Browse Search Feedback Other Links Home Home

The Talk.Origins Archive: Exploring the Creation/Evolution Controversy

Feedback for August 2005

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Hmmm. I think that it would be pretty boring - almost all of these fall into one or more of these categories, and one example of each would suffice:

1. We are damned and going to hell.

2. We are anti-God and refuse to listen.

3. Evolution isn't science.

4. What about [insert canard here]?

5. Were we there?

6. God is all-powerful and can do anything He wants to.

7. We are [insert obscenity here].

8. The respondent will beat us up if [usually] he ever meets us.

9. We are fags.

10 We are anti-American.

11. [Insert wacko theory here - not usually creationists].

etc. That is why Mark Isaak has produced the Index to Creationist Claims, now available as a book.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: 1. No.

2. We aren't sure.

3. Absolutely no idea.

These are strange questions to be asking. It's perfectly clear to all sides that the origin of life, or abiogenesis, is something where we don't have clear answers. The only point in these questions is to make some kind of capital out of that fact; so I would suggest just being frank. Science has no claim to having all the answers, and let's not pretend otherwise.

It's not relevant as a criticism of evolutionary biology. Evolution works exactly the same no matter how life got started.

On the other hand, if anyone is genuinely interested in the research relevant to processes that may have been involved in the origin of life, then I have been told that a good reference is The Emergence of Life on Earth: A Historical and Scientific Overview, by Iris Fry (Rutgers Uni Press, 2000)

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: What is Evolution?
Response: The definition in the FAQ did not include any mention of populations adapting to suit their environment. There's a good reason for this. Natural selection is just one of the ways populations can evolve. Random genetic drift is another. It would not be appropriate to restrict the defintion of evolution to just one of the possible mechanisms. That's why my preferred definition is "Evolution is a process that results in heritable changes in a population spread over many generations."
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: I assume you're speaking of the Introduction to Talkdesign.org FAQ found on the Talkdesign.org site. As the title indicates, that article is merely an introduction, and as such gives only a very general overview of the topic. Articles on specific topics can be found in the sidebar on the Talkdesign.org home page.

As for Dembski and Behe, we have a wide collection of articles concerning their views. You can find those articles by searching for their names; you could examine the index or the site outline; or you can browse this site and browse Talkdesign.org.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: If you are a specialist in any discipline of science, one of the duties that comes with education is the spread that knowledge, I agree. But the reason why ID and creationism are making headway in the broader social context is that it is not, in the end, about knowledge. Educating the community is likely to prevent people of good will and good faith from falling prey to the misunderstandings of anti-science, but in the end this is all about political maneuvrings and control of the education system to ensure that they maintain and increase their social status. Even to control the social agenda.

Therefore the appropriate response is to make it known publicly as a scientist that ID is non-science. Write to your local paper, your local representative at all levels of government, and to talk to schools, teachers, public forums and neighbours to ensure that ignorance and religious bigotry do not take over. But always remember that this is not a crusade against religious beliefs, but in favour of knowledge and good education.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: The papers you are probably referring to are treated briefly in CI001.4: Intelligent Design has been published .... None gives evidence for intelligent design, and most do not even argue for it. The people at the Discovery Institute are only pretending.

See also NCSE's Analysis of the Discovery Institute's "Bibliography of Supplementary Resources for Ohio Science Instruction", about the DI claiming that several papers show challenges to evolution, but papers' authors say the DI misrepresented them.

Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: The article contains no argument against evolution; it attacks a strawman. Mutations are extremely common; neutral mutations are ubiquitous, and beneficial ones are not rare. The article's talk about the number of mutations needed for a "new structure" is just silly. Evolution does not produce new structures as such; it gradually modifies existing structures. One mutation is enough to do that. And as mutations add up, they do produce new features. We have seen them.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From: B1FF
Response: OMG!!1! TH3 |3RaND Sp4nK1N N00|3 7H1NK2 H35 7074LLY PWNED U5 BUT H3 C4NT H4NDLE U5 1337 H4X0R2!!!1!!1! CUZ B1FF 15 7H3 K00L3ST D00D EVUR!!11!!! 4ND 3V3RY|3UDDY N0SE 7H47 7H3 V1C-20 K1CK5 7074L 455!!!!1!!!
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Well, you could join and/or donate money to the National Center for Science Education.

