25)

…

The creationist argument is based on a fundamental misunderstanding of thermodynamics and the Second Law. The laws of thermodynamics only apply within a thermodynamically "closed" system, in which no free energy can enter from outside the system. Under such circumstances, the available free energy is used up and degraded until it can no longer do work, leading to thermodynamic decay and increase in entropy and disorder, just as the house in our example falls inevitably into disrepair.” (http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hangar/2437/thermo.htm)

DNAunion: I’m afraid I have to disagree with my old arch enemy Lenny Flank *sigh*, *shrug*.

Note that the Creationist – in EVERY ONE of the 3 quotes Lenny provided – said that all systems TEND to move towards a state of greater. This is a pretty much TRUE statement. It doesn’t matter if the system is open, closed, or isolated, the system still TENDS to move towards greater disorder. The system’s actual BEHAVIOR, on the other hand, can go against this TENDENCY.

Let me use an analogy to explain. I say that all objects released from above the ground TEND to fall towards the Earth because of the law of gravity. Does a helium balloon’s rising refute my claim? No. Even a helium balloon TENDS to fall towards the Earth because helium (as well as the rubber of the balloon) has mass. The helium balloon’s BEHAVIOR, on the other hand, is to rise up away from the Earth because air’s mass is greater than helium’s.

A second – better - example. You’re laying flat on a weightlifting bench with a 200-lb barbell held above your chest with your arms locked out. You can feel the TENDENCY of the barbell to move towards the center of the Earth, yet its BEHAVIOR is to remain at rest. You now unlock your elbows but do not push up hard enough to fully resist its TENDENCY to move towards the Earth’s center, so it gradually lowers – now it’s TENDENCY and BEHAVIOR are IDENTICAL. Once it gets just above your chest, you give a might heave and now the barbell moves upwards – its BEHAVIOR is OPPOSITE its TENDENCY. At no time did the barbell lose its tendency to move towards the center of the Earth – it had only one tendency throughout. Yet its behaviors were (1) to remain at rest, (2) to move towards the center of the Earth, and (3) to move away from the center of the Earth.  The input of energy did not change the barbell's gravitational tendency, just its behavior.

TENDENCY and BEHAVIOR are not the same thing – Lenny conflates the two in making his argument, which is thus invalid.

If Lenny (who believes is a “fruit cocktail God” – made up of bits and pieces of several offbeat religions) had better evidence/quotes, he should have presented them.

 

PS:  Reading farther down in Lenny's page, he actually says about the same thing.  He notes that streams and rivers flow downhill because of gravity (their tendency due to gravity) but that if they encounter rocks, a vortex can form in which some of the water goes temporarily uphill (their behavior differing from their gravitational tendency).

 

PPS:  Funny, reading even farther down Lenny presents the following quote the same Creationist:

"Disorder can never produce order through any kind of random process. There must be present some form of code or program, to direct the ordering process, and this code must contain at least as much 'information' as is needed to provide this direction. Furthermore, there must be present some kind of mechanism for converting the environmental energy into the energy required to produce the higher organization of the system involved. ... Thus, any system that experiences even a temporary growth in order and complexity must not only be "open" to the sun's energy but must also contain a "program" to direct the growth and a "mechanism" to energize the growth. " (Morris, 1972, p. 19)

 

DNAunion:  Gee, I thought Lenny's claim/point was that Morris said an increase in order couldn't occur?  Yet here is Lenny quoting Morris saying - multiple times - that an increase in order CAN occur.  What was Lenny's long rant about then???

 

DNAunion:  Came back with something else.

 

Thus, any system that experiences even a temporary growth in order and complexity must not only be "open" to the sun's energy but must also contain a "program" to direct the growth and a "mechanism" to energize the growth.

 

Therefore one needs not only an influx of free energy (which comes from the sun), but also a mechanism to capture that energy and use it for biological processes.

DNAunion:  Notice how similar the two are - it's almost as if they were written by the same author.  Yet the first is from the Creationist Lenny attacks - you know, the guy who doesn't know a thing about thermodynamics - and the second is Lenny's own words - you know, the world's expert on thermodynamics.

 

 
 
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DNAunion

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Lenny Flank: The laws of chemistry and phsyics that govern the formation of biological molecules are the very same ones that govern the formation of any other carbon compound.

DNAunion: They are also the same laws that govern the formation of a four-stroke, reciprocating, internal combustion engine – yet one will not form spontaneously.

Lenny Flank: At the chemical level, there is nothing different about "life"--the chemistry of a carbon atom is the same whether that atom is part of a DNA molecule or whether it is part of a lump of coal.

