sfs said:
The vestigial centromere and telomeres were not known when the fusion was proposed, so yes, they really were a prediction.
why it was proposed at all? the simple answer is because this is the only logical conclusion. so the creation model predict it too, as i said.
But
why is it the "only logical conclusion" within the creation model? Within the common creationist model
anything is possible, since God poofed it all into existence as-is. There would be no need to make it appear that human chromosome 2 is the fusion of two other chromosomes (unless you were a deliberately deceptive trickster god of some sort, I guess).
So, rather than merely claiming the appearance of fusion is a "logical conclusion" within the creationist framework, please explain the
how and
why it is a logical prediction (and yes, we were talking about
predictions here, not merely conclusions) one could reach, before it was already known, from within the creationist framework.
but you said before that motors arent evidence for design. so now you agree with me that a motor is evidence for design?
The fact that a man-made motor is evidence of design for that particular motor
is not evidence that
all motors are man-made. This is a logical fallacy known as a
hasty generalization, where you assume a generalization based on insufficient evidence, or in the face of evidence to the contrary. Often this occurs by ignoring other possible explanations.
You can't merely assume design in biological motors, due to the fact that non-biological motors were designed. We can make lightning too, does that mean that lightning is also only made by intelligent processes? Of course not, but that's the kind of argument you're making.
If you want to prove that biological motors are the product of intelligence, then you need to demonstrate that they actually were, more likely than any other explanation, the product of an actual intelligence creating it. You haven't even provided independent objective evidence for such a creator, so you can't make that argument yet. Because of this, the evolutionary model remains the most plausible, possible, and parsimonious explanation.
so you are claiming that if something that is identical to a robot evolved by a natural process, then it's not a robot anymore by definition?
Yes. Show me a
literal robot which evolved by natural processes. You can't.
So what? The fact that humans can produce a flagellum
is not evidence that
all flagellum are are the product of design.
This point should not be news to you, so why do you keep repeating that invalid argument?
so again; if we will find a self replicating robot\car (without seeing any human around)- we cant conclude design?
No. One cannot simply assume things, conclusions should require sufficient evidence. Also, this is a nonsense scenario, so it's not really going to tell us anything about the real world.
More importantly, you dodged my question, so here it is again:
The question should be: if we find a self-replicating organism on another planet that we're able to reproduce, can we conclude that it's the product of design?
Please don't dodge this time, actually answer the question.
i dont know why. there could be many reasons, but since it doesn't have any connection to design detection, i realy dont care.
It's a question that could tell you something about your supposed designer, which is your God, and you don't really care to find out about your designer? ...LOL. OK.
no. i have showed to you that no one can detect bad design. therefore your claim about bad design is meaningless. and i linked to wiki only for the image source and not for the definition of a spare tire.
No, you have
not shown that no one can detect bad design. As I explained before, this is not a blanket conclusion that it's possible for anyone to reach. The fact that you can
partially attack
one example, doesn't mean there are similar arguments for
all other examples of bad design. You'd have to shoot down every individual example of purported bad design, and even then, there could be further examples we're not yet aware of.
Again, this is a case of you overgeneralizing from a single example. This seems to be a common type of error that you make.
it's exist only because the "backward retina". so dawkins is claiming that the retina has a bad design. but again: he simply wrong because this structure improve vision. and even in this case the designer add an "'automatic photoshop software" (dawkins words). in other words: another evidence for design rather then evolution, even in this suppose example of a "bad design".
No, the backwards retina doesn't
only improve vision, it also creates blind spots in our vision, which is a deficit to vision.
Furthermore, the fact that something has some value in the way it's structured is
not evidence for design rather than evolution, since evolution adequately explains how good bottom-up designs can evolve without intelligent intervention. Evolution also explains how poor designs can creep in, designs which would appear to be evidence
against intelligent design/creationism.
So both evolution and creationism can explain good design, thus good design isn't evidence for one over the other. But of the two, only evolution can explain poor design. Since we see plenty of examples of poor design (such as autoimmune diseases), despite your protestations, this makes evolution a model which is far more plausible than a model which can't explain these things and relies upon an unproven and untestable "intelligent designer".
i actually found this quote and never read the whole part(just for clarification).
Yeah, quote mining and cherry picking among creationists are common. I recommend looking up the source of any quotes you plan on using, since you'll find the actual text/context will often bite you on the butt if you don't.
Heck, I'd recommend you check the source of any supposed scientific claims creationists make, since they're often the opposite of what the source actually says.
Troubles in Paradise (TIP) is a great resource for all sorts of examples of this, while providing the actual scientific evidence for the theory of evolution.
so your other example is basically about disease.
Glaucoma is a disease, but the other two aren't. For example, I mentioned
presbyopia, which isn't a disease.
Presbyopia is a product of the "design" of the eye, where the lens of the eye gradually hardens, so that at around 40 years old it becomes very difficult or even impossible to focus on close objects. It's the reason why, after a lifetime of 20/20 vision, at age 42 I had to get reading glasses.
Now, evolution can adequately explain why such a condition would evolve in humans. This is because natural selection is less able to do anything to prevent traits which only appear after most childbearing and raising have occurred. If this is a product of "intelligent" design, then the designer is just a jerk to old people.
I also mentioned
detached retinas, which is also a problem which is made more likely due to the backwards retina, since the retinal pigment epithelium is what connects the retina to the back of the eye. This encourages tearing of the structures which produce vision.
But regardless of whether I was talking about disease or not, the problems I listed are the product of how the eye is structured, and you've simply ignored these problems of poor design by writing them off as disease, even though two out of the three things I listed aren't diseases.
but you said that this nerve doesnt has other functions. so this claim is incorrect.
