Evolution? Good Discussion here

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around arguments against the theory of evolution, exploring various perspectives on its validity and the areas where participants believe there may be shortcomings. The scope includes theoretical critiques, personal research, and the importance of open dialogue in scientific discourse.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants express interest in hearing arguments against evolution that do not rely on religious references.
  • Concerns are raised about the completeness of the theory of evolution, with some participants suggesting that there are unresolved issues that should not be overlooked.
  • One participant mentions that most studies involving stress or environmental changes have not produced beneficial changes in higher-order species, questioning the role of mutations in variation.
  • Another participant challenges the notion of "perfect" variations and "useful" traits, seeking clarification on these terms.
  • Examples from scientific experiments, such as E. coli developing new abilities through mutations, are presented as counterarguments to claims about the limitations of evolutionary theory.
  • Participants discuss the importance of citations and the role of laypersons in scientific discussions, with some expressing skepticism about the originality of certain arguments.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus, as there are multiple competing views regarding the validity of evolution and the nature of scientific discourse. Some advocate for open discussion while others emphasize adherence to established scientific standards.

Contextual Notes

There are references to forum rules regarding speculative theories and the need for peer-reviewed sources, indicating limitations on the types of arguments that can be presented. Additionally, the discussion reflects varying levels of understanding and acceptance of evolutionary theory among participants.

DR_henegar
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I can probably argue against evolution without biblical references? Anyone wish to hear my argument?
 
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Sure
 
DR_henegar said:
I can probably argue against evolution without biblical references? Anyone wish to hear my argument?

You do so at your own risk, per the https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=414380" that you had agreed to regarding speculative, personal theory.

Zz.
 
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You should also check out one of the many evolution FAQs available online, to see if your arguments have already been refuted. Try this one for example. If you want to speculate beyond what the forum rules allow, the JREF forum is a good place to do that.
 
Still if the man says he has references that are not religious then let's here him out. I think that is a very important part of science, because without open discussion I do not think any field of science will ever advance.

In response to the OP, I wouldn't mind hearing your arguments.
 
Yeah I'm interested to hear what you have to say. Send me a message with your argument please.
 
thE3nigma said:
Still if the man says he has references that are not religious then let's here him out. I think that is a very important part of science, because without open discussion I do not think any field of science will ever advance.
Very good. You should feel free to host or suggest a forum where anyone can post their personal speculation. PF is not that place.

If the OP has references from acceptable peer reviewed journals, then that's definitely fair game here.
 
Well as far as my common sense tells me, that is what the OP had in mind. By the way, I have done some of my own research and discussed certain topics on this such issue with Professors, and I have to honestly say there are a lot of problems with this Theory still. PF should not hide this fact just because the media "thinks" Evolution is complete and perfect; it is far from anything like that.
 
thE3nigma said:
Well as far as my common sense tells me, that is what the OP had in mind. By the way, I have done some of my own research and discussed certain topics on this such issue with Professors, and I have to honestly say there are a lot of problems with this Theory still. PF should not hide this fact just because the media "thinks" Evolution is complete and perfect; it is far from anything like that.
Hide what? Evolution has been accurately presented in this forum. Do you know what a theory is? Do you understand what the theory of evolution is? A theory is never "complete and perfect" to use your own words.
 
  • #10
thE3nigma said:
...there are a lot of problems with this Theory still. PF should not hide this fact just because the media "thinks" Evolution is complete and perfect; it is far from anything like that.
Not only does no serious scientist think evolution is complete or perfect but I'm pretty sure this "media" you speak of does not think that either.

I'd say you're trying to stir a pot.

What you need to understand is that PF is first and foremost a source for mainstream science (taught in schools). There are plenty of fora for flogging speculative hypotheses; this just isn't one of them.
 
  • #11
thE3nigma said:
Still if the man says he has references that are not religious then let's here him out. I think that is a very important part of science, because without open discussion I do not think any field of science will ever advance.

In response to the OP, I wouldn't mind hearing your arguments.
Don't hold your breath for something new and exciting. I'd be willing to bet a rediculous amount of money that the idea the OP has is just one of the several typical/common misconceptions about evolution that we've all heard dozens of times.
 
  • #12
Please do not get me wrong. I firstly did not try in any way to stir up a debate, or a pot? seriously? :). The only thing I was trying to say is I believe what the OP will talk about is clearly those areas in which we lack understanding. Obviously though, this is something we have to accept, and these areas which lack understanding aren't speculative hypothesis or anything, it is just a part of the working Theory.
 
