Originally posted by Nineveh
Look, you say he is lying, it seems a simple matter, either fruitflies have unique sequences or they don't. That was the point of his article, his idea is that the "creation model" would have unique sequences in creatures. Either they do or they don't. Which is it?
Sigh. I didn't say he was lying. It is no surprise that if your sample contains in complete genomes for less than 0.001% of all species you are likely to find unique sequences. This has nothing to do with YEC vs. evolutionary biology; it has to do with incomplete sampling. As you add more species to the comparison set, the number of
apparently unique sequences can only decrease. Why do you pretend that I've never explained this, and keep asking me the same question over and over and over? But let me give you the chance to return the accusation, if you dare, by asking you the same question yet again. You, and Brewer, claim that the existence of unique sequences in fruit flies supports a creation model. Does that mean that evolutionary model predicts
no unique sequences in fruit flies? Obviously not, but then the question, asked repeatedly but as yet unanswered, is "how unique a sequence do the two models predict?" Why does 50% uniqueness in fruit flies favor creation vs. evolution?
Originally posted by Nineveh
They do research in their field, and they happen to disbelieve evo.
Ah, well that's not what any of us are really interested in, is it? Creationist scientists, as I understand the term, refers not to scientists in other disciplines who happen to believe in YEC, but rather scientists doing reseach in creationism. Are you saying that the merits of someone's 'research' in one field depends not on the quality of that 'research,' but rather on their credentials in an unrelated field?
Originally posted by Nineveh
You haven't offered critical review of his research papers. You want to offer your view on one article from AiG. Do you want to critique his research on cancer?
If this were a cancer forum, I might be inclined to discuss his cancer research. His research on cancer is utterly irrelevant to his creationism paper(s). It's quite ironic that you've charged evolutionary biologists with withholding criticism of our "brothers" and yet you do absolutely everything in your power to divert attention away from serious consideration of Brewer's analysis.
Originally posted by Nineveh
Like it's been repeated forever in this thread, creation topics don't get published in mainstream journals.
Hmm, I don't see the relevance. Brewer got his paper out, we've all seen it, and it's bogus. Peer-review would probably have identified these problems, and they either would have been fixed or the paper would never have been published.
Originally posted by Nineveh
Well, it would be quite interesting to see your "critique" and the rebuttle at AiG. Perhaps, since you have contacted Dr. Brewer, you might also contact AiG and see if your correspondence with him would merit some space.
You mean ICR, don't you? Geez, it's hard for you to let go of even minor goofs like this, isn't it? In any case, these groups have made it clear that they are under no obligation, and have no interest, in publishing critiques of papers on their website.
Originally posted by Nineveh
I take that to mean you won't let me know what he has to say in his own defence?
There's that impeccable logic of yours again. Unless I get banned from TOL for relentless pursuit of rationale thought, I guarantee that I will post the outcome of my dialogue with Dr. Brewere. For example, his original response implied that I'd given much more thought to these issues than had he...
But your post is effective in further burying the more important point: "And what happens? Nothing. Not a peep. No YEC has dared to take it on. Brewer is not the one who's gotten my skin, it's you guys who make all kinds of grand, definitive, unsupported statements, but when you get a chance to actually show that you are capable of understanding basic elements of scientific analysis, or to show that you are at all interested in evaluating the merits of an argument that draws conclusions you like, you absolutely clam up. It's okay, though. It's been interesting watching what happens to a thread when an argument seems to be heading into potentially difficult territory for the YEC perspective."
Originally posted by Nineveh
It is?
The fundamental diffrence is "anscestors" from what I can tell.
Exactly. Under the evolutionary model, all organisms except the first had a living ancestor; under the YEC model, all organisms except (drumroll, please!)
created kinds had a living ancestor. Funny how even when we are in agreement you sound like you disagree with me!
Originally posted by Nineveh
No, I was asking about what john told Agent Smith way back about mass extinctions that have happend (I believe he said) 5 times or so.
Oh, I wouldn't have guessed that. Mainly because mass extinctions didn't wipe everything out. Mass extinction refers to the sudden (geologically speaking) disappearance of a large fraction (but never 100%!) of taxa.
Originally posted by Nineveh
I share that view of you. You want me to believe in your life's work, but remain silent about your theories as to where matter came from to begin with and how it got in a form for you to get at least one anscestor, then we can get to your life's passion.
As I've said before, I do not expect to change anyone's beliefs. I have tried to be as clear, open, upfront as possible; I don't just complain, I show my work; I identify the logical steps in my argumentation. You can't honestly claim that you do any of these. Even now, you refuse to consider evolution-based ideas until you are satisfied with how evolution explains something it is not intended to explain (here, the origin of life, and of matter; elsewhere, the origin of the universe).
Originally posted by Nineveh
But you said you don't know if there was one or many. Should I assume one from now on?
If it will make you happy. There certainly isn't much evidence for a polyphetic origin of life.
Originally posted by Nineveh
Yeah, it's sort of confusing when another evo talks about 5 mass extinctions... So what is right here?
Again, you're overinterpreting "mass extinction." "Many rapid extinctions" is not the same as "Complete rapid extinction."
Originally posted by Nineveh
It seems like you are saying, it started once because it's all related by anscestors. Am I close?
Sounds like I'm lucky to have escaped from the southern Indiana school system! "If
all are related, then,
by definition, they must have
one common ancestor. If all are
not related, then they cannot possibly all share a single common ancestor."
