I did not mean any disrespect.
To chop a bit more at your position: are sequences of humans traced back to an ancestral population of 4000, 3000 or even 300 ancestors, or a single ancestral sequences? Does this not support one single pair of ancestors?
It does not trace back to a single pair of ancestors.
Re: your why I won't accept this, my motivations even if present are irrelevant. Do not so hastily commit the genetic fallacy to disregard my position. That for one, kind of insults my intelligence and beliefs. And secondly, well it is informally fallacious. This should not really come into the debate at all. One should not logically dismiss a position based on the beliefs of people who hold it, but rather on the merits or lack thereof.
As I said, I frankly remarked on why I think you won't accept it, I did not mean to say you were being ignorant or that it dismisses your position, nor do I think it should.
I do not believe your position is in any way scientifically superior when it comes down to the facts of the matter than a position that supports a single pair like a "Biblical Adam and Eve".
That is the problem, there is no such scientific position that supports a single pair, if there would I won't mind accepting it. I certainly do not enjoy saying that the adam and eve story is a false one, I do not. Because it creates a plethora of other problems (I agree with Jac btw, the genesis story makes the best sense when its read in a YEC framework). However so far, all positions with research and evidence point to more than a couple.
FWIW I tried my best to fit evolution with all it entails into the genesis story and its internal theology, and make a consistent understanding of it but I could not and my opinion is, one can't without either disrupting theology or scientific findings.
Re: information, I'm talking about how all the "genetics" and information got there in the first place. There are many theories, but it is certainly far from settled. This is not simply a small gap or here in understanding, but more like the similar "major conceptual lacuna" Paul Davies describes in regards to solving the origins of life. However, while relevant to this discussion, it is a tangent. The thread to discuss this tangent can be found here:
http://discussions.godandscience.org/vi ... =6&t=38806.
I think we should save it for another day.
Did you check that peer reviewed article I linked to:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1766376/? The genetic diversity was far higher than expected from one pair.
If natural selection can account for greater diversity in the island mouflon (a conclusion drawn in that paper), then such may lead to unusually high population estimates in humans. That is, natural selection is driving the increase in genetic diversity, because an increase in genetic variability increases the likelihood of the survivability of the population.
I think its quite complex and I do not understand all of it fully, I would have to read it again. But given at face value even if we can say that it happened for Mouflon Population, that it happened for homo sapiens too? That is the first question and second which kind of makes the first point irrelevant is that we have genetic markers and their tracing which traces back to more than one couple. So we do know, dna being unique, that there is more than one couple involved. That kind of settles it right there. Even if it turns out to be 300 or 50 (and its certainly higher than that), we would still not be able to patch it with the genesis story.
Bottom line we have to prove that genesis single couple story is infact compatible with scientific findings and research. Proving that there is a some margin of error in the research model does not make genesis story any more true. That is what matters to me. If we can find that the current human population came from one pair then nothing would make me more glad...but we have found the contrary.
It would be a blessing if they missed the cairns and got lost on the way back. Or if
the Thing on the ice got them tonight.
I could only turn and stare in horror at the chief surgeon.
Death by starvation is a terrible thing, Goodsir, continued Stanley.
And with that we went below to the flame-flickering Darkness of the lower deck
and to a cold almost the equal of the Dante-esque Ninth Circle Arctic Night
without.
//johnadavid.wordpress.com