And if you like you could also make a donation to the Talk.Origins Archive.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: Dino Blood Redux
Response: The link is just below my name.

There were no pliable ligaments. There were no ligaments, but to read some creationists, the critter was practically running around.

Enjoy.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: Who knows? Some IDevotees say yes, some say no, some are careful to make no comment.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: It depends on the meaning, and reference, of the word "ape".

As usually understood, "ape" means "something that looks like a chimp, or a gorilla, or an orangutan". But in scientific terms, "ape" means something rather more like "the last common ancestor of a gorilla and an orangutan, and all its descendents". The latter definition includes us. The former definition, well, that also depends on how closely you look.

Originally, all apes were part of the genus Homo when defined by the creationist Linnaeus in the 18th century. He was strongly criticised and they were moved out of that genus by a later writer, so that humans were the sole species. But anatomists cannot ignore the extremely strong similarities between the other apes and humans, and most now think we fall into the same general group.

So, what was the last common ancestor of all apes and us? It probably looked something like this:

Ape Ancestor in Spain.

Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: Problems with a Global Flood, 2nd edition
Response: A FAQ which discredits a literal interpretation of Noah's flood is not Bible-bashing unless you believe that the Bible is best served by requiring it to be interpreted in such a way to make it patently false. You want the evidence to speak for itself, and our main FAQ about Noah's ark is little more than a list of the evidence. Yes, we have a bias, a bias to be true to the evidence. But the evidence cannot speak to those who will not look at it.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: There are several possible answers to your questions. The ones I give here are speculation, though, I hope, informed speculation.

A few creationists (very few, I think, but including some of the most visible) are probably charlatans. Money, not God, is their master.

Many creationists are taught that a literal interpretation is essential for salvation. Thus, any threat to creationism is perceived as a threat to their very soul. When the stakes are that high, one might go to extreme lengths to defend one's beliefs.

Others have been so indoctrinated in creationism that they honestly think they are always right. Since evolution is wrong (their fundamental premise), then anything that says evolution is wrong has to be right. I have seen creationists confronted with an obviously out-of-context quote reply simply by repeating that the quote was accurate. The fact that it plainly did not reflect the author's intent did not matter. The author, to the creationist, was wrong about everything else, including his intent, except for that one quote.

Finally, some creationism has effectively nothing to do with religion. The so-called Intelligent Design movement is a political movement, intent on political power and using religion to that end. They already contradict mainstream Christian beliefs with, among other things, their belief in a slow, incremental creation. They are willing to lie for more power.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: What was his PhD in, literary criticism? That is about the worst explanation of the big bang I have ever heard. And one of the major reasons why things form out of the atoms formed in supernovas is that they bond together according to the laws of chemistry and physics. This process is well understood and repeatable.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: First of all, Newton is not the source for the laws of thermodynamics. But let's not worry about that, I made the same error once.

It does matter that your description of the second law (I cannot call it a definition) is inadequate to apply to the energetics of complex molecules. This is perhaps why you feel that the 2ndL precludes the origin of life. There are several resources that can help with your question.

Here at TalkOrigins there is The Second Law of Thermodynamics, Evolution, and Probability.

Another good discussion is, The second law of thermodynamics and evolution. The author, Prof. Frank Lambert, actually discusses the same "definition" that you have used.

And for those who want a Christian perspective, I recommend The Second Law of Thermodynamics in the Context of the Christian Faith.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Since all species are equally evolved (evolution is not a ladder from less to more evolved) and since “race” in this instance refers only minor geographic variations within a single species, it is indeed possible for the answer to be none is more evolved than any other.

