Forums | MacLife
You are not logged in.
#76 2005-08-22 8:57 am
- jerwin
- Sophist
- From: The Garden of Pure Ideology
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 7052
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
Maybe his posts weren't up to the high standards of the Ministry.
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
Offline
#77 2005-08-22 9:09 am
- Zetetic Apparatchik
- Member

- Registered: 2001-01-07
- Posts: 8250
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
Did he ever try to qualify his statement that "more complex organisms such as humans definatly have longer DNA sequences." ?
Join the MAF AudioScrobbler group.
Protest ist, wenn ich sage, das und das paßt mir nicht. Widerstand ist, wenn ich dafür sorge, daß das, was mir nicht paßt, nicht länger geschieht.
Offline
#78 2005-08-22 9:43 am
- Hank Rearden
- Watch your step

- From: Republic of Western Canada
- Registered: 2001-04-18
- Posts: 7044
- Website
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
Zetetic Apparatchik wrote:
Did he ever try to qualify his statement that "more complex organisms such as humans definatly have longer DNA sequences." ?
Get used to it. The arguing tactic by the opposition seems to be "bring something fallacious up, wait until a good reply is posted, then ignore, ignore, ignore"
It happened with your genome size post.
It happened with my nest temperature/sex ratio post.
And it's happened on numerous other occasions.
It must be noted that this is a typical creationist arguing tactic. The idea is, keep on bringing up this, that and the next thing. Make sure that the arguments are, as often as possible, fairly obscure. Then, when a good reply is posted, say something to the effect of, "well, that's fine, but what about the second gizzard of the turquoise-tufted ant catcher, how did that evolve?"
The idea is to continue to throw obscure facts and ideas at your opponent until he/she is fatigued or doesn't care anymore. Then, when no response is garnered, the creationist can say, "look, in this instance evolutionary theory fails, thus our only other option is YEC."
The gross heathenism of civilization has generally destroyed nature, and poetry, and all that is spiritual. -John Muir-
Offline
#79 2005-08-22 9:50 am
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
Hank Rearden wrote:
It happened with my nest temperature/sex ratio post.
Sorry I haven't been in here as much as during the summer, I'm a lot busier now.
Can you explain to me why biologists who work with Tuataras are worried about global warming if it isn't an issue?
I think they might know a little more about them than painted turtles, which can ultimately migrate if the need be. There is no place to go when you are on an Island - and cooling eggs to get females is a hell of a lot more difficult than warming them to get males. Decaying matter rots and does produce some heat in the process, but how the hell does a reptile that abandons its eggs cool them to prevent all male clutches?
In her right hand Jenny held the Bible of her mother
Jenny had a pistol in the other
-- Steve Taylor
Offline
#80 2005-08-22 10:10 am
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
resedit wrote:
Intelligent Design as a Science demonstrates (or tries to anyway) that the most logical answer to the question is one that can not come from science.

Duke Stratosphere wrote:
At this point, evolution and ID are both just theories, so why shouldn't they both be taught in school?
As Res has explained, the entire point of Intelligent Design science is to prove that Intelligent Design can't be explained by science.
Since they spend so much time and effort to debunk themselves so nicely for us, we should at least be polite and keep it out of schools. It's what they'd want.
Zetetic Apparatchik wrote:
Why can't I see any of rolley49's posts now?
I don't know. I sure didn't do it.
Offline
#81 2005-08-22 10:31 am
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
resedit wrote:
Can you explain to me why biologists who work with Tuataras are worried about global warming if it isn't an issue?
It's hard to go outside to study animals when it's 117° in the shade. It also kills your tomato plants, melts the polar ice caps, and raises the sea level.
You know, all the reasons the rest of us are worried about global warming.
(Can you keep something quiet? Despite what I said above they don't really worry about global warming - it's a well-kept secret that biologists who specialze in the Tuatara actually have a special pill that allows them not to worry about global warming - they take it once a month and they stay cooool. Think Ahnuld in that Batman movie.)
Offline
#82 2005-08-22 11:00 am
- jerwin
- Sophist
- From: The Garden of Pure Ideology
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 7052
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
In ages past, when the climate changes, tuatara would migrate to a more hospitable environment.
"Migrate where?" you ask disbelievingly. "Aren't tuatara restricted to small offshore islands, where escaping climate change is quite difficult?"
But the tuatara were not always restricted to small offshore islands. At one time, they thrived on the mainland. And presumably, migration could have solved many of their problems. But the tuatara are trapped now, with no alternative habitats.
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
Offline
#83 2005-08-22 3:36 pm
- Hank Rearden
- Watch your step

