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The NSTA offers this:
The natural phenomenon really comes down to populations changing traits over time. The way things change are best unified with the Laws of Inheritance Meiosis and Mitosis but for some reason Mendelian Genetics isn't mentioned, only some nebulous concept of evolution.
Try another, less obscure example. What did you really learn in Algebra and how did you 'profit' from it?
Getting to the point, it's a unified theory of biology, it has been since the Modern Synthesis of Mendelian Genetics and Darwinism. What they profit is a matter of conjecture, what they should be learning is Biology and Genetics.
Darwin is often accused of being racist but for his time he was actually more of a moderate. He is not trying to draw some definitive line indicating superior to inferior races, as a matter of fact he is trying to get away from those kind of distinctions. What he is most interested in are classifications that are assigned for the sake of convenience, this he says is best done at the level of genus. When it comes to human beings since we are all of the same genus the subcategories would be more like demographics then anything remotely resembling species.
All this talk about evolution, which when you get right down to it's variation resulting in bigger changes over time. One of the things that biology should be teaching us is what all the members of a genus, like say humans, have in common. Strangely enough, as convoluted as the use of expressions like 'favorable races' Darwinian evolution has helped to demonstrate just how meaningless a term like 'race' can be.
The father of modern genetics did a series of hybrid experiments that propelled the science of genetics for the last hundred years, did his work in the heart of the Austrian Hungry Empire.
That actually happened, his name was Gregor Mendel and if you asked a thousand university students if evolution happened you would probably get a thousand affirmative responses. If you ask them how it happens the vast majority would say something vaguely Darwinian and all of them would be wrong. The Germans, notably the warlike Prussian national socialists like Hitler, were all enthusiastic evolutionists but they didn't have a clue how meaningless a phrase like 'survival of the fittest' is in biochemistry.
Mendelian genetics was not considered a science for a hundred years after Mendel had completed the work that was the foundation for modern genetics. It was not until Watson, Crick and their associates unveiled the DNA double helix model that the biochemical cause and genetic external allele effects were finally synthesized, graduating it to a true science. In the wake of this century of discovery it has become the world's newest and arguably, the most important scientific research of the modern world.
The expression, 'Survival of the fittest' is a gross misnomer. Evolution is the change of alleles (traits) in populations over time. The traits, in order to be adaptive over time have to make it past the normative screening of the genome. Hybrids have a strong tendency to revert back to the grand parent form according to Mendel and according to Darwin, infertility is the bane of horticulture. Indeed, producing adaptive traits in progeny is what has come to be known as differential selective success. However, Mendel discovered a pattern, a 3:1 ratio of dominant to recessive genes expressed as traits. Unfortunately for the Soviet Union they promoted Darwinian evolution to the exclusion of Mendelian Genetics which was a costly mistake for them in the Life Sciences:
The Human Genome Project in their landmark paper tell us about the history of their science:
I think it's pretty clear that Soviet Russia rejected Mendelian Genetics for 50 years and it hurt them in the Life Sciences. Lamark is a Zoologist Darwin mentions in the Preface: '
The statement pertains to lineage, from the concept of common descent Darwin would form what he called 'The Tree of Life'. It is the only illustration in the book. That's one of the reasons Darwinism became so controversial, the premise of On the Origin of Species was that life evolved by means of 'Natural Law' rather then being created by some 'miraculous interposition'. Darwin's inaugural book on natural selection can be described as one long argument against special creation.
Basically there were two issues with the Modern Synthesis:
At its heart was the question of whether Mendelian genetics could be reconciled with gradual evolution by means of natural selection. A second issue was whether the broad-scale changes (macroevolution) seen by palaeontologists could be explained by changes seen in local populations (microevolution).
Modern evolutionary synthesis
In Mendelian Genetics they are cyclical, a 3:1 ratio of dominant to recessive traits. Darwinism tries to resolve this by means of random (spontaneous) mutations, one of the ultimate sources of variation in living systems. There is just one problem with that, mutations are neutral the vast majority of the time and when strong enough for selection to act they are usually deleterious (harmful). In rare instances they can be beneficial, those rare instances Darwinians believe are the source of adaptive evolutionary history.
I'm not getting Mendelian Genetics from the article, Galton starts his eugenics ideas without reference to Mendelian Genetics since it was barely introduced to chromosome theory at the time. The rise of eugenics came about oblivious to Mendelian Genetics:
There is mention in the article of the Human Genome project and a push by some in the field to do a kind of DNA profiling. What the article failed to mention is that Francis Collins, the director of the Human Genome Project was opposed to this kind of discrimination and testified on Capitol Hill to that effect. Mendelian Genetics has never been associated with eugenics, Darwinism is famous for it.