In addition your three racial groups are simplistic and outmoded. The concept of race is far more complicated than the 19th century grouping that you are using allowed for. These three groups must be broken down into several groups and sub-groups, and more added besides, to even get close to an accurate picture of human diversity. On top of this the concept is further complicated by the migration throughout history, intermarriage and geographical overlap of different groups. In fact the boundaries are so blurry and differences so minor that many biologists deny that races even exist in humans.

More simplistic and outmoded still are the racist, typological, ideas about the inherent inferiority or superiority of different races.

There are claims that some “races” score slightly higher on IQ tests than others, however such claims are controversial because besides innate intelligence there are numerous environmental factors that can effect how individuals perform on such tests. Then there is the question as to whether IQ tests are even an adequate measure of that complex thing we call intelligence.

The thing to bear in mind here is that races do not have an IQ, people do. So even if the claims about race and IQ are correct and even if IQ is an accurate measure of intelligence we are still only talking about statistical differences between large groups and one can not judge individuals based simply upon whatever group they might belong to.

In other words there are, for example, smart white people and not-so-smart white people, and there are smart black people and not-so-smart black people, but you can't tell which is which just by looking at their skin (again even if the big if’s about IQ are true).

So as a matter of practicality we should to take people as individuals not groups, and as a matter of law and American philosophy (the ideals of the Declaration and Constitution) we should treat everyone equally and equally under the law.

Some relevant links:

Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From: Chris Stassen
Author of: Isochron Dating
Response: An overwhelming majority of isotopic age measurements yield values consistent with the mainstream age and history of the Earth. The only sensible explanation that we currently have for that fact is: dating methods work most of the time. Explaining away a large body of consistent data as being due to all results being inaccurate is an untenable position. (If the results are wildly inaccurate, why are they consistent?) For that reason, a leap from "unable to 'guarantee' a single result devoid of context" to "can happily ignore all results" is unjustifiable.

To one who calls himself a scientist, figuring out how and why a dating method sometimes fails is an interesting pursuit. It is part of the process of understanding the limitations of the dating technique. It leads to rules for when the methods shouldn't be applied, and to independent tests that help assess the likelihood of getting a valid result.

See this archive's January '99 feedback, fourth entry from the top, for a longer discussion of mine on this topic. Note in particular the failure of young-Earthers to give a sensible explanation for the data that they try to handwave away. Creationists want to pretend all dating results are merely individual values in isolation, because even they know that they can't make a believable case against the strength of multiple consistent results from a context where independent cues suggest reliability.

Finally, Austin's result is a contrived failure, and for that reason not relevant to the issue of reliability when one is not attempting to misuse the methodology. See Young-Earth Creationist 'Dating' of a Mt. St. Helens Dacite: The Failure of Austin and Swenson to Recognize Obviously Ancient Minerals by Kevin R. Henke, for details.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: This month in particular has lots of ill-informed feedback, basically reiterating what is answered over and over on this site and others. They get less interesting, and so we choose not to respond if the issues are dealt with. Put it down to our tiredness.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Oil can be millions of years old even when the oil pressure is recent. See CD231.

Polonium is a decay product of radon, which comes from uranium, which has a very long half-life, so polonium halos do not indicate a young age. See CF201.

See the rest of the Index to Creationist Claims to get an idea of how far removed other creationist claims are from the actual evidence. Pay especial attention to the claims about religion and science being somehow incompatible. Creationism is anti-relgion (unless that religion is the one official authorized version, as amended), but evolution is not. Over 7,000 clergy of the Clergy Letter Project have stated that Christianity is fully compatible with evolution.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: The nearest I can think of is Steve Jones' Darwin's Ghost, also titled Almost Like a Whale in the UK edition. But it is pretty much a reinterpretation of the opening passages of the various chapters of the Origin.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Thank you for volunteering. :-)

If you (or anyone else) do get motivated to write such a page, here are the Submission Guidelines.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Genes can

1. Change and remain the same number (mutation)

2. Duplicate (it's quite common) and subsequently be "repurposed" by selection

3. Duplicate, remain the same, and be additive by making more of the protein they code, which increases the "dosage", as it were

4. Reduce in number (reducing the dosage)

and many changes are "silent", meaning they are invisible to selection at the time they occur. This means a lot of molecular change of DNA is neutral, and spreads by chance. It can become useful later, although most of it doesn't.

