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Moral objection to evolution!

SithDoughnut

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A language is any form of communication that is structured and is intended to convey messages. Even though computer languages are in their own sense a language; They are not intended for use between humans but rather between humans and machines. I can use a programming language like assembly to make a computer understand what I want it to understand. Now the same assembly language is useless for inter-human communication simply because assembly is not designed to instruct a living biological brain that lacks registry addresses etc.

Just because one language is "poorer" compared to another does not mean it is inferior because for the society it evolved for; It is more than adequate as a communications medium.

So would you say that DNA is a language?
 
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mzungu

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So would you say that DNA is a language?
In a very loose sense one could see it as an instruction code that may resemble the structure of language. No it is not a language since it does not meet the requirements for communication but is an instruction code for the manufacture of an organism rather than as a communications media.

But first we have to agree on the definition of What we mean by language. Shall we start here?
 
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SithDoughnut

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In a very loose sense one could see it as an instruction code that may resemble the structure of language. No it is not a language since it does not meet the requirements for communication but is an instruction code for the manufacture of an organism rather than as a communications media.

But first we have to agree on the definition of What we mean by language. Shall we start here?

I would say that a language is a means of transmitting information. That's a pretty loose term, but it works.
 
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So would you say that DNA is a language?


DNA is more a code than a language I believe.

1. The pattern in DNA is a code.
2. All codes we know the origin of are designed.
3. Therefore we have 100% inference that DNA is designed and 0% inference that it is not.
Perry Marshall

You can argue this point here if you want, but its been a number of years to no avail yet.
 
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Wiccan_Child

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DNA is more a code than a language I believe.

1. The pattern in DNA is a code.
2. All codes we know the origin of are designed.
3. Therefore we have 100% inference that DNA is designed and 0% inference that it is not.
Perry Marshall

You can argue this point here if you want, but its been a number of years to no avail yet.
The argument is invalid due to a hidden premise: it is simply asserted that the 'code' defined in (1) is the same 'code' as defined in (2), yet one need only reject that assertion to reject the conclusion.

In other words, the hidden assumption ("All observed codes are designed, therefore all codes are designed", or "DNA constitutes a 'code' in the sense that is used in (2)"), is unsubstantiated.

Moreover, the sheer fact that we have a mechanic by which DNA can arise wholly naturally - i.e., without being designed - soundly disproves the hidden assumption.
 
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mzungu

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DNA is more a code than a language I believe.

1. The pattern in DNA is a code.
2. All codes we know the origin of are designed.
3. Therefore we have 100% inference that DNA is designed and 0% inference that it is not.
Perry Marshall

You can argue this point here if you want, but its been a number of years to no avail yet.
That is flawed logic. You are basically saying:
The heart, intestines, kidneys, etc are all organs therefore the church musical organ is biological and alive!

You are not well versed in the Atomic theory and chemistry (bio, molecular, etc.) If you were then you would not have made the false statement as you did in #3.
 
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vaguelyhumanoid

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If they can communicate information between each other, why shouldn't that count as a language?

Because a language has a very specific set of characteristics, such as arbitrariness of signs, syntax, words composed of phonemes, and the ability to speak of things distant in spacetime from one's present location and time.

And the fossil record is a language too...

I study linguistics as a hobby, and I can assure you that the fossil record is not a language. It's not even a form of communication, how could it be a language? You can say it's metaphorically a language, but saying it's literally one is like saying love is a form of quantum mechanics.
 
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Nathan Poe

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I study linguistics as a hobby, and I can assure you that the fossil record is not a language. It's not even a form of communication, how could it be a language? You can say it's metaphorically a language, but saying it's literally one is like saying love is a form of quantum mechanics.

I study linguistics as part of my career, and I can assure you that the fossil record is not a language.

Charles Hockett is pretty much the go-to man when it comes to language features: The Features of Human Language - Hockett
 
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Wiccan_Child

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Because a language has a very specific set of characteristics, such as arbitrariness of signs, syntax, words composed of phonemes, and the ability to speak of things distant in spacetime from one's present location and time.
Why must a language consist of phonemes? Why wouldn't a language composed purely of graphemes suffice (e.g., a mute person writing on a board)? Or one that is purely body movements (sign language, a bee's dance, etc)? Why must a language be able to 'speak' of particular concepts (i.e., "things distant in spacetime from one's present location and time")? Your 'specific set of characteristics' seem to do nothing but restrict what constitutes a 'language' without providing anything useful.
 
