by jimwalton » Wed Feb 10, 2016 2:45 pm
Thanks for the reply. My point is that random mutations consistently destroy information (there is not one single, crystal-clear example of a known mutation that unambiguously created information). Beneficial mutations occur at a rate less than 1 in a million, so low as to thwart any actual measurement. But then a certain percentage of those could be considered by selection to be worthless, and so also rejected as unselectable. It is largely unreasonable that mutations will result in a net gain of information. A loss of information is all but guaranteed. Everything about the true distribution of mutations argues against their possible role in forward evolution.
I agree that life forms can increase in complexity.
You say evolution is not a "means-to-an-end" anything, and yet biology has many purposeful, means-to-end-and mechanisms. And while I agree that the process is not over and humans may not be the "end product," I still see a weakness in the theory that cannot account for teleology in "self-replicating" chemical reactions.
> "Science does not currently know how something works" does not equal "god did it"
I agree. That's faulty logic. Far more has to be present in the argument and evidence to conclude that God is a reasonable Cause. There is no room to assemble all of those arguments here and discuss them, but having examined them, I have come to that conclusion. I skipped a lot of steps in my sentence.
For deleterious mutations and loss of information in the "hands" of blind chemical reactions (no intelligence present) to have created what amounted to a long series of benefits is a stretch of credulity. Remember (I'm sure you know) that both the mutation process and that of natural selection are both blind processes (devoid of intelligent oversight), and that they don't even "communicate" with each other. And yet the claim of naturalistic evolution is that somehow we have ended up with organisms far more complex than the space shuttle, carrying far more information than the Library of Congress, all by "typographical errors" (mutations in the genome) and a "blind judge" (natural selection) who never sees the individual letters (the genetic code) but only the performance of the organism. I'm not convinced it's a tenable axiom.
Thanks for the reply. My point is that random mutations consistently destroy information (there is not one single, crystal-clear example of a known mutation that unambiguously created information). Beneficial mutations occur at a rate less than 1 in a million, so low as to thwart any actual measurement. But then a certain percentage of those could be considered by selection to be worthless, and so also rejected as unselectable. It is largely unreasonable that mutations will result in a net gain of information. A loss of information is all but guaranteed. Everything about the true distribution of mutations argues against their possible role in forward evolution.
I agree that life forms can increase in complexity.
You say evolution is not a "means-to-an-end" anything, and yet biology has many purposeful, means-to-end-and mechanisms. And while I agree that the process is not over and humans may not be the "end product," I still see a weakness in the theory that cannot account for teleology in "self-replicating" chemical reactions.
> "Science does not currently know how something works" does not equal "god did it"
I agree. That's faulty logic. Far more has to be present in the argument and evidence to conclude that God is a reasonable Cause. There is no room to assemble all of those arguments here and discuss them, but having examined them, I have come to that conclusion. I skipped a lot of steps in my sentence.
For deleterious mutations and loss of information in the "hands" of blind chemical reactions (no intelligence present) to have created what amounted to a long series of benefits is a stretch of credulity. Remember (I'm sure you know) that both the mutation process and that of natural selection are both blind processes (devoid of intelligent oversight), and that they don't even "communicate" with each other. And yet the claim of naturalistic evolution is that somehow we have ended up with organisms far more complex than the space shuttle, carrying far more information than the Library of Congress, all by "typographical errors" (mutations in the genome) and a "blind judge" (natural selection) who never sees the individual letters (the genetic code) but only the performance of the organism. I'm not convinced it's a tenable axiom.