This is something you don't see everyday, a scientist quoting a politician and saying he got something right. Francis Collins quoting George Bush:
Testimony of Francis S. Collins, see Genetic Discrimination
I've never had much interest in the age of the earth, even though I'm pretty much a young earth creationist. What interests me is genetics.
The NSTA advocates teaching evolution as a unifying theory of science, I don't think they are talking about biology and genetics here. I think a better word here would be Darwinism, Mendelian genetics and the modern synthesis is what is in mind here.
Grace and peace,
Mark
The National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) strongly supports the position that evolution is a major unifying concept in science... (The Teaching of Evolution)
The natural phenomenon really comes down to populations changing traits over time. The way things change are best unified with the Laws of Inheritance Meiosis and Mitosis but for some reason Mendelian Genetics isn't mentioned, only some nebulous concept of evolution.
Try another, less obscure example. What did you really learn in Algebra and how did you 'profit' from it?
Getting to the point, it's a unified theory of biology, it has been since the Modern Synthesis of Mendelian Genetics and Darwinism. What they profit is a matter of conjecture, what they should be learning is Biology and Genetics.
In short, we shall have to treat species in the same manner as those naturalists treat genera, who admit that genera are merely artificial combinations made for convenience. This may not be a cheering prospect; but we shall at least be freed from the vain search for the undiscovered and undiscoverable essence of the term species. (Darwin, On the Origin of Species: Chapter 14 - Recapitulation and Conclusion)
Darwin is often accused of being racist but for his time he was actually more of a moderate. He is not trying to draw some definitive line indicating superior to inferior races, as a matter of fact he is trying to get away from those kind of distinctions. What he is most interested in are classifications that are assigned for the sake of convenience, this he says is best done at the level of genus. When it comes to human beings since we are all of the same genus the subcategories would be more like demographics then anything remotely resembling species.
All this talk about evolution, which when you get right down to it's variation resulting in bigger changes over time. One of the things that biology should be teaching us is what all the members of a genus, like say humans, have in common. Strangely enough, as convoluted as the use of expressions like 'favorable races' Darwinian evolution has helped to demonstrate just how meaningless a term like 'race' can be.
The father of modern genetics did a series of hybrid experiments that propelled the science of genetics for the last hundred years, did his work in the heart of the Austrian Hungry Empire.
"Some day the world may be as indebted as it is to Isaac Newton for physics. They may be as indebted to the City of Brno for its contributions to inheritance." (CF Napp, Brno)
That actually happened, his name was Gregor Mendel and if you asked a thousand university students if evolution happened you would probably get a thousand affirmative responses. If you ask them how it happens the vast majority would say something vaguely Darwinian and all of them would be wrong. The Germans, notably the warlike Prussian national socialists like Hitler, were all enthusiastic evolutionists but they didn't have a clue how meaningless a phrase like 'survival of the fittest' is in biochemistry.
Mendelian genetics was not considered a science for a hundred years after Mendel had completed the work that was the foundation for modern genetics. It was not until Watson, Crick and their associates unveiled the DNA double helix model that the biochemical cause and genetic external allele effects were finally synthesized, graduating it to a true science. In the wake of this century of discovery it has become the world's newest and arguably, the most important scientific research of the modern world.
The expression, 'Survival of the fittest' is a gross misnomer. Evolution is the change of alleles (traits) in populations over time. The traits, in order to be adaptive over time have to make it past the normative screening of the genome. Hybrids have a strong tendency to revert back to the grand parent form according to Mendel and according to Darwin, infertility is the bane of horticulture. Indeed, producing adaptive traits in progeny is what has come to be known as differential selective success. However, Mendel discovered a pattern, a 3:1 ratio of dominant to recessive genes expressed as traits. Unfortunately for the Soviet Union they promoted Darwinian evolution to the exclusion of Mendelian Genetics which was a costly mistake for them in the Life Sciences:
They were not receiving Western journals. And Western ideas were considered bourgeois, erroneous and that they had to be abandoned, including - and this is what shocked Monod - 50 years of genetics. So this - there was a public announcement in the Soviet Union that Mendelian genetics, the genetics of Gregor Mendel and the chromosomal theories of genetics...It gutted Soviet biology, I would say, really, since that time; that Soviet biology never really recovered from this long episode of genetics being suppressed in the Soviet Union. ( 'Brave Genius': A Tale of Two Nobelists NPR)
The Human Genome Project in their landmark paper tell us about the history of their science:
The rediscovery of Mendel's laws of heredity in the opening weeks of the 20th century sparked a scientific quest to understand the nature and content of genetic information that has propelled biology for the last hundred years. The scientific progress made falls naturally into four main phases, corresponding roughly to the four quarters of the century.
