stipe said:take me to your sources.
Do you sleep well at night?Stipe said:tough. jukia... learn some biology before you come back with any of your whacked ideas.
Hey, if you happen to find a paper, anywhere, that actually demonstrates (even defines!) cellular specified complexity, now that would be worth reporting! Or are you assuming that all cellular complexity is specified complexity?bob b said:Apparently you did not read the initial posting on this thread which stated that ALL of the sources I would be using for my postings would be from creationsafaris.com, which in turn summarize and reference information from articles in the mainline scientific journals..
I started with the earliest one they had back in late 2000 and am gradually working my way up to the present. We are now at December 2001.
Lots more cellular specified complexity to go!!!
bob b said:Intelligent Design scientists are working to identify a relatively small number of cases of what they call "specified complexity" in organisms, and then scientifically eliminating the possibilities of "necessity and chance" for their origin, which then leaves only the possibility of design (which being always the result of intelligence, means that the term "Intelligent Design" is strictly speaking redundant: Design is really the only word required).
Bob b – you are not a biologist, nor am I. So I will ask you, as a fellow non-biologist, consider (from the OP) “How do brainless, sightless molecules perform first aid?”“… But mistakes happen. How does the cell recognize an error? How do brainless, sightless molecules perform first aid? How could a cell survive that didn't have these capabilities from the start? …”
ThePhy said:From Bob b's OP: Bob b – you are not a biologist, nor am I. So I will ask you, as a fellow non-biologist, consider (from the OP) “How do brainless, sightless molecules perform first aid?”
1) What is the author’s intent in identifying these as “brainless, sightless molecules” since every molecule in existence, no matter what it’s function is “brainless and sightless”?
2) Can you seriously say that you do not know how a “cell (could ) survive that didn't have these (repair) capabilities from the start?”
It just sounded to me like a simplistic appeal showing that ID must have been involved. But as I already mentioned, the brainless sightless nonsense is pure silliness.bob b said:I am sure you can speculate as well as I can regarding the author's intent.
Your quote in the OP made no distinction about what cells are being discussed. It made no mention of the fidelity of DNA replication, other than saying that when mistakes are made, they might be amenable to repair.I believe that the reason for doubting that cells would be able to survive without a repair mechanism is called error castastrophe, meaning that a certain degree of fidelity in DNA replication is required and normal replication without a repair mechanism is apparently not adequate.
ThePhy said:It just sounded to me like a simplistic appeal showing that ID must have been involved. But as I already mentioned, the brainless sightless nonsense is pure silliness. Your quote in the OP made no distinction about what cells are being discussed. It made no mention of the fidelity of DNA replication, other than saying that when mistakes are made, they might be amenable to repair.
Based on several years of experience with you, I probably shouldn’t introduce real math, but who knows, maybe you will show you can really do it this time. Specific example - if a fatal folding error occurs in 25% of some type of cells, but one healthy cell is successful in splitting into two cells, which then each split into two more cells, etc, what is the chance that the lineage will be terminated due to the occurrence of the error? (I will venture to guess that 25% fatal errors in protein folding in a cell is wildly more frequent than is the norm in most living cells.)
25% chance that of all the proteins in the cell, one critical protein will misfold, killing the cell.bob b said:I do not see the point of your request. Are you saying that there is a 25% probability of error in a single protein or does this apply to all the proteins in the cell involved in the "splitting" of the cell into two cells?
Keep it simple – assume that that chance of a fatal protein (fatal to the cell) fold error in any one of the cells in question is 25%.In any case I have no idea how one would approach an answer to such a problem, since not all folding problems are necessarily fatal to the organism, just as the loss of a single protein is not necessarily fatal either.
But that is the point. You are finding it necessary to impose a condition the original article never imposed, that there is a high enough breakdown of fidelity that the cells will all die out. The article never made any such stipulation, instead it carefully planted the idea in the mind of the casual reader that cells without repair abilities could not last.However, I think that it is clear that at some level of breakdown of fidelity in the "splitting" process of cell replication that extinction of the line will occur.
I claim it is perfectly possible for many types of cells to multiply sans such a mechanism. If over the evolutionary history of a cell it developed folding repair mechanisms, then natural selection would select for the retention of such mechanisms. Sounds like classic evolution to me.How could a cell survive that didn't have these capabilities from the start?
ThePhy said:You are finding it necessary to impose a condition the original article never imposed, that there is a high enough breakdown of fidelity that the cells will all die out. The article never made any such stipulation, instead it carefully planted the idea in the mind of the casual reader that cells without repair abilities could not last.
I claim it is perfectly possible for many types of cells to multiply sans such a mechanism.
And the sum total of the proof you have offered under direct questions – is for you to (once again) run like a scared jackrabbit from the simple math. Aerospace systems engineer? Hah, bad, really bad joke.bob b said:That was no accident, because it is undoubtedly true.
I gave you the specific scenario to address the claim. You are the one who is too cowardly (or incompetent) to give answer to it.Go ahead and support your claim, if you can.