fishbob said:
One year after another for 10 - 15 million years is quite a sequence.
Fish, iirc the results at maximum speciation, and major dieoff, don't fit sequencing particularly well (ok, random sequential selection, I suppose).
Thinking a bit more, the only thing sequential actually means is that abiogenesis did not occur many times. Unbeknownst to me until recently, Creationists defined in the early 40s (and continue to re-define) the term that has some implication here: baramin.
You are using the standard creationist terminology here - Cambrian Explosion, macroevolution, random chance - are you messing with me?
Not as such. We both use such words as are available to us.
BSM said:
I'll still assume you haven't spotted your schoolboy howler.
I have not. Please enlighten me in this regard.
.... in goes a mouse, out pops an elephant. Now that might be tricky, however, you have already been directed to some pretty good examples of speciation that prove the point, but just because you personally can't convinced by anything short of a mouse/elephant transition doesn't mean that the point has not been adequately demonstrated.
What you and many others find adequate is what I question. Remember that I stipulate -- given 100% materialism to work with, and given the formation of life itself from non-life -- evolution is a great theory.
BTW, I understand the proof just fine, I just don't accord it the same validity as I do validation of a theorem that posits, say, electron charge is between 0.9999999 and 1.000001 ev.
but I'd like to add another ingredient to the mixture: the readily demonstrable properties of self-organisation that are present in matter, both animate and inanimate.
What is animate matter (that is the question, in one sense)?
The quark-gluon plasma demonstrated properties of self-organization. Now what? Does that address ontology?
Dr.A said:
I'm telling you it's gibble because it's gibble, and it stands between you and an accurate picture of science.
Unfortunately for the truth-value of that, you don't know what my picture of science is, or is not.
That's right! No-one can! Is a prion alive? Is a virus? Where can we draw the line between "life" and "chemicals which given the right environment cause their own synthesis". We can't! But why you think this is an argument against science is beyond me. Can you explain?
I don't use it as an argument against science. Science does not and cannot answer an ontological supposition.
Are energy fields conscious? Why on earth should we think, say, electromagnetism or the strong nuclear force are conscious? Any more than we should suppose a brick to be conscious? What makes a photon or a gluon different from a brick?
Questions that science -- unfortunately -- cannot address.
What is "II's boulder-rolling question"? You've gone cryptic on me again
Perhaps. It was a test for understanding of your involvement in a question that has been discussed on JREF for many many months prior to your arrival, Dr.A.