So I am supposed to conclude this entire debate with my closing statement. I had set out to prove that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on earth. Well, obviously this is an impossible thing to do if there is no rigid definition of what entails ‘necessary.’ It is frankly impossible to prove that anything is absolutely necessary. Would Theophage say that intelligence is necessary for the construction of a piece of high-quality literature? Perhaps, but there would be no way to prove that it is absolutely necessary. Simulations might be run to determine if random processes could produce a piece of literature, yet these simulations could not rebut the notion that maybe, just maybe, somehow, something extremely lucky happened and this hypothetical literature was produced by chance processes. There is always the possibility that something incredibly lucky happened, which would render any attempt to prove intelligence absolutely necessary null and void.
This is why I regret that no attempt to define what we mean by ‘necessary’ was made by any of the debating parties.
On the other hand, I am satisfied with my performance on demonstrating that intelligence is a more adequate explanation for certain biochemical systems than mindless processes.
Ultimately, I agree with Theophage that we have all won this debate (i.e. we have both lost the debate from a pessimist’s point of view).
So I wish my opponent good luck in any of the things he’s going to be doing, and I wish the audience luck.
Livingstone Morford
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Monday, August 2, 2010
Theophage's Closing Statement
Well, It seems that I could not even finish this response or put it up by the 1st of august like I'd hoped. This will be my closing statement to this debate, and my last post here. No tears, people, come on now...
My two aborted attempts at my fifth response can be found on GoogleDocs if anyone is interested in reading them: (The second one is the latest and longer)
https://docs.google.com/document/edit?id=1p_2-vJXXCd3Y-5vUNMIupgtdT_g8IFVf8msuyhOVoXw&hl=en&authkey=CNnjn_gO
https://docs.google.com/document/edit?id=1m6XxZJQcag8Pso_e-iPvnVCcpmtZ_DUSQKO894nTMZE&hl=en&authkey=CNflm_wC
I want to thank FirstFreedomFighter for putting up with me this whole time, I have not been a good opponent in this debate. My posts have habitually been late, and I don't feel that I have argued as forcefully as was expected. But I did enjoy this exchange and I learned some interesting and important things, so I still feel this has been a good thing.
In his last post, Livingstone assures us that we can know that life was designed by the same reasoning that assures us that Stonehenge was designed: the fact that no natural process is known which can account for it.
The simple fact, however, is that this reasoning is false. That is not how we know that Stonehenge was made by an intelligent designer. I dealt with how we can tell these things way back in my very first post. Basically, it is because Stonehenge is made of cut stones placed and stacked and we know humans cut stones and place and stack them. Plus, we know that humans exist.
Now let's contrast this to life. Living cells are not like anything we know is made by humans, nor were humans (humans being the *only* intelligent designers we know exist) around when life began. This is exactly the opposite situation with Stonehenge, but Livingstone wants us to believe they are the same.
Look, folks. If what Livingstone says is correct, and if the intelligent design of life was as obvious as the intelligent design of Stonehenge, then pretty much all biologists would accept the intelligent design of life, right? I mean sure, there would be some hardcore atheists who would reject it on ideological grounds, but it would still be a mainstream biological idea, right?
It would, if things were like Livingstone claims. But the simple fact is that things aren't like that. That is obvious to all of us. Livingstone's (and Dembski's before him) naive criteria for design simply isn't how science works. I've tried to explain that here, but apparently not well enough.
All throughout this debate, it has been Livingstone's job to show that intelligent design is not only a good explanation for life, but *necessary* to explain life. He's failed to do this. Even in his last post when he acknowledged this and said his new focus about be on the necessity, he failed to do this. I don't think I've won anything with my lackluster performance, but Livingstone has certainly failed.
But that isn't the point of this debate, we knew we weren't going to convince each other of anything. the point of this debate was to learn and to compare ideas and to try to understand each other. In that sense, I think this debate has worked, and that we have all won.
I wish I had the stamina to have stayed with it, or the tenacity to hammer my points more effectively, or the better knowledge to give concrete devastating examples to crush my foe.
But ultimately, we are just two guys talking about some stuff on the internet, and sharing it with you all.
One thing that I have learned, is that if I am going to be in a debate again, I want a definite limit on number of responses and posting dates. This informal open-ended stuff just enables my lazy ass. And I wouldn't mind debating again on another topic (Oh God please, a different topic!) If Livingstone or anyone else is interested.
And with that, I bid you all adieu. Keep fighting the good fight, folks.
Daniel "Theophage" Clark
My two aborted attempts at my fifth response can be found on GoogleDocs if anyone is interested in reading them: (The second one is the latest and longer)
https://docs.google.com/document/edit?id=1p_2-vJXXCd3Y-5vUNMIupgtdT_g8IFVf8msuyhOVoXw&hl=en&authkey=CNnjn_gO
https://docs.google.com/document/edit?id=1m6XxZJQcag8Pso_e-iPvnVCcpmtZ_DUSQKO894nTMZE&hl=en&authkey=CNflm_wC
I want to thank FirstFreedomFighter for putting up with me this whole time, I have not been a good opponent in this debate. My posts have habitually been late, and I don't feel that I have argued as forcefully as was expected. But I did enjoy this exchange and I learned some interesting and important things, so I still feel this has been a good thing.
In his last post, Livingstone assures us that we can know that life was designed by the same reasoning that assures us that Stonehenge was designed: the fact that no natural process is known which can account for it.
The simple fact, however, is that this reasoning is false. That is not how we know that Stonehenge was made by an intelligent designer. I dealt with how we can tell these things way back in my very first post. Basically, it is because Stonehenge is made of cut stones placed and stacked and we know humans cut stones and place and stack them. Plus, we know that humans exist.
Now let's contrast this to life. Living cells are not like anything we know is made by humans, nor were humans (humans being the *only* intelligent designers we know exist) around when life began. This is exactly the opposite situation with Stonehenge, but Livingstone wants us to believe they are the same.
Look, folks. If what Livingstone says is correct, and if the intelligent design of life was as obvious as the intelligent design of Stonehenge, then pretty much all biologists would accept the intelligent design of life, right? I mean sure, there would be some hardcore atheists who would reject it on ideological grounds, but it would still be a mainstream biological idea, right?
It would, if things were like Livingstone claims. But the simple fact is that things aren't like that. That is obvious to all of us. Livingstone's (and Dembski's before him) naive criteria for design simply isn't how science works. I've tried to explain that here, but apparently not well enough.
All throughout this debate, it has been Livingstone's job to show that intelligent design is not only a good explanation for life, but *necessary* to explain life. He's failed to do this. Even in his last post when he acknowledged this and said his new focus about be on the necessity, he failed to do this. I don't think I've won anything with my lackluster performance, but Livingstone has certainly failed.
But that isn't the point of this debate, we knew we weren't going to convince each other of anything. the point of this debate was to learn and to compare ideas and to try to understand each other. In that sense, I think this debate has worked, and that we have all won.
I wish I had the stamina to have stayed with it, or the tenacity to hammer my points more effectively, or the better knowledge to give concrete devastating examples to crush my foe.
But ultimately, we are just two guys talking about some stuff on the internet, and sharing it with you all.
One thing that I have learned, is that if I am going to be in a debate again, I want a definite limit on number of responses and posting dates. This informal open-ended stuff just enables my lazy ass. And I wouldn't mind debating again on another topic (Oh God please, a different topic!) If Livingstone or anyone else is interested.
And with that, I bid you all adieu. Keep fighting the good fight, folks.
Daniel "Theophage" Clark
Saturday, July 17, 2010
It is My Fault Once Again...
Hello to you all who keep desperately hitting f5 refreshing this page to see if anything new has been posted; it's me, Theophage. Here I am months overdue, and no, this post isn't going to be my latest response to FirstFreedomFighter.
The problem is that I have just lost interest in continuing. I told this to Livingstone in a message, and he said that he was losing interest as well. We both decided that I would finish my latest response, and then we would each put up a closing statement about the debate. Of course that agreement itself was about a month ago, and as you can see, I still haven't finished my latest response!
Livingstone has gone off-line for a while, he won't be back until some time in August. I have set a goal for myself that I will finish and post my response by Aug 1st, because to do otherwise simply isn't fair to my opponent or to all of you out there. Just leaving something hanging may be common on the internet, but it is inexcusable.
The countdown begins...
Daniel "Theophage" Clark
The problem is that I have just lost interest in continuing. I told this to Livingstone in a message, and he said that he was losing interest as well. We both decided that I would finish my latest response, and then we would each put up a closing statement about the debate. Of course that agreement itself was about a month ago, and as you can see, I still haven't finished my latest response!
Livingstone has gone off-line for a while, he won't be back until some time in August. I have set a goal for myself that I will finish and post my response by Aug 1st, because to do otherwise simply isn't fair to my opponent or to all of you out there. Just leaving something hanging may be common on the internet, but it is inexcusable.
The countdown begins...
Daniel "Theophage" Clark
Monday, May 3, 2010
An Analysis Of Clark's Critique
AN ANALYSIS OF CLARK’S CRITIQUE
In this essay, I will only analyze and respond to Daniel’s pivotal points and arguments – if there is anything which Daniel believes I have not responded to, please feel free to point them out and I promptly will correct that.
A Necessary Adaptation
I realize that I am tending to argue in terms of ‘best explanation,’ instead of in terms of ‘necessity.’ I also realize that it is my duty in this debate to demonstrate that intelligent design is necessary for life on earth. A necessary adaptation is therefore heralded – an adaptation which promises to demonstrate that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on earth.
That intelligent design is necessary to account for life on earth is to me a patent certainty – however the burden of proof is necessarily upon me to prove the above proposition articulated.
How then, can we prove that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on earth? What form of argumentation would demonstrate that intelligence is a sine qua non for life on earth?
Perhaps it would be best to introduce an analogy in this form: namely, that intelligence – rational design – must account for the origin of archeological features like Stonehenge.
The Darwinians should ponder long and hard on the question of how archeologists came to that inevitable conclusion that intelligence is necessary to account for Stonehenge.
It may interest the Darwinians to know that there is a not a scrap of paper of any civilization which claims to be the creator of the Stonehenge; true, there are tools around Stonehenge, but to argue that this is sufficient evidence to conclude that Stonehenge was designed by intelligence is as equally fallacious to argue that finding a Neanderthal hammer and other stone tools in a cave demonstrates conclusively the cave was built by the Neanderthals (I doubt anyone would argue such) instead of the cave being hollowed out by weathering processes.
The Darwinian is therefore met with this to consider: that intelligence is a necessity for the origin of Stonehenge.
Why is intelligent design an absolute necessity for the origin of Stonehenge?
We are met with an inevitable series of propositions which defines the process used to come to the conclusion that intelligent design is paramount and necessary to the origin of Stonehenge:
Firstly, that there is no known undirected process which can account for the origin of such a structure manifested by Stonehenge;
Secondly, that there is a directed process which can account for the origin of Stonehenge;
Thirdly, that this process can be experimentally verified and tested by replicating the construction of Stonehenge, and that this process which utilizes intelligence is an observable reality. That process is human intelligence.
The archeologist – and the Darwinian – now comes to the simple yet eloquent conclusion that intelligence is a necessary feature for the origin of Stonehenge. If Daniel disagrees with my above process to come to the conclusion that Stonehenge demands intelligence, I ask him to describe the process entailed.
What then, precisely, is the problem with using the same method to conclude that intelligence is necessary for the origin of life? I can find none whatsoever.
Therefore, my postulate that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on earth follows this curve:
[Assuming that all of these propositions are correct – I am using this method merely to demonstrate my point.]
Firstly, that there is no known undirected process which can account for the origin of protein primary structure;
Secondly, that there is a directed and intelligent process which can account for the origin of protein primary structures;
Thirdly that this process can be experimentally verified and tested by replicating the engineering of protein primary structures.
Therefore, we conclude – using the exact same process used to determine that Stonehenge demands intelligence – that intelligence is necessary to account for life on earth.
Mainstream Science vs. Clark
It is argued by those that hold that intelligent design is not necessary to account for life on earth – such as my opponent, Daniel – that intelligent design does not offer a more adequate explanation for certain biological features (such as protein primary structures) than Darwinian processes.
I believe that Daniel is articulating a false dichotomy between intelligent design and nature. Intelligent design is entirely natural – as equally natural as humanity or other species of organisms.
Furthermore, it may be surprising to learn that in this particular case mainstream science conflicts with Daniel – namely that scientific discipline of anthropology and the forensic sciences.
There is a process archeology uses to detect design in various objects. Naturally, lack of knowledge of how something was manifested does not amount to evidence of intelligent interaction. What does amount to evidence of intelligent interaction in archeology is the knowledge of how some phenomena could possibly have been produced through intelligent interaction (and how this phenomena is made through observable reality) while there is no knowledge of how this phenomena could have been produced without intelligence. This is the means archeologists detect design. This is the same means used by the forensic scientist and the detective. This is mainstream science.
This also happens to be the same method I am using to detect design: firstly, that there is the knowledge of how certain long protein primary structures could be designed and are designed through intelligence, and an utter lack of knowledge on how they could be produced through un-intelligent processes. Thus, I am entirely utilizing the methods used by archeology and the forensic sciences to detect intelligent design in biological features.
I therefore feel inclined to ask, “How is it that such methods of detecting design may be used in archeology and in the forensic sciences but that exact same method cannot be used to detect design in the biological world?”
I think the answer is very simple: there exists, whether one wishes to believe it or not, heresy in science.
Heresy In Science
At first glance, it may seem ludicrous at best to suggest that there is such a thing as heresy in science. But I am not alone in the opinion that there is such a thing – I am backed by the Encyclopaedia Britannica as well as evidence.
Is Daniel not aware that in 1906 Scientific American ran an article debunking the Wright brother’s airplane and posing them as frauds? Was this because it is indeed true that the Wright brothers did not invent the airplane, or that the airplane actually does not exist? Or is it because of willful intolerance of the unorthodox in scientific circles?
Is my opponent not aware that Nature, a peer-reviewed scientific journal, turned down Encrio Fermi’s work on beta decay because they claimed it was too remote from reality – and that they only published it after Fermi’s work had been widely accepted in scientific circles?
I do not think an ‘appeal ad mainstreamus scientia’ is sufficient to convince me that I am wrong in this debate – nor do I think it is an adequate argument against my articulations.
Answering Questions
Daniel posed a list of questions concerning mechanisms the designer could have used to design various biochemical structures and features. I will quote his point-by-point critique and then examine where it does not work:
Speaking of ribosomal engineering to account for the origin of the genetic code,
“Well, that is certainly a possible explanation, but again you have no evidence of an intelligent being utilizing those processes, nor any evidence that those processes in particular were used other than to say that it simply could have been that way.”
It would be interesting to hear a response to this from an anthropologist. Again, one must simply look to Stonehenge. Why does one conclude it is designed? Because of the process I described above. This is the same process intelligent design proponents use to detect design.
Expatiating on homochirality and chiral pool synthesis, Daniel says,
“Again, we have possible processes, but what is the evidence that these processes were used? Where is the archaeological remains of the facilities in which these were done, or of the intelligent beings which did them? None?”
I happen to live in that ultimate and universal structure which serves as shelter for the person of average intelligence, a house. However, I can assure you that around my house one will not find a single tool that would indicate it was constructed through intelligence.