- From: Republic of Western Canada
- Registered: 2001-04-18
- Posts: 7044
- Website
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
resedit wrote:
Hank Rearden wrote:
It happened with my nest temperature/sex ratio post.
Sorry I haven't been in here as much as during the summer, I'm a lot busier now.
Can you explain to me why biologists who work with Tuataras are worried about global warming if it isn't an issue?
I think they might know a little more about them than painted turtles, which can ultimately migrate if the need be. There is no place to go when you are on an Island - and cooling eggs to get females is a hell of a lot more difficult than warming them to get males. Decaying matter rots and does produce some heat in the process, but how the hell does a reptile that abandons its eggs cool them to prevent all male clutches?
Females may be choosy about nest sites. Just because it is an island doesn't mean that it doesn't have varied habitats with varied temperatures, etc.
Reference:
http://www.seaturtle.org/PDF/Nelson_200 … sSeies.pdf
Results from two nesting seasons suggest sex ratios of tuatara populations will be resilient to global warming in the short term because an equal sex ratio was predicted from a relatively warm season. However, most other islands where tuatara occur are smaller, have fewer open areas for nesting and/or shallower soils. Additionally, nesting is comparatively difficult to monitor. As nest depth influences hatching success and sex ratio through temperature, and female tuatara do not appear to dig deeper nests in warmer years, a male bias in hatchlings may be more likely from tuatara nests on other islands. In the extreme, this could lead to extinction of small populations.
Basically, on the bigger island (discussed in the paper), the reptiles seem to respond to year-on-year temperature by choosing nest sites in some manner or another (likely not random, but this is yet to be shown). On smaller islands, there is the chance of localized extinctions. However, over time one might hypothesize that surviving individuals on larger islands (surely, even in a YEC scenario there would be periods of unusual warm or unusual coolness) would recolonize the smaller islands.
Such climate-related extinction/recolonization events could be tested for genetically as well via decent and modification from common ancestors. The Tuatara probably also could be (perhaps is currently being used as) a model organism for founder effects and local evolution towards envirnomental effects on various islands, in terms of nesting sites and sex ratio.
Note, also, that as I pointed out earlier, in times of a lack of males, male offspring are valuable, and vice versa. Even on the small islands, depending on the dynamics of the sitauation (and all of the parameters could be modeled and tested) some individuals may be able, via genetic variation, to produce more females in warm years. It is not like every single tuatara has the exact same temperature tolerances. This variation could be selected for, and some of the populations could survive (i.e., there would not necessarily be a need to invoke recolonization, even though recolonization is not an unlikely event).
The thing is, this whole Tuatara discussion is blatantly exposing the fact that I can develop nice, testable hypotheses about Tuatara biology, genetics, and ecology based on evolutionary theory. ID cannot do that, but instead just looks that the world in a state of continual puzzlement.
The thing is, I do believe that God is a continual agent in nature. But that belief has absolutely no scientific value as it is the sort of thing that cannot be tested. Thus, to test physiological, ecological, genetic, or anatomical hypotheses I NEED a workable theoretical framework. Evolutionary theory provides that. ID does not.
The gross heathenism of civilization has generally destroyed nature, and poetry, and all that is spiritual. -John Muir-
Offline
#84 2005-08-22 3:59 pm
- NAG
- A witch!
- Royal Wombat

