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Re: POLITICS - Evolution | Creation | Intelligent Design

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In a message dated 2/26/04 5:34:31 PM Eastern Standard Time,

nativenutrition@... writes:

> The complexity of

> the universe necessitates a Designer by the second law of thermodynamics,

> which states disorder should be the order of the day (entropy).

Deanna,

Unfortuantely, this is an absolute fallacy that demonstrates a thorough

inability to understand what the second law of thermodynamics is.

Chris

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In a message dated 2/26/04 5:46:24 PM Eastern Standard Time, myers_45@...

writes:

> What evidence? There is no evidence for the " Big Bang " theory. Chaos to

> order doesn't happen. Contrary to evolution, the Second law of thermodynamics

> says everything is winding down, wearing out, like our sun for example.

> Eventually it will burn out.

No, the second law of thermodynamics says nothing of the sort. This logical

error is similar to saying, " The universal law of gravitation says that

everything is falling down, falling down, crumbling. It is impossible for

anything

to be built, suspended, or fly. "

Chris

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In a message dated 2/26/04 6:28:50 PM Eastern Standard Time,

dovedesignsrus@... writes:

> Chaos to order doesn't happen.

Sheryl, plant a seed and watch it grow, and find out how wrong you are.

Chris

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Second Law of Thermodynamics (1850). R.J.E. Clausius stated the law of

entropy::

> All systems will tend toward the most mathematically probable state, and

> eventually become totally random and disorganized (Harold Blum, Time's Arrow

> and Evolution, 1968, p. 201). In other words, everything runs down, wears out,

> and goes to pieces (R.R. Kindsay, " Physics: to What Extent is it

> Deterministic, " American Scientist 56, 1968, p. 100). This law totally

eliminates the

> basic evolutionary theory that simple evolves into complex. Einstein said the

> two laws were the most enduring laws he knew of ( Rifkin, Entropy: A New

> World View, 1980, p. 6).

I shouldn't have gotten myself into this, but I'm going to go way out on a

limb, and assume there's more than a 1% chance you'll consider the truth if

you're confronted with it.

The Second Law of Thermodynamics states that the entropy of the UNIVERSE is

increasing. It does not state that the entropy of any given system, or the

entropy of all systems, is increasing.

In any given chemical reaction, there is a system, and there are the

surroundings of the system, and together the two components make up the

universe. In

an exergonic reaction, free energy is evolved from the system to its

surroundings, and in an endergonic reaction, free energy moves from the

surroundings

into the system. Any given chemical reaction will have some increase or

decrease of entropy of the system, which will have some impact on the increase

or

decrease of the entropy of the surroundings. The change in entropy of the

universe in that reaction is the net effect of the two entropy changes.

In other words, if the entropy of the system increases but the entropy of the

surroundings decreases by the same magnitude, there is no net change in the

entropy of the universe.

The Second Law of Thermodynamics does not concern itself with the entropy of

a given reaction, but the entropy of the universe. Therefore, a system can

decrease its entropy, and the reaction can occur, so long as the entropy of the

surroundings increases enough that the net effect on the universe is for

entropy to increase.

What determines the sponteneity of a reaction (that is, whether it occurs by

itself without some outside force making it occur) is an evolution of free

energy from the system to the surroundings.

The change in free energy for a given reaction is the product of the

temperature in Kelvin and the entropy, all subtracted from the change in

enthalpy

(heat energy). If the value of entropy is negative, that means the entropy of

the

system DECREASED. However, note in the following equation:

delta G = delta H - T(delta S)

where G= free energy, H=enthalpy, T= temperature in Kelvin, and S= entropy,

and " delta " means " the change in " ,

that if delta S is negative, the minus sign will change the value to

positive, and since the reaction will only occur if the delta G is negative, an

increase in S makes the reaction less likely to occur to the extent of the

magnitude

of the positive value of S, BUT, whether or not the overall value of G is

negative (and the reaction is therefore spontaneous) depends on the value of

H!!!

So, if the reaction has a very negative delta H, and the product of T and

delta S is smaller than the delta H, the reaction will be spontaneous, even

though the delta S was positive.

Furthermore, the absurd claim that evolution is contrary to the second law of

thermodynamics ignores biological catalysts and the ability of a biological

system to induce the occurance of non-spontaneous reactions.