Or better yet, to make an example,
If I constructed a small shelter made of just timber from the forest (sticks forming sides and walls) and then left it, and one year later archeologists found it, would they conclude it was intelligently designed or that it sprouted through chance processes? Naturally, the archeologists would suspect the latter – that this magnificent and beautiful little shack was the result of chance processes alone – that this singularly marvelous shack was the result of branches and twigs falling into place; and that it was also the result of rope flying in by the wind and through chance alone tying up the boughs and branches and twigs in the correct spots. This is what the anthropologists would undoubtedly conclude as there would be not a tool to be seen, or any ‘trace’ of intelligence whatsoever.
The more radical anthropologists, however, in a tone slightly different than that of their brethren, would say that chance is not a more adequate explanation for the origin of this shack, but rather that chance processes and intelligence are as equal in their explanatory powers.
Daniel says,
“why this instead of that, why is this virus using RNA and this one using DNA, etc.”
Since I still cannot grasp the point of this question, I will ask Daniel to list specifics. What virus? What anatomical part of what creature? Etc.
On Probability
In his latest exposition Daniel wrote the following:
“The simple fact is that functioning life reproduces and makes more functioning life, and non-functioning life (if it can be non-functioning and still live) does not. That is simply an observation about what obtains, not any kind of evidence of a goal.”
Naturally, the individual molecules, taken as a single entity, are not goal-oriented. The same holds true for the card analogy. However, there is a goal in life. That goal is survival. Life is a constant struggle to survive – a never ceasing struggle to be the fastest runner, the highest flier, the strongest creature, the best swimmer – all of these things are invariably dictated by the functionality of protein primary, secondary, and tertiary structure. It is therefore quite patent that there is a goal even in protein primary structures.
Daniel also says:
“Livingstone, please show us how you calculate the probability of life functioning that isn't just a re-hash of the bad probability argument that you gave at the beginning.”
I see no problem at all with using the formula W=m^N to calculate the probability of said case – where W is the probability factor, m is the number of possible options at each site, and N is the number of possible sequences.
Daniel further request that I show my figure that functionality is rare. My argument is not that functionality is rare; however, protein primary structures separating exceedingly long, functional protein primary structures, there is a general lack of functionality. In this particular case, functionality is rare.
Finally, Daniel says,
“Remember, functionality is not just a matter of the individual protein or other molecule itself, but the system the protein finds itself in: Protein A may be perfectly functional in environment X, but fail to do anything in environment Y. How you're going to work that into your calculations should be interesting.”
Firstly, let us all remember this: that proteins find themselves in cells. Secondly, that codons are what code for amino acids, and amino acids are what constitute protein primary structures.
I accept the definition of functionality as proposed by the paper I cited in an earlier post regarding protein functionality – i.e., it can mean specific biochemical reactions, cellular responses, or molecular components that interact with biocatalysts.
Thus, a functionally redundant protein primary structure would be devoid of all of those manifestations, and more than that as well. It can be regarded as an inert polymer in such a case. Consequently, I could care less about the environment the protein is in. Whether the cell finds itself in a boiling hot-spring or a freezing wasteland of the North, it is completely irrelevant.
Semantics
Daniel asked a question concerning my continual use of the word ‘protein primary structure’ and asked me why I did not instead use the word ‘gene.’ The answer is very simple:
I use the word ‘protein primary structure’ to clearly distinguish between protein secondary structure and protein tertiary structure.
All About Nylonase
I still postulate that nylonase evolved with no intelligent direction because virtually any mutation that occurred at the chromosomal loci that codes for the enzmye of which it is a derivatice would be functional – and not only functional but a step towards the evolution of nylonase.
However, in the case of EPSP synthase, PB2, S12, or any other proteins that have been sequenced and their functionality determined in vitro, there is a barrier which I believe I proposed before which would impede the evolution of such proteins.
The burden of proof is on Daniel to demonstrate that the case of nylonase is parallel to the case of the above proteins I mentioned – in that there is a barrier of functionally redundant protein primary structures separating one protein from another.
I have furthermore evidence to support my hypothesis that nylonase was not subject to any such barrier:
“Scientists have also been able to induce another species of bacteria, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, to evolve the capability to break down the same nylon byproducts in a laboratory by forcing them to live in an environment with no other source of nutrients. The P. aeruginosa strain did not seem to use the same enzymes that had been utilized by the original Flavobacterium strain.”
This means of course that a different set of codons were utilized by one bacteria than another bacterian, but the end result was the same: nylon was digested. This means that my hypothesis has some substantiated evidence to back it up.
However, Daniel makes this statement:
"Livingstone cannot claim that there is no possible way for it[EPSP synthase] to evolve when there is, and that is exactly what he needs to claim in order to show that the intelligent design of this protein is necessary as per our agreed upon debate topic. That is my point."
There is a monstrous difference between ‘possible’ and ‘plausible.’ It is possible that flying spaghetti monsters (no pun intended) exist, but we must ask ourselves, “is it plausible?”
Having said that, I think I have demonstrated that there is no plausible way for certain protein primary structures to evolve. I have done this through peer-reviewed articles I have presented in this debate. Indeed, if there were no such barriers to protein evolution then that would be the death of directed enzyme evolution. Directed enzyme evolution is needed to engineer certain enzymes for specific functions simply because there is a barrier that Darwinian mechanisms cannot pass.
Responding To Critiques
On nylonase, it is not necessary for the enzyme to be arrived at one single step – it may take many steps for nylonase to evolve. However, nearly all of these steps entailed would be functional and beneficial to the bacterium. This would allow natural selection to select the gradual evolution of the nylonase.
I quote Daniel,
“It is almost assured that many mutations were tried and the right one came up and was therefore used; that's the way evolution works.”
It is almost assured that Daniel did not venture to cite a source that indicated that ‘many mutations were tried and the right one came up.’ Indeed, it is almost assured that many mutations occurred and those bacterium that were more capable of digesting even a little nylonase survived better. It is almost assured that there was no one singular mutation that was ‘right.’ Rather, a series of progressive mutations occurred, slowly leading towards the evolution of nylonase.
I am not saying this based on mere assumptions; my postulate that in the case of nylonase every protein primary structure that formed was functional and therefore capable of being selected still stands and with evidence (which I wrote above on the case of different strains of bacteria being used).
In the case of citrate, who is to say that it is not the same case of nylonase, where there is not an impassable and monumental ‘protein barrier’ separating the enzymes which evolved the ability to synthesize citrate?
I quote Daniel again:
“The fact that some sequences of numbers (analogous to genes and the proteins they make) may not "work" when combined with their environments (including other numbers they reside with) may make the journey from one to the other more difficult and indirect, but you've got to have a lot more evidence that you absolutely can't get there than what my opponent has presented, or indeed, opponents of evolution have been presenting for the last 150 years.”
More difficult and indirect is quite clear – indeed it renders it most unnecessary to construct any form of elucidation. By more difficult and indirect my opponent undoubtedly means that trillions upon trillions of mutations would be needed. By more difficult and indirect my opponent necessarily is meaning to say that great gulfs consisting of trillions of functionally redundant primary structures can be – even though it is ‘more difficult’ – through an indirect method inevitably crossed. I suspect this is what Daniel is implying. If not, I ask him what he does mean.
Necessarily, the Darwinian will acknowledge that chance processes alone are sufficient to account for exceedingly long protein primary structures which have function. Even though chance processes have never been observed to account for such protein primary structures the faith of the Darwinian in pure-chance processes remains unshaken.
Daniel asks a very interesting question regarding the hypothetical ET engineers. His question can be summed up thusly: why would these aliens who, having no genetic code, design life on earth with an inheritable system other than the prion system, i.e. with a genetic code?
At first glance, this question sounds quite reasonable. However, there is an answer to the above question, and an answer which required little reflection on my part. Prions cannot, to my knowledge, be subject to genetic engineering. It cannot be subject to recombinant DNA techniques and cloning. Prions cannot be designed through directed enzyme evolution techniques coupled with recombinant DNA. Therefore, these hypothetical alien engineers would have to design a genetic code that would ensure that they could engineer many different types of organisms. This is quite patent and clear.
Lastly, I will respond to Daniel’s critique of the intelligent designer finishing the design some 200,000 years ago (actually a little more than that).
Daniel writes that,
“I cannot help but again think that it is just a biased and anthropocentric view that intelligent design ended with mankind.”
Yes I suppose it is extraordinarily biases and particularly anthropocentric. Indeed, its anthropocentricity is, in all probability, nearly equal – or even as equal as Charles Darwin’s extremely anthropocentric statement in The Descent of Man Chapter 6,
“The Simiadae then branched off into two great stems, the New World and Old World
monkeys; and from the latter, at a remote period, Man, the wonder
and glory of the Universe, proceeded.”
I expect a flow of rhetoric on Charles Darwin’s bias, his notorious anthropocentricity – it should be condemned by all of those who hold that man is not the wonder and glory of the universe – not the most-highly developed species of organisms on earth.
I still hold that it logically follows that, as the development of the species follows a general curve from crudely formed to a more highly developed state, intelligent design concluded with man. This is in itself is evidence of when the intelligent designer stopped its design, i.e. human designers designed things following a curve of less developed to more developed. I see no practical refutation of my point here.
In Brief
I think that I have in fact come up with a considerably large body of evidence and substantial arguments to support my thesis, despite what Daniel says that ‘lack of evidence seems to be a recurring theme here…’
I am supporting my thesis with the same processes used by mainstream scientific disciplines like anthropology and forensics, and even SETI science.
I am quite sure that the facts and evidences already advanced render it undeniable that intelligent design is a requisite and a necessity to account for the origin of life on earth.
-Livingstone M.
In this essay, I will only analyze and respond to Daniel’s pivotal points and arguments – if there is anything which Daniel believes I have not responded to, please feel free to point them out and I promptly will correct that.
A Necessary Adaptation
I realize that I am tending to argue in terms of ‘best explanation,’ instead of in terms of ‘necessity.’ I also realize that it is my duty in this debate to demonstrate that intelligent design is necessary for life on earth. A necessary adaptation is therefore heralded – an adaptation which promises to demonstrate that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on earth.
That intelligent design is necessary to account for life on earth is to me a patent certainty – however the burden of proof is necessarily upon me to prove the above proposition articulated.
How then, can we prove that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on earth? What form of argumentation would demonstrate that intelligence is a sine qua non for life on earth?
Perhaps it would be best to introduce an analogy in this form: namely, that intelligence – rational design – must account for the origin of archeological features like Stonehenge.
The Darwinians should ponder long and hard on the question of how archeologists came to that inevitable conclusion that intelligence is necessary to account for Stonehenge.
It may interest the Darwinians to know that there is a not a scrap of paper of any civilization which claims to be the creator of the Stonehenge; true, there are tools around Stonehenge, but to argue that this is sufficient evidence to conclude that Stonehenge was designed by intelligence is as equally fallacious to argue that finding a Neanderthal hammer and other stone tools in a cave demonstrates conclusively the cave was built by the Neanderthals (I doubt anyone would argue such) instead of the cave being hollowed out by weathering processes.
The Darwinian is therefore met with this to consider: that intelligence is a necessity for the origin of Stonehenge.
Why is intelligent design an absolute necessity for the origin of Stonehenge?
We are met with an inevitable series of propositions which defines the process used to come to the conclusion that intelligent design is paramount and necessary to the origin of Stonehenge:
Firstly, that there is no known undirected process which can account for the origin of such a structure manifested by Stonehenge;
Secondly, that there is a directed process which can account for the origin of Stonehenge;
Thirdly, that this process can be experimentally verified and tested by replicating the construction of Stonehenge, and that this process which utilizes intelligence is an observable reality. That process is human intelligence.
The archeologist – and the Darwinian – now comes to the simple yet eloquent conclusion that intelligence is a necessary feature for the origin of Stonehenge. If Daniel disagrees with my above process to come to the conclusion that Stonehenge demands intelligence, I ask him to describe the process entailed.
What then, precisely, is the problem with using the same method to conclude that intelligence is necessary for the origin of life? I can find none whatsoever.
Therefore, my postulate that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on earth follows this curve:
[Assuming that all of these propositions are correct – I am using this method merely to demonstrate my point.]
Firstly, that there is no known undirected process which can account for the origin of protein primary structure;
Secondly, that there is a directed and intelligent process which can account for the origin of protein primary structures;
Thirdly that this process can be experimentally verified and tested by replicating the engineering of protein primary structures.
Therefore, we conclude – using the exact same process used to determine that Stonehenge demands intelligence – that intelligence is necessary to account for life on earth.
Mainstream Science vs. Clark
It is argued by those that hold that intelligent design is not necessary to account for life on earth – such as my opponent, Daniel – that intelligent design does not offer a more adequate explanation for certain biological features (such as protein primary structures) than Darwinian processes.
I believe that Daniel is articulating a false dichotomy between intelligent design and nature. Intelligent design is entirely natural – as equally natural as humanity or other species of organisms.
Furthermore, it may be surprising to learn that in this particular case mainstream science conflicts with Daniel – namely that scientific discipline of anthropology and the forensic sciences.
There is a process archeology uses to detect design in various objects. Naturally, lack of knowledge of how something was manifested does not amount to evidence of intelligent interaction. What does amount to evidence of intelligent interaction in archeology is the knowledge of how some phenomena could possibly have been produced through intelligent interaction (and how this phenomena is made through observable reality) while there is no knowledge of how this phenomena could have been produced without intelligence. This is the means archeologists detect design. This is the same means used by the forensic scientist and the detective. This is mainstream science.
This also happens to be the same method I am using to detect design: firstly, that there is the knowledge of how certain long protein primary structures could be designed and are designed through intelligence, and an utter lack of knowledge on how they could be produced through un-intelligent processes. Thus, I am entirely utilizing the methods used by archeology and the forensic sciences to detect intelligent design in biological features.
I therefore feel inclined to ask, “How is it that such methods of detecting design may be used in archeology and in the forensic sciences but that exact same method cannot be used to detect design in the biological world?”
I think the answer is very simple: there exists, whether one wishes to believe it or not, heresy in science.
Heresy In Science
At first glance, it may seem ludicrous at best to suggest that there is such a thing as heresy in science. But I am not alone in the opinion that there is such a thing – I am backed by the Encyclopaedia Britannica as well as evidence.
Is Daniel not aware that in 1906 Scientific American ran an article debunking the Wright brother’s airplane and posing them as frauds? Was this because it is indeed true that the Wright brothers did not invent the airplane, or that the airplane actually does not exist? Or is it because of willful intolerance of the unorthodox in scientific circles?
Is my opponent not aware that Nature, a peer-reviewed scientific journal, turned down Encrio Fermi’s work on beta decay because they claimed it was too remote from reality – and that they only published it after Fermi’s work had been widely accepted in scientific circles?
I do not think an ‘appeal ad mainstreamus scientia’ is sufficient to convince me that I am wrong in this debate – nor do I think it is an adequate argument against my articulations.
Answering Questions
Daniel posed a list of questions concerning mechanisms the designer could have used to design various biochemical structures and features. I will quote his point-by-point critique and then examine where it does not work:
Speaking of ribosomal engineering to account for the origin of the genetic code,
“Well, that is certainly a possible explanation, but again you have no evidence of an intelligent being utilizing those processes, nor any evidence that those processes in particular were used other than to say that it simply could have been that way.”