  • #13
thE3nigma said:
Please do not get me wrong. I firstly did not try in any way to stir up a debate, or a pot? seriously? :). The only thing I was trying to say is I believe what the OP will talk about is clearly those areas in which we lack understanding. Obviously though, this is something we have to accept, and these areas which lack understanding aren't speculative hypothesis or anything, it is just a part of the working Theory.

Out of curiosity, what areas do you believe evolutionary theory to be "lacking"?
 
  • #14
Well since I do prefer genetics myself mostly, I can only speak primarily about that area itself as related to evolution. One such question is how variation truly arises. I know the common mainstream answer: mutation. And although I agree with that answer to a certain aspect, as in primarily within single-celled organisms; I do not believe it is the only answer or even the main process of variation creation within higher-order species. The reason I ask this question, is because science has yet to provide any concrete example of a perfect variation according to mutations. Most of the experiments I have seen and read about have produced no new useful traits.
 
  • #15
thE3nigma said:
...any concrete example of a perfect variation according to mutations. Most of the experiments I have seen and read about have produced no new useful traits.

Wait. What?

What is a 'perfect' variation?
What would you consider a 'useful' trait?

I have a feeling I know where this is headed...
 
  • #16
Well why don't I ask you Mr. Dave what a useful trait. According to the Theory, a useful trait would be anything that helps the species or individual at least, become adapted to his new environment. That is all it is. As far as I know, most studies that have placed any form of stress or say change in the environment of a species have not produced a change in that species that was helpful to it in any way. This is obviously not true for single celled organisms which have immediate phenotype changes upon mutation.

You know I would love to actually hear something smart from you once Mr. Dave. All you keep doing is replying with one liners that aren't really helping this conversation go anywhere. Feedback would be appreciated. I assume that is what the role and goal of PF is, correct?
 
  • #17
How about the experiment in which E.coli, by a sequence of random mutations, developed the new ability to digest a different abundant food source (and ceased to be E.coli)?
 
  • #18
thE3nigma said:
That is all it is. As far as I know, most studies that have placed any form of stress or say change in the environment of a species have not produced a change in that species that was helpful to it in any way.
Needs citations to the studies.
 
  • #19
cesiumfrog said:
How about the experiment in which E.coli, by a sequence of random mutations, developed the new ability to digest a different abundant food source (and ceased to be E.coli)?
This too.
 
  • #20
I’m interested to know Gokul43201 what your opinion of the type of contributions I offer is. Believe me, I am not fishing for compliments, I have a serious point to make. If these forums really are only for contributions from well studied people with the capability to offer citations for every assertion, then clearly I should leave. I have made no secret of the fact that I am a layman, and I simply do not possesses that ability. I do, however, believe I have something to contribute to the discussion with thE3nigma. I have nothing particularly to offer to DR henegar, I share the scepticism that his or her argument will offer anything remotely original, and I also have a deep suspicion, borne of experience, about the good doctor’s true motivations.

So, thE3nigma, discussions on these matters tend to be littered with assertions like ‘…clearly those areas in which we lack understanding.’ And almost invariably, they cite some area in which, in fact, the understanding is very good. You mention a ‘preference’ for genetics, and if by that, you mean that you have genuine knowledge and experience of formal study in that area, then you almost certainly know a good deal more than me. But your post (#16) does reflect a recognisable naivety, one that I freely admit I was once a possessor of, but that I improved from, purely by a little bit of reading and by engagement with forums like this one.

Before I offer you a very good example of a study that identified ‘a change in a species that was helpful to it’ let me just offer one piece of terminology that might seem like hair splitting, but actually, I contend, is significant. Rather than ‘useful traits’, most of the knowledgeable people I have read tend to talk about traits that offer a ‘selective advantage’. The study that I wanted to mention is so familiar to this discussion I can even refer to its usual formal title: ‘Industrial Melanism in the Peppered Moth’. Briefly, the basis is this. The peppered moth originally had an essentially white colouring, with speckled black patterns that varied between individual moths. During the era of industrialisation, because of pollution, lichens had a tendency to become sooted and blackened. Because lighter coloured moths stood out more against this dark background, predators found them easier to catch, and having darker colouring thus offered a selective advantage. Within just a few generations, peppered moths became predominantly black in appearance. Then along came the clean air act, and lichens returned to their natural green colouring. Suddenly it was the darker moths that stood out the most and within another few generations, peppered moths had returned to their former colouring. This is only one example of observed, naturally occurring evolution, and even industrial melanism is not exclusive to the peppered moth.
 