- From: /usr/local/apps/nag
- Registered: 2000-09-22
- Posts: 30229
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
*waits for res to say ID is testable yet not give an example*
Offline
#85 2005-08-22 4:57 pm
- jerwin
- Sophist
- From: The Garden of Pure Ideology
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 7052
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
BTW, it seems that a major predator of tuatara is the Kiore, or Pacific rat (Rattus exulans).
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
Offline
#86 2005-08-22 5:25 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- ::: title edited due to Satanic influences :::

- From: Rockin' out
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 22237
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
Maybe we should ask whether genetic mutations can affect behavior ...
Note: please delete this post.
Offline
#87 2005-08-22 5:53 pm
- Hank Rearden
- Watch your step

- From: Republic of Western Canada
- Registered: 2001-04-18
- Posts: 7044
- Website
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Maybe we should ask whether genetic mutations can affect behavior ...
Yes, e.g.:
http://www.nida.nih.gov/MeetSum/NS99/Cahillabs.html
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/quer … t=Citation
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/quer … query_hl=1
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/quer … t=Citation
Etc.
Etc.
Etc.
The gross heathenism of civilization has generally destroyed nature, and poetry, and all that is spiritual. -John Muir-
Offline
#88 2005-08-22 6:15 pm
- D'Eyncourt
- OMGDICTATOR

- Registered: 2001-12-27
- Posts: 8806
- Website
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
OK, then I'll ask the question:
Were there tuatara on the Ark?
BOYCOTT SONY
"I think the question now is not whether you went to Vietnam or whether you didn't, whether you fought in the war or fought against the war. I think the only question is whether we can find a president smart enough never to make a mistake like that again"--Molly Ivins, way back in 1992
Offline
#89 2005-08-22 6:56 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- ::: title edited due to Satanic influences :::

- From: Rockin' out
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 22237
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
Hank Rearden wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Maybe we should ask whether genetic mutations can affect behavior ...
Yes, e.g.:
http://www.nida.nih.gov/MeetSum/NS99/Cahillabs.html
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/quer … t=Citation
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/quer … query_hl=1
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/quer … t=Citation
Etc.
Etc.
Etc.
Yes, I know ... it was one of the times where rezzie got slapped mighty hard (by the 'win, if I'm not mistaken) but went on regardless, like Clouseau knocking over a piano during an interrogation.
Note: please delete this post.
Offline
#90 2005-08-22 7:00 pm
- Zetetic Apparatchik
- Member

- Registered: 2001-01-07
- Posts: 8250
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
D'Eyncourt wrote:
OK, then I'll ask the question:
Were there tuatara on the Ark?
Yes, but they were stowaways. God hates them.
Join the MAF AudioScrobbler group.
Protest ist, wenn ich sage, das und das paßt mir nicht. Widerstand ist, wenn ich dafür sorge, daß das, was mir nicht paßt, nicht länger geschieht.
Offline
#91 2005-08-22 7:04 pm
- bratboy
- laden with emotion
- Royal Wombat

- From: Austin, Texas
- Registered: 2003-01-19
- Posts: 34106
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
D'Eyncourt wrote:
OK, then I'll ask the question:
Were there tuatara on the Ark?
...right next to the T-Rex?
"One thing we've learned is there's a difference between being disappointed and having madmen in authority."
--Paul Krugman
Offline
#92 2005-08-22 8:35 pm
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
bratboy wrote:
D'Eyncourt wrote:
OK, then I'll ask the question:
Were there tuatara on the Ark?...right next to the T-Rex?
no. dinosaurs were to big to fit on the ark. even the small ones. so god killed them and noah saved the elephant and the hippo and the smurfing bumble bee and the blind cave fish.
Offline
#93 2005-08-22 8:46 pm
- Chickenhawk
- Snark Snark Snark Snark
- From: Being Snarky
- Registered: 2005-06-01
- Posts: 5816
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
I wonder why god saved the titmouse. 
It seems wierd that something with such a leud name would meet god's approval.
The recent medical controversy over whether vaccinations cause autism reveals a habit of human cognition—thinking anecdotally comes naturally, whereas thinking scientifically does not. -- Michael Shermer
Offline
#94 2005-08-22 8:56 pm
- mo' ron
- PS3 4 EVA

- From: NC, USA
- Registered: 2002-10-15
- Posts: 14245
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.

