Brahe said:
The laws of inheritance that natural selection hides behind? What does this even mean?
It was decades before natural selection was sythesised into biology and the laws of inheritance, even though they were developed at the same time. Natural selection (aka evolution, or phylogeny) does not represent a law of science it is a way of looking at things. Natural selection is a premise of a philosophy that pretends to be proven, its not an established fact it is a philosophy.
Brahe said:
Alright, on the off-chance that you'll respond intelligibly to any of the posts in this thread, here's natural selection. You know that in a population or organisms, not all individuals are identical, right? Furthermore, some of these differences are heritable, and some of these heritable differences alter the individuals' abilities to reproduce successfully. Heritable differences that favorably alter the chances at reproduction tend to spread through the population while heritable differences that disfavorbly alter the chances at reproduction tend to be eliminated from the population.
Ok, on the off-chance that you are just looking for clarification these inherited traits are genetics. 22,000 experiments by Mendal produced identifiable patterns and formulas for artifical selection, no such experiments were performed by Darwin. They are not only not possible, they are not nessacary.
Look, I'm a philosophy major and I simply recognized that natural selection is a systematic philosophy. I would agree that is a scientific philosophy but that does not make it natural science. I'm amazed that evolutionists don't agree and go on to compare the philosophy of creationism and evolution. Consider this, if we agreed on matters of fact with regards to data produced by natural science, the way that creationists and evolutionists often do, what is left? Philosophy perhaps?
Brahe said:
Knowing this, phaedrus, can you now tell us what observations we would expect to make if natural selection were accurate? Can you also tell us what observations would falsify natrual selection? Keep in mind that not all environments are the same.
Natural selection is not an empirical science, that doesn't mean that the premise is invalid. We are debating semantics and metaphysics. If we recognize this then we can actually look at the facts more objectivly. Keep in mind I never once said that the premise of natural selection is invalid, it does at certain levels corrospond with reality. My point is that it is metaphysics, not empirical science. I have no idea why it is so important to argue otherwise.
Brahe said:
Bonus assignment: define "satire" for us and point out an example or two of its use in this thread.
Satire: poetic medley. a literary work in which vices, folies, stupidities, abuses, etc. are held up to ridicule and contempt.
toff said:
This is just idiocy. Evidence is irrelevant?...Something like 90% of the workd is theistic, which makes your assertition that god had been supplanted demonstrable nonsense.
Peter Harcoff said:
If you want to stay in philosophical la-la land, that's your call. But you're not going to get anywhere by doing so.
Thats just on this page.