  • #21
thE3nigma said:
Well since I do prefer genetics myself mostly, I can only speak primarily about that area itself as related to evolution. One such question is how variation truly arises. I know the common mainstream answer: mutation. And although I agree with that answer to a certain aspect, as in primarily within single-celled organisms; I do not believe it is the only answer or even the main process of variation creation within higher-order species. The reason I ask this question, is because science has yet to provide any concrete example of a perfect variation according to mutations. Most of the experiments I have seen and read about have produced no new useful traits.

thE3nigma said:
Well why don't I ask you Mr. Dave what a useful trait. According to the Theory, a useful trait would be anything that helps the species or individual at least, become adapted to his new environment. That is all it is. As far as I know, most studies that have placed any form of stress or say change in the environment of a species have not produced a change in that species that was helpful to it in any way. This is obviously not true for single celled organisms which have immediate phenotype changes upon mutation.

You know I would love to actually hear something smart from you once Mr. Dave. All you keep doing is replying with one liners that aren't really helping this conversation go anywhere. Feedback would be appreciated. I assume that is what the role and goal of PF is, correct?

Gah, :confused: read more. quit confusing me, and try not to insult people please, we are here to learn. Get your facts lay them them straight. 10 minute search =
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2806358/
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/1521-1878%28200012%2922:12%3C1057::AID-BIES3%3E3.0.CO;2-W/abstract
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.0014-3820.2000.tb01232.x/abstract
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.0014-3820.2003.tb01561.x/abstract
http://www.genetics.org/cgi/content/abstract/168/4/1817
 
  • #22
Ken Natton said:
If these forums really are only for contributions from well studied people with the capability to offer citations for every assertion, then clearly I should leave.
Not all assertions need citation. Many are common knowledge and/or generally uncontroversial.

Some assertions beg for a citation. For example when someone says that they have read papers that claim XYZ, it is automatically incumbent upon them to cite some of these papers. If you as discussing a scientific study, it is not an unreasonable requirement that you have to cite the study so that others may read it too and therefore be able to better understand or challenge any arguments that are based on that study.

Peppered moth evolution is ripe hunting ground for any well-read proponent of creationism/ID. Heck, there may be more Creationinst literature in that field than there is from Biology!
 
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  • #23
Gokul43201 said:
This too.

http://lmgtfy.com/?q=e+coli+mutation+experiment&l=1"
 
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  • #24
cesiumfrog said:
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=e+coli+mutation+experiment&l=1"
Thank you, smarty-pants!

It's your job to give us better citations for your references, not ours to have to hunt them down.

I tried before asking.
 
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  • #25
Gokul43201 said:
I tried before asking.
Your first hit (creationwiki) is actually relevant, it raises questions as to the validity of my example.
 
  • #26
thE3nigma said:
As far as I know, most studies that have placed any form of stress or say change in the environment of a species have not produced a change in that species that was helpful to it in any way.
This shows a profound misunderstanding of how evolution works. This is what I was concerned about.

thE3nigma said:
You know I would love to actually hear something smart from you once Mr. Dave. All you keep doing is replying with one liners that aren't really helping this conversation go anywhere. Feedback would be appreciated.
Feedback, sure. Education, no.

This isn't really going to be a discussion, it's going to be a lesson. Online fora are not the place for in-depth lessons, that's for classrooms and textbooks.





But OK, in a very tiny, overly-simplified nutshell:

Evolution does not produce 'useful' and 'not useful' mutations. It produces things that are different. It takes generations of pressure in a large population, in the vastness of the environment before some trait that was neither good nor bad to start having unintended side effects. These unintended side effects made no difference at first but when things change (say, a new competitor invades the geographical area) that this side effect suddenly seems to have a silver lining.

One common example: sickle cell anemia in humans. Terrible affliction. By no means useful or even beneficial.

That is, until a new species of malaria-bearing mosquito made its presence known. Those with anemia, once clambering for survival, now found themelves more able to survive outbreaks of malaria than their non-mutated brethren.


If, tomorrow, you saw mutated, malformed red blood cells in your new lab specimen that were adversely affecting its health - would you write in your report that you had isolated a 'perfect variation' or a 'useful trait'?
 
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  • #27
DaveC426913 said:
This shows a profound misunderstanding of how evolution works. This is what I was concerned about.

...

If, tomorrow, you saw mutated, malformed red blood cells in your new lab specimen that were adversely affecting its health - would you write in your report that you had isolated a 'perfect variation' or a 'useful trait'?