Some examples of reactions that occur every day where the entropy of the

SYSTEM decreases:

--Ice freezes

-- Light energy, water, and carbon dioxide combine to form glucose during

photosynthesis

--Two ions entering a solution precipitate as a solid

--ATP is generated within the human body from ADP and phosphate

--Rain (water vapor becomes liquid water)

--Amino acids are assembled into proteins within biological systems

--Stalagmites and Stalagtites form in caves

I could go on and on for hundreds of pages, but these are all examples of

reactions where the entropy of the system decreases.

According to the argument you are making, where the decrease of a system's

entropy violates the Second Law of Thermodynamics, all of these reactions are a

violation of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, even though they happen every

day.

In other words, your argument requires the argument that the process of

RAINING is a fundamental violation of the laws of the universe.

Clearly, it isn't.

Chris

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In a message dated 2/26/04 6:41:05 PM Eastern Standard Time,

dovedesignsrus@... writes:

> I wouldn't call a see Chaos.

A seed? It isn't. What's chaos is the light energy, the carbon dioxide, the

water, and the nutrients in the soil, which become ordered into a biological

system. The plant turns chaos into order, like every other biological system

does.

Chris

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What about the option that the universe was necessarily created

(intelligent design) as evidenced by the Big Bang (a theory that supports

" In the beginning... " ), yet doesn't follow the Bible's ideas (creationism)?

Is it by chance or necessity that the universe exists? The complexity of

the universe necessitates a Designer by the second law of thermodynamics,

which states disorder should be the order of the day (entropy). Highly

ordered systems don't just happen by chance as Darwin (evolution) supposed.

See A. Demski's work for more details about this other option not

listed below.

Deanna

Known options:

Choices of how the observed phenomena came into being--

1. The universe was created by God.

2. The universe always existed.

3. The universe came into being by itself by purely natural processes (known

as evolution) so that no appeal to the supernatural is needed.

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What evidence? There is no evidence for the " Big Bang " theory. Chaos to order

doesn't happen. Contrary to evolution, the Second law of thermodynamics says

everything is winding down, wearing out, like our sun for example. Eventually

it will burn out. The universe has God's fingerprints all over it.

RE: POLITICS - Evolution | Creation | Intelligent Design

What about the option that the universe was necessarily created

(intelligent design) as evidenced by the Big Bang (a theory that supports

" In the beginning... " ), yet doesn't follow the Bible's ideas (creationism)?

Is it by chance or necessity that the universe exists? The complexity of

the universe necessitates a Designer by the second law of thermodynamics,

which states disorder should be the order of the day (entropy). Highly

ordered systems don't just happen by chance as Darwin (evolution) supposed.

See A. Demski's work for more details about this other option not

listed below.

Deanna

Known options:

Choices of how the observed phenomena came into being--

1. The universe was created by God.

2. The universe always existed.

3. The universe came into being by itself by purely natural processes (known

as evolution) so that no appeal to the supernatural is needed.

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>>> What evidence? There is no evidence for the " Big Bang " theory.

Primordial background radiation discovered by Arno Penzias and

in the 1960s. Look at astronomy. The Big Bang is evidence of creation.

Read _God and the Astronomers_ for a historical perspective. I am a

liturgical Christian, btw.

With all due respect, I will now take Mike's advice and bow out of such off

topic discussions. I will claim ignorance as a newbie for engaging in such

dialogue. He's right. It is futile.

Deanna

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I wouldn't call a see Chaos.

Sheryl

ChrisMasterjohn@... wrote:In a message dated 2/26/04 6:28:50 PM Eastern

Standard Time,

dovedesignsrus@... writes:

> Chaos to order doesn't happen.

Sheryl, plant a seed and watch it grow, and find out how wrong you are.

Chris

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Second Law of Thermodynamics (1850). R.J.E. Clausius stated the law of entropy::

All systems will tend toward the most mathematically probable state, and

eventually become totally random and disorganized (Harold Blum, Time's Arrow and

Evolution, 1968, p. 201). In other words, everything runs down, wears out, and

goes to pieces (R.R. Kindsay, " Physics: to What Extent is it Deterministic, "

American Scientist 56, 1968, p. 100). This law totally eliminates the basic

evolutionary theory that simple evolves into complex. Einstein said the two laws

were the most enduring laws he knew of ( Rifkin, Entropy: A New World

View, 1980, p. 6).

Re: POLITICS - Evolution | Creation | Intelligent Design

In a message dated 2/26/04 5:46:24 PM Eastern Standard Time, myers_45@...

writes:

> What evidence? There is no evidence for the " Big Bang " theory. Chaos to

> order doesn't happen. Contrary to evolution, the Second law of

thermodynamics

> says everything is winding down, wearing out, like our sun for example.