DNAunion: So surely if we just throw a lump of coal into a solution of water and ammonia and jolt it all with some free energy, we’ll get life, right? Or at least proteins. Shoot, after all, we’ll have not only carbon but hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen as well – everything needed to make amino acids. Yet, sadly, this simply won’t work. Then there must be some difference in the chemistry, no?

Lenny is wrong. The chemistry of life IS different from the chemistry of coal and other inanimate matter. What Lenny should have said is that “At the ATOMIC level, there is nothing different about “life” – A CARBON ATOM ITSELF is the same whether it is part of a DNA molecule or whether it is part of a lump of coal.”
 
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Lenny Flank: Therefore one needs not only an influx of free energy (which comes from the sun), but also a mechanism to capture that energy and use it for biological processes. Fortunately for life on earth, the unique chemistry of carbon atoms makes this a rather straightforward process (it is so simple, in fact, that amino acids are found floating free in interstellar space, where they form spontaneously from carbon chains utilizing free energy).

DNAunion: Is Lenny Flank under the delusion that life = amino acids?

Second, Lenny basically contradicted himself. He first said that “also [needed is] a mechanism to capture that energy and use it for biological processes”. That’s a correct statement. Yet he next turns around and claims that the simple chemistry of carbon itself is enough to do the trick (given free energy). What happened to the mechanism? Where’d it go?

Back to photosynthesis. I got out into the desert and never eat again. Will I be able to maintain my highly ordered, living state, or will I die and decay? Let’s see, I’ve got free energy in abundance and I’ll be darned if I don’t have tons of carbon atoms with their simple and unique chemical properties right there in my body – yep, everything Lenny claims is needed. Yet I will surely die and decay. I need those mechanisms that Lenny ditched!

Lenny: Similar chemical processes, powered by the same free energy from the sun, allow life to grow in complexity, without in any way violating any of the laws of thermodynamics.

DNAunion: Hogwash. The chemical processes that allow life to grow in complexity are vastly different from the kind of chemistry that produces amino acids out in space.

The charge Lenny is guilty of is downplaying the complexity of BIOchemistry. He does this in hopes of creating the illusion that there really is no major difference between life and an amino acid (or even a lump of coal!), for example: both of them follow the same laws of physics and chemistry and are made of aggregates of the same carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen atoms.
 
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lucaspa

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Originally posted by Hank
Speaking of which; are ALL theist, me included, who believe in God and subsequently that He created humans classified as creationists? :confused: 

According to Phillip Johnson, yes. But, if you believe God created through evolution, then no.  :rolleyes: Yes, Johnson is inconsistent here.  No big surprise, huh?
 
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lucaspa

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Originally posted by DNAunion
DNAunion: I’m afraid I have to disagree with my old arch enemy Lenny Flank *sigh*, *shrug*.

Note that the Creationist – in EVERY ONE of the 3 quotes Lenny provided – said that all systems TEND to move towards a state of greater. This is a pretty much TRUE statement. It doesn’t matter if the system is open, closed, or isolated, the system still TENDS to move towards greater disorder. The system’s actual BEHAVIOR, on the other hand, can go against this TENDENCY.

Thanks, DNA, for showing that the creationist argument that the second law of thermodynamics (SLOT) makes evolution impossible is nonsense -- by the words of the creationists themselves.

You have to remember the orginal claims.  Flank made it clear in the first sentence of the web page that he was dealing with the claims of creationists that SLOT makes evolution impossible because systems move toward disorder, and life is ordered and evolution has produced more "complex" organisms over time.

What you have done is show that the words of the creationists contradict their own claim since "trend" is not the same as "behavior". So, tho the system may tend to disorder, its actual behavior can toward order. Therefore evolution does not violate SLOT.

Again, thank you for helping show how creationists are in error.
 
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lucaspa

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Originally posted by DNAunion DNAunion: They are also the same laws that govern the formation of a four-stroke, reciprocating, internal combustion engine – yet one will not form spontaneously.



DNAunion: So surely if we just throw a lump of coal into a solution of water and ammonia and jolt it all with some free energy, we’ll get life, right? Or at least proteins. Shoot, after all, we’ll have not only carbon but hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen as well – everything needed to make amino acids. Yet, sadly, this simply won’t work. Then there must be some difference in the chemistry, no?


No.  Carbon forms the same covalent bonds in coal as it does in lipids, amino acids, sugars, and proteins.  Gibb's Free energy applies to the combustion of sugars in mitochondria and to the combustion of coal in a furnace or gasoline in an internal combustion engine.

The specific chemicals and reactions that make up life are different from those that happen with a lump of coal in an ammonia solution, but the chemistry is the same. There are no special rules of chemistry that apply only to life.

Now, the internal combustion engine is also composed of highly refined metal machined into particular shapes.  There are no processes in nature to produce an internal combustion engine.

