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How smart are fish ?
On Thu, 27 Jul 2006 15:02:37 GMT, Wayne Sallee
wrote: atomweaver wrote on 7/26/2006 9:19 AM: The scientific community's support for evolution is universal (we wouldn't have the fields of modern medicine and genetics without it... Are you getting a flu vaccine this year, Wayne? If so, thanks for your support of ToE... your dollars and actions speak far more than your anecdotes do). I'll only leave a pair of links for that angle. I think the hundreds of thousands of peer-reviewed evolution-related articles in various scientific journals could also be considered support for ToE; The fact that we are similar to animals has helped modern medicine, not the theory of evolution. And why are we similar to animals? (hint: learn something about evolution) LOL! |
How smart are fish ?
Most translations go back to the original documents.
If what you say was true, then the many different translations would vary greatly, and they would vary greatly over the years. But that is not the case. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets RicSeyler wrote on 7/27/2006 12:11 PM: Ever played the telephone game in school Wayne? Going through person after person it never comes out the same at the end of game. Wayne Sallee wrote: Inabón Yunes wrote on 7/26/2006 1:06 AM: You see, there is a whole world outthere that sees the bible for what it is worst. A bunch of papers translated from language to language that are most likely so transformed that it says the opposite of what they were intended. Don't believe everything your professors told you. Most translations go back to the original documents. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets |
DaveZ and Wayne's ToE/Creationist thread Jump in, or ignore
Wayne Sallee wrote in
: The similarities are something to look at, and are a good starting point, but they don't prove anything, no more than the similarities in machines and computers prove that they evolved from each other. But unlike machines, the fact that living things have heritable traits is common knowledge (you like like your parent's right? So does most everyone, and every thing, else), and here is why your machine analogy fails so miserably and obviously. DNA is the vehicle by which heritable traits are pssed from one living organism to its offspring (a feature which machines obviusly lack). Taxonomy by physical similarities was a common practice of early scientists (they had little else to go on), and still has value today, inasmuch as living things with similar physical characteristics are likely (not guaranteed, see convergent evolution) to be somehow related. But you are right, proof does not come from a single example of physical similarity. Fortunately, commonality of genetic material serves to _heavily_ reinforce with additional evidence that which was previously posited upon appearance alone. Look at things in the reef, many things at a casual observance from a novice would think that they were the same, when a closer look shows them to be very different, and some things that look very different are actually more similar than those that look similar. This shows that a novice simply doesn't know what he's looking for. Hell, even experienced professionals will adjust taxonomies frequently, on the basis of additional gathered evidence. That's a large part of the value of scientific theory over dogmatic scripture. This month's TFH has an article on exactly how such evidence was used to assign the chanchito (sp?) a different species name, IIRC. One small improvement to the theory... All of this merely means that the task of properly tracking heritable traits is a complex one, not that the task is impossible (in fact, genetics makes the taks much easier and more accurate) More ToE at work; http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp- dyn/content/article/2005/08/06/AR2005080600849.html Can you link me to any recent research that Creationists have done, to find support for their various assertions in the physical world (evidence in _support_ of their claims, not just attempts to discredit evolution)? If you were a Martian doing a study on how machines evolved from one another, some of the order of how you would say they evolved would be in the same order that they were created, but some of the things would be in no way the order that they were created. If I were a Martian doing such a study, I would be doing it with the pre-supposition that machines had the ability to pass on heritable traits to one another, and thus would be a very stupid Martian. If I were an Earthling doing the same study on _living_ things, which I had _observed_ to pass on heritable traits, I would be going about things in a much more intelligent way. I'd probably also be searching for the mechanism by which those traits are passed along. Saaay... those Earthlings are pretty smart critters (well, some of them, anyways). Regards, DaveZ |
Where did we and our corals come from?
atomweaver wrote on 7/27/2006 1:08 PM:
But unlike machines, the fact that living things have heritable traits is common knowledge (you like like your parent's right? So does most everyone, and every thing, else), and here is why your machine analogy fails so miserably and obviously. DNA is the vehicle by which heritable traits are pssed from one living organism to its offspring (a feature which machines obviusly lack). Good point, DNA tells everything about the creature, it is the instructions for the cells, on how to grow, and everything else. It's like with computer programing, I prefer assembly language/machine language, because machine language is the only language that the computer chip understands. To me, programing in machine language, is like changing the DNA of a fish, while programing in other languages is like breeding the fish to get the characteristics you want. DNA has done wonders in the criminal justis system, and in science, it still does not prove that one creature evolved from another any more than if I write a computer program, and then write another computer program using much of the same code. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets |
Where did we and our corals come from?
Wayne Sallee wrote in
: DNA has done wonders in the criminal justis system, and in science, it still does not prove that one creature evolved from another any more than if I write a computer program, and then write another computer program using much of the same code. Patently false. Myriad examples of contemporary speciation exist; http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.html speciation examples in section 5.0 http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/speciation.html Most all can be verified by documented alterations in genetic material... DaveZ Atom Weaver |
Where did we and our corals come from?
You can take guppies or other fish, and breed them to get
them the way you want them in color and fin pattern, but you can only go so far, and you start running into problems with defects such as sterility. There is some cross breeding that people can do, but again there are limits, and often sterility. It's like there's a wall that keeps you from going too far. Everything has it's limits. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets atomweaver wrote on 7/27/2006 1:50 PM: Wayne Sallee wrote in : DNA has done wonders in the criminal justis system, and in science, it still does not prove that one creature evolved from another any more than if I write a computer program, and then write another computer program using much of the same code. Patently false. Myriad examples of contemporary speciation exist; http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.html speciation examples in section 5.0 http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/speciation.html Most all can be verified by documented alterations in genetic material... DaveZ Atom Weaver |
How smart are fish ?
"Wayne Sallee" wrote in message ...
Nothing new about that. People have been doing that for many years on the farm. So now compare this to your fish recognising the fridge opening. |
How smart are fish ?
This one: ...
"Wayne Sallee" wrote in message ... What question? Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Pszemol wrote on 7/25/2006 9:37 PM: "Wayne Sallee" wrote in message ... What question? The one you cut off the bottom of my previous message. |
How smart are fish ?
"Wayne Sallee" wrote in message ...
Most translations go back to the original documents. It is not true. I bet many european languages like German, English, French were translated from the Latin version, not from the original Hebrew/Aramaic... And even so - each translating person/team will have different "flavor" added to the translation... It is impossible to translate word-to-word from one language to another, especially so different languages as English and Hebrew... Do an experiment: Try to do modern text translation from English to German, hire two different translators, then get two Germant versions of the same English text and compare them word-by-word. I bet they will be different. Then hire another two translators and ask them to translate these two German copies back to English - you will be amazed what will you do in return. If what you say was true, then the many different translations would vary greatly, and they would vary greatly over the years. But that is not the case. They DO vary greatly. |
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