> Eventually it will burn out.

No, the second law of thermodynamics says nothing of the sort. This logical

error is similar to saying, " The universal law of gravitation says that

everything is falling down, falling down, crumbling. It is impossible for

anything

to be built, suspended, or fly. "

Chris

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Uh, there's a whole lot of math involved in this law. It has nothing to do

with evolution. It is physics based on calculus. No biology. Sorry I

brought it up. It is heat lost doing work, work being the integral of force

df, 1/2 mv^2, that sort of thing.

But I'm done now. My lips are sealed.

Deanna

This law totally eliminates the basic evolutionary theory that simple

evolves into complex. Einstein said the two laws were the most enduring laws

he knew of ( Rifkin, Entropy: A New World View, 1980, p. 6).

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Christ wrote:

A seed? It isn't. What's chaos is the light energy, the carbon dioxide, the

water, and the nutrients in the soil, which become ordered into a biological

system. The plant turns chaos into order, like every other biological system

does.

It only appears chaos to you. . .It is called Divine order.

Sheryl

Sheryl Illustrations

http://dovedesignsrus.com

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--- HEY Do you suppose when a tornado goes thru a junk yard a

747 or a cadillac is built? Dennis

In , ChrisMasterjohn@a... wrote:

> In a message dated 2/26/04 6:28:50 PM Eastern Standard Time,

> dovedesignsrus@y... writes:

>

> > Chaos to order doesn't happen.

>

> Sheryl, plant a seed and watch it grow, and find out how wrong you

are.

>

> Chris

>

>

>

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Deanna,

Sounds simply divine.

> This law totally eliminates the basic evolutionary theory that simple

> evolves into complex. Einstein said the two laws were the most enduring

laws

> he knew of ( Rifkin, Entropy: A New World View, 1980, p. 6).

Wanita

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> Re: POLITICS - Evolution | Creation | Intelligent Design

>

>

>

>Christ wrote:

now THERE is an ego boost.

Suze Fisher

Lapdog Design, Inc.

Web Design & Development

http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg

Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine

http://www.westonaprice.org

----------------------------

" The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause

heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " --

Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt

University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher.

The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics

<http://www.thincs.org>

----------------------------

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That make me chuckle out loud! Love it.

Sheryl

dkemnitz2000 <dkemnitz2000@...> wrote:

--- HEY Do you suppose when a tornado goes thru a junk yard a

747 or a cadillac is built? Dennis

In , ChrisMasterjohn@a... wrote:

> In a message dated 2/26/04 6:28:50 PM Eastern Standard Time,

> dovedesignsrus@y... writes:

>

> > Chaos to order doesn't happen.

>

> Sheryl, plant a seed and watch it grow, and find out how wrong you

are.

>

> Chris

>

>

>

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In a message dated 2/26/04 7:30:06 PM Eastern Standard Time,

dkemnitz2000@... writes:

> --- HEY Do you suppose when a tornado goes thru a junk yard a

> 747 or a cadillac is built?

No, I'd expect a cadillac to be destroyed by a tornado. What an irrelevant

analogy.

Chris

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In a message dated 2/26/04 7:17:59 PM Eastern Standard Time,

dovedesignsrus@... writes:

> It only appears chaos to you. . .It is called Divine order.

Sheryl,

You are so severely missing the point. The seed turns the same chemicals

into life that you claim couldn't be turned into life. The " chaos " of water,

gases, and organic compounds that " evolved " into life is no more " chaos " and no

less " divine order " than the water, gases, and organic compounds that a seed

turns into a growing plant.

Chris

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Suze wrote:

> >now THERE is an ego boost.

Tell me about it. My ID from UMass reads " Masterjohn, Christ " because my

full name wouldn't fit! It read the same thing on the screen when I'd punch in

to work, and a guy behind me noticed it once, and asked wonderously, " Is your

name 'Christ'?!

Chris

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Suze wrote:

>

> now THERE is an ego boost.

>

Suze,

Chris's ego is already big enough.

I screw up on my own name occassionally, but the error isn't quit as

noticable. Guess it shows where my mind was.

Sheryl

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In a message dated 2/26/04 7:30:06 PM Eastern Standard Time,

dkemnitz2000@... writes:

> --- HEY Do you suppose when a tornado goes thru a junk yard a

> 747 or a cadillac is built? Dennis

Dennis,

This deserves a better answer than my last one:

The analagous question would be to ask, do I think that a more sturdy car

would be more likely to survive a natural disaster than a less sturdy car. A

disaster that tends to cause destruction is analagous to the natual selection

component of evolution, not the random mutation component.