- The first established the cellular basis of heredity: the chromosomes.
- The second defined the molecular basis of heredity: the DNA double helix.
- The third unlocked the informational basis of heredity, with the discovery of the biological mechanism by which cells read the information contained in genes and with the invention of the recombinant DNA technologies of cloning and sequencing by which scientists can do the same.
- The last quarter of a century has been marked by a relentless drive to decipher first genes and then entire genomes, spawning the field of genomics. (Initial sequencing and analysis of the human genome. Nature, 15 Feb 2001)
I think it's pretty clear that Soviet Russia rejected Mendelian Genetics for 50 years and it hurt them in the Life Sciences. Lamark is a Zoologist Darwin mentions in the Preface: '
"In these works he upholds the doctrine that species, including man, are descended from other species.He first did the eminent service of arousing attention to the probability of all change in the organic, as well as in the inorganic world, being the result of law, and not of miraculous interposition." (Darwin, On the Origin of Species)
The statement pertains to lineage, from the concept of common descent Darwin would form what he called 'The Tree of Life'. It is the only illustration in the book. That's one of the reasons Darwinism became so controversial, the premise of On the Origin of Species was that life evolved by means of 'Natural Law' rather then being created by some 'miraculous interposition'. Darwin's inaugural book on natural selection can be described as one long argument against special creation.
Basically there were two issues with the Modern Synthesis:
At its heart was the question of whether Mendelian genetics could be reconciled with gradual evolution by means of natural selection. A second issue was whether the broad-scale changes (macroevolution) seen by palaeontologists could be explained by changes seen in local populations (microevolution).
Modern evolutionary synthesis
In Mendelian Genetics they are cyclical, a 3:1 ratio of dominant to recessive traits. Darwinism tries to resolve this by means of random (spontaneous) mutations, one of the ultimate sources of variation in living systems. There is just one problem with that, mutations are neutral the vast majority of the time and when strong enough for selection to act they are usually deleterious (harmful). In rare instances they can be beneficial, those rare instances Darwinians believe are the source of adaptive evolutionary history.
I'm not getting Mendelian Genetics from the article, Galton starts his eugenics ideas without reference to Mendelian Genetics since it was barely introduced to chromosome theory at the time. The rise of eugenics came about oblivious to Mendelian Genetics:
Three generations of imbeciles are enough." This decision opened the floodgates for thousands to be coercively sterilized or otherwise persecuted as subhuman. Years later, the Nazis at the Nuremberg trials quoted Holmes's words in their own defense...In Mein Kampf, published in 1924, Hitler quoted American eugenic ideology and openly displayed a thorough knowledge of American eugenics. "There is today one state," wrote Hitler, "in which at least weak beginnings toward a better conception [of immigration] are noticeable. Of course, it is not our model German Republic, but the United States." (HNN article)
There is mention in the article of the Human Genome project and a push by some in the field to do a kind of DNA profiling. What the article failed to mention is that Francis Collins, the director of the Human Genome Project was opposed to this kind of discrimination and testified on Capitol Hill to that effect. Mendelian Genetics has never been associated with eugenics, Darwinism is famous for it.
This is something you don't see everyday, a scientist quoting a politician and saying he got something right. Francis Collins quoting George Bush:
...who got it exactly right when he said, "Genetic discrimination is unfair to workers and their families. It is unjustified. To deny employment or insurance to a healthy person based only on a predisposition violates our country's belief in equal treatment and individual merit. In the past, other forms of discrimination have been used to withhold rights and opportunities that belong to all Americans. Just as we have addressed discrimination based on race, gender and age, we must now prevent discrimination based on genetic information."
Testimony of Francis S. Collins, see Genetic Discrimination
I've never had much interest in the age of the earth, even though I'm pretty much a young earth creationist. What interests me is genetics.
The NSTA advocates teaching evolution as a unifying theory of science, I don't think they are talking about biology and genetics here. I think a better word here would be Darwinism, Mendelian genetics and the modern synthesis is what is in mind here.
Grace and peace,
Mark
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