zoegirl wrote:I guess by that you are meaning virulent bacteria and viruses. I would say yes.
So how do you feel about worshipping a God who intentionally and deliberately created all manner of pathogens, parasites, and other horrible things that have caused the suffering of untold millions? In any other context, wouldn't this "designer" be considered a mass murding bio-terrorist?
zoegirl wrote:Regardless of their effect, your question (please let me know if I am totally off base with that assunmtion) has more to do with theology than design. Whether or not a God would make something that infects another being is more in line with the classic *God/suffering question* and really has no bearing on it's design.
Given that ID is religious apologetics masquerading as science, the theological ramifications are indeed relevant.
zoegirl wrote:Can we not observe a gun or tank with the same conclusion as our observations at a corvette or porsche?
Sure...but the people getting squashed beneath the tank treads aren't praising and worshiping the tank designer, are they?
zoegirl wrote:Can you definitively say it isn't
? Look, if tomorrow, if ten years from now, we see that those 10 additional years of bacterial growth produces more changes, I'll be happy to adjust my view. However, if that happens, *YOU STILL* can't rule out GOd or the supernatural.
That doesn't answer the question: Have you ever seen anything being supernaturally created?
zoegirl wrote:Hey, maybe I am too demanding. BUT, maybe the scientific community is too quick to leap to theor conclusions as well. (I suspect, and yes, a generalizaiton here, that phillosophically, they HAVE to leap on these discoveries).
Or maybe they aren't? How would
you tell the difference?
zoegirl wrote:All I'm saying is that I want to see more of these studies. Who are you to say I *should* be convinced by this?
No one is saying you have to do anything.
zoegirl wrote:This is the only example I have seen of such a long range study of 20,000 generations. And while there are interesting examples of allopolyploidy and autopolyploidy in plants, the selection for mate choice in fruit flies, these are not as long range.
The reason is that experiments are set up with very specific hypotheses to test. Once the identified hypotheses have been tested, the experiment is over and the strain/population is eliminated. What you seem to be saying is, "I won't believe in evolutionary common descent until I see it all happen".
zoegirl wrote:Because I have a problem with making such a large extrapolation based on one example of 20,000.
What "large extrapolation"? Again, all we've ever seen is the evolution of new traits and species via natural means; we've never seen new traits or species arise via any other means. So why is it such a "large extrapolation" to conclude that's been the case for the history of life on earth?
zoegirl wrote:Here's one scenario. Suppose, for instance, selection is not meant to be creative over those long periods of time, but rather a maintenance? In other words, selection can work up to a point but the creation of new genetic traits through inversion, replication, mutation...is not as powerful as we think?
Ok, let's
suppose.
zoegirl wrote:First, since most people use that typical extrapolation (mutations over time), who would bother?
Bother to do what?
zoegirl wrote:Secondly, this type of scenario can only be studied by examining this over time.
Not necessarily. One would expect that if major taxa were completely distinct (i.e. specially created), there would be signs of it in the genetic record. We wouldn't expect, for example, seperate taxa to share sequences like retroviral insertions or pseudogenes.
zoegirl wrote:Ok, I an fully convinced of what the studied showed, that somewhere between 20,000 and 30,000 generations of bacteria, some mutations occurred (were they inversions of genes already there? hmm, mnaybe those bacteria originally had that ability).
Is that
all you think this study demonstrated ("some mutations occured")? Really?
zoegirl wrote:But I doubt the *accumulation* GIVEN THAT mutations are far more likely to disrupt than create.
They're sufficient enough now to generate new species, so why wouldn't the same hold true for the past?
zoegirl wrote:AGAIN, the study showed ONE new trait over 20,000 generations. the desire is to extrapolate this over millions of years. How can we tell?
It demonstrates yet again that new traits evolve via natural evolutionary mechanisms...mutation and natural selection can indeed generate new traits in populations.
zoegirl wrote:Since when does logic mean something is necessarily what happened?
Where did I say "necessarily" anything happened?