Just to clarify:liquidsolid said:Well I voted in the poll. I'm so tired of arguing about this one. They are both theories, there seems to be more evidence supporting one of them and according to the poll results more people seem to agree with me.
I feel like this argument is easier to win than the whole "Global Warming" argument. I honestly don't know who to trust on that one, because scientists from both sides tell me that the other side employs "bad science" and is trying to fool you.
No, they are not both theories. It's not a theory unless you apply the scientific method. ID is a suggestion, at best. Calling ID a theory is lending it scientific credibility it is not deserving of in any way. Which is exactly what people pushing this suggestion are trying to do.liquidsolid said:Well I voted in the poll. I'm so tired of arguing about this one. They are both theories, there seems to be more evidence supporting one of them and according to the poll results more people seem to agree with me.
I read an ID theory about "complex and specified information". The hypothesis is based on the observation that intelligent agents produce complex and specified information. ID theorists hypothesize that if a natural object was designed it would contain a high level of complex and specified information. (Where you and I would disagree with the scientists) The experiments involve testing natural objects to determine if they contain the complex and specified information, such as irreducible complexity. Thats a fancy way of saying "do they need all parts to function?" which is tested by reverse-engineering biological structures to see if they do need all the parts. When the scientists find this specified and complex information, they reach the conclusion that the structures were designed.fenrizz said:Just to clarify:liquidsolid said:Well I voted in the poll. I'm so tired of arguing about this one. They are both theories, there seems to be more evidence supporting one of them and according to the poll results more people seem to agree with me.
I feel like this argument is easier to win than the whole "Global Warming" argument. I honestly don't know who to trust on that one, because scientists from both sides tell me that the other side employs "bad science" and is trying to fool you.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_theory
Only one of the two qualify as a scientific theory and the other one is nothing but make believe and pointing to the sky and yelling "GOD DID IT!" (or Intelligent Designer, which is just a clever way of teaching it in schools without using the word god).
Basically just read up there^^, thats why I think it can be described as a theory despite disagreeing with the theory.poleboy said:No, they are not both theories. It's not a theory unless you apply the scientific method. ID is a suggestion, at best. Calling ID a theory is lending it scientific credibility it is not deserving of in any way. Which is exactly what people pushing this suggestion are trying to do.liquidsolid said:Well I voted in the poll. I'm so tired of arguing about this one. They are both theories, there seems to be more evidence supporting one of them and according to the poll results more people seem to agree with me.
Sorry, but evolution/the fossil records never actually makes that claim. Humans and modern apes have a common ancestor. And there is proof. Lots of it.rogue_salty said:but to say that mankind evolved from apes thats absurd, theres no proof of that,
Points for trying, but this is still incredibly bad research.The scientific method is commonly described as a four-step process involving observations, hypothesis, experiments, and conclusion. Intelligent design begins with the observation that intelligent agents produce complex and specified information (CSI). Design theorists hypothesize that if a natural object was designed, it will contain high levels of CSI. Scientists then perform experimental tests upon natural objects to determine if they contain complex and specified information. One easily testable form of CSI is irreducible complexity, which can be discovered by experimentally reverse-engineering biological structures to see if they require all of their parts to function. When ID researchers find irreducible complexity in biology, they conclude that such structures were designed.
Just because something is an intelligent agent (not sure what this term implies btw), it doesn't necessarily mean that it produces CSI.Intelligent design begins with the observation that intelligent agents produce complex and specified information (CSI)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_flagellagummibear76 said:The majority of scientists in the field though the world was flat, tomatoes were poisonous, and the sun revolved around the earth at one time or another.RedEyesBlackGamer said:What do the majority of scientists in the field know, anyway? Clearly, you know better. I'll compromise: give me one example of irreducible complexity and I'll stop quoting you.
and I think I'll help out the person your quoting, so heres your answer: The Angler Fish
...and the chicken egg
...and the bacterial flagellum
...and the mouse trap (alright, alright, its not an animal, but its a good demonstration of the concept)
So if a species were to "re-adapt" you would accept evolution?gummibear76 said:I beg to differ. The articles you linked, have shown science proving "Natural Selection" and "Adaption".
Contrary to popular belief, Adaptation, and Natural selection actually fit with the intelligent design doctrine.