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lucaspa

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So would you say that DNA is a language?

No. DNA is a polymer of nucleotide bases. What you are referring to is the genetic "code", not DNA itself. We often loosely speak of the different bases as "letters" in a 3 letter code for particular amino acids. But it isn't really a language. It's a mapping of triplet bases to amino acids so that you can convert one polymer (of nucleotides) into another polymer consisting of amino acids.
 
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lucaspa

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So, I could theoretically (had I enough political power to do it) select who would breed and who wouldn't - creating a "force" that would negate changes in the population (still avoiding that charged word "evolution"). I think that has a name ... something like "eugenics" ... a favorite of the Nazis.

As has been noted, you are simply changing selection criteria. Instead of having "nature" do the selecting, you are having humans do it. You are substituting artificial selection for natural selection. The result is still evolution: descent with modification.

Then where between the two extremes does a "moral" society reside? At one extreme are the social darwinists who propose letting the poor and weak die because its "natural." At the other extreme are the fascists who want to "design" a society. I guess this doesn't belong in the science forum, but the thread is here.

Neither. What you are doing is committing the Naturalistic Fallacy: that what happens in nature is what ought to happen in human society.

Both examples are artificial selection. Neither is particularly moral. What's more, both are dumb. The problem is that natural selection is a lot smarter than we are. Where humans focus in on just a few traits that are "good" and ignore the costs of those traits, natural selection balances the costs/benefits of thousands of traits at once. Just leave it alone.
 
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lucaspa

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Really? I've got a few physics books (not mine) that states that laws and theories are completely different. A law deals with what. A theory deals with why. Laws do not attempt to explain anything, nor are they necessarily about things that have been explained. They are just things that we know to be true through repeated observation.

Both laws and theories are statements about the physical universe. Laws tend to be very well supported theories. And yes, theories can also be things we know to be true through repeated observation: take heliocentrism theory and cell theory.

I have a cartoon I show when I give my Philosophy of Science lecture. It has a man suspended upside down unsupported with his wrist handcuffed to a cop. The cop is calling in on his radio: "Defying the law of gravity, Sarge".

If you have noticed, there have been no new "laws" discovered. We don't call Special Relativity a law even tho it fits how you described a law. That is partly because we recognize that laws are really well supported theories and that, like theories, it's possible that someday they may be shown to be wrong.
 
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vaguelyhumanoid

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Why must a language consist of phonemes? Why wouldn't a language composed purely of graphemes suffice (e.g., a mute person writing on a board)? Or one that is purely body movements (sign language, a bee's dance, etc)? Why must a language be able to 'speak' of particular concepts (i.e., "things distant in spacetime from one's present location and time")? Your 'specific set of characteristics' seem to do nothing but restrict what constitutes a 'language' without providing anything useful.

Phonemes aren't necessarily spoken, if they fill the same role they are considered phonemes under this definition. As for the other things I spoke of, I recommend you look up linguistic universals. Certain features are held in common by all languages around the world, and things such as ant communication and the fossil record(!) do not have these features.
 
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Wiccan_Child

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Phonemes aren't necessarily spoken, if they fill the same role they are considered phonemes under this definition.
I'm curious as to how you can have a non-sonic phoneme. Would the fundamental chemical bases of a formicidic language count as a phoneme?

As for the other things I spoke of, I recommend you look up linguistic universals. Certain features are held in common by all languages around the world, and things such as ant communication and the fossil record(!) do not have these features.
That confuses descriptive and prescriptive qualities: just because all known languages are, say, learn-able to the human mind, doesn't mean all languages must be learn-able to the human mind. I don't doubt that there are traits common to all languages, but it's possible that some of these are garnered from the small sample size - we only have human languages to analyse.
 
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Tiberius

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I study linguistics as a hobby, and I can assure you that the fossil record is not a language. It's not even a form of communication, how could it be a language? You can say it's metaphorically a language, but saying it's literally one is like saying love is a form of quantum mechanics.

That's excactly my point.

if DNA is a language, then the fossil record is too.
 
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