Again, I wasn't claiming that it didn't have multiple functions at each end, I was disputing that it had any other functions which would explain the circuitous route that the nerve took. Please stop attacking an argument I wasn't actually making.
If you have to use
straw man arguments that just makes your side of the argument look weak.
Please show an explanation for this poorly "designed" route that this nerve takes which isn't better explained by the evolutionary model.
and again: if you were wrong about the backward retina, how you can be sure that you aren't wrong about this trait too?
Dude. I was
not wrong about the retina. I knew exactly where you were going, which is why I gave you
multiple examples of the poor design of the eye, examples which you've merely ignored since they destroy your narrative. All you did was say one part of it wasn't as bad as once thought, which did nothing to dispute all of my examples, some of which still show problems caused by the backwards layout of the retina, as I hope I've adequately demonstrated above.
if a mammal evolved once, it can evolve twice. so a 600my mammal will not disprove evolution theory. we can also claim for contamination (the fossil age isnt correct). so evolution isnt a scientific theory.
Yes, convergent evolution could occur, however it
could not occur out of the blue within the evolutionary model, which is what we're talking about here. And one could
claim contamination, but we're talking about an example where that has been ruled out. So yes, species appearing without evolution being involved, would be evidence against evolution, at least for those specific species.
Nothing you've said there makes evolution not a scientific theory. You merely insisting that it isn't, isn't an argument.
I've shown you exactly how the theory of evolution makes testable and verified predictions. You can't merely ignore all of that and claim that it isn't a scientific theory.
HiEv said:
One family doesn't evolve into another one, that's not how evolution works. A species evolves into another one.
true. but you asked me to show you how to disprove creation. so i gave you such an example.
So your argument about how to disprove
creation requires showing that something which evolution says won't happen, happens. ...WHAT?!?!
If that happened, it would shoot down evolution, but I fail to see how that would disprove creation as well. You're really going to have to explain this one to me, because that makes no sense as far as I can see.
HiEv said:
That being said, we have plenty of examples of evolution of the sort that I believe you're trying to ask for. For example, I recommend looking up the
evolution of whales some time. If you think that doesn't qualify, I'd love to hear you explain why.
one reason is this: there is no stepwise from one creature into another. in the same way that there is no (functional) stepwise from say a gps into a cell-phone. even by an intelligent designer.
Uh... Yes, there is a "stepwise" from one creature to another. That's what both the fossil record and DNA evidence both show. Do you literally need every single skeleton from every single generation over a period of
15 million years before you could connect the dots?
We have evidence of species which fit in a linear sequence, where they appear in the fossil record one after another, showing gradual changes into the whales we know today. And it isn't just physical similarity we find in the fossils, but also the geographic relations, where they are found where you would expect if one fossil was an ancestor or descendant of the other, and not randomly scattered around the world. Also, we have a mechanism by which this could naturally occur: evolution via. natural selection. So isn't the most parsimonious explanation for this progression in the fossil record the evolutionary model?
Also, cell-phones preceded GPS (so you got that backwards), one didn't come from the other (outside of both using radio waves, they're largely separate technologies), and there's no analogy between man-made devices and self-reproducing life here. Thus your attempt at an analogy utterly fails, because what you're talking about is basically wrong in almost every possible way.
according to berkeley site this definition including common descent:
"Biological evolution is not simply a matter of change over time. Lots of things change over time: trees lose their leaves, mountain ranges rise and erode, but they aren't examples of biological evolution because they don't involve descent through genetic inheritance. The central idea of biological evolution is that all life on Earth shares a common ancestor, just as you and your cousins share a common grandmother."
so are you agree or disagree with that definition?
An introduction to evolution
That isn't a definition. That's a description. And none of that disputes anything I said.
Also, that's describing the
theory of evolution, not the
fact of evolution. You will note that it went on to say:
"Through the process of descent with modification, the common ancestor of life on Earth gave rise to the fantastic diversity that we see documented in the fossil record and around us today. Evolution means that we're all distant cousins: humans and oak trees, hummingbirds and whales."
Thus this is a description of the
theory of evolution.
So,
yet again, you've confused the
theory of evolution for the
fact of evolution. When you see the word "evolution" you usually need to look at the context to determine which is being talked about, which is sometimes made worse when people conflate the two. However, in this case, where they're clearly talking about it as an explanatory model, then it should be obvious that it's the theory that is being talked about.
In any case, I'm not sure why you bothered to bring that up, since none of that supports your argument. All you've shown is that Berkley disagrees with you.
Now, I return to the essential question:
What would disprove ID/creationism to you?
Your first answer was "see if evolution is testable". It is, but whether
evolution is testable is totally irrelevant to what would disprove
creationism. So that's not a valid answer.
Your second answer was "show me evidence of one family evolving into another." But that isn't something evolution claims happens, and is just as irrelevant to disproving creationism.
Thus, your two main answers are founded upon a
false dichotomy, where you assume evolution being true means that creationism can't be true at all. But it could be that evolution is true, while a creator merely started the process. This is something most Christians around the world believe. The evidence doesn't support that position, but I give it merely to point out that what you're arguing is merely a false dichotomy, the positions aren't actually mutually exclusive.
So, I ask once again,
what would disprove ID/creationism to you? And this time don't pretend that one has to prove evolution to do that, since that's a false dichotomy. What evidences would count as evidence
against the creationist model?
If you can't answer that question, then all you have is an untestable unscientific claim, which is utterly unworthy of belief.