Now your probably going to ask me "Whats the difference between adaption and evolution?", or say that "adaption IS evolution.", but you are wrong. Adaption is different from evolution, because no new genetic material is added. For example, if you take a breed of dog with the genes to create dogs with long hair or short hair, and then leave them with a cold environment, the dogs with the short hair gene die. This means that the surviving members of that species will only have the "long hair" gene, since the carriers of the short hair gene would have died before they could pass it on.
Now, if you took these long haired dogs, and put them in the middle of the desert, they would probably all die due to heatstroke. This is because the short haired gene was eliminated, when the dogs were on the mountain, so they would not be able to "re-adapt" since they would not have the genes required.
This is not evolution, since the dogs only change because certain genes are eliminated, not because they spontaneously generate new ones.
There are two major reasons why ID is not scientific.Zarkov said:Snip
From the one link off that page I checked, (it was an example of an armored fish that "de-evolved") all I could gather, was that natural selection was again at work. Example: Fish is being eaten by predators, so the fish without the armor gene start to die off. Majority of fish become armored. Note: MAJORITY. Later on, when the lake becomes dirtier, fish with the armor start to die because the extra weight would make them slower. (I agree, that there is a slight flaw in my example, due to the huge amount of random things that can happen. Some creatures that are "less adapted" may survive, just purely out of luck) so the majority of the armored fish die. later on, when the lake is cleaner, the small majority of armored fish start to repopulate, and gain ground in terms of population size, on the more vulnerable fish.10BIT said:So if a species were to "re-adapt" you would accept evolution?gummibear76 said:I beg to differ. The articles you linked, have shown science proving "Natural Selection" and "Adaption".
Contrary to popular belief, Adaptation, and Natural selection actually fit with the intelligent design doctrine.
Now your probably going to ask me "Whats the difference between adaption and evolution?", or say that "adaption IS evolution.", but you are wrong. Adaption is different from evolution, because no new genetic material is added. For example, if you take a breed of dog with the genes to create dogs with long hair or short hair, and then leave them with a cold environment, the dogs with the short hair gene die. This means that the surviving members of that species will only have the "long hair" gene, since the carriers of the short hair gene would have died before they could pass it on.
Now, if you took these long haired dogs, and put them in the middle of the desert, they would probably all die due to heatstroke. This is because the short haired gene was eliminated, when the dogs were on the mountain, so they would not be able to "re-adapt" since they would not have the genes required.
This is not evolution, since the dogs only change because certain genes are eliminated, not because they spontaneously generate new ones.
Let me google that for you! [http://lmgtfy.com/?q=reverse+evolution]
Problem: suppose you took the bar and used it to make a tie clip. Then you add the spring to it, and it suddenly becomes too heavy on one side and falls out.Zetion said:gummibear76 said:The majority of scientists in the field though the world was flat, tomatoes were poisonous, and the sun revolved around the earth at one time or another.RedEyesBlackGamer said:What do the majority of scientists in the field know, anyway? Clearly, you know better. I'll compromise: give me one example of irreducible complexity and I'll stop quoting you.
and I think I'll help out the person your quoting, so heres your answer: The Angler Fish
...and the chicken egg
...and the bacterial flagellum
...and the mouse trap (alright, alright, its not an animal, but its a good demonstration of the concept)
... why do I have the sneaking suspicion that you are just linking articles with a headline that supports your ideals without actually reading them?RedEyesBlackGamer said:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_flagellagummibear76 said:The majority of scientists in the field though the world was flat, tomatoes were poisonous, and the sun revolved around the earth at one time or another.RedEyesBlackGamer said:What do the majority of scientists in the field know, anyway? Clearly, you know better. I'll compromise: give me one example of irreducible complexity and I'll stop quoting you.
and I think I'll help out the person your quoting, so heres your answer: The Angler Fish
...and the chicken egg
...and the bacterial flagellum
...and the mouse trap (alright, alright, its not an animal, but its a good demonstration of the concept)
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/10/58
The egg question is irrelevant.
The mousetrap makes a decent tie clip by removing a couple of parts.
Because some people still think "hey, a god must have done that because I can't explain it!" is a valid way in which to explain something.fenrizz said:Evolution obviously.
Why are we even discussing it?