Science Forums
Advanced search
User Name
Password

Science Social Network
home    members    help/rules    who is online    contact   

Go Back   Science Forums > Physical Sciences Forums > Biology
Become a science forums sponsor today
Closed Thread
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 05-19-2005   #1 (permalink)
eMTee's Avatar
Understanding


 



chance and evolution

Some evolutionists say that evolution doesn't happen by chance. I ask if it isn't by chance, then how else has it or does it happen?
Old 05-19-2005   #2 (permalink)
Smokinjoe9's Avatar
Questioning


 



Re: chance and evolution

I am sure there are other possibilities, chance seems like a possibility, just not the best one(too me). I suppose saying chance is how it happened will work fine, until another(better)theory comes along.
I understand that proof is required, but I would be worried about holding the theory as true until ALL the facts are straight...
Don't get me wrong I know about probability, and sometimes it seems obvious what the outcome is, but that doesn't make the theory true.
Old 05-19-2005   #3 (permalink)
Buffy's Avatar
Resident Slayer

Hypography Staff Member
Administrator

 



Re: chance and evolution

There's a big difference between "pure chance" and a sequence of events each of which has a certain amount of chance involved.

When an Evolutionist says its "not chance" its to point out the fallacy of the analogy that Creationists try to use where the "chance" that an eyeball would evolve is "like a tornado hitting a junkyard and making a 747", which is then calculated to be so large a probablility as to be improbable.

But the problem with this analogy is that evolving an eyeball takes a long time, and has lots and lots of intermediate steps. Each step involves a bunch of different mutations, some of which are useful, others of which are not, but together these mutations that are indeed based on "chance" become useful and survive to successive generations. Not all of these mutations have to be initially useful since they can hang around if they are not detrimental, meaning they're there when some other mutation happens and then the combination of the two turn out to be very useful, and then they get reinforced. When you look at all the steps involved, the fact that it doesn't really matter which ones mutate by chance in which order because *eventually* the useful one will show up, it turns out that theres almost a 100% guarantee that these complex things will show up eventually. So, in that respect, evolution of life isn't an amazingly improbable event, its almost guaranteed to happen!

Cheers,
Buffy


----------------
"If you do not agree with anything I say, I'll not only retract it, but deny under oath that I ever said it!"
__________________________________________________ ______________-- Tom Lehrer

"The shrinks diagnosed me a sociopath with paranoid delusions. But they’re just out to get me cause I threatened to kill them."


Forum Administrator
Hypography Science Forums - Science for Boys and Girls! Its not for nothing that we hang out here.
Old 05-19-2005   #4 (permalink)
zadojla's Avatar
Questioning


 



Re: chance and evolution

Most "evolutionists", like Stephen Jay Gould, believe that evolution is highly "contingent" on events. The conclusion is that if you were to start with the same system, evolution would certainly occur, but the precise results would not repeat over multiple trials (if that were possible).
Old 05-19-2005   #5 (permalink)
eMTee's Avatar
Understanding


 



Re: chance and evolution

How did science create it's vital organized paturn? everything has a beginning, and how did science decide what to create, and how to create it?
Old 05-19-2005   #6 (permalink)
BEAKER's Avatar
Understanding


 



Cool Re: chance and evolution

Quote:
Originally Posted by eMTee
How did science create it's vital organized paturn? everything has a beginning, and how did science decide what to create, and how to create it?
Science doesn't decide; science (hopfully) discovers; how, when, where, annd why. - But of course the hypothesese are debatable.


----------------
Without love, our Earth is a tomb.

-Robert Browning
Old 05-20-2005   #7 (permalink)
Stargazer's Avatar
Understanding


 



Re: chance and evolution

Quote:
Originally Posted by eMTee
Some evolutionists say that evolution doesn't happen by chance. I ask if it isn't by chance, then how else has it or does it happen?
Surely chance is involved, but if things were truly random, we wouldn't be here.
Old 05-20-2005   #8 (permalink)
bumab's Avatar
Local Brewmaster


 



Re: chance and evolution

Randomness (mutations) gives you the pieces with which natural selction acts upon. Natural selection is explictly NOT random, it involves what's best for the given situation.


----------------
Every dollar you spend is a vote you cast
Old 05-20-2005   #9 (permalink)
Biochemist's Avatar
Eccentric Heretic


 



Re: chance and evolution

Quote:
Originally Posted by Buffy
...But the problem with this analogy is that evolving an eyeball takes a long time, and has lots and lots of intermediate steps. Each step involves a bunch of different mutations, some of which are useful, others of which are not, but together these mutations that are indeed based on "chance" become useful and survive to successive generations....
Buff- Although the tornado/junkyard/747 analogy might be inappropriate, to my knowledge no one in the gradualism camp has ever demonstrated a credible mathematical counterexample either. This is one of those cases where the evolutionary argument is more faith than science. The math is not substantially improved by suggesting that the steps can be incremental, or that most steps fail. In most instances, these outcomes do not improve the statistics (that is, the liklihood that a viable complex form will eventually arrive from abiotic sources) without generating other unpalatable assumptions.

Personally, I think the general argument for gradualism is very weak, and the tornado/747 analogy is not a bad handle to describe the problem.


----------------
Few problems are so complex that they cannot be substantially clarified by one more cup of coffee (or a nice cabernet if it is after 5:00)

Moderator in absentia. Return anticipated. Timing somewhat vague.

Last edited by Biochemist; 05-20-2005 at 03:45 PM. Reason: Clarification
Old 05-20-2005   #10 (permalink)
eMTee's Avatar
Understanding


 



Re: chance and evolution

you say that creationism is based on faith...but when the evolution comes up..I see more faith than evidence.

One person says evolution is not by chance..another says that it requires chance..is science the maker of all things? How can you say that science works along with the situation at hand, creating whatever it can in watever environment it is in..changing all the time along with it's situation at hand, and say it is not by chance?

At the same time..when you break apart all the evidence...you keep on finding a more complex universe that could not have evolved randomly.

Last edited by eMTee; 05-20-2005 at 03:03 PM.
Closed Thread

Bookmarks


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Evolution is Junk Science and Secular Religion perfusionista Biology 119 01-27-2006 01:23 PM
Round Two: God vs. Darwin Fishteacher73 Biology 170 06-13-2005 04:43 PM
Intelligent Design - theory, examples, implications Lolic Philosophy and Humanities 229 05-27-2005 06:11 PM
Creationist Reply…challenging! jasonparker Biology 12 10-08-2004 09:49 AM
Human origins:Biology vs. Creationism TeleMad Biology 9 08-12-2004 10:00 PM


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 10:11 PM.

Hypography?

Hypography [n.]: A combination of "hyperlink" and "bibliography" - ie, a list of links to electronic documents. Comparable to discography and bibliography, but not cartography.

We have been online since May 2000, and aim to be the best place to find and share science-related content of all kinds.

Share the love!

Please add more science to your life. Use our RSS feeds on your blog, your portal, or your favorite feedreader!

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.2.0 ©2008, Crawlability, Inc. Copyright © 2000-2008 Hypography
Part of the Hypography - Science for Everyone Network