However, there are chemical reactions in nature that lead to life.  Ammonia, carbon dioxide, methane, etc. are formed by chemical reactions. Other reactions take these starting products and make amino acids.  Heating amino acids gives you proteins.  Proteins spontaneously form cells (due to hydrophobic interactions).  The proteins are also catalysts that catalyze the chemical reactions that compose life:  breakdown of chemicals to release the energy in their chemical bonds, formation of other chemicals (such as nucleic acids and phosphorylated proteins) from precursor molecules, depolarization of cell membranes under stimulus, etc.

None of the chemistry is mysterious.  All that is necessary is to have -- within wide limits -- a particular set of chemical reactions in a place separated from the rest of the environment.
 
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LiveFreeOrDie: DNA: You're doing a fine job of arguing the negative here. I appreciate your role as debunker of claims that are oversimplified, poorly thought out, and overly specious.

But how about a positive statement from you for a change. How do YOU think life got started?

 

DNAunion:  Here's a version of my "official position". 

 

I am highly skeptical that something as ordered, organized, complex, and intricate as a autonomous cell could have arisen by purely natural means alone here on Earth under the conditions thought to have been present in the amount of time thought to have been available.

 

Over the last several years I've looked at the various mainstream OOL positions and I see major problems with them all: I don't know of one that I would be willing to bet on.

 

I have often offered -- as nothing more than unsupported speculation -- a form of Crick's Directed Panspermia, in which a form of life unlike our own arose on some other planet and then intelligently designed life as we know it (in the form of bacteria) and seeded Earth with it.  But I wouldn't be willing to be on that either.

 

As far as supernatural cause, well, first it's not science.  And, no experiment can confirm the notion.  Second, it's overkill - cellular life is a lot like an internal combustion engine in that neither requires a miracle to arise (humans have already made the latter and probably will soon make the former). 

 

So I'm afraid I don't actually have a true position.  But I do believe in keeping the discussions in line with scientific evidence, so if someone says something I know is wrong, I point it out.

 
 
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lucaspa:  Again, thank you for helping show how creationists are in error.

 

DNAunion:  Uhm, I didn't show that the Creationists are in error - I showed that Lenny Flank made a lame, inconsistent, and unsupported claim that the Creationists are in error. 

 

Now, does life or evolution defy the second law?  No, of course not.  And I've posted material about that - at great length - several times on the web. 


Two Examples from October of 2000:

http://www.asa3.org/archive/evolution/200010/0587.html

http://www.asa3.org/archive/evolution/200010/0610.html

 

Simply put, If Lenny had been a good little boy - if he had done things correctly - I wouldn't have had anything to say.  But he botched it.
 
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Originally posted by DNAunion
I am highly skeptical that something as ordered, organized, complex, and intricate as a autonomous cell could have arisen by purely natural means alone here on Earth under the conditions thought to have been present in the amount of time thought to have been available.

Over the last several years I've looked at the various mainstream OOL positions and I see major problems with them all: I don't know of one that I would be willing to bet on.

I have often offered -- as nothing more than unsupported speculation -- a form of Crick's Directed Panspermia, in which a form of life unlike our own arose on some other planet and then intelligently designed life as we know it (in the form of bacteria) and seeded Earth with it.  But I wouldn't be willing to be on that either.

How come you're "highly skeptical" of theories of natural origin, yet you're willing to offer an alternative that you admit is nothing but "unsupported speculation"? What makes you more confident in your unsupported speculations than in theories with at least some empirical basis?

As far as supernatural cause, well, first it's not science.  And, no experiment can confirm the notion.  Second, it's overkill - cellular life is a lot like an internal combustion engine in that neither requires a miracle to arise.

Cellular life is also a lot NOT like an IC engine in that is capable of reproducing itself. That makes the "where did it come from" question a lot tougher to answer.

So I'm afraid I don't actually have a true position.

I think you do. I think you're an IDist in sheep's clothing. Subtler and less dogmatic than the Dembski/Behe mold, to be sure, but an IDist nonetheless.

I could be wrong...

But I do believe in keeping the discussions in line with scientific evidence, so if someone says something I know is wrong, I point it out.

Hear! Hear! Unsupported speculations are the first things to go, right?
 
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DNAunion: They [the laws of physics and chemistry] are also the same laws that govern the formation of a four-stroke, reciprocating, internal combustion engine – yet one will not form spontaneously.

DNAunion: So surely if we just throw a lump of coal into a solution of water and ammonia and jolt it all with some free energy, we’ll get life, right? Or at least proteins. Shoot, after all, we’ll have not only carbon but hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen as well – everything needed to make amino acids. Yet, sadly, this simply won’t work. Then there must be some difference in the chemistry, no?

Lucaspa: No.

DNAunion: Yes.