It would be interesting to hear a response to this from an anthropologist. Again, one must simply look to Stonehenge. Why does one conclude it is designed? Because of the process I described above. This is the same process intelligent design proponents use to detect design.
Expatiating on homochirality and chiral pool synthesis, Daniel says,
“Again, we have possible processes, but what is the evidence that these processes were used? Where is the archaeological remains of the facilities in which these were done, or of the intelligent beings which did them? None?”
I happen to live in that ultimate and universal structure which serves as shelter for the person of average intelligence, a house. However, I can assure you that around my house one will not find a single tool that would indicate it was constructed through intelligence.
Or better yet, to make an example,
If I constructed a small shelter made of just timber from the forest (sticks forming sides and walls) and then left it, and one year later archeologists found it, would they conclude it was intelligently designed or that it sprouted through chance processes? Naturally, the archeologists would suspect the latter – that this magnificent and beautiful little shack was the result of chance processes alone – that this singularly marvelous shack was the result of branches and twigs falling into place; and that it was also the result of rope flying in by the wind and through chance alone tying up the boughs and branches and twigs in the correct spots. This is what the anthropologists would undoubtedly conclude as there would be not a tool to be seen, or any ‘trace’ of intelligence whatsoever.
The more radical anthropologists, however, in a tone slightly different than that of their brethren, would say that chance is not a more adequate explanation for the origin of this shack, but rather that chance processes and intelligence are as equal in their explanatory powers.
Daniel says,
“why this instead of that, why is this virus using RNA and this one using DNA, etc.”
Since I still cannot grasp the point of this question, I will ask Daniel to list specifics. What virus? What anatomical part of what creature? Etc.
On Probability
In his latest exposition Daniel wrote the following:
“The simple fact is that functioning life reproduces and makes more functioning life, and non-functioning life (if it can be non-functioning and still live) does not. That is simply an observation about what obtains, not any kind of evidence of a goal.”
Naturally, the individual molecules, taken as a single entity, are not goal-oriented. The same holds true for the card analogy. However, there is a goal in life. That goal is survival. Life is a constant struggle to survive – a never ceasing struggle to be the fastest runner, the highest flier, the strongest creature, the best swimmer – all of these things are invariably dictated by the functionality of protein primary, secondary, and tertiary structure. It is therefore quite patent that there is a goal even in protein primary structures.
Daniel also says:
“Livingstone, please show us how you calculate the probability of life functioning that isn't just a re-hash of the bad probability argument that you gave at the beginning.”
I see no problem at all with using the formula W=m^N to calculate the probability of said case – where W is the probability factor, m is the number of possible options at each site, and N is the number of possible sequences.
Daniel further request that I show my figure that functionality is rare. My argument is not that functionality is rare; however, protein primary structures separating exceedingly long, functional protein primary structures, there is a general lack of functionality. In this particular case, functionality is rare.
Finally, Daniel says,
“Remember, functionality is not just a matter of the individual protein or other molecule itself, but the system the protein finds itself in: Protein A may be perfectly functional in environment X, but fail to do anything in environment Y. How you're going to work that into your calculations should be interesting.”
Firstly, let us all remember this: that proteins find themselves in cells. Secondly, that codons are what code for amino acids, and amino acids are what constitute protein primary structures.
I accept the definition of functionality as proposed by the paper I cited in an earlier post regarding protein functionality – i.e., it can mean specific biochemical reactions, cellular responses, or molecular components that interact with biocatalysts.
Thus, a functionally redundant protein primary structure would be devoid of all of those manifestations, and more than that as well. It can be regarded as an inert polymer in such a case. Consequently, I could care less about the environment the protein is in. Whether the cell finds itself in a boiling hot-spring or a freezing wasteland of the North, it is completely irrelevant.
Semantics
Daniel asked a question concerning my continual use of the word ‘protein primary structure’ and asked me why I did not instead use the word ‘gene.’ The answer is very simple:
I use the word ‘protein primary structure’ to clearly distinguish between protein secondary structure and protein tertiary structure.
All About Nylonase
I still postulate that nylonase evolved with no intelligent direction because virtually any mutation that occurred at the chromosomal loci that codes for the enzmye of which it is a derivatice would be functional – and not only functional but a step towards the evolution of nylonase.
However, in the case of EPSP synthase, PB2, S12, or any other proteins that have been sequenced and their functionality determined in vitro, there is a barrier which I believe I proposed before which would impede the evolution of such proteins.
The burden of proof is on Daniel to demonstrate that the case of nylonase is parallel to the case of the above proteins I mentioned – in that there is a barrier of functionally redundant protein primary structures separating one protein from another.
I have furthermore evidence to support my hypothesis that nylonase was not subject to any such barrier:
“Scientists have also been able to induce another species of bacteria, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, to evolve the capability to break down the same nylon byproducts in a laboratory by forcing them to live in an environment with no other source of nutrients. The P. aeruginosa strain did not seem to use the same enzymes that had been utilized by the original Flavobacterium strain.”
This means of course that a different set of codons were utilized by one bacteria than another bacterian, but the end result was the same: nylon was digested. This means that my hypothesis has some substantiated evidence to back it up.
However, Daniel makes this statement:
"Livingstone cannot claim that there is no possible way for it[EPSP synthase] to evolve when there is, and that is exactly what he needs to claim in order to show that the intelligent design of this protein is necessary as per our agreed upon debate topic. That is my point."
There is a monstrous difference between ‘possible’ and ‘plausible.’ It is possible that flying spaghetti monsters (no pun intended) exist, but we must ask ourselves, “is it plausible?”
Having said that, I think I have demonstrated that there is no plausible way for certain protein primary structures to evolve. I have done this through peer-reviewed articles I have presented in this debate. Indeed, if there were no such barriers to protein evolution then that would be the death of directed enzyme evolution. Directed enzyme evolution is needed to engineer certain enzymes for specific functions simply because there is a barrier that Darwinian mechanisms cannot pass.
Responding To Critiques
On nylonase, it is not necessary for the enzyme to be arrived at one single step – it may take many steps for nylonase to evolve. However, nearly all of these steps entailed would be functional and beneficial to the bacterium. This would allow natural selection to select the gradual evolution of the nylonase.
I quote Daniel,
“It is almost assured that many mutations were tried and the right one came up and was therefore used; that's the way evolution works.”
It is almost assured that Daniel did not venture to cite a source that indicated that ‘many mutations were tried and the right one came up.’ Indeed, it is almost assured that many mutations occurred and those bacterium that were more capable of digesting even a little nylonase survived better. It is almost assured that there was no one singular mutation that was ‘right.’ Rather, a series of progressive mutations occurred, slowly leading towards the evolution of nylonase.
I am not saying this based on mere assumptions; my postulate that in the case of nylonase every protein primary structure that formed was functional and therefore capable of being selected still stands and with evidence (which I wrote above on the case of different strains of bacteria being used).
In the case of citrate, who is to say that it is not the same case of nylonase, where there is not an impassable and monumental ‘protein barrier’ separating the enzymes which evolved the ability to synthesize citrate?
I quote Daniel again:
“The fact that some sequences of numbers (analogous to genes and the proteins they make) may not "work" when combined with their environments (including other numbers they reside with) may make the journey from one to the other more difficult and indirect, but you've got to have a lot more evidence that you absolutely can't get there than what my opponent has presented, or indeed, opponents of evolution have been presenting for the last 150 years.”
More difficult and indirect is quite clear – indeed it renders it most unnecessary to construct any form of elucidation. By more difficult and indirect my opponent undoubtedly means that trillions upon trillions of mutations would be needed. By more difficult and indirect my opponent necessarily is meaning to say that great gulfs consisting of trillions of functionally redundant primary structures can be – even though it is ‘more difficult’ – through an indirect method inevitably crossed. I suspect this is what Daniel is implying. If not, I ask him what he does mean.
Necessarily, the Darwinian will acknowledge that chance processes alone are sufficient to account for exceedingly long protein primary structures which have function. Even though chance processes have never been observed to account for such protein primary structures the faith of the Darwinian in pure-chance processes remains unshaken.
Daniel asks a very interesting question regarding the hypothetical ET engineers. His question can be summed up thusly: why would these aliens who, having no genetic code, design life on earth with an inheritable system other than the prion system, i.e. with a genetic code?
At first glance, this question sounds quite reasonable. However, there is an answer to the above question, and an answer which required little reflection on my part. Prions cannot, to my knowledge, be subject to genetic engineering. It cannot be subject to recombinant DNA techniques and cloning. Prions cannot be designed through directed enzyme evolution techniques coupled with recombinant DNA. Therefore, these hypothetical alien engineers would have to design a genetic code that would ensure that they could engineer many different types of organisms. This is quite patent and clear.
Lastly, I will respond to Daniel’s critique of the intelligent designer finishing the design some 200,000 years ago (actually a little more than that).
Daniel writes that,
“I cannot help but again think that it is just a biased and anthropocentric view that intelligent design ended with mankind.”
Yes I suppose it is extraordinarily biases and particularly anthropocentric. Indeed, its anthropocentricity is, in all probability, nearly equal – or even as equal as Charles Darwin’s extremely anthropocentric statement in The Descent of Man Chapter 6,
“The Simiadae then branched off into two great stems, the New World and Old World
monkeys; and from the latter, at a remote period, Man, the wonder
and glory of the Universe, proceeded.”
I expect a flow of rhetoric on Charles Darwin’s bias, his notorious anthropocentricity – it should be condemned by all of those who hold that man is not the wonder and glory of the universe – not the most-highly developed species of organisms on earth.
I still hold that it logically follows that, as the development of the species follows a general curve from crudely formed to a more highly developed state, intelligent design concluded with man. This is in itself is evidence of when the intelligent designer stopped its design, i.e. human designers designed things following a curve of less developed to more developed. I see no practical refutation of my point here.
In Brief
I think that I have in fact come up with a considerably large body of evidence and substantial arguments to support my thesis, despite what Daniel says that ‘lack of evidence seems to be a recurring theme here…’
I am supporting my thesis with the same processes used by mainstream scientific disciplines like anthropology and forensics, and even SETI science.
I am quite sure that the facts and evidences already advanced render it undeniable that intelligent design is a requisite and a necessity to account for the origin of life on earth.
-Livingstone M.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Theophage's 4th: New Directions and Old Repeats
What's all this about then?
Several times through this debate, my opponent has assured us that intelligent design is a better explanation for life and the universe. From his most recent post:
The first thing I notice about this statement is that it is actually irrelevant to the debate at hand. FirstFreedomFighter and I tossed around several vague debate proposals before settling on the exact proposal which is posted on the right side of this blog for all to see: "Intelligent Design is necessary to account for the existence of life on Earth."
The problem here is that regardless of whether intelligent design is true or not, or whether it is a better explanation or not, the role FFF accepted in this debate was to affirm that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on Earth. I mentioned this important detail several times so far including in my last post, but he hasn't seemed to address this most glaring incongruity at all. These things are most certainly not the same.
My opponent wrote specifically:
And yet that is absolutely not the debate proposal we agreed upon.
So I ask you, Livingstone, are you going to somehow move logically from "best explanation" to "necessary to account for" or do you want to concede the current debate proposal and try again with the new proposal: "Intelligent design is the best explanation for life on Earth"? I assure you that I will be a most gracious victor if you wish to concede. You do see the difference between the two proposals, right?
A Better Explanation?
The second thing I notice in the passage quoted above is, of course, the claim that intelligent design actually is a better explanation. This is an area where Livingstone and I clearly disagree, but I think we need to come to some kind of agreement about what constitutes a 'better' or even a 'good' explanation before we can determine which of us is correct. There is not much point in trying to compare apples to oranges, right?
In my last post, I tried to outline some differences between a good explanation and a poor explanation. Things like how a good explanation increases our knowledge about things, how it links to other known things, etc. I trust my opponent will let us know if he finds any of these criteria objectionable, or if he has any to add that I haven't covered.
Once we have established a common set of criteria for what makes a good explanation, then it is a simple matter to determine which explanation is better than another just by adding up all the 'pros' and subtracting the 'cons'.
As I'd granted earlier, of course, there are many things about how life arose and changed over the eons that the biological sciences simply cannot explain at the present time (using known unintelligent natural processes). That means that for mainstream science's case, what we have in some instances is a known agent (Nature) and some known and unknown processes involved.
For intelligent design's case, we have essentially the reverse: an unknown agent and (as Livingstone's examples indicate) some possible known processes. I say 'possible' because we simply don't know if these processes were used or not. Only additional evidence of these processes (like the ruins of some billion year old biology labs at the bottom of the sea, for example) could let us know if these processes were indeed used.
Notice that in both cases we have a huge, glaring unknown. How does simply trading one unknown for another make for a better explanation? To my way of thinking, it doesn't and it can't.
"Nature did it" is no more of a good explanation than "the Grand Old Designer did it"; both are far too lacking in informative value to be useful as explanations let alone is there enough there to say that one is somehow better than the other. So I guess I'd like to hear my opponent explain why he thinks one truly is better than the other. Specifically, Livingstone, how does trading one unknown for another make for a better explanation?
For illustrative purposes, let me put both of these together:
1) Mainstream science has no explanation for X,
2) Intelligent design does offer a mechanism for X,
3) Therefore the intelligent design postulate is a more adequate explanation for X.
but:
1) Intelligent design has no known agent to implement the process involved in X,
2) Mainstream science does offer a known agent to implement the process involved in X,
3) Therefore mainstream science's postulate (unintelligent nature is responsible) is a more adequate explanation for X.
I also "fail to see any flaw in my logic and rational[e]". That's why we're doing this, to point out our flaws.
Mainstream Science
The more astute of our readers (all five of you) may have noticed in the first syllogism above that I replaced my opponent's wording with "Mainstream science". Why did I do that?
The point is one I would like to make perfectly clear: Intelligent Design is not mainstream science; it is not part of the current fields of biology, chemistry, or physics. This is an important fact that we must seek to explain somehow.
Those less stable and more prone to tinfoil sombreros among us, assure us that it is because of a great conspiracy among scientists and science in general; "The Man" is keeping down the truth for nefarious reasons and simply won't allow dissent. To someone who believes this way...well...I really don't know what I or anyone else could possibly say that would convince you otherwise. In fact, I think we have one of our agents heading to your location right now to straighten it all out for you...
In reality, the reason is because at the current time there simply isn't sufficient evidence to conclude intelligent design in life. Period.
But this is completely at odds with what my opponent is trying to convince us of. To hear him tell it, the evidence is both blatant and plentiful. So we are left with a choice of what seems to be more probable: either virtually every expert in the appropriate fields of science are somehow blissfully ignorant of this overwhelming evidence of design, or the case for intelligent design is simply not as obvious or as well evidenced as Livingstone thinks it is and is arguing here that it is. I'm pretty sure that the former is much more likely than the latter.
My List of Questions
In support of my argument that intelligent design isn't a better explanation at all, I gave several example questions and applied Livingstone's reasoning (or a close facsimile thereof) to them to show that they didn't offer anything better than a designer-of-the-gaps argument that he swears he isn't using. He gave some answers to these which I think are worth examining to again try to understand how (if at all) the intelligent design proposal gives us any more insight or actually is a better explanation. Again, I think his reasoning fails, and I would like to show why point by point:
Well, that is certainly a possible explanation, but again you have no evidence of an intelligent being utilizing those processes, nor any evidence that those processes in particular were used other than to say that it simply could have been that way. How are those unknowns any more advantageous than talking about an unknown natural process that didn't require an additional intelligent agent to work them?