A question for you:

If people on two planets, or in two regions of the globe isolated with no

communication, were product designers designing from scratch, and one was

interested in inventing something to keep food cold, and the other was

interested in

inventing something to put food on top of while eating, and the first invented

a refrigerator, would you expect the second to invent a table, or would you

expect him to invent a refrigerator, and turn it on its side to make a

makeshift table?

A second question:

If you were a designer and had infinite resources at your disposal, and you

wanted to invent tables and chairs, would you be more likely to do a or b?

a) You invent and construct a table. Independently, you invent and construct

a chair.

B) You invent and construct a chair. Visualizing that if you were to put four

chairs adjascent to each other in the shape of a square, and remove the backs

from each you would have a large enough space at which several people could

eat, being only moderately problematic in that there would be several spaces

within the " table, " you then proceed, rather than inventing and constructing a

table, to construct four additional chairs. You then modify them by placing

them in the proper position and removing the backs of the chairs.

The reason I ask you this question is because at both the macroscopic

anatomical level and the microscopic biochemical level, we find that identical

structures will be used in one species and another for two totally different

things,

or that within a species there will be dozens of proteins that might use a

particular domain, sometimes completely revolutionizing the function of the

protein simply by pairing up two of them as a dimer or four as a tetramer. You

would think a designer with ultimate tools at his disposal would invent each

system with the proper tools such that it would function perfectly and not

malfunction. But life more closely resembles continual modifcations of other

systems to make make-shift products that often malfunction because of their

make-shift-like design.

Chris

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Hi Marla,

> I think you missed Dennis's point.

I think I understood it perfectly, but I answered the analogy based on its

own merit, rather than the intended effect Dennis wished it to have.

Dennis can correct me if I'm

> wrong, but I think he was referring to the fact that order does not

> come out of chaos.

He was, but his analogy simply did not make that point. It made the point

that a desctructive force will destroy something, which is actually an integral

part of evolutionary theory and one of the primary mechanisms by which

biological evolution occurs.

I've read the analogy that evolution is like

> throwing a deck of cards out of a flying plane, and those cards

> landing on the ground all in one stack and in complete order. That

> just doesn't happen from what we have observed.

You've read that analogy, but sense there is basically no element of it that

is actually analogous to the process of biological evolution, it is

meaningless.

> True science is based on observation.

Like observation of speciation?

Science laws are those that

> can be observed and repeated in a predictable manner.

Like the modern observations of the repetition of the process of speciation?

Given that no > one was around to " observe " and document evolution, all we

> have

> are " speculations. "

The mechanisms by which evolution occurs are not held in the past, but exist

now as they ever did. All of them are testable in some way, and all of them

are tested by the scientific method.

Just as there was no one to observe the 6 day

> creation of the world.

Right, only there are accurate methods of radiometric dataing that can

interpolate the age of the earth scientifically.

Both evolution and creation are based on

> faith.

No, evolution is based on science. The only faith it requires is faith in

the scientific method. Creation is based on faith, but one can make a

scientific case for it as well, and in fact that is done all the time. It just

happens

that those cases are generally closer to " pseudo-science " and almost

exclusively use lies and strawmen, and thus, are not very effective.

There are currently no observations of life springing from

> non-life.

That's true to my knowledge, but has nothing whatsoever to do with biological

evolution, which does not state, as a scientific theory, that life arose from

non-life.

It is erroneous to say that evolution is based on science

> since none of it is testable and repeatable. At least it hasn't been

> done to this day. Those who say that evolution is science are

> confused with what true science is. Gravity is demonstratable, as is

> the first and second laws of thermodynamics. These types of things

> are demostratable through the scientific method.

The process of genetic mutations is demonstrable, and the process of natural

selection is demonstrable. In fact, their synthesis-- speciation, has been

observed several times in worms and rodents.

Both evolution and > creationism are scientific " models " which can not be

> proved or

> disproved by the scientific method (the scienfic method requires

> observation, experimentation, and repeatablity).

You assert this, yet scientists use the scientific method to study evolution

every day.

We are neither

> observing the evolutionary process of kinds of creatures developing

> into other kinds.

Only if you arbitrarily defined " kind " in such a way as to deliberately

exclude the speciation we've observed.

We know, by observation, that:

--random mutations occur

--mutations that enhance reproductivity and survival of offspring have a

greater probability of surviving and increasing in the gene pool, as well as the

converse

--the synthesis of this process produces differentiable species that cannot

interbreed

-- some mutations can cause characteristics of other animals to be manifest

in one animal-- case in point, humans with webbed appendages.

