Buffy Posted May 26, 2005 Report Posted May 26, 2005 Yes, but Dembski is just fiddling with probability. Its is a situation where he's assuming that you put all the ingredients in a bucket and *randomly* try all combinations. He makes no allowance for subcombinations that occur and build on eachother nor for feedback mechanisms that cause selection (which by the way does not have to be biological!). Even if we were debating pure mathematical probabilities, he does not use Bayes theorem to adjust for prior probabilities. Thus, before we even get to talking about evolution, his computations are garbage simply based on the fact that his math is all wrong. Cheers,Buffy Quote
Biochemist Posted May 26, 2005 Report Posted May 26, 2005 Yes, but Dembski is just fiddling with probability.Sure, but the only point Lolic was maiking iw that 1 in 10^150 is the outlide limit of probablility. I don't have a problem with that boundary. It is the calculation of the odds of any particular state of nature that are a little dicey. Quote
Buffy Posted May 26, 2005 Report Posted May 26, 2005 ...the only point Lolic was maiking iw that 1 in 10^150 is the outlide limit of probablility.Whoops, you're right. I read 10^50 which is Dembski's favorite number for the probability of anything complex happening.... Nonetheless, this computation is wrong too. The 10^80 number (actually its between 4x10^9 and 6x10^79 or about 10^80) is the number of *atoms* in the *observable* universe (who knows how much more there is beyond that!), and those are built up from lots of smaller elements that still seem complex, thus you could easily multiply this by another 10,100, or 1000, and thats assuming the branes or whatever they are have simple state descriptions, which they may not. Moreover, this number also *completely* skips the dark matter, dark energy, effects of "quantum foam" and other things we can't observe directly. As you read this blathering post, many billions of neutrinos have passed through your body, and those aren't counted in this figure either. 10^80 is way low for the number of things you'd have to keep track of the state for in the universe.... Cheers,Buffy Quote
Biochemist Posted May 26, 2005 Report Posted May 26, 2005 Whoops, you're right. I read 10^50 which is Dembski's favorite number for the probability of anything complex happening....I am not sure any of this really matters. Statisticians often use 1 in 10^50 to equal "0" by convention. 1 in 10^150 seems pretty darn uncommon to me. I am looking forward to your response to my last post in the Punk Eek thread. Quote
Buffy Posted May 26, 2005 Report Posted May 26, 2005 I am nto sure any of this really matters. Statisticians often use 1 in 10^50 to equal "0" by convention. 1 in 10^150 seems pretty darn uncommon to me.Sure, but its not really relevant to anything, so it doesn't really matter. Its just a number that's mostly useful in arguing about the number of possible universes there are which gets really big! Cheers,Buffy Quote
lindagarrette Posted May 26, 2005 Report Posted May 26, 2005 This would suggest that the majority of animal and plant kingdom information content was reflected in the first prokaryote. Go figure. But I think this model better reflects our current state of biochemical understanding and our current state of paleontological knowledge than any mutation-based model. Mutations actually might occur, but they have nearly nothing to do with speciation. Doesn't stike me as a whole lot more difficult to swallow that the entire mass of the universe being squashed into a space the size of a Planck length. Feel free to name my theory. I think I like "Biological Big Bang". Do keep in mind that if my heretical theory is true, then the IDers would have to prove an incredible level of CSI in the first prokaryote. Everyting after that would be a natural consequence of that information load, and a fundamentally "natural" process.Your BBB theory seems plausible to me. I looked on the web for the DNA structure of the prokaryote but there wasn't any specific information. There is only one fundamental structure. And the coded segments can be used in a variet of ways to construct different traits. The eye gene is the same, for example no matter what the species . Quote
Biochemist Posted May 26, 2005 Report Posted May 26, 2005 Your BBB theory seems plausible to me. I looked on the web for the DNA structure of the prokaryote but there wasn't any specific information. There is only one fundamental structure. And the coded segments can be used in a variet of ways to construct different traits. The eye gene is the same, for example no matter what the species .I think that is true, LG. The intriging part of the idea (to me) is that all DNA packages would essentially have to code for additional DNA. This means that early life forms (actually, all life forms) have both DNA and meta-DNA in the same package. The meta-DNA specifies features that have never been expressed, and may not be expressed for multiple species generations. Seems pretty ugly complicated. I have always thought that DNA coding is so complex that it is fundamentally inexplicable. Once you accept that notion, making it an order of magnitude more inexplicable doesn't seem so odd. It is a little like the thought path we went through from Newton to Einstein to Quantum Physics to String theory. It gets progressively more arcane, and fundamentally "'unreasonable" to a novice, but if you are there for every step, its seems sort of inescapable. Quote
Fishteacher73 Posted May 26, 2005 Report Posted May 26, 2005 Bio asked me to jump in on some points. I am late in the thread, and am making some points that were brought up by bio and buffy in posts around 215. I think it is a bit erroneous to assume an either/or statement about PE vs. gradualism. They are not mutually exclusive of each other if you examine timr frames and don't really hold to a true equilibria (ie nothing, then something.) Both systems can be at work. Genetic drift is good support for some of the tennets of gradualism. Yet I think it can be pretty well demonstarted by sudden shifts in fossil records after times of relative calm to support PE. Quote