Again, we have possible processes, but what is the evidence that these processes were used? Where is the archaeological remains of the facilities in which these were done, or of the intelligent beings which did them? None? What about molecular evidence? Is there a particular molecular signature left when these processes are used as opposed to any other which may accomplish the same job? (Like how in my example of the crystal skulls, the trace physical remains of the process helped determine what processes were used to create them.)
Again, how is an explanation with a huge unknown like this better than an explanation with a known agent (nature) and a different but unknown process?
Oh, and you asked earlier if there were any other known processes which would either produce only a single enantiomer instead of both or be able to sort only one type from a mixture. Now this may be me being naive again, but doesn't the chemical processes of life itself do that now? So certainly, processes are known which do this which don't require an immediate intelligent agent to do them, right? Like in plants, bacteria, etc? So to say that no such processes exist is patently false.
Again, it is absolutely possible that an intelligent being or beings put them this way using these techniques, but possibility does not make either probability, likelihood, or necessity. That is where your reasoning falls apart.
As I'd said in my last post, the fact that it is possible that the rain falling on my roof was not coming from a natural process, but by an intelligent agent actually dribbling water on my house does not somehow make it more probable, likely, or necessarily true, even if we didn't know the natural process of how it does rain. Yet this is exactly what you seem to be claiming about these other phenomena. What is the difference and how can we tell?
+5 points for style, but -100 for substance. The point I was making here is like the rest hereafter, so I'll re-explain in the next one:
I try to make my points as clear as possible, but I am only human. As I'd said in my last post, part of what makes a good explanation 'good' is the additional information it gives us about the phenomena. A good explanation doesn't just tell us what happens, it tells us why it happens this way and not a different way.
Why doesn't it rain gumdrops? Because huge gumdrop seas don't evaporate and collect into gumdrop clouds suspending little gumdroplets in the air which combine together at nucleation sites and fall to the ground as fat gumdrops once they get too heavy. But all of this does indeed happen to water, which is why it rains water.
If we explained rainfall as simply the Grand Old Designer dropping stuff on us from above, then there is absolutely no reason why it couldn't be gumdrops other than "because that's just not what the Grand Old Designer chose". A good explanation tells us why this and not that.
If intelligent design really is a better explanation for these processes as you say it is, then it should give us some insight into all of the above questions: why this instead of that, why is this virus using RNA and this one using DNA, etc. I certainly expect the naturalistic, unintelligent explanations to give us this kind of detail once they are found as well.
But what we see is that adding an intelligent designer to the mix does not give us any of this additional information at all. That is my point. Your explanation gives us no more information than we could get from simply saying "The Grand Old Designer dunnit".
And because of this, you have absolutely no grounds to claim that it is a better explanation than a standard Grand-Old-Designer-of-the-gaps argument. Are we clear on this point now?
Bad Probability Arguments Are Still Bad
I want to thank my opponent for the concession on the particular bad example that he used, but it wasn't just the example I had issue with, it was his entire mode of reasoning which he still seems to be using. He says that you can still use a probability argument if we're talking about matching a goal, and that the goal of life is functionality. But does that really work?
First, simply declaring that a goal exists does not actually make it a goal. It is a goal only in a metaphoric sense; neither the universe, nor the planet, nor the molecules themselves care if they are functional or not. The simple fact is that functioning life reproduces and makes more functioning life, and non-functioning life (if it can be non-functioning and still live) does not. That is simply an observation about what obtains, not any kind of evidence of a goal.
But even if I grant that it is the goal of life and the processes of life, how then does one calculate the probability (or improbability) of reaching this goal? It is Livingstone's contention that the improbability of this is a de facto impossibility, yet he has to show this to be true. One doesn't just get to assert it and leave it at that.
Livingstone, please show us how you calculate the probability of life functioning that isn't just a re-hash of the bad probability argument that you gave at the beginning.
And not only am I not going to let my opponent simply assert its improbability, I'm doubly not going to let him totally beg the question as he does here:
So if we assume that the probability of functionality is a rare thing, like being dealt a royal flush, then naturally we must conclude that functionality is a rare thing like being dealt a royal flush, right? Am I really the only one seeing this here? Bad probability analogies are also bad.
Please show us how you figure that functionality is rare. Then we can see whether or not your reasoning is good and your conclusion is correct. Remember, functionality is not just a matter of the individual protein or other molecule itself, but the system the protein finds itself in: Protein A may be perfectly functional in environment X, but fail to do anything in environment Y. How you're going to work that into your calculations should be interesting.
Protein Primary Structures Again
"You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means." - Inigo Montoya
You keep using the term "protein primary structures". Not being as familiar with biochemistry lingo as you are, I didn't quite catch on in the beginning, but now that I have done more reading (and believe me, I have learned a lot since I began this debate with you, that alone makes everything worth it!) I find it more and more curious why you use this term the way you do. For example from your last post:
and this:
For those of you who don't know, a protein's primary structure is the sequence of amino acids which make it up. This comes directly from the DNA sequence in the gene that codes for the protein. So when you are asking about how a particular protein primary structure evolved, what you are really asking is how the gene evolved. Why not just say that? Is there some difference here that I'm missing?
Yet "Darwinian mechanisms" are all about how genes evolve, or rather how traits evolve, and the neo-Darwinian synthesis in biology takes that to the genetic level including non-expressed regions of DNA. How can you possibly claim that there are no such mechanisms or that such mechanisms cannot account for what we find?
Granted, we may not know the evolutionary history of a particular gene, or of the particular process which makes use of the protein encoded by it, but that is a very far cry from 'no known mechanisms' which is what you claim and especially from 'no possible mechanisms' which is what you would have to show in order to support our agreed upon debate proposal.
There is a lot that we do know, and it is my understanding that it is because of that knowledge that makes it more likely that these same processes account for all genes and all proteins used by living things.
Nylonase ad Nauseam
Livingstone postulates that there is probably a barrier of non-functional structures in the case of the EPSP synthase which accounts for why it could not have evolved, whereas there must not have been any such barriers in the case of the nylonase which was produced by unguided evolution in the case of the various nylon-eating bacteria. This may, or may not be true.
He referenced a paper which seemed to indicate this, but I'm not totally sure given that I didn't make my way completely through the paper. (And by not "completely through" I mean I skimmed it quickly, ran into a bunch of stuff that made little sense to me, and then quit...) Clearly mainstream biology doesn't know how this particular protein, its associated gene, or the system that uses it evolved. But I'm fairly certain that the point of the paper wasn't that it couldn't have evolved, so for my opponent to use it this way is misleading at best.
I'm going to try to plow through that paper again, and I encourage you the readers as well as Livingstone himself to go through it and see if it really supports the case that he postulates that it does.
I explained why I thought the case of the nylonase is significant, but still my opponent says: "Again, I fail to realize how this applies directly to this conversation on protein evolution." Let me run though this one more time:
It is one thing to see obvious evidence of simple evolutionary change in a gene. If we look at the difference in the sequences for cytochrome C across species, we can see that while evolution has made a few changes here and there over the eons, the protein itself is fairly highly conserved (meaning it's overall structure and function doesn't change much). The exact mutations between species and other groups are fairly easy to place both in type (what changed) and in time (when in evolutionary history it happened). But like most things, not all cases are that simple.
It is possible for an entirely new protein to essentially "come out of nowhere" and not be similar at all to its predecessor. This is much more likely in the case of a duplicated gene, where an unchanged copy still remains to do the job, but the new copy is free to provide new function. The mechanism for this is not some wild imagining of my particular biochemical ignorance and naivete, but an actual known and studied mechanism, that of a frameshift type mutation.
While the gene having undergone the frameshift is fairly similar to the original, the protein that it codes for is most certainly not. Some relevant links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frameshift_mutation
http://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/handbook/illustrations/frameshift
My point being that if this happens somewhere in the evolutionary history of life, then tracing back the original protein this new protein came from becomes exceedingly more complex, since now we're looking for something totally dissimilar. It could very well be that the resulting protein, if it has or finds a new function, has no similar functionality in any further slightly mutated form; Livingstone's barrier in effect. And yet it wouldn't need functionality in a close but different form in order to have evolved in this way.
Is this the case with EPSP synthase specifically? I really have no idea. But my point is that it is possible, and if there is a possibility, then the opposite claim (that there is no possibility) cannot be true. Livingstone cannot claim that there is no possible way for it to evolve when there is, and that is exactly what he needs to claim in order to show that the intelligent design of this protein is necessary as per our agreed upon debate topic. That is my point.
Do you see how this is relevant now? I'll explain again if you'd like, but I don't think it will look any different next time. I can only do my best.
Miscellaneous Critiques
Related to the above, Livingstone clarified his comment regarding the precursor gene to the evolved nylonase gene:
But what does that mean that the 'potential' was present? What it means is simply that it is possible to arrive at the derived gene from the original gene by way of normal unguided evolutionary mechanisms. Okay, I'll accept that.
But that last part is rather curious (and probably false). Where in any paper does it say that the mutated gene was arrived at in a single step? That would be the implication if there was no browsing alternatives involved. How do we know that that other, non-functional mutations of this gene weren't tried first? Is my opponent just assuming this?
Did the bacteria somehow "know" that they had to make this particular mutation at this particular place in order to capitalize on a new food source? Absolutely not. It is almost assured that many mutations were tried and the right one came up and was therefore used; that's the way evolution works.
Am I totally misunderstanding what my opponent is saying here? Because it seems blatantly and demonstrably wrong to me.
We don't even have to talk specifically about the nylonase case in order to to see a similar process at work. Here is a link to an article about The E. coli long-term evolution experiment done by Richard Lenski: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._coli_long-term_evolution_experiment
During this experiment, certain groups of the bacteria he was using developed an ability to eat citrate. This took place after thousands of generations, and actually required two separate mutations which (apparently) were not beneficial without the other. And yet there it is, it happened.
Clearly over thousands of generations and millions of mutations, natural selection searched through many alternatives and chose those that just happened to be beneficial. there was no particular goal involved, the point of the experiment was not even to get them to eat the citrate. But mutation and natural selection don't operate with goals in mind. What happens to work simply gets passed on, and what doesn't doesn't. How can Livingstone say what he said above in light of this?
Let's look at this a little more abstractly: Let's say we have a sequence of numbers, like 0305821875. Now what Livingstone seems to be saying is that given the rules that we can change at random any number in the sequence, add or subtract numbers, or copy sections of numbers and repeat them (these being analogous to mutation), we somehow cannot start with the sequence given and end with something like 345677243457. Really?
The fact that some sequences of numbers (analogous to genes and the proteins they make) may not "work" when combined with their environments (including other numbers they reside with) may make the journey from one to the other more difficult and indirect, but you've got to have a lot more evidence that you absolutely can't get there than what my opponent has presented, or indeed, opponents of evolution have been presenting for the last 150 years.
Yes, the Grand Old Designer may have simply wrote 345677243457 with some intent and purpose in mind I'm not saying that isn't a possibility, but when you have no evidence of said designer, and when the known rules allow such changes to be possible, is it really the 'better' explanation? Not at all, and yet this is what my opponent wants us to accept.
Also in his last post, my opponent concedes to me a second time (apparently), but curiously says it this way:
I think he meant that he is conceding the point that just by following the Zipf relationship it doesn't make DNA a language, but he is, after all, only human and prone to mistakes. I hope all of our readers picked up on that and weren't too confused.
Regarding why the hypothetical alien designers used a genetic code for life (which my opponent claimed is sure evidence of intelligent design) while they themselves wouldn't have had one (since they wouldn't have been intelligently designed), he mentions a possible example in how prions transmit their heritable traits.
This is a perfectly fine speculation and I don't doubt that on some level it may be possible, but it still fails to account for why the designers would have chosen to make the life that they created and designed so different from the way they themselves work chemically.
Clearly whatever system they used was good enough to achieve sentience and technological sophistication, and have come about billions of years earlier in the lifetime of the universe, but then they for some reason decided to say: "...and now for something completely different". This is just the sort of additional information which I would think that a truly good explanation of life would provide; again, why is it this way instead of that way, which once again Livingstone's postulate fails to provide. How is it a better explanation again?
Finally, my opponent answered why he felt that the designer took his seventh-day rest about 200,000 years ago with the advent of Homo sapiens. We went over this a bit in private messages before his debate post appeared, and I told him how I felt that this seemed like simple anthropocentrism which he assured me it wasn't.
Well, looking at what he wrote about it again in his last debate post, I cannot help but again think that it is just a biased and anthropocentric view that intelligent design ended with mankind. In our private exchange, he assured me that there were good and valid scientific reasons for believing that intelligent design ended with humans, but he didn't provide any specifics there, nor (to my extreme disappointment) did he provide them here.
What I was looking for would have been something along the line of some specific biochemical structures humans have which would require (and thus be evidence of) intelligent design, which haven't been found in any other living thing since the time that H. sapiens appeared. In our private messages, he assured me there were some, but this would have been the time and place to present them and yet they just aren't here.
Given this, I not only don't see the compelling evidence that intelligent design exists at all in living systems, but I certainly don't see compelling evidence which says when it started or stopped occurring at any particular point in time or with the appearance of humans.
Lack of evidence seems to be a recurring theme here, and I wonder if we will continue to see more of it in posts to come...
Daniel "Theophage" Clark
Several times through this debate, my opponent has assured us that intelligent design is a better explanation for life and the universe. From his most recent post:
the theory of intelligent design holds that certain features of the universe and biosphere are better explained by the actions of a rational agent than purely undirected processes.
The first thing I notice about this statement is that it is actually irrelevant to the debate at hand. FirstFreedomFighter and I tossed around several vague debate proposals before settling on the exact proposal which is posted on the right side of this blog for all to see: "Intelligent Design is necessary to account for the existence of life on Earth."
The problem here is that regardless of whether intelligent design is true or not, or whether it is a better explanation or not, the role FFF accepted in this debate was to affirm that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on Earth. I mentioned this important detail several times so far including in my last post, but he hasn't seemed to address this most glaring incongruity at all. These things are most certainly not the same.
My opponent wrote specifically:
Throughout this debate, my central argument is not merely ‘mainstream science has not explanation for X, therefore goddunnit.’ My argument is based upon a clear and conscience acknowledgement of the fact that the intelligent design postulate does not hold that intelligent design is absolutely necessary for the origin of life or its ultimate diversification, but rather that certain features of the biosphere are more adequately explained by the intelligent design proposition.
And yet that is absolutely not the debate proposal we agreed upon.
So I ask you, Livingstone, are you going to somehow move logically from "best explanation" to "necessary to account for" or do you want to concede the current debate proposal and try again with the new proposal: "Intelligent design is the best explanation for life on Earth"? I assure you that I will be a most gracious victor if you wish to concede. You do see the difference between the two proposals, right?
A Better Explanation?
The second thing I notice in the passage quoted above is, of course, the claim that intelligent design actually is a better explanation. This is an area where Livingstone and I clearly disagree, but I think we need to come to some kind of agreement about what constitutes a 'better' or even a 'good' explanation before we can determine which of us is correct. There is not much point in trying to compare apples to oranges, right?