Despite the high school textbooks, genes are not like a zipper, nedding to pair up exactly. And in any event, slightly mispaired DNA can spread through a population, with light loss of fitness, and then "meet up" with copies of itself, regaining that fitness.

A proper understanding requires a complicated explanation, so I'll just refer you to

Beginner's Guide to Molecular Biology

Molecular Biology textbook (warning - large PDF)

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: This feedback was referred from an article in the Archive titled Dinosaur Valley State Park by Glen Kuban which discusses the location in Texas where there are supposed fossil human footprints (some giant sized) in the same rock as various types of dinosaurs footprints, I assume that these are the footprints that the author of the feedback claims to have seen and accuses us of lying about.

See Glen’s main page The Texas Dinosaur/"Man Track" Controversy

And Mark Isaak’s Index to Creationist Claims-Claim CC101: Human and dinosaur footprints have been found together in the Glen Rose formation at Paluxy River, Texas

The Paluxy man tracks claim is one of the antievolution arguments that just won’t die no matter how often if is debunked or by who. It is nosferatu, it is un-dead…

I don’t know what you saw Shannon, but if we are lying about this then so are a lot of creationists.

The current President of the Institute for Creation Research, John Morris, had this to say about the status of the Paluxy man tracks:

Another research project of some note involved the alleged discovery of human and dinosaur footprints in the Paluxy River, central Texas. Having been nominally involved since the late 1960's, I undertook a major role in 1975 from nearby Oklahoma, culminating in a summary book, Tracking Those Incredible Dinosaurs, and the People Who Knew Them, in 1980. This book was withdrawn in 1985 when further research called the original interpretation into question. Research continues, but I am of the opinion that the evidence is, at best, ambiguous and unusable as an anti-evolutionary argument at the present time. Source: Back to Genesis #87, Mar 1, 1996, ”ICR and The Future (IX: ICR, For Such A Time As This)”

During the Q&A of a debate between Curtis Clark of Cal Poly Pomona and the ICR’s Senior Vice President Duane Gish at Cal Poly Pomona on 10/20/99, Dr. Gish said the following in response to a question about the Paluxy tracks:

Q: How do you explain the footprint of a human inside, and along side of a dinosaur in a riverbed in Texas? This was scientifically proven, it is not a hoax.

Gish: I'll just answer that first.

This is a claim that has been made in the past, and creationists have cited this evidence. The later conclusions, the evidence indicates that they were probably not human tracks. Dr. Morris at our institute published a book in which he…[garbled, possibly "interpreted them as human"] He has withdrawn that book. The evidence now indicates that it doesn't show any human tracks. Now there are dinosaur tracks down on the Paluxy riverbed in Texas, and there are tracks that in some ways to people look like human tracks. But a, it is so questionable, and so disputable, I don't think, we just don't use that sort of evidence. So I don't think we even need to debate that question.

Ken Ham’s group Answers in Genesis lists the Paluxy man tracks on it’s list of Arguments they think creationists should NOT use

The Geoscience Research Institute (a creationist group at Loma Linda University (Loma Linda, CA) has the following on their web site regarding the Paluxy tracks:

2. Are human and dinosaur footprints found together?

No. There was a claim that they were found together in the riverbed of the Paluxy River of Texas, but this claim seems to have been abandoned by all scientifically trained creationists. The dinosaur footprints are genuine, but the human footprints are not.

See also on the GSRI site:

Dinosaur Tracks and Giant Men by Berney Neufeld

Of Dinosaurs and Men by Art Chadwick

And finally the British creationist group The Biblical Creation Society has an article on it’s web site titled Dinosaur & alleged Human Trackways which condemns some of the tactics used by the few remaining professional creationists who use this argument (Baugh, Hovind etc.).

Be sure to e-mail all these creationists and tell them they are lying as well.