Of course I wouldn't say that, who in their right mind would? It is a mutation that is causing a problem for that specimen not anything else. Obviously though you have brought up a good example of this with anemia, that is when it would be useful.

I do not think my understanding of how evolution works is flawed, maybe not full or complete, but then who's is really? What I said earlier still applies. When doing fly experiments with Drosophila melanogaster that were placed under pressure in a controlled environment, the population was never shown to exhibit any selective adaptation. The reason I believe this to be, may be because mutation in higher-ordered organisms like the above mentioned species plays a minute role in its adaptation and evolution - that is the variability in its genetic pool.

I understand your point that the mutation occurred before any selective pressure was introduced into the environment, and I obviously have nothing against this nor did my example.

@Kglocc,
Aren't most of those examples dealing with adaptation and evolution of single-celled species? You told me not to insult anyone, you seem to have insulted me quite clearly by not reading my second post that you quoted. I clearly said I accept and agree that mutation within the organisms is one of the most important forces to their variation; but i don't think so that the same is true for higher-order organisms.
 
  • #28
When doing fly experiments with Drosophila melanogaster that were placed under pressure in a controlled environment, the population was never shown to exhibit any selective adaptation
Do give us a reference to that work, please.
 
  • #29
thE3nigma said:
Of course I wouldn't say that, who in their right mind would? It is a mutation that is causing a problem for that specimen not anything else. Obviously though you have brought up a good example of this with anemia, that is when it would be useful.

I do not think my understanding of how evolution works is flawed, maybe not full or complete, but then who's is really? What I said earlier still applies. When doing fly experiments with Drosophila melanogaster that were placed under pressure in a controlled environment, the population was never shown to exhibit any selective adaptation. The reason I believe this to be, may be because mutation in higher-ordered organisms like the above mentioned species plays a minute role in its adaptation and evolution - that is the variability in its genetic pool.

I understand your point that the mutation occurred before any selective pressure was introduced into the environment, and I obviously have nothing against this nor did my example.

@Kglocc,
Aren't most of those examples dealing with adaptation and evolution of single-celled species? You told me not to insult anyone, you seem to have insulted me quite clearly by not reading my second post that you quoted. I clearly said I accept and agree that mutation within the organisms is one of the most important forces to their variation; but i don't think so that the same is true for higher-order organisms.


Variation arises by two sources mutations and sexual recombination. The term "mutation" is vague, ambiguous and misleading to those not well studied in biology. Since you said you express interest in genetics, in particular, you should get used to distinguishing between them. For instance, when you say mutation do you mean a UV induced thymine dimerization? Do you mean a translocation that leads to gene duplication? Point mutation? Cryptic splice?

As I pointed out in another topic, there are literally thousands of examples of these changes which provide positive or negative selective value, far to many to start any kind of comprehensive list here.

As Dave points out, this really isn't a problem with evolution, but rather your education regarding evolution--And I mean no offense by that.

Anyway a few examples you could look into would be the lactose gene in humans, mutant allele CCR5 receptors in populations who were descendants of populations who experienced strong selective pressures from plague and smallpox, oxygen loading genes in Tibetans vs similarly geographically located Hans Chinese, etc

And also to clarify with the sickle cell anemia (SCA) its not the disease which necessarily confers evolutionary advantage. In fact, left untreated SCA patients often die before reproductive age.

The pudding in this case lies in something we call the "heterozygote advantage". Both hemoglobin (Hb) genes are used to make Hb. In the case of heterozygote patients (HbA/HbS, where HbA is the "normally Hb Adult allele"), that means a small amount of the sickle beta-globin will be incorporated into Hb tetramers (Hb is a tetramer protein, made of 2 dimers, each made of 2 beta units and 2 alpha units). Because HbA/HbS individuals have some sickle beta globin protein, they have lower bloodox levels and thus a greater resistance to the malaria parasite.

Evolutionary selection then, favors those individuals HbA/HbS in areas of epidemic malaria. Of course Nature's unintended consequence of increasing HbA/HbS individuals means that the frequency of full blown disease (HbS/HbS) increases.
 
  • #30
thE3nigma said:
Of course I wouldn't say that, who in their right mind would? It is a mutation that is causing a problem for that specimen not anything else.

And yet, when the results are tallied, it may well result in a population that, a thousand generations from now, has incorporated that trait just like any other trait that helps us stay alive.

The trouble is what we see as a "benefit" with our short-term mindset has nothing to do with what nature selects for.

You are looking to controlled experiments and seeing that they "fail" to turn up the results you expect. I'm saying your expectations are flawed.
 

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