In my last post, I tried to outline some differences between a good explanation and a poor explanation. Things like how a good explanation increases our knowledge about things, how it links to other known things, etc. I trust my opponent will let us know if he finds any of these criteria objectionable, or if he has any to add that I haven't covered.
Once we have established a common set of criteria for what makes a good explanation, then it is a simple matter to determine which explanation is better than another just by adding up all the 'pros' and subtracting the 'cons'.
As I'd granted earlier, of course, there are many things about how life arose and changed over the eons that the biological sciences simply cannot explain at the present time (using known unintelligent natural processes). That means that for mainstream science's case, what we have in some instances is a known agent (Nature) and some known and unknown processes involved.
For intelligent design's case, we have essentially the reverse: an unknown agent and (as Livingstone's examples indicate) some possible known processes. I say 'possible' because we simply don't know if these processes were used or not. Only additional evidence of these processes (like the ruins of some billion year old biology labs at the bottom of the sea, for example) could let us know if these processes were indeed used.
Notice that in both cases we have a huge, glaring unknown. How does simply trading one unknown for another make for a better explanation? To my way of thinking, it doesn't and it can't.
"Nature did it" is no more of a good explanation than "the Grand Old Designer did it"; both are far too lacking in informative value to be useful as explanations let alone is there enough there to say that one is somehow better than the other. So I guess I'd like to hear my opponent explain why he thinks one truly is better than the other. Specifically, Livingstone, how does trading one unknown for another make for a better explanation?
For illustrative purposes, let me put both of these together:
1) Mainstream science has no explanation for X,
2) Intelligent design does offer a mechanism for X,
3) Therefore the intelligent design postulate is a more adequate explanation for X.
but:
1) Intelligent design has no known agent to implement the process involved in X,
2) Mainstream science does offer a known agent to implement the process involved in X,
3) Therefore mainstream science's postulate (unintelligent nature is responsible) is a more adequate explanation for X.
I also "fail to see any flaw in my logic and rational[e]". That's why we're doing this, to point out our flaws.
Mainstream Science
The more astute of our readers (all five of you) may have noticed in the first syllogism above that I replaced my opponent's wording with "Mainstream science". Why did I do that?
The point is one I would like to make perfectly clear: Intelligent Design is not mainstream science; it is not part of the current fields of biology, chemistry, or physics. This is an important fact that we must seek to explain somehow.
Those less stable and more prone to tinfoil sombreros among us, assure us that it is because of a great conspiracy among scientists and science in general; "The Man" is keeping down the truth for nefarious reasons and simply won't allow dissent. To someone who believes this way...well...I really don't know what I or anyone else could possibly say that would convince you otherwise. In fact, I think we have one of our agents heading to your location right now to straighten it all out for you...
In reality, the reason is because at the current time there simply isn't sufficient evidence to conclude intelligent design in life. Period.
But this is completely at odds with what my opponent is trying to convince us of. To hear him tell it, the evidence is both blatant and plentiful. So we are left with a choice of what seems to be more probable: either virtually every expert in the appropriate fields of science are somehow blissfully ignorant of this overwhelming evidence of design, or the case for intelligent design is simply not as obvious or as well evidenced as Livingstone thinks it is and is arguing here that it is. I'm pretty sure that the former is much more likely than the latter.
My List of Questions
In support of my argument that intelligent design isn't a better explanation at all, I gave several example questions and applied Livingstone's reasoning (or a close facsimile thereof) to them to show that they didn't offer anything better than a designer-of-the-gaps argument that he swears he isn't using. He gave some answers to these which I think are worth examining to again try to understand how (if at all) the intelligent design proposal gives us any more insight or actually is a better explanation. Again, I think his reasoning fails, and I would like to show why point by point:
* What is the origin of the genetic code? Ribosomal engineering techniques explain the origin of the genetic code better than undirected processes.
Well, that is certainly a possible explanation, but again you have no evidence of an intelligent being utilizing those processes, nor any evidence that those processes in particular were used other than to say that it simply could have been that way. How are those unknowns any more advantageous than talking about an unknown natural process that didn't require an additional intelligent agent to work them?
* What is the origin of the homochirality of amino acids used by life? What’s the problem with a designer using chiral synthesis pools and chemical bonding breakage technology?
Again, we have possible processes, but what is the evidence that these processes were used? Where is the archaeological remains of the facilities in which these were done, or of the intelligent beings which did them? None? What about molecular evidence? Is there a particular molecular signature left when these processes are used as opposed to any other which may accomplish the same job? (Like how in my example of the crystal skulls, the trace physical remains of the process helped determine what processes were used to create them.)
Again, how is an explanation with a huge unknown like this better than an explanation with a known agent (nature) and a different but unknown process?
Oh, and you asked earlier if there were any other known processes which would either produce only a single enantiomer instead of both or be able to sort only one type from a mixture. Now this may be me being naive again, but doesn't the chemical processes of life itself do that now? So certainly, processes are known which do this which don't require an immediate intelligent agent to do them, right? Like in plants, bacteria, etc? So to say that no such processes exist is patently false.
* How could "longer and more complex proteins (for example, those belonging to the alpha/beta classes)" arise? Directed enzyme evolution coupled with recombinant DNA techniques.
Again, it is absolutely possible that an intelligent being or beings put them this way using these techniques, but possibility does not make either probability, likelihood, or necessity. That is where your reasoning falls apart.
As I'd said in my last post, the fact that it is possible that the rain falling on my roof was not coming from a natural process, but by an intelligent agent actually dribbling water on my house does not somehow make it more probable, likely, or necessarily true, even if we didn't know the natural process of how it does rain. Yet this is exactly what you seem to be claiming about these other phenomena. What is the difference and how can we tell?
* Why do some viruses use RNA, some use single strand DNA, and some use double strand DNA for their heritable material? Degenerative processes dunnit.
+5 points for style, but -100 for substance. The point I was making here is like the rest hereafter, so I'll re-explain in the next one:
* Why is this protein or this system or this anatomical part used instead of this other one? I don’t get the point of this argument or any of the arguments entailed below this one.
I try to make my points as clear as possible, but I am only human. As I'd said in my last post, part of what makes a good explanation 'good' is the additional information it gives us about the phenomena. A good explanation doesn't just tell us what happens, it tells us why it happens this way and not a different way.
Why doesn't it rain gumdrops? Because huge gumdrop seas don't evaporate and collect into gumdrop clouds suspending little gumdroplets in the air which combine together at nucleation sites and fall to the ground as fat gumdrops once they get too heavy. But all of this does indeed happen to water, which is why it rains water.
If we explained rainfall as simply the Grand Old Designer dropping stuff on us from above, then there is absolutely no reason why it couldn't be gumdrops other than "because that's just not what the Grand Old Designer chose". A good explanation tells us why this and not that.
If intelligent design really is a better explanation for these processes as you say it is, then it should give us some insight into all of the above questions: why this instead of that, why is this virus using RNA and this one using DNA, etc. I certainly expect the naturalistic, unintelligent explanations to give us this kind of detail once they are found as well.
But what we see is that adding an intelligent designer to the mix does not give us any of this additional information at all. That is my point. Your explanation gives us no more information than we could get from simply saying "The Grand Old Designer dunnit".
And because of this, you have absolutely no grounds to claim that it is a better explanation than a standard Grand-Old-Designer-of-the-gaps argument. Are we clear on this point now?
Bad Probability Arguments Are Still Bad
I want to thank my opponent for the concession on the particular bad example that he used, but it wasn't just the example I had issue with, it was his entire mode of reasoning which he still seems to be using. He says that you can still use a probability argument if we're talking about matching a goal, and that the goal of life is functionality. But does that really work?
First, simply declaring that a goal exists does not actually make it a goal. It is a goal only in a metaphoric sense; neither the universe, nor the planet, nor the molecules themselves care if they are functional or not. The simple fact is that functioning life reproduces and makes more functioning life, and non-functioning life (if it can be non-functioning and still live) does not. That is simply an observation about what obtains, not any kind of evidence of a goal.
But even if I grant that it is the goal of life and the processes of life, how then does one calculate the probability (or improbability) of reaching this goal? It is Livingstone's contention that the improbability of this is a de facto impossibility, yet he has to show this to be true. One doesn't just get to assert it and leave it at that.
Livingstone, please show us how you calculate the probability of life functioning that isn't just a re-hash of the bad probability argument that you gave at the beginning.
And not only am I not going to let my opponent simply assert its improbability, I'm doubly not going to let him totally beg the question as he does here:
To put this in the form of card-playing:
Let the royal flush be functionality, and all other card sequences redundant, non-coding regions of DNA. What is the probability of the royal flush being obtained? Next to nil, and this is analogous to my argument on protein formation.
So if we assume that the probability of functionality is a rare thing, like being dealt a royal flush, then naturally we must conclude that functionality is a rare thing like being dealt a royal flush, right? Am I really the only one seeing this here? Bad probability analogies are also bad.
Please show us how you figure that functionality is rare. Then we can see whether or not your reasoning is good and your conclusion is correct. Remember, functionality is not just a matter of the individual protein or other molecule itself, but the system the protein finds itself in: Protein A may be perfectly functional in environment X, but fail to do anything in environment Y. How you're going to work that into your calculations should be interesting.
Protein Primary Structures Again
"You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means." - Inigo Montoya
You keep using the term "protein primary structures". Not being as familiar with biochemistry lingo as you are, I didn't quite catch on in the beginning, but now that I have done more reading (and believe me, I have learned a lot since I began this debate with you, that alone makes everything worth it!) I find it more and more curious why you use this term the way you do. For example from your last post:
I believe I can demonstrate that my argument on protein evolution and probability does indeed indicate that there is indeed virtually no chance of protein primary structures evolving through Darwinian mechanisms.
and this:
I know of no undirected evolutionary mechanism (like Lamarckism or saltationism) which can offer a feasible model that would demonstrate how these protein primary structures arose.
For those of you who don't know, a protein's primary structure is the sequence of amino acids which make it up. This comes directly from the DNA sequence in the gene that codes for the protein. So when you are asking about how a particular protein primary structure evolved, what you are really asking is how the gene evolved. Why not just say that? Is there some difference here that I'm missing?
Yet "Darwinian mechanisms" are all about how genes evolve, or rather how traits evolve, and the neo-Darwinian synthesis in biology takes that to the genetic level including non-expressed regions of DNA. How can you possibly claim that there are no such mechanisms or that such mechanisms cannot account for what we find?
Granted, we may not know the evolutionary history of a particular gene, or of the particular process which makes use of the protein encoded by it, but that is a very far cry from 'no known mechanisms' which is what you claim and especially from 'no possible mechanisms' which is what you would have to show in order to support our agreed upon debate proposal.
There is a lot that we do know, and it is my understanding that it is because of that knowledge that makes it more likely that these same processes account for all genes and all proteins used by living things.
Nylonase ad Nauseam
Livingstone postulates that there is probably a barrier of non-functional structures in the case of the EPSP synthase which accounts for why it could not have evolved, whereas there must not have been any such barriers in the case of the nylonase which was produced by unguided evolution in the case of the various nylon-eating bacteria. This may, or may not be true.
He referenced a paper which seemed to indicate this, but I'm not totally sure given that I didn't make my way completely through the paper. (And by not "completely through" I mean I skimmed it quickly, ran into a bunch of stuff that made little sense to me, and then quit...) Clearly mainstream biology doesn't know how this particular protein, its associated gene, or the system that uses it evolved. But I'm fairly certain that the point of the paper wasn't that it couldn't have evolved, so for my opponent to use it this way is misleading at best.
I'm going to try to plow through that paper again, and I encourage you the readers as well as Livingstone himself to go through it and see if it really supports the case that he postulates that it does.
I explained why I thought the case of the nylonase is significant, but still my opponent says: "Again, I fail to realize how this applies directly to this conversation on protein evolution." Let me run though this one more time:
It is one thing to see obvious evidence of simple evolutionary change in a gene. If we look at the difference in the sequences for cytochrome C across species, we can see that while evolution has made a few changes here and there over the eons, the protein itself is fairly highly conserved (meaning it's overall structure and function doesn't change much). The exact mutations between species and other groups are fairly easy to place both in type (what changed) and in time (when in evolutionary history it happened). But like most things, not all cases are that simple.
It is possible for an entirely new protein to essentially "come out of nowhere" and not be similar at all to its predecessor. This is much more likely in the case of a duplicated gene, where an unchanged copy still remains to do the job, but the new copy is free to provide new function. The mechanism for this is not some wild imagining of my particular biochemical ignorance and naivete, but an actual known and studied mechanism, that of a frameshift type mutation.
While the gene having undergone the frameshift is fairly similar to the original, the protein that it codes for is most certainly not. Some relevant links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frameshift_mutation
http://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/handbook/illustrations/frameshift
My point being that if this happens somewhere in the evolutionary history of life, then tracing back the original protein this new protein came from becomes exceedingly more complex, since now we're looking for something totally dissimilar. It could very well be that the resulting protein, if it has or finds a new function, has no similar functionality in any further slightly mutated form; Livingstone's barrier in effect. And yet it wouldn't need functionality in a close but different form in order to have evolved in this way.
Is this the case with EPSP synthase specifically? I really have no idea. But my point is that it is possible, and if there is a possibility, then the opposite claim (that there is no possibility) cannot be true. Livingstone cannot claim that there is no possible way for it to evolve when there is, and that is exactly what he needs to claim in order to show that the intelligent design of this protein is necessary as per our agreed upon debate topic. That is my point.
Do you see how this is relevant now? I'll explain again if you'd like, but I don't think it will look any different next time. I can only do my best.
Miscellaneous Critiques
Related to the above, Livingstone clarified his comment regarding the precursor gene to the evolved nylonase gene:
The potential to evolve the functionality of synthesizing nylon was already present, as it did not require natural selection to ‘browse’ through an endless array of non-beneficial protein primary structures.
But what does that mean that the 'potential' was present? What it means is simply that it is possible to arrive at the derived gene from the original gene by way of normal unguided evolutionary mechanisms. Okay, I'll accept that.
But that last part is rather curious (and probably false). Where in any paper does it say that the mutated gene was arrived at in a single step? That would be the implication if there was no browsing alternatives involved. How do we know that that other, non-functional mutations of this gene weren't tried first? Is my opponent just assuming this?
Did the bacteria somehow "know" that they had to make this particular mutation at this particular place in order to capitalize on a new food source? Absolutely not. It is almost assured that many mutations were tried and the right one came up and was therefore used; that's the way evolution works.
Am I totally misunderstanding what my opponent is saying here? Because it seems blatantly and demonstrably wrong to me.
We don't even have to talk specifically about the nylonase case in order to to see a similar process at work. Here is a link to an article about The E. coli long-term evolution experiment done by Richard Lenski: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._coli_long-term_evolution_experiment
During this experiment, certain groups of the bacteria he was using developed an ability to eat citrate. This took place after thousands of generations, and actually required two separate mutations which (apparently) were not beneficial without the other. And yet there it is, it happened.
Clearly over thousands of generations and millions of mutations, natural selection searched through many alternatives and chose those that just happened to be beneficial. there was no particular goal involved, the point of the experiment was not even to get them to eat the citrate. But mutation and natural selection don't operate with goals in mind. What happens to work simply gets passed on, and what doesn't doesn't. How can Livingstone say what he said above in light of this?