[Now where did I leave that garlic…]

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
Comment:
Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: It would have no effect on evolutionary theory whatsoever. Antievolutionists seem to think that the idea that dinosaurs became extinct 65 million years ago is somehow an intrinsic part of evolutionary theory, it is not. There is nothing in evolutionary theory that says that any particular group of organisms must become extinct at any particular time.

The reason scientists think dinosaurs (the non-avian ones) became extinct so long ago is simply because we do not find any of their fossils in rocks from later than the end of the cretaceous period and we don’t see any still alive today. It has nothing to do with evolutionary theory.

In fact not only would scientists not be embarrassed by the finding of a still living species dinosaur (again, of the non-bird sort), as antievolutionists often insinuate, many paleontologists would probably give their eye-teeth (or a left testis/ovary) for a chance to see one alive.

Now before some antievolutionist out there complains that the very existence of the cretaceous period is some sort of evolutionary assumption let me point out that the geologic column was worked out, by men who were mostly old earth creationist catastrophists, long before Darwin brought evolution into the scientific mainstream in 1859 with the publication of the Origin of Species. As for the cretaceous it was named in 1822 by Belgian geologist D'Omalius d'Halloy (who I understand, not that it should matter, was a Catholic).

The fact that antievolutionists are under the misapprehension that there is some sort of connection between dinosaur extinction and evolutionary theory is probably due to their apparent belief that any of the theories and/or observations of mainstream science which contradicts their theology are all somehow based in evolution. This is nonsense of course and highlights the fact that antievolutionists are really not only against evolutionary theory but are in fact against practically all of science.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: My viewpoint is that there is only one real world, and I attempt to describe that one rather than any imaginary version. And I have this radical notion that the best place to look, if you want to learn about things in the real world, is to look at things in the real world. Some people call this "bias" or "viewpoint discrimination" or somesuch, but I do not see the problem. I enjoy fantasy stories, too, as fantasies. If you believe in actual alternate realities, just live in another one and leave this one alone.

I note that you have no objection to my description of this reality. Is that because the "bias" charge is a last resort when you can not fault the facts?

I am not doing this for an employer. I am having fun. The real world is a wonderful place. I highly recommend it to anyone thinking of visiting.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: That's pretty much how I see it. Many changes involved in the evolution of new species are not advantageous, just not (very) disadvantageous. This is a core tenet of allopatric speciation theory. The organisms must not be too much less fit, but the genetic variants can be a bit.

But for any trait that is highly adaptive, and that usually means very efficient in making a living, such as an eye in humans, or a wing in songbirds, each step must be at least as fit as its predecessors, or only a slight amount less fit.

This is best described in terms of Sewall Wright's notion of an "Adaptive Landscape". In this, Wright, a founder of population genetics, supposed that different combinations of gene variants (alleles) would have different fitnesses, which, if you mapped it as a contour landscape, would have peaks and valleys. Under a strong selection, once you have climbed a fitness peak, you are stuck there. Wright pointed out that if the population is subject to a bit of random fluctuation, and this will happen if the population is small or has internal structure, then some organisms can move down the slope to be able to climb another peak.

This is pretty well standard evolutionary biology these days.

Feedback Letter
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Responses
From: Chris Stassen
Author of: Isochron Dating
Response: We get the term from the creationists themselves. Henry Morris is the father of modern creation "science." He chose Scientific Creationism as the title of his landmark work in the 1970s. The Institute for Creation Research, the largest and most influential creationist organization, publishes their " ICR Tenets on Creationism" which all faculty must subscribe to.
From:
Response: And it should be noted that the term goes back to the mid-19th century at least. It had, also, a prior meaning, which in Catholic theology was the doctrine of the creation of individual souls at conception.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: I believe the answer would be: cat is to feline as horse is to equine. Cats being in the family felidae and horses (of course) being in the family equidae.

I Hope that helps.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: As I understand it, "random" just means "not biased from a normal distribution" in this context. In other words, drift is the result of stochastic sampling errors in the reproduction of a bell curve of allele frequencies from one generation to the next.