Lucaspa: Carbon forms the same covalent bonds in coal as it does in lipids, amino acids, sugars, and proteins.

DNAunion: Not really.

The higher the carbon content, the more energy the coal will produce when burned: the best coal is around 90-95% carbon. In such a case:

(1) The vast majority of carbon atoms in coal are bonded to 4 other carbon atoms, thus making each of its four bonds NONPOLAR covalent. However, in amino acids, sugars, and even lipids, the vast majority of carbon atoms are bonded to at least one non-carbon atom, making at least one of its bonds POLAR covalent (even the hydrocarbon chains in lipids have a polar nature since the electronegativities of carbon and hydrogen differ).

(2) The vast majority of carbon atoms in coal are bonded to 4 other carbon atoms, thus making each of its bonds a SINGLE covalent bond. However, in amino acids, sugars, and even a lot of lipids, typically one carbon atom will have a DOUBLE covalent bond with another atom (such as the carbon in the carboxyl group of an amino acid, in the carbonyl group of a sugar, and a C=C bond in an unsaturated hydrocarbon).

(3) The vast majority of carbon atoms in coal are bonded to 4 other carbon atoms, thus ensuring that those carbon atoms are all SYMMETRIC. However, in 19 of the 20 biological amino acids and the key biological sugars (such as ribose, deoxyribose, glucose, etc.), at least one carbon atom has attached to it four different atoms/groups, thus making the carbon atom ASYMMETRIC. The asymmetric nature of carbon in these biological molecules is what gives rise to optical isomers (enantiomers) – the left- and right-handed mirror images that are non-superimposible one upon the other. Chirality plays an ENORMOUS role in biochemistry, but doesn’t mean squat in coal.

And now we can see one reason why the chemistry of the carbons in biological molecules is different from the chemistry of carbon in coal. The asymmetric carbon atoms found in the bioligical amino acids and sugars produce two different optical isomers, only one of which is biologically relevant.  The rule is that only left-handed amino acids and right-handed nucleotide sugars are used in biological polymerization, with the opposite handed forms being “poisonous”. But there is no requirement for homochirality to produce a functional lump of coal - the carbon atoms can be, and in many instance are, mostly symmetric. 

 

In a high-carbon-content coal you have almost exclusively each carbon atom bonded by nonpolar single covalent bonds to other carbon atoms ---- boring.  In biological molecules, such as amino acids and sugars, you have a wide range of possibilities actualized: nonpolar single bonds to other carbon atoms, slightly polar single covalent bonds to hydrogen, single polar covalent bonds to hydroxyl groups, nonpolar double bonds to othe carbon atoms, polar double bonds to oxygen atoms, long linear chains - such as DNA, RNA, and proteins - with backbones composed of carbon atoms linked to other atoms in a repeating manner, summetric carbon atoms, asymmetric carbon atoms giving rise to optical isomers, different bond lengths, different bond energies, etc.


The comments I have made about high-carbon-content coal also scale down pretty well to lower-carbon-content coal.  But those have not been altered as much - they either are not as old or have not been subjected to as much pressure, or both.  They are closer to being their original plant matter than what most of us consider to be "true coal".
 
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DNAunion: Not a double post – just needed the same setup as an earlier post I made in reply to Lucaspa.

DNAunion: So surely if we just throw a lump of coal into a solution of water and ammonia and jolt it all with some free energy, we’ll get life, right? Or at least proteins. Shoot, after all, we’ll have not only carbon but hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen as well – everything needed to make amino acids. Yet, sadly, this simply won’t work. Then there must be some difference in the chemistry, no?

Lucaspa. No. Carbon forms the same covalent bonds in coal as it does in lipids, amino acids, sugars, and proteins. … The specific chemicals and reactions that make up life are different from those that happen with a lump of coal in an ammonia solution, but the chemistry is the same.

DNAunion: Do you think chemistry means only how one atom is bonded to another? Do you think it excludes the chemical reactions that occur, the rate at which those reactions occur, the factors that affect the rate of the reactions, and so on?

Let’s look at stereochemistry for a second. Life is dependent upon the biological amino acids and sugars being homochiral, and the existence of two optical isomers in the first place is the result of the chemistry of carbon – a symmetric carbon atom does not produce a chiral molecule whereas an asymmetric carbon atom does (this is the rule - as with every other rule, it is not always so cut-and-dry). Coal, unlike life, has no requirement for homochirality. All the carbon in coal could be symmetric and still have coal. You could have both symmetric and asymmetric carbon atoms in coal, in any ratio, and even have both of the optical isomers of every chiral molecule, and still have coal.

Lucaspa: There are no special rules of chemistry that apply only to life.

DNAunion: Yes there is – life depends upon homochirality: coal doesn’t.
 
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