Let's look at this a little more abstractly: Let's say we have a sequence of numbers, like 0305821875. Now what Livingstone seems to be saying is that given the rules that we can change at random any number in the sequence, add or subtract numbers, or copy sections of numbers and repeat them (these being analogous to mutation), we somehow cannot start with the sequence given and end with something like 345677243457. Really?
The fact that some sequences of numbers (analogous to genes and the proteins they make) may not "work" when combined with their environments (including other numbers they reside with) may make the journey from one to the other more difficult and indirect, but you've got to have a lot more evidence that you absolutely can't get there than what my opponent has presented, or indeed, opponents of evolution have been presenting for the last 150 years.
Yes, the Grand Old Designer may have simply wrote 345677243457 with some intent and purpose in mind I'm not saying that isn't a possibility, but when you have no evidence of said designer, and when the known rules allow such changes to be possible, is it really the 'better' explanation? Not at all, and yet this is what my opponent wants us to accept.
Also in his last post, my opponent concedes to me a second time (apparently), but curiously says it this way:
I concede the point, that, using Zipf’s laws, DNA is a language.
I think he meant that he is conceding the point that just by following the Zipf relationship it doesn't make DNA a language, but he is, after all, only human and prone to mistakes. I hope all of our readers picked up on that and weren't too confused.
Regarding why the hypothetical alien designers used a genetic code for life (which my opponent claimed is sure evidence of intelligent design) while they themselves wouldn't have had one (since they wouldn't have been intelligently designed), he mentions a possible example in how prions transmit their heritable traits.
This is a perfectly fine speculation and I don't doubt that on some level it may be possible, but it still fails to account for why the designers would have chosen to make the life that they created and designed so different from the way they themselves work chemically.
Clearly whatever system they used was good enough to achieve sentience and technological sophistication, and have come about billions of years earlier in the lifetime of the universe, but then they for some reason decided to say: "...and now for something completely different". This is just the sort of additional information which I would think that a truly good explanation of life would provide; again, why is it this way instead of that way, which once again Livingstone's postulate fails to provide. How is it a better explanation again?
Finally, my opponent answered why he felt that the designer took his seventh-day rest about 200,000 years ago with the advent of Homo sapiens. We went over this a bit in private messages before his debate post appeared, and I told him how I felt that this seemed like simple anthropocentrism which he assured me it wasn't.
Well, looking at what he wrote about it again in his last debate post, I cannot help but again think that it is just a biased and anthropocentric view that intelligent design ended with mankind. In our private exchange, he assured me that there were good and valid scientific reasons for believing that intelligent design ended with humans, but he didn't provide any specifics there, nor (to my extreme disappointment) did he provide them here.
What I was looking for would have been something along the line of some specific biochemical structures humans have which would require (and thus be evidence of) intelligent design, which haven't been found in any other living thing since the time that H. sapiens appeared. In our private messages, he assured me there were some, but this would have been the time and place to present them and yet they just aren't here.
Given this, I not only don't see the compelling evidence that intelligent design exists at all in living systems, but I certainly don't see compelling evidence which says when it started or stopped occurring at any particular point in time or with the appearance of humans.
Lack of evidence seems to be a recurring theme here, and I wonder if we will continue to see more of it in posts to come...
Daniel "Theophage" Clark
Thursday, April 22, 2010
I found Daniel’s rebuttal to my endogenous retrovirus argument quite thorough, as was the rest of his post. Entailed here is my response to his latest exposition.
The ET Hypothesis
It is entirely irrelevant whether or not particular proponents of intelligent design have religious motivations behind them; the theory of intelligent design merely holds that certain biological features on earth are better explained by rational action that purely undirected processes.
To argue that the proponents of intelligent design are religiously motivated, and that, therefore, intelligent design holds that God is the designer, is as fallacious as me arguing that social Darwinism is the very epitome of the Neo-Darwinian narrative.
The reason why I so passionately argue against the notion that the intelligent design proposition holds that the designer is God is because this is simply untrue.
Design As An Explanation
Perhaps I was not entirely clear in my exposition on how the theory of intelligent design works.
As I stated earlier in one of my posts, the theory of intelligent design holds that certain features of the universe and biosphere are better explained by the actions of a rational agent than purely undirected processes.
Now, I have this proposition; and that is that it is implausible that certain protein primary structures can arise through Darwinian mechanisms of natural selection and random mutations in the gene pool. I know of no undirected evolutionary mechanism (like Lamarckism or saltationism) which can offer a feasible model that would demonstrate how these protein primary structures arose.
However, directed enzyme evolution techniques, i.e. intelligent design, can engineer these proteins; I therefore conclude that intelligent design through directed enzyme evolution is a far more rational explanation for certain protein primary structures than the Darwinian synthesis.
In short,
1) Darwinism has no explanation for X,
2) Intelligent design does offer a mechanism for X,
3) Therefore the intelligent design postulate is a more adequate explanation for X.
I fail to see any flaw in my logic and rational.
To summarize,
· What is the origin of the genetic code? Ribosomal engineering techniques explain the origin of the genetic code better than undirected processes.
· What is the origin of the homochirality of amino acids used by life? What’s the problem with a designer using chiral synthesis pools and chemical bonding breakage technology?
· How could "longer and more complex proteins (for example, those belonging to the alpha/beta classes)" arise? Directed enzyme evolution coupled with recombinant DNA techniques.
· What is the origin of the complex metabolic pathways involving glycolysis? Metabolic engineering dunnit.
· Why do some viruses use RNA, some use single strand DNA, and some use double strand DNA for their heritable material? Degenerative processes dunnit.
· Why is this protein or this system or this anatomical part used instead of this other one? I don’t get the point of this argument or any of the arguments entailed below this one.
A Case Of Bad Probabilities?
I concede the point that my argument on enodenous retroviruses and probability has been successfully refuted; nevertheless, I believe I can demonstrate that my argument on protein evolution and probability does indeed indicate that there is indeed virtually no chance of protein primary structures evolving through Darwinian mechanisms.
The fact here is this:
That there is, au grand sérieux, an ultimate goal in protein evolution – and indeed in all evolution. And that goal is (beneficial) functionality. Thus, in protein evolution and in morphological evolution, and all organic change, there is a goal. Since there is a goal, it is extremely improbable for certain protein primary structures to evolve through Darwinian mechanisms.
To put this in the form of card-playing:
Let the royal flush be functionality, and all other card sequences redundant, non-coding regions of DNA. What is the probability of the royal flush being obtained? Next to nil, and this is analogous to my argument on protein formation.
Amino Acids And The Genetic Code
Throughout this debate, my central argument is not merely ‘mainstream science has not explanation for X, therefore goddunnit.’ My argument is based upon a clear and conscience acknowledgement of the fact that the intelligent design postulate does not hold that intelligent design is absolutely necessary for the origin of life or its ultimate diversification, but rather that certain features of the biosphere are more adequately explained by the intelligent design proposition.
I believe this is precisely the case regarding amino acids and the genetic code.
In the case of homochirality, the Darwinian synthesis offers no explanation for the origin of this peculiar feature of the biological world, whilst intelligent design does offer a plausible hypothesis for the origin of homochirality. That hypothesis is not and never has been ‘intelligent designer dunnit, next problem’. The plausible mechanism for the origin of homochirality is that of asymmetric synthesis and chiral synthesis pools. In short, a chiral substance would be manipulated through a series of biochemical reactions employing achiral chemicals to eventually obtain the wanted chiral molecule, i.e. the chiral molecule desired would be ‘purified’ from a pool of molecules consisting of both enantiomers.
This would offer a brilliant and plausible explanation for the origin of homochirality using an intelligent agent. This would effortlessly explain such an origin, while the Darwinian synthesis offers no possible mechanisms.
The Case Of Nylonase
I do not believe that the evolution of nylonase is a case against my argument on protein evolution.
While I do not know the exact mechanism (Daniel said it wasn’t a frameshift mutation or gene duplication actually), I can postulate this: that in the case of EPSP synthase, there is a ‘barrier’ as it were of non-coding nucleotide primary structures; however, I hypothesize that in the case of nylonase, there is no such barrier, and any mutation occuring at that particular chromosomal loci will result in beneficial functionality. Again, I fail to realize how this applies directly to this conversation on protein evolution.
Answering Critiques Of My Previous Post
On the nylon bug and my statement that ‘the ability was already present,’ I regret I did not clarify that statement; in detail, I mean this: the ability to synthesize nylon, i.e. the potential to do so, was present. The potential to evolve the functionality of synthesizing nylon was already present, as it did not require natural selection to ‘browse’ through an endless array of non-beneficial protein primary structures.
As to intelligent design being over at roughly 200,000 years ago:
200,000 years ago homo sapiens appeared on earth. I hold that homo sapiens was the last act of design the intelligent designer did. Why do I hold to such a proposition?
There is a linear curve imposed upon phylogeny; that curve, seldom negated in any way shows a definite progression of more unintelligent animals to a more intelligent class of animal. Humans are the most intelligent; the first products that evolution is supposed to have produced are the least intelligent. It seems natural to me to presuppose that the ‘wonder and glory of the universe’ (Darwin, “The Descent of Man,”), and the most intelligent of all organisms, mankind, would be the last species engineered by the intelligent designer.
As to whether the intelligent designer is at work today: I suppose it’s possible the intelligent designer is still designing things on earth, however we lack substantial evidence to support that view. If one were to find plasmids containing insert DNA of zebras for example in the genome of wasps it would be logical to assume an intelligent designer is at work here.
Now on to these hypothetical alien engineers:
As to a heritable system and a system to construct proteins, there are means and ways to get around such obstacles, albeit hypothetically. Prions for example, are suspected to not need a way to store heritable traits. This would immediately bypass the problem of these aliens needing a genetic code of sorts.
I concede the point, that, using Zipf’s laws, DNA is a language.
In Brief
In brief, I believe that intelligent design still explains the origin of homochirality and protein primary structures better than any other known synthesis which does not have intelligence.
-Livingstone M.
The ET Hypothesis
It is entirely irrelevant whether or not particular proponents of intelligent design have religious motivations behind them; the theory of intelligent design merely holds that certain biological features on earth are better explained by rational action that purely undirected processes.
To argue that the proponents of intelligent design are religiously motivated, and that, therefore, intelligent design holds that God is the designer, is as fallacious as me arguing that social Darwinism is the very epitome of the Neo-Darwinian narrative.
The reason why I so passionately argue against the notion that the intelligent design proposition holds that the designer is God is because this is simply untrue.
Design As An Explanation
Perhaps I was not entirely clear in my exposition on how the theory of intelligent design works.
As I stated earlier in one of my posts, the theory of intelligent design holds that certain features of the universe and biosphere are better explained by the actions of a rational agent than purely undirected processes.
Now, I have this proposition; and that is that it is implausible that certain protein primary structures can arise through Darwinian mechanisms of natural selection and random mutations in the gene pool. I know of no undirected evolutionary mechanism (like Lamarckism or saltationism) which can offer a feasible model that would demonstrate how these protein primary structures arose.
However, directed enzyme evolution techniques, i.e. intelligent design, can engineer these proteins; I therefore conclude that intelligent design through directed enzyme evolution is a far more rational explanation for certain protein primary structures than the Darwinian synthesis.
In short,
1) Darwinism has no explanation for X,
2) Intelligent design does offer a mechanism for X,
3) Therefore the intelligent design postulate is a more adequate explanation for X.
I fail to see any flaw in my logic and rational.
To summarize,
· What is the origin of the genetic code? Ribosomal engineering techniques explain the origin of the genetic code better than undirected processes.
· What is the origin of the homochirality of amino acids used by life? What’s the problem with a designer using chiral synthesis pools and chemical bonding breakage technology?
· How could "longer and more complex proteins (for example, those belonging to the alpha/beta classes)" arise? Directed enzyme evolution coupled with recombinant DNA techniques.
· What is the origin of the complex metabolic pathways involving glycolysis? Metabolic engineering dunnit.
· Why do some viruses use RNA, some use single strand DNA, and some use double strand DNA for their heritable material? Degenerative processes dunnit.
· Why is this protein or this system or this anatomical part used instead of this other one? I don’t get the point of this argument or any of the arguments entailed below this one.
A Case Of Bad Probabilities?
I concede the point that my argument on enodenous retroviruses and probability has been successfully refuted; nevertheless, I believe I can demonstrate that my argument on protein evolution and probability does indeed indicate that there is indeed virtually no chance of protein primary structures evolving through Darwinian mechanisms.
The fact here is this:
That there is, au grand sérieux, an ultimate goal in protein evolution – and indeed in all evolution. And that goal is (beneficial) functionality. Thus, in protein evolution and in morphological evolution, and all organic change, there is a goal. Since there is a goal, it is extremely improbable for certain protein primary structures to evolve through Darwinian mechanisms.
To put this in the form of card-playing:
Let the royal flush be functionality, and all other card sequences redundant, non-coding regions of DNA. What is the probability of the royal flush being obtained? Next to nil, and this is analogous to my argument on protein formation.
Amino Acids And The Genetic Code
Throughout this debate, my central argument is not merely ‘mainstream science has not explanation for X, therefore goddunnit.’ My argument is based upon a clear and conscience acknowledgement of the fact that the intelligent design postulate does not hold that intelligent design is absolutely necessary for the origin of life or its ultimate diversification, but rather that certain features of the biosphere are more adequately explained by the intelligent design proposition.
I believe this is precisely the case regarding amino acids and the genetic code.
In the case of homochirality, the Darwinian synthesis offers no explanation for the origin of this peculiar feature of the biological world, whilst intelligent design does offer a plausible hypothesis for the origin of homochirality. That hypothesis is not and never has been ‘intelligent designer dunnit, next problem’. The plausible mechanism for the origin of homochirality is that of asymmetric synthesis and chiral synthesis pools. In short, a chiral substance would be manipulated through a series of biochemical reactions employing achiral chemicals to eventually obtain the wanted chiral molecule, i.e. the chiral molecule desired would be ‘purified’ from a pool of molecules consisting of both enantiomers.
This would offer a brilliant and plausible explanation for the origin of homochirality using an intelligent agent. This would effortlessly explain such an origin, while the Darwinian synthesis offers no possible mechanisms.
The Case Of Nylonase
I do not believe that the evolution of nylonase is a case against my argument on protein evolution.
While I do not know the exact mechanism (Daniel said it wasn’t a frameshift mutation or gene duplication actually), I can postulate this: that in the case of EPSP synthase, there is a ‘barrier’ as it were of non-coding nucleotide primary structures; however, I hypothesize that in the case of nylonase, there is no such barrier, and any mutation occuring at that particular chromosomal loci will result in beneficial functionality. Again, I fail to realize how this applies directly to this conversation on protein evolution.
Answering Critiques Of My Previous Post
On the nylon bug and my statement that ‘the ability was already present,’ I regret I did not clarify that statement; in detail, I mean this: the ability to synthesize nylon, i.e. the potential to do so, was present. The potential to evolve the functionality of synthesizing nylon was already present, as it did not require natural selection to ‘browse’ through an endless array of non-beneficial protein primary structures.
As to intelligent design being over at roughly 200,000 years ago:
200,000 years ago homo sapiens appeared on earth. I hold that homo sapiens was the last act of design the intelligent designer did. Why do I hold to such a proposition?