What is the difference between Vista and OSX?
- Microsoft employees are excited about OSX.
Offline
#95 2005-08-22 9:11 pm
- cbaines
- zzzzzap!

- From: Shreveport, La.
- Registered: 2004-08-08
- Posts: 102
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
Logic is no defense against a good axe!
... just trying to maintain..
Offline
#96 2005-08-22 10:09 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- ::: title edited due to Satanic influences :::

- From: Rockin' out
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 22237
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
That's a nice cartoon. I'll rate it four stars out of five on the Shnicky Scale.
Note: please delete this post.
Offline
#97 2005-08-23 8:35 am
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
gozer wrote:
noah saved ... the blind cave fish.
I've always guessed that he didn't really need to save fish and other water-dwelling creatures.
mo' ron wrote:
Nice.
Offline
#98 2005-08-23 10:18 am
- KingFred
- is enjoying his status as
- Royal Wombat

- Registered: 2002-05-09
- Posts: 7541
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
oatmeal wrote:
gozer wrote:
noah saved ... the blind cave fish.
I've always guessed that he didn't really need to save fish and other water-dwelling creatures.
He would have had to since the water would have greatly changed in salinity levels due to 40 days of downpour and water levels rising several thousand feet (to cover the highest mountains) and either saltwater critters would have perished in the lower salinity levels of rainwater or freshwater critters would have perished in the now brackish water. Unless, of course, the saltwater fish evolved very very very quickly into freshwater fish (or vice versa) and then within about a year DEvolved back to strictly saltwater fish once the water levels returned to normal (and the salt magically evaporated from what was previously freshwater lakes and rivers).
Maybe he had a big saltwater tank in the ark. He'd also have needed a local aquarium or pet shop to get himself pairs of all sorts of unusual fish and critters. Like those rare breeds found only in the Amazon, for example.
Of course, you could always argue that the most absurd and impossible thing happened (Noah was able to get EVERY possible variety of animal onboard, regardless of original habitat) by simply stating that it doesn't have to make sense or even be possible; God can do anything he wants.
If God wants Noah, residing in the middle east sometime around 2300 BC, to have access to a platypus from Australia which is ~7000 miles away (Ankara, Turkey to Darwin, Australia) - which would mean a 14,000 mile return trip - and the capybara of the Amazon region (~6500 to Manaus, Brazil or 13,000 miles return), then Noah can have access to a platypus and a capybara. God can also put that platypus back in Australia and the capybara back in South America once the flood is over. Or Noah could take the time to travel back to Australia and South America to drop these and all other animals he got from specific regions around the world back to their flooded out habitats where they would naturally have no problems existing off the drowned out vegetation.
Because, as we all know, world travel back then was speedy, affordable and easy. As is finding, transporting, feeding and caring for unusual livestock, never mind even knowing there WAS such a critter as a capybara he had to get from that well known continent of South America.
Magic is a wonderful thing. Logic not required.
Exploring the intertubes
Offline
#99 2005-08-23 10:37 am
- jerwin
- Sophist
- From: The Garden of Pure Ideology
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 7052
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
Maybe there noah was just one of several ark builders-- and the countless tales worldwide of floods were all true....
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
Offline
#100 2005-08-23 10:49 am
Re: Evolution. Creation. Intelligent Design. Darwinism. Etc.
NAG wrote:
*waits for res to say ID is testable yet not give an example*
You'll be waiting awhile because I've already stated that the methodology is to demonstrate paradox in random design - thus leaving ID as the only possible answer.
ID doesn't claim the ability to put God in a test tube and prove he exists. It never has.
In her right hand Jenny held the Bible of her mother
Jenny had a pistol in the other
-- Steve Taylor
Offline