Originally posted by Nineveh
Considering the lineage from Cain and his mentioned wife, their children (all human) bear out the fact they were real. We have both parents spoken of. For you, it seems it's not necessary to even name one parent to assume an ansestor. ie: man and ape.
Phylogenetic analyses do not need to
name ancestors to determine the relationships among descendants. A good phylogenetic analysis will, however, allow one to make predictions about ancestors.
Originally posted by Nineveh
For crying out loud. I admit I assumed your use of a term, now I have to give evidence and proof of why I assumed your use? Simply, get over it already.
Not at all. Comparing your original and subsequent statements make it clear that you claim other evolutionary scientists have charged that YECs think the Bible explains natural phenomena at the level of (your example) the workings of the atom. I'm calling you on that.
Originally posted by Nineveh
And I am not suprised you set up yet one more strawman argument.
No strawmen from me.
Originally posted by Nineveh
It appears those two evo scientists can't even agree on what ramifications the study has.
... so?
Originally posted by Nineveh
Why do you say Sakaki's responce is "emotional"? By the way, there wasn't 30,000,000 chromosome comparisons, there was one.
"Surprise" is an emotion, is it not? Your entire rationale for running with this story has been his surprise at the results.
You need to keep your units straight. What do you mean when you refer to "60,000" differences (many such posts, most recently #740)? Did
you mean 60,000 chromosomes?!? As the citation you provided makes clear, they found > 60,000 indels in 30,000,000 bases.
Originally posted by Nineveh
I've just been trying to get you to tell me if there are more/less/none unique sequences in a fruitfly than Brewer claims.
You've been trying, eh? Are you implying that I've been at all shy at answering this, you who still won't say a peep about Brewer's 4-bacteria game? You who first brings up the 50% issue in "response" to my question: "And he never tells us how unique either the evolutionary model or the ID model would predict, so how could he possibly claim his data favors one or the other?" How is your 50% claim anything but a feeble attempt to
avoid answering my question?
In any case, maybe you've been trying so hard to get me to answer this question that you've overlooked my answer. How about my post #56 in the "Credentialled Creationist" thread, or my post #743 in this thread?
Originally posted by Nineveh
What I said was evo claims to give us the "origins of species".
Oh,
you were the one saying that! I somehow thought you were the one saying that evo needs to explain the origin of the universe, the origin of matter, and the origin of life, and
we were the ones saying that, no, evolutionary theory discusses the origin and differentiation of species.
Originally posted by Nineveh
I have been asking you personally, (and all the other evoers) what do you intellectually think about before evo takes over? Where did the matter come from? How did it get into a form useful for evo to take over?
Ah, see, it sounds like you're doing it again! And you won' take "I don't know" or "Ask a cosmologist" for answers.
Originally posted by Nineveh
Are those questions really that hard for you to grasp?
Let's trot those "questions" out for a second look, shall we?
"Hold the phone.
This thread wasn't even about evo. To find fault with me at this stage of the game is finding fault with mere rebuttle."
" I think its a problem for evos personally, for themselves."
Nope, after a second look, I still don't grasp these "questions." Sorry!
Originally posted by Nineveh
I tend to think something other than "if", "could be", "might have".
For example....? Don't worry, I don't really think you can answer this.
Originally posted by Nineveh
How does "shared features" assume "common anscestry"?
It doesn't. Much of systematics is concerned with distinguishing "shared due to common ancestry" with other kinds of "shared."
Originally posted by Nineveh
So they are dinos with feathers? Is that all it takes to fly, feathers?
Yeah, that's why bats and insects don't really fly. Or is it, Yeah, so ostriches and penguins don't really have feathers. Or is it, Yeah, so ostriches really can fly, they're just self-conscious. Nope, no coherent response to your statement. Don't you mean "Is that all it takes to be a bird, feathers?"
Originally posted by Nineveh
Actually Flipper (I believe) was the one giving me the link to one of the dinos with feathers. It said basically, well, it's a dino, and it had feathers, and maybe it could have flown, but it probably just glided.
Once again, let me ask what you would accept as evidence for dino to bird? So far you've told me nothing, which I'm willing to bet is really your answer!
Originally posted by Nineveh
Except of course that left handed amino acid thing. Guess you will read into the evidence what your schooling dictates.
Oops. I think you need to recheck that link that john2001 gave you about this. But maybe I'm missing some late breaking news. What is it about left-handed amino acids that is predicted by the YEC model but not by the evolutionary model?
Originally posted by Nineveh
Which is?
Phew! I've spent thousands of hours in the field, in the lab, in museums, looking at every aspect of the biology of plants and animals, freshwater, terrestrial, and marine, temperate and tropical. YECs tend to focus on the exceptions, but what I've seen, by the thousands, is the rule. Let me know what kind of evidence you're looking for. Kinda the same question as I'm asking re: dino to bird above.
Originally posted by Nineveh
Again, I see evidence in the way the very cell is designed.
See Jukia's comment. And how carefully have
you looked at the morphology and function of cells?
Originally posted by Nineveh
Obviously, as to where the matter came from and how it got in a useable form, no more than you do.
Obviously. But somehow you interpret your lack of serious consideration to mean that evolution fails because it doesn't answer these very questions!
Originally posted by Nineveh
So the question of how it all got here never crossed your mind? Do you just assume it's always been here?
Sure, I think about it, but quickly realize that I don't have enough information to even make a defensible hypothesis. That's enough to prevent some people from expressing strong opinions.