Lolic Posted May 28, 2005 Author Report Posted May 28, 2005 Point iii above, which claims to be an experiment, also brings in the idea that irreducible complexity is a fact. There are however enough examples provided in this thread already to show that the given examples if IC are not accepted as such. On that point we disagree. Type III Secretory System & Flagellar Motor Below is a portion of this PDF file. The entire article is located: http://www.discovery.org/scripts/viewDB/index.php?command=view&id=2181 5. Philosophical implications.To paraphrase the original rendition of the Department of Energy’s Genomes toLife web site, ‘the molecular machines present in the simplest cells, produced byevolution, dwarf the engineering feats of the 20th century’. The dissection of thecomplexity and sophistication of simple machines like the bacterial flagellum areindeed a testimony to the power of modern molecular biological techniques. Yet, theelegant structural properties, efficiency, and the highly controlled geneticprogramming to produce these machines was neither anticipated nor predicted. Thepotential applications of this knowledge are legion and have spawned a new disciplinefocused on nanotechnology. In light of this new information, some scientists have questioned whether themechanism of mutation, natural selection, and time are sufficient to account for theorigin of such machines. Behe [17] has proffered the concept of irreduciblecomplexity using the flagellum as a paradigmatic example. It is this very concept thathas been the bread and butter of molecular geneticists allowing them to identify genesin any given system by loss of function. Behe argues that natural selection andrandom mutation cannot produce the irreducibly complex bacterial flagellar motorwith its ca. forty separate protein parts, since the motor confers no functionaladvantage on the cell unless all the parts are present. Natural select can preserve themotor once it has been assembled, but it cannot detect anything to preserve until themotor has been assembled and performs a function. If there is no function, there isnothing to select. Given that the flagellum requires ca. 50 genes to function, how didthese arise? Contrary to popular belief, we have no detailed account for the evolutionof any molecular machine. The data from Y. pestis presented here seems to indicatethat loss of one constituent in the system leads to the gradual loss of others. Forprogression to work, each gene product must maintain some function as it is adaptedto another. To counter this argument, particularly as it applies to the flagellum, othershave used the TTSS. Since the secretory system that forms part of the flagellarmechanism can also function separately, Miller [18, 19] has argued that naturalselection could have “co-opted” the functional parts from the TTTS and other earliersimple systems to produce the flagellar motor. And, indeed, the TTSS contains eighttenproteins that are also found in the forty protein bacterial flagellar motor. Millerthus regards the virulence secretory pump of the Yersinia Yop system as a Darwinianintermediate, case closed. This argument seems only superficially plausible in light of some of thefindings presented in this paper. First, if anything, TTSSs generate morecomplications than solutions to this question. As shown here, possessing multipleTTSSs causes interference. If not segregated one or both systems are lost.Additionally, the other thirty proteins in the flagellar motor (that are not present in theTTSS) are unique to the motor and are not found in any other living system. Fromwhence, then, were these protein parts co-opted? Also, even if all the protein partswere somehow available to make a flagellar motor during the evolution of life, theparts would need to be assembled in the correct temporal sequence similar to the wayan automobile is assembled in factory. Yet, to choreograph the assembly of the partsof the flagellar motor, present-day bacteria need an elaborate system of geneticinstructions as well as many other protein machines to time the expression of thoseassembly instructions. Arguably, this system is itself irreducibly complex. In anycase, the co-option argument tacitly presupposes the need for the very thing it seeks toexplain—a functionally interdependent system of proteins. Finally, phylogeneticanalyses of the gene sequences [20] suggest that flagellar motor proteins arose firstand those of the pump came later. In other words, if anything, the pump evolved fromthe motor, not the motor from the pump. Molecular machines display a key signature or hallmark of design, namely,irreducible complexity. In all irreducibly complex systems in which the cause of thesystem is known by experience or observation, intelligent design or engineeringplayed a role the origin of the system. Given that neither standard neo-Darwinism, norco-option has adequately accounted for the origin of these machines, or theappearance of design that they manifest, one might now consider the designhypothesis as the best explanation for the origin of irreducibly complex systems inliving organisms. That we have encountered systems that tax our own capacities asdesign engineers, justifiably lead us to question whether these systems are the productof undirected, un-purposed, chance and necessity. Indeed, in any other context wewould immediately recognize such systems as the product of very intelligentengineering. Although some may argue this is a merely an argument from ignorance,we regard it as an inference to the best explanation [21, 22], given what we knowabout the powers of intelligent as opposed to strictly natural or material causes.We know that intelligent designers can and do produce irreducibly complexsystems. We find such systems within living organisms. We have good reason tothink that these systems defy the creative capacity of the selection/mutationmechanism. The real problem may not be determining the best explanation of theorigin of the flagellum. Rather it may be amending the methodological strictures thatprevent consideration of the most natural and rational conclusion—albeit one withdiscomfiting philosophical implications. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.