Arugmentum ad hominem much? Your argument doesn't stand up to scrutiny, and that is all that matters, "you have an emotional investment therefore my argument is not flawed" is a nonsensical statement. Atheism is a lack of belief, and the default position, philosophically or otherwise, puts the burden of proof on you. Regarding PhD theses, the work involved therein is based on subjects and a body of literature that is evidentially supported (in other words, anything other than ex-recto blind assertions), which doesn't apply to your argument because they are strawmen, come again. I find errant nonsense repungant, whether that be lamarckism or faulty arguments, next. Also, blatant case of projection much?spinoza99 wrote:Genes,
you are not an objective scientist because you've clearly expressed an extreme repugnance for any ideas which imply intelligent design. you will always bend the results of your findings to please you. you will ignore evidence that refutes your cherished beliefs, and you will focus on evidence that confirms it. an ethical scientist has no emotional interest in any one theory, the only thing that matters is the truth and he accepts whatever that truth is without emotion. you clearly have an emotional investment in atheism as demonstrated by your numerous insults. you wouldn't use insults in a phd thesis, so why do you use them now?
1) An argument doesn't become valid despite flaws because opponents don't put provide an alternative (say for instance you are in a court defending someone who has been wrongly accused, proving his innocence does not require that you find the real culprit, so here your argument is not logically valid.You have pointed to flaws in my calculation of the odds without you yourself offering odds based on your own calculations. I already demonstrated that even if we assume that all life came from a creature which was half as complex Mycoplasma Mycoides, the odds would still be one in 900 googols. There has be to some threshold in which life is not possible with a particular DNA sequence. You cannot sequence DNA anyway you like and expect it to replicate. A true, good and virtuous atheist does not believe in anything without evidence, so believing that life came from a being of one fifth the complexity of the Mycoplasma Mycoides would be to commit the cardinal sin of atheism: to believe in something for which there is no evidence. Humans share 90% of their DNA with a tree. All advanced life has 90% of the DNA in common. Therefore it is rational that 90% of the DNA found in the Mycoplasma Mycoides must be sequenced in an exact way, but even if we assume that only 25% of it need be sequenced in an exact way then the odds are still one in 450 googols that it could be sequences at random.
2) I'd like to see citations for the 90% of all higher organisms sharing complex DNA, and you missed my point about any possible sequence being capable of being produced from chemical processes acting on precursor sequences, and that treshold for self replicability isn't anything like a Mycoplasma mycoides genome. So, your assertion that it is "rational" is nonsense.
The fundamental laws of genetics allow the inheritance and the expression of a vast majority of alleles independent of sequence or the order in which they're present on a genome, I will be waiting for evidence that 90% of the genomes of all higher organisms is in the same sequence, good luck finding it, that stat very probably applies to orthologous proteins, that the same proteins doing the same function in both trees and humans may have a 90% similarity in cases of specific proteins, you can just go to Genbank, retrieve sequences for a protein, run a similarity search and look at how much variation there can be from the query sequence and related sequences, this alone is enough to render your strawman false, the argumentum ad hominem in the first paragraph.
In any case, the onus is on you to back your assertion that whole genomes (not protein coding exons in orthologous sequences) have to be sequence specific to be functional and to an extent of 90%, I'll not be holding my breath.
Much appreciated, still doesn't confer any validity to your argument.I gave the atheists an enormous benefit of the doubt in assuming that the number of events at our disposal is roughly a max of 2 googols, in reality it is probably closer to .3 googols, if not .1 googols. I assumed that the max number of events was equal to the number of atoms in the universe linking with one another each billionth of a second that has existed in our universe's history, moreover i assumed that there are as many Universes in existence as there are atoms in the Universe.
Interesting, what do you know of the Cambrian Explosion? (If you are going to assert that species appeared then out of nowhere expect to have evidence to the contrary handed to you on a platter, since I do already have links to several papers describing Precambrian fossils, also note that the fossilisability of organisms or the lack thereof doesn't rule out the presence of organisms, and it is a known fact that soft bodied animals do not necessarily fossilise well at all, in any case, the Ediacaran fauna is enough to refute any attempts to prop up assertions about the caricatured version of the Cambrian explosion (which, by the way, lasted 23 million years or so by some of the more popular estimates)In reality, to be honest we would have to divide the number of nitrogen atoms in our universe by however many it takes to make one DNA base pair and it's about 20 or so, then we have to restrict the time to the time after the first galaxies arose.
And we cannot stop there. If we wanted we could try to calculate the odds of the Cambrian Explosion, an extraordinarily unlikely event probably equal to one in a million googols.
Testable, well defined natural processes are NOT random, way to miss the flippin' point.You also conveniently ignored the question: how does randomness select the correct properties from an infinite set of properties. In our Universe, F = MA,
all three of those letters are properties. Randomness has no ability to make properties work in coordination with each other. Randomness can only select the right answer from a finite list some of the time, randomness cannot do what humans do every day: the amount of utterances at a human's disposal is infinite, and yet we utter grammatically correct utterances about 99% of the time. If you randomness is instructed to produce from an infinite list a correct formulation such as F = MA it will never accomplish the task. If the odds that will fail are one in an infinity, then you will always fail.
This is actually the more parsimonious explanation when dealing with the possibility of multiple quantum inflations, since you will have to assume a barrier to preventing other "universes" from forming otherwise. There is no cardinal sin of atheism because atheism is NOT a doctrine, category error much?Another poster offered the possibility that there are infinite universes. This is committing the cardinal sin of atheism which is to believe in something for which there is no evidence.
I have explained why this (sequence thing) is a strawman, and I expect you to handwave this away again, just go look at Genbank, gene maps, and locus mapping, and also find out where in the scientific literature it is postulated that all life evolved from Mycoplasma mycoides genomes,and that it is the minimally required component for all life and also the asinine idea that whole genome sequences have to be conserved and necessary, the fact that we have the flagellum, which is purportedly irreducibly complex, capable of evolving from a Type 3 Secretory system through the Mullerian Two Step of adding a part and making it necessary by selection, since the dynamics of multicomponent systems is altered by the addition of the new component, to the point that the component in question becomes integral is enough to suggest that your strawman is, well, a strawman.True, the process of bonding is not random. Bonding is a property. Randomness cannot choose the correct properties such that several properties will coordinate to form something like life. Even if that were true, that randomness could select properties, randomness cannot sequence material into a correct sequence of which the odds are one in 100 googols if only a half of a googol of events is at its disposal.Chemical processes are random in that you cannot predict, in a mixture of reagents, which particular reagent molecules will react and which won't, but the process of bonding is NOT.
So, to sum up, you persist with a strawman, several dodgy pieces of logical reasoning, and an argumentum ad hominem which is the cherry on the cake, all the while offering unsubstantiated, uncited assertions, and yet you demand that your argument is something that must be treated with the same respect that evidentially supported stuff gets when being dealt with as part of a PhD thesis? The reason insults are not used in a PhD thesis is because the work being dealt with doesn't call for it, this does, now get over it.