There is a linear curve imposed upon phylogeny; that curve, seldom negated in any way shows a definite progression of more unintelligent animals to a more intelligent class of animal. Humans are the most intelligent; the first products that evolution is supposed to have produced are the least intelligent. It seems natural to me to presuppose that the ‘wonder and glory of the universe’ (Darwin, “The Descent of Man,”), and the most intelligent of all organisms, mankind, would be the last species engineered by the intelligent designer.
As to whether the intelligent designer is at work today: I suppose it’s possible the intelligent designer is still designing things on earth, however we lack substantial evidence to support that view. If one were to find plasmids containing insert DNA of zebras for example in the genome of wasps it would be logical to assume an intelligent designer is at work here.
Now on to these hypothetical alien engineers:
As to a heritable system and a system to construct proteins, there are means and ways to get around such obstacles, albeit hypothetically. Prions for example, are suspected to not need a way to store heritable traits. This would immediately bypass the problem of these aliens needing a genetic code of sorts.
I concede the point, that, using Zipf’s laws, DNA is a language.
In Brief
In brief, I believe that intelligent design still explains the origin of homochirality and protein primary structures better than any other known synthesis which does not have intelligence.
-Livingstone M.
Friday, March 26, 2010
Theophage's Third Post
For those of you following along, I hope this exchange has managed to keep your interest so far. I think my opponent's last post was very good, and I think we are beginning to get down to the nitty-gritty of the disagreement over intelligent vs. unintelligent design. I see only better and better things ahead for this debate, so please spread the word to your friends and enemies alike and leave us some comments as to how we're doing.
Ideally I'd like to get some sense of just how many people are reading this and following along. (If we wanted no one else to see it, we could have done this all by email.) So even if you have no comment other than "I'm obviously cool and hip because I'm reading along," we'd love to see that.
The ET Hypothesis
If we examine the history of the intelligent design movement, it is clear that there is almost exclusively religious motivation behind it. Proof of God is sought in His creation, and intelligent design fills that need nicely. I daresay that (nearly) all of the prominent names in the intelligent design movement come straight out of earlier creationist movements. I hope my opponent is not trying to deny this easily demonstrated fact.
It is also easily demonstrable that there was and is a definite push to disguise intelligent design as non-religious for the purposes of including it in public school curricula. These intentions were made clear by the Discovery Institute's leaked "Wedge Document" and was decided definitively in the Kitzmiller vs Dover trial.
So while it is technically true that intelligent design does not necessarily point to God, to ignore the obvious cultural and historical context would be like someone being accused of using racial stereotypes when talking about fried chicken and watermelon and responding "That isn't a racial thing, lots of people like both watermelon and fried chicken..."
Is it a terrible thing to say "It could be aliens or whomever"? No, it isn't a terrible thing. I even understand it on a certain level: If we can scientifically prove designed features in life, that information may or may not even be able clue us in to the identity of the designer. But given that the obvious motivation behind intelligent design research is to reconcile God and science, it seems odd that one would go to such great lengths to then deny we are talking about God. Terrible? No. Curious? Quite.
Anyway, I think this tangent has run it's course, and this will be the last I have to say about this matter. (Though I reserve the right to still use the term 'Grand Old Designer' because it tickles me.)
Design as Explanation
In response to my assertion that he has been putting forth arguments from ignorance, my opponent wrote that his reasoning is actually:
Now I will grant that this is a valid form of reasoning, and one that is used in science all the time. If theory X explains A and B, but has no explanation for C, while theory Y explains A, B, and C, then of course theory Y is preferred and considered the "correct" view (until possibly replaced by better theories later, of course). But does intelligent design really offer a better explanation? I say no, I don't think it offers any explanation at all.
My opponent outlined the argument from ignorance thusly:
We both agree that this is a poor argument and as an explanation provides us with absolutely nothing. It is simply the 'God of the gaps' argument I brought up earlier with 'God' replaced by 'an intelligent designer' (remember, it could be aliens...)
So his actual argument has to be better than this, right? Intelligent design according to his argument has to explain more than the argument from ignorance, right? Well, let's look at what the intelligent design explanation actually gives us:
I'm sorry Livingstone, perhaps I'm just a moron, but I'm not seeing any explanatory difference between what you are arguing and simply a Grand Old Designer of the gaps type argument from ignorance. Can you please explain better?
It would seem that I could turn around and answer all of those above questions with "Nature dunnit" or "Unintelligent 'Darwinian' processes dunnit" and it would contain exactly the same explanatory value (i.e. none). And yet my opponent assures us that "the intelligent design model best explains X". How can this be?
A real scientific explanation is one that gives us additional information either about a previously unknown fact or process, or links previously known facts or processes together in newly discovered ways. An explanation can hardly be considered good or even adequate unless it increases our knowledge about the explained thing somehow. How does the idea that life is intelligently designed increase our knowledge about life and how it works, even one bit?
Again. I simply don't see it.
What's worse, imagine if other branches of science used this same type of reasoning. Why do atoms of one type combine readily with another type but not with a third type? Should we have not learned about electron shells and orbitals (or even the periodic table itself) and simply stuck with "the designer made them that way"? No, of course not.
The fact is that learning about the physical reasons why some things are the way they are increases our knowledge about the world. Saying that they just are that way or that they were just made that way by an inscrutable being increases nothing and in fact inhibits the gaining of knowledge.
So no, even if intelligent design is true (and my opponent has not yet shown that to be the case), it still is not any kind of a "better explanation".
Bad Probabilities
Earlier in this debate I argued that my opponent is (and generally all other intelligent design proponents are) using a bad argument from probability when talking about the likelihood of a particular protein or whatever forming by chance. To illustrate his bad reasoning, I used the example of dealing out an entire deck of cards (jokers included) and showing that even though the probability of that exact sequence of cards coming up is just this side of impossible, that does not mean a miracle occurs every time we deal out the cards. The difference is in having a goal sequence that you're trying to match with the random process.
Livingstone came up with a fairly clever response to this, and compared my problem of probability with a commonly used argument for common descent, that of shared ERV sequences. Briefly, the inserted DNA sequences from retroviruses in the human genome follow a certain pattern of placement, and a very similar pattern is also found in the chimpanzee genome. These ERV sequences aren't functional, so they aren't subject to selection even though they are still passed down by normal heredity. The probability that the specific pattern and placement of these ERVs in the human and chimpanzee genomes is the same is so terribly, incredibly small that it isn't considered to be possible by chance, and thus common ancestry is the explanation for why they are so similar.
My opponent says that if we use the reasoning of my critique, then the sequences aren't so terribly improbable at all, and thus I am undercutting my own position by using this critique. I can't have it both ways, right? Either it is or it isn't terribly improbable to come up with particular sequences and patterns. Well, as expected, my opponent is mistaken on this issue once again.
Protein formation by chance is analogous to dealing cards out on the table, and it is also analogous to ERV sequences accruing in the genome of a species by chance. As I demonstrated earlier, no miracle occurs in any of these processes, they are fairly straight forward. The only thing that would be terribly improbable is for these processes to end up matching a particular pre-selected goal.
In the case of ERVs being used as evidence of common descent, it isn't the pattern of ERVs in either the human or chimpanzee genome that is terribly improbable, it is the comparison of the two; that's the key.
To give another card example, take one deck of well shuffled cards and deal them out onto the table. Yay! They have some particular arrangement without invoking a miracle, yes? Now, grab another deck of well shuffled cards and deal them out onto the table in a line below (or above, I'm not picky) the first. What are the chances that both are the same arrangement? That's right, it's exactly the number I calculated earlier: about 1 in 2 * 10^70. The sequence of the first deck is the goal that the second deck is trying to match, and the chances of that are indeed effectively impossible without some mechanism to make them that way.
This is what we are talking about when we use the ERV argument. For the human genome to have a pattern of ERVs by chance is not impossible. For chimpanzees to have a pattern of ERVs by chance is not impossible. For both species to have such a similar pattern purely by chance is indeed impossible.
Similarly, for random DNA patterns to code for any particular complicated protein you can think of is next to impossible, but only because you are trying to compare the result of the simple unintelligent evolutionary process with a pre-determined goal. For just any complicated proteins to arise just by simple unintelligent processes, by contrast, is no more improbable than just dealing out a deck of cards. Are we clear on the difference now? Remember: bad probability arguments are bad.
Amino Acids and the Genetic Code
My opponent has been asking me some terribly difficult and specific questions about biochemistry. Even though before the debate began I specifically said that I had no answer to these types of questions, since we agreed that "I don't know" is a boring answer, I tried to oblige and give my best responses to them. As my opponent has shown, they just don't hold up to scrutiny; no big surprise there. We both know that there simply aren't any answers to these questions in current scientific knowledge.
So why was my opponent asking me these questions? Ostensibly, it was to support his argument that while mainstream science had no good explanations for these things, that intelligent design does have explanations, and thus an existent explanation is clearly superior to a non-existent one. But as I'd shown above, his explanation consists of essentially "the Grand Old Designer made them that way".
While I agree that it would be perfectly possible for an intelligent being with the appropriate technology to do so, that again fails as an explanation because it gives us exactly zero additional knowledge about these processes and life itself. Should the fact that it is possible for an intelligent being with the proper resources to cause it to rain over Battle Creek, Michigan mean that we should then accept that as the reason it is raining on my roof right now? Or should there be some criteria other than mere possibility to determine what actually is the cause of something? Possibility is a necessary but not a sufficient criteria for determining cause. This is an important fact.
As I'd written earlier in this debate, in order to support the claim that intelligent design is necessary for the existence of life on Earth, it isn't sufficient to simply show that an intelligent being could have done it, it has to be shown that it couldn't have happened any other way. Surely we all agree that 'possible' does not equal 'necessary'.
Consequently, Livingstone has to do more than simply show that mainstream science doesn't currently have explanations for these things in order to support his case, he has to show that they cannot possibly have them. Only if that is true can we then regard intelligent design as necessary.
And unless I'm totally missing something (which is not an impossibility), he simply has not done this so far. "Don't know how" in no way equals "can't be done".
Bringing up the nylon bug
My opponent said, "I really don’t know what my opponent’s reason was for bringing up the evolution of nylonase." I try to make my points as clear as I can so that everyone can follow along, but perhaps I failed to do so here. I will try to explain again:
The information I had about the nylon-eating bacteria was that it's ability to digest nylon was caused by an earlier gene duplication followed by a particular frame shift mutation in the duplicated gene. Why is this relevant? Because it is an example of an entirely new protein consisting of hundreds of amino acids coded essentially out of nowhere by mutation alone in a single step.
A frame shift mutation is one which changes the genetic reading frame such as a deletion or insertion of one or many nucleotides. The genetic material codes for amino acids in groups of three nucleotides at a time, so that every three 'letters' in the gene spells out one amino acid 'word'. If you delete or add a single nucleotide to the gene, everything after the mutation gets shifted one 'letter' one way or the other. This means that all of the amino acids coded for after the mutation to the end of the gene are completely different; it isn't just a matter of the same protein with a couple of amino acids different, it becomes an entirely new protein.
My point in bringing this up is that this is one naturalistic, unintelligent mechanism for coming up with entirely new proteins all at once instead of in a stepwise fashion, where each step has to provide some sort of selective advantage in order to be carried on to the next step. Can we all see the significance of this? If not, I'll try to explain again next time.
Now I was rather unpleasantly surprised to find that this isn't what happened in this particular case after all when I read the Wikipedia article. The original paper on the nylon bug by S. Ohno in 1984 was incorrect. But as disappointed as I am that this wasn't the actual case with this particular organism, my point still stands just as firm. New proteins most certainly can be created by unintelligent frameshift mutations in which the new protein may be totally unlike the protein that the unmutated gene originally coded for.
Other Comments
With the main points in the argument now addressed, I'd like to make a few comments on some other things I found in Livingstone's last entry.
Regarding the nature of the ability to digest nylon, my opponent wrote (bolding is mine):
The ability was already present?
Yes, the ability to digest other materials for food was indeed present, but what made this special was the new ability to digest a new food source. I realize that you've already said that you don't dispute that new functions, information, and complexity can be added by mutation and selection (like many of our creationist friends would dispute), so why are you downplaying the fact that this function is a new one?
His reasoning is apparently thus:
I think even we in the unintelligent design camp would be surprised if it would take "trillions upon trillions of mutations to eventually evolve a novel function". Livingstone makes it seem like we require mutation and natural selection to plan ahead many, many steps in advance in order to explain life, but that fact is that we simply don't.
Right after this section, my opponent wrote this extremely curious sentence:
It was? 200,000 years ago? How in the world did you come up with that oddly specific bit of information? And how do you know that the Grand Old Designer(s) isn't at work today?
Speaking of the hypothetical designer(s):
Which is odd because you also said that the genetic code is a clear indicator of intelligence, so presumably these hypothetical aliens are alive without having any kind of genetic code? No known way to store heritable traits or produce proteins required for a body of some sort? This means that they would have to be a form of life completely different from anything we know today, indeed, possibly even something that we may not even perceive as alive at all.
Now if we were talking about a supernatural living 'spirit' (say that a God would have), that idea makes a little more sense. A spirit body presumably does not require any sort of molecular machinery or genetic code. But why would these hypothetical alien designers make a form of life so different than their own, when apparently whatever they have works pretty well? Curiouser and curiouser...
And speaking of genetic codes:
Well of course one's position is strengthened if one is begging the question, that's the whole point of using logical fallacies: to give one's position an unwarranted advantage!
But I don't think that is necessarily what you are doing here. What we do have is an inductive argument of the form:
1) All known languages are the product of intelligence.
2) DNA is a language.
3) Therefore it is most likely that DNA is a product of intelligence.
Even though "most likely" still falls short of what my opponent needs to show in this debate (that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on Earth) I would grant that this would be pretty good evidence in favor of intelligent design were it's premises indeed true.
Unfortunately, the argument here fails because premise 2 fails. DNA and the genetic code is only a language in the metaphoric sense. Note my use of the metaphors of 'letter' for nucleotide base and 'word' for nucleotide triplet which codes for an amino acid above.
Even following the mathematical relationship noted by Zipf doesn't make something a language; Livingstone's reference above was misleading. From this article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipf's_law
The Zipf relation is also found in many other non-language contexts such as the stock market. So to conclude that just because something follows that particular relationship that it must therefore be a language is demonstrably false.
Cutting it Short
Once again it has taken me way too long to finish a post, so I'm going to cut this one short here. Once again I would like to acknowledge that while I haven't addressed everything in my opponent's last post, I feel I have addressed the major issues. But if there is something important that Livingstone feels I should have addressed but didn't, please let me know and I'll make sure it is one that definitely I include next time. I don't want to avoid any important issues because for one it is dishonest in a debate, but also because it is unfair to our audience. And you guys know I'm doing all of this for you, right?
Daniel "Theophage" Clark
Ideally I'd like to get some sense of just how many people are reading this and following along. (If we wanted no one else to see it, we could have done this all by email.) So even if you have no comment other than "I'm obviously cool and hip because I'm reading along," we'd love to see that.
The ET Hypothesis
If we examine the history of the intelligent design movement, it is clear that there is almost exclusively religious motivation behind it. Proof of God is sought in His creation, and intelligent design fills that need nicely. I daresay that (nearly) all of the prominent names in the intelligent design movement come straight out of earlier creationist movements. I hope my opponent is not trying to deny this easily demonstrated fact.