"Biased genetic drift" would be stochastic sampling errors on a skewed distribution of alleles. There's nothing "religious" about this, unless you happen to worship statistics. In which case, you are in for disappointment...

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: "Spirit" is so undefined here that one might easily replace "energy" and have a more meaningful sentence.

But why is there any conflict? If God created any physical process that can be explained without mentioning Him, then He may have created evolutionary processes. Science can't say anything about that, but that doesn't mean science rules God out.

If God created, God created everything, including all the things of the present moment. I can think of many options for a religious believer to accept both God and science, so long as theology is not permitted to overrule empirical data.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Responses
From: Chris Stassen
Author of: Isochron Dating
Response: Thanks for the FAQ suggestions. I've corrected the grammar in that one section. As it refers to the USEnet newsgroup, "talk.origins" is traditionally lowercase, even though we've capitalized it in the archive logo.

You correctly point out that there are two somewhat orthogonal considerations: religious (Christians vs. atheists), and scientific ("evolutionists" vs "young-Earth creationists"). I think of the division of Christians/atheists as opposite ends on the "religious axis" of the problem space. On the "science axis" the division is different: on one end there are both Christians and atheists who accept where the evidence leads, and on the other end there are those who demand that the evidence be hammered -- no matter how poor the fit -- into the history dictated by their religious belief.

This site isn't for religious debate, so we ignore the religious axis and concentrate on the science one. While I try to be good about using "young-Earth creationists" or "YECs," the former is verbose and the latter obscure to the general public. Those folks call themselves "creationists," and the label has stuck. I wouldn't write off all mis-use of the term as being due to YECs and evolutionary materialists -- I'm guilty of it myself, and like you I am an ACG member.

From:
Response: This sort of confusion is one of the reasons I try and use the term antievolutionist rather than creationist. Another good term is evolution denier, though YEC deny the validity of a whole lot more of science than just biological evolution.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: I can see you are confused. What you call "evolution" here truly is nonsense, and it is no part of any account of evolution by science.

But I think you have confused Pinocchio with evolutionary theory.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Thank you for a sensible feedback question. I was beginning to despair for August...

On facts: a fact is the subject of much philosophical debate, but alls cientists know what a fact is - it's a measurement derived from observation. Measurements have an in-built error, and sometimes that error can lead to conclusions that need to be revised. Mistakes can be made in science; it's one of it's human aspects.

Conclusions drawn from widely accepted standards of measurement can get called facts as well, and sometimes they need to be overturned. The method has changed, however, not the measurements (use the old method and you will still get the same measurements, more or less). The conclusions about the facts have changed, not the facts themselves (we should now be able to explain the measurements of the discredited method - it might be that we under- or over-estimated the dates it gave).

On randomness and chance: I have given an argument about this, but I think something more needs to be said. A little bit above this response you'll see me claim that "random" means simply that a group of things are distributed over a standard bell curve. However, in this context, "chance" simply means that what happens in mutation isn't correlated with what happens in selection. And no, selection is not a chance phenomenon; it is quite the contrary. Selection is the removal of chance based on what works best.

"Purpose" is always related to something a human being thinks in science. To say "the purpose of trait T is to do X" is to say that a scientist has a model of T in which doing X explains why it is there (through selection, in my view - all biological purpose is selection-based. Same for "function", "goal", "reason" and so on).

Genes do not "have" purposes - we assign purposes based on what happens to be the best theoretical account we can give them. In short, they have purposes only in that account. The genes themselves just do what they do, and the organisms and environment do what they do, and we end up with what we see.

The agent-centric notion of "purpose" is a philosophical, and usually theologically-inspired, notion, not one that matters in biology (apart from the psychology of biological organisms that are agents).

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Actually, it is call "evolutionary biology" in university biology departments. Every explanation in science is a "theory".
Previous
July 2005
Up
2005 Feedback
Next
September 2005
Home Browse Search Feedback Other Links

Home Page | Browse | Search | Feedback | Links