It is also easily demonstrable that there was and is a definite push to disguise intelligent design as non-religious for the purposes of including it in public school curricula. These intentions were made clear by the Discovery Institute's leaked "Wedge Document" and was decided definitively in the Kitzmiller vs Dover trial.
So while it is technically true that intelligent design does not necessarily point to God, to ignore the obvious cultural and historical context would be like someone being accused of using racial stereotypes when talking about fried chicken and watermelon and responding "That isn't a racial thing, lots of people like both watermelon and fried chicken..."
Is it a terrible thing to say "It could be aliens or whomever"? No, it isn't a terrible thing. I even understand it on a certain level: If we can scientifically prove designed features in life, that information may or may not even be able clue us in to the identity of the designer. But given that the obvious motivation behind intelligent design research is to reconcile God and science, it seems odd that one would go to such great lengths to then deny we are talking about God. Terrible? No. Curious? Quite.
Anyway, I think this tangent has run it's course, and this will be the last I have to say about this matter. (Though I reserve the right to still use the term 'Grand Old Designer' because it tickles me.)
Design as Explanation
In response to my assertion that he has been putting forth arguments from ignorance, my opponent wrote that his reasoning is actually:
"(1) The Darwinian synthesis cannot explain how X could have happened, (2) The intelligent design paradigm can explain a plausible mechanism, (3) Therefore the intelligent design model best explains X."
Now I will grant that this is a valid form of reasoning, and one that is used in science all the time. If theory X explains A and B, but has no explanation for C, while theory Y explains A, B, and C, then of course theory Y is preferred and considered the "correct" view (until possibly replaced by better theories later, of course). But does intelligent design really offer a better explanation? I say no, I don't think it offers any explanation at all.
My opponent outlined the argument from ignorance thusly:
"we do not know of a Darwinian mechanism for X, therefore ‘an intelligent designer dunnit.’"
We both agree that this is a poor argument and as an explanation provides us with absolutely nothing. It is simply the 'God of the gaps' argument I brought up earlier with 'God' replaced by 'an intelligent designer' (remember, it could be aliens...)
So his actual argument has to be better than this, right? Intelligent design according to his argument has to explain more than the argument from ignorance, right? Well, let's look at what the intelligent design explanation actually gives us:
- What is the origin of the genetic code? ‘An intelligent designer dunnit.’
- What is the origin of the homochirality of amino acids used by life? ‘An intelligent designer dunnit.’
- How could "longer and more complex proteins (for example, those belonging to the alpha/beta classes)" arise? ‘An intelligent designer dunnit.’
- What is the origin of the complex metabolic pathways involving glycolysis? ‘An intelligent designer dunnit.’
- Why do some viruses use RNA, some use single strand DNA, and some use double strand DNA for their heritable material? ‘An intelligent designer dunnit’ that way.
- Why is this protein or this system or this anatomical part used instead of this other one? ‘An intelligent designer dunnit’ that way.
- Why did the intelligent designer choose to do it this way instead of that way? ‘An intelligent designer dunnit’ that way.
I'm sorry Livingstone, perhaps I'm just a moron, but I'm not seeing any explanatory difference between what you are arguing and simply a Grand Old Designer of the gaps type argument from ignorance. Can you please explain better?
It would seem that I could turn around and answer all of those above questions with "Nature dunnit" or "Unintelligent 'Darwinian' processes dunnit" and it would contain exactly the same explanatory value (i.e. none). And yet my opponent assures us that "the intelligent design model best explains X". How can this be?
A real scientific explanation is one that gives us additional information either about a previously unknown fact or process, or links previously known facts or processes together in newly discovered ways. An explanation can hardly be considered good or even adequate unless it increases our knowledge about the explained thing somehow. How does the idea that life is intelligently designed increase our knowledge about life and how it works, even one bit?
Again. I simply don't see it.
What's worse, imagine if other branches of science used this same type of reasoning. Why do atoms of one type combine readily with another type but not with a third type? Should we have not learned about electron shells and orbitals (or even the periodic table itself) and simply stuck with "the designer made them that way"? No, of course not.
The fact is that learning about the physical reasons why some things are the way they are increases our knowledge about the world. Saying that they just are that way or that they were just made that way by an inscrutable being increases nothing and in fact inhibits the gaining of knowledge.
So no, even if intelligent design is true (and my opponent has not yet shown that to be the case), it still is not any kind of a "better explanation".
Bad Probabilities
Earlier in this debate I argued that my opponent is (and generally all other intelligent design proponents are) using a bad argument from probability when talking about the likelihood of a particular protein or whatever forming by chance. To illustrate his bad reasoning, I used the example of dealing out an entire deck of cards (jokers included) and showing that even though the probability of that exact sequence of cards coming up is just this side of impossible, that does not mean a miracle occurs every time we deal out the cards. The difference is in having a goal sequence that you're trying to match with the random process.
Livingstone came up with a fairly clever response to this, and compared my problem of probability with a commonly used argument for common descent, that of shared ERV sequences. Briefly, the inserted DNA sequences from retroviruses in the human genome follow a certain pattern of placement, and a very similar pattern is also found in the chimpanzee genome. These ERV sequences aren't functional, so they aren't subject to selection even though they are still passed down by normal heredity. The probability that the specific pattern and placement of these ERVs in the human and chimpanzee genomes is the same is so terribly, incredibly small that it isn't considered to be possible by chance, and thus common ancestry is the explanation for why they are so similar.
My opponent says that if we use the reasoning of my critique, then the sequences aren't so terribly improbable at all, and thus I am undercutting my own position by using this critique. I can't have it both ways, right? Either it is or it isn't terribly improbable to come up with particular sequences and patterns. Well, as expected, my opponent is mistaken on this issue once again.
Protein formation by chance is analogous to dealing cards out on the table, and it is also analogous to ERV sequences accruing in the genome of a species by chance. As I demonstrated earlier, no miracle occurs in any of these processes, they are fairly straight forward. The only thing that would be terribly improbable is for these processes to end up matching a particular pre-selected goal.
In the case of ERVs being used as evidence of common descent, it isn't the pattern of ERVs in either the human or chimpanzee genome that is terribly improbable, it is the comparison of the two; that's the key.
To give another card example, take one deck of well shuffled cards and deal them out onto the table. Yay! They have some particular arrangement without invoking a miracle, yes? Now, grab another deck of well shuffled cards and deal them out onto the table in a line below (or above, I'm not picky) the first. What are the chances that both are the same arrangement? That's right, it's exactly the number I calculated earlier: about 1 in 2 * 10^70. The sequence of the first deck is the goal that the second deck is trying to match, and the chances of that are indeed effectively impossible without some mechanism to make them that way.
This is what we are talking about when we use the ERV argument. For the human genome to have a pattern of ERVs by chance is not impossible. For chimpanzees to have a pattern of ERVs by chance is not impossible. For both species to have such a similar pattern purely by chance is indeed impossible.
Similarly, for random DNA patterns to code for any particular complicated protein you can think of is next to impossible, but only because you are trying to compare the result of the simple unintelligent evolutionary process with a pre-determined goal. For just any complicated proteins to arise just by simple unintelligent processes, by contrast, is no more improbable than just dealing out a deck of cards. Are we clear on the difference now? Remember: bad probability arguments are bad.
Amino Acids and the Genetic Code
My opponent has been asking me some terribly difficult and specific questions about biochemistry. Even though before the debate began I specifically said that I had no answer to these types of questions, since we agreed that "I don't know" is a boring answer, I tried to oblige and give my best responses to them. As my opponent has shown, they just don't hold up to scrutiny; no big surprise there. We both know that there simply aren't any answers to these questions in current scientific knowledge.
So why was my opponent asking me these questions? Ostensibly, it was to support his argument that while mainstream science had no good explanations for these things, that intelligent design does have explanations, and thus an existent explanation is clearly superior to a non-existent one. But as I'd shown above, his explanation consists of essentially "the Grand Old Designer made them that way".
While I agree that it would be perfectly possible for an intelligent being with the appropriate technology to do so, that again fails as an explanation because it gives us exactly zero additional knowledge about these processes and life itself. Should the fact that it is possible for an intelligent being with the proper resources to cause it to rain over Battle Creek, Michigan mean that we should then accept that as the reason it is raining on my roof right now? Or should there be some criteria other than mere possibility to determine what actually is the cause of something? Possibility is a necessary but not a sufficient criteria for determining cause. This is an important fact.
As I'd written earlier in this debate, in order to support the claim that intelligent design is necessary for the existence of life on Earth, it isn't sufficient to simply show that an intelligent being could have done it, it has to be shown that it couldn't have happened any other way. Surely we all agree that 'possible' does not equal 'necessary'.
Consequently, Livingstone has to do more than simply show that mainstream science doesn't currently have explanations for these things in order to support his case, he has to show that they cannot possibly have them. Only if that is true can we then regard intelligent design as necessary.
And unless I'm totally missing something (which is not an impossibility), he simply has not done this so far. "Don't know how" in no way equals "can't be done".
Bringing up the nylon bug
My opponent said, "I really don’t know what my opponent’s reason was for bringing up the evolution of nylonase." I try to make my points as clear as I can so that everyone can follow along, but perhaps I failed to do so here. I will try to explain again:
The information I had about the nylon-eating bacteria was that it's ability to digest nylon was caused by an earlier gene duplication followed by a particular frame shift mutation in the duplicated gene. Why is this relevant? Because it is an example of an entirely new protein consisting of hundreds of amino acids coded essentially out of nowhere by mutation alone in a single step.
A frame shift mutation is one which changes the genetic reading frame such as a deletion or insertion of one or many nucleotides. The genetic material codes for amino acids in groups of three nucleotides at a time, so that every three 'letters' in the gene spells out one amino acid 'word'. If you delete or add a single nucleotide to the gene, everything after the mutation gets shifted one 'letter' one way or the other. This means that all of the amino acids coded for after the mutation to the end of the gene are completely different; it isn't just a matter of the same protein with a couple of amino acids different, it becomes an entirely new protein.
My point in bringing this up is that this is one naturalistic, unintelligent mechanism for coming up with entirely new proteins all at once instead of in a stepwise fashion, where each step has to provide some sort of selective advantage in order to be carried on to the next step. Can we all see the significance of this? If not, I'll try to explain again next time.
Now I was rather unpleasantly surprised to find that this isn't what happened in this particular case after all when I read the Wikipedia article. The original paper on the nylon bug by S. Ohno in 1984 was incorrect. But as disappointed as I am that this wasn't the actual case with this particular organism, my point still stands just as firm. New proteins most certainly can be created by unintelligent frameshift mutations in which the new protein may be totally unlike the protein that the unmutated gene originally coded for.
Other Comments
With the main points in the argument now addressed, I'd like to make a few comments on some other things I found in Livingstone's last entry.
Regarding the nature of the ability to digest nylon, my opponent wrote (bolding is mine):
In the bacterium there are three enzymes, EIII (NylC) EI (NylA), and EII (NylB), which are used to digest nylon; a substitution mutation/point mutation occurred in the carboxylesterase gene which allowed the bacterium to hydrolyze nylon oligomers. The ability was already present; it simply took a point mutation to cause an alteration in the parent enzymes specificity.
The ability was already present?
Yes, the ability to digest other materials for food was indeed present, but what made this special was the new ability to digest a new food source. I realize that you've already said that you don't dispute that new functions, information, and complexity can be added by mutation and selection (like many of our creationist friends would dispute), so why are you downplaying the fact that this function is a new one?
His reasoning is apparently thus:
The intelligent design camp is not at all surprised at this; merely one mutation was needed to achieve this function. It would be much more of a surprise to the intelligent design proponents if something that took trillions upon trillions of mutations to eventually evolve a novel function.
I think even we in the unintelligent design camp would be surprised if it would take "trillions upon trillions of mutations to eventually evolve a novel function". Livingstone makes it seem like we require mutation and natural selection to plan ahead many, many steps in advance in order to explain life, but that fact is that we simply don't.
Right after this section, my opponent wrote this extremely curious sentence:
Nobody is denying mutations; intelligent design is over and was over about 200,000 years ago.
It was? 200,000 years ago? How in the world did you come up with that oddly specific bit of information? And how do you know that the Grand Old Designer(s) isn't at work today?
Speaking of the hypothetical designer(s):
The hypothetical alien-engineers could plausibly arise through Darwinian mechanisms on another planet; however, the evidence indicates that biochemical structures and life on earth is designed through intelligence.
Which is odd because you also said that the genetic code is a clear indicator of intelligence, so presumably these hypothetical aliens are alive without having any kind of genetic code? No known way to store heritable traits or produce proteins required for a body of some sort? This means that they would have to be a form of life completely different from anything we know today, indeed, possibly even something that we may not even perceive as alive at all.
Now if we were talking about a supernatural living 'spirit' (say that a God would have), that idea makes a little more sense. A spirit body presumably does not require any sort of molecular machinery or genetic code. But why would these hypothetical alien designers make a form of life so different than their own, when apparently whatever they have works pretty well? Curiouser and curiouser...
And speaking of genetic codes:
In the first place, DNA is obviously a language, or a code as it were. Of course, you might protest that this begs the question, whether DNA is actually a language. However, I think my position is stronger in saying that it is, as DNA follows laws of linguistics such as those postulated by Zipf.
Observation tells us that all languages are a derivative of intelligence; there is no known unintelligent process that will make a language. Therefore, I hold that intelligent design explains the origin of DNA better than Darwinian mechanisms.
Well of course one's position is strengthened if one is begging the question, that's the whole point of using logical fallacies: to give one's position an unwarranted advantage!
But I don't think that is necessarily what you are doing here. What we do have is an inductive argument of the form:
1) All known languages are the product of intelligence.
2) DNA is a language.
3) Therefore it is most likely that DNA is a product of intelligence.
Even though "most likely" still falls short of what my opponent needs to show in this debate (that intelligent design is necessary to account for life on Earth) I would grant that this would be pretty good evidence in favor of intelligent design were it's premises indeed true.
Unfortunately, the argument here fails because premise 2 fails. DNA and the genetic code is only a language in the metaphoric sense. Note my use of the metaphors of 'letter' for nucleotide base and 'word' for nucleotide triplet which codes for an amino acid above.
Even following the mathematical relationship noted by Zipf doesn't make something a language; Livingstone's reference above was misleading. From this article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipf's_law
It is not known why Zipf's law holds for most languages. However, it may be partially explained by the statistical analysis of randomly-generated texts. Wentian Li has shown that if you create a document where each character is chosen randomly from a uniform distribution of all letters (plus a space character), then the "words" in this document also follow the general trend of Zipf's law (appearing approximately linear on log-log plot). This suggests a partial explanation for why Zipf's law might hold for most natural languages (although the law holds much more strongly to natural language than to random texts).
The Zipf relation is also found in many other non-language contexts such as the stock market. So to conclude that just because something follows that particular relationship that it must therefore be a language is demonstrably false.
Cutting it Short
Once again it has taken me way too long to finish a post, so I'm going to cut this one short here. Once again I would like to acknowledge that while I haven't addressed everything in my opponent's last post, I feel I have addressed the major issues. But if there is something important that Livingstone feels I should have addressed but didn't, please let me know and I'll make sure it is one that definitely I include next time. I don't want to avoid any important issues because for one it is dishonest in a debate, but also because it is unfair to our audience. And you guys know I'm doing all of this for you, right?
Daniel "Theophage" Clark
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