Even after the first two, which are demonstrable, you'd have to assert that

there is some arbitrary mechanism preventing mutations to occur that would

bring about differentiation in reproductive capacity, although that's also been

observed. After the third, you'd have to say that " species " don't count as

different " kinds, " because the worm is still a worm and the mouse is still a

mouse, and that there are arbitrary but existing limits that prevent qualitative

characteristics from being interchanged among animals, but the fourth point

proves that false.

So in what way are the mechanisms of evolution not observed?

Nor are we observing the creation of new kinds of

> creatures. Since the scientific method requires observation and

> repeatability of processes and since neither evolution nor creation

> are truly observed nor are we able to repeat evolution or creation in

> a laboratory situation, then neither are valid scientific theories.

That would be perfectly good reasoning if it weren't false.

Chris

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In a message dated 2/27/04 8:16:02 PM Eastern Standard Time,

talithakumi@... writes:

> Perhaps one of the most common logical fallacies held by

> evolutionists happens when they assert that evolution

> (macroevolution: the ameoba to man senario)is demonstrated through

> speciation (microevolution). This is the common logical fallacy of

> equivocation, that is, the use of a term in an argument that shifts

> meaning so that the conclusion does not validly follow. Your stating

> that evolution (meaning macroevolution by context) is observed

> through speciation (microevolution) is the fallacy of equivocation.

Marla,

It isn't, because you haven't defined " macroevolution " in such a way as to

differentiate it from " microevolution. " In order for this argument not to be an

utter logical fallacy on your part, you need to define in some non-arbitrary

what magnitude of mutational changes constitute " macro-evolution " and you need

to give some reasonably plausible explanation as to how there is a

qualitative difference between the process of mutational changes that lead to

speciation

and the process of mutational changes that lead to " macro-evolution. "

But so far, you have not proposed any such definitions.

And so far, the non-arbitrary differentiation between groups of organisms--

that of the species-- has shown to be fluid, not static. The irony is that

where the fossil record is relatively weak in transitions between species, it is

absolutely abundant in higher order transitions, and it is precisely the

higher order transitions that you claim cannot occur.

So, thus far, you have committed the logical fallacy by introducing random

differentiations among a single phenomenon that you have chosen not to define.

Until you attempt to define your categories and properly propose a

differentiation, my " equivocation " of a single phenomenon remains just.

An analogy: If we observe that a rock weighing 10 Kg falls for 10 seconds

and lands with a velocity of 98 m/s^2, and with a force of 98 Newtons, and a

rock of 100 Kg does the same, hitting with a velocity of 98 m/s^2 and 980

Newtons, we can form a law that the velocity will always be a function of the

time

spent accelerating due to gravity, and that the force it hits the ground with

will be a function of the mass, namely it's mass times it's acceleration due to

gravity.

We can extrapolate from that that if a mass of 1000Kg were to hit the earth

after 10 seconds of falling it would do so at 98 m/s^2 with a force of 9800

Newtons, even if we never observe such an event.

And suppose-- hypothetically-- that we can't observe such an event, because

masses of that magnitude do not fall spontaneously, and we have no way of

engineering such an event.

An argument analagous to the argument you're making now, is that it would be

the logical fallacy of " equivocation " to say that " micro-falling " that is,

falling of masses with a magnitude on the order of 100Kg or less, is

qualitatively equal to " macro-falling " , that is, falling on the order of 1000Kg

or more,

when in fact they are entirely different phenomena, and no one can prove that

" macro-falling " exists, let alone follows the same laws as " micro-falling. "

I would, in that case, suggest that you propose to establish some clearly

defined method of differentiating between the two phenomena; otherwise,

everything we've observed would indicate that a falling mass of any size obeys

the same

physical laws as a mass of any other size.

This is analagous to your current argument, with the exception that you have

not even bothered to define a quantitative or qualitative boundary that

differentiates the two (as opposed to the hypothetical limits of <100Kg and

>1000Kg

in the previous example.)

Chris

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Hi Chris:

I think you missed Dennis's point. Dennis can correct me if I'm

wrong, but I think he was referring to the fact that order does not

come out of chaos. I've read the analogy that evolution is like

throwing a deck of cards out of a flying plane, and those cards

landing on the ground all in one stack and in complete order. That

just doesn't happen from what we have observed.

True science is based on observation. Science laws are those that

can be observed and repeated in a predictable manner. Given that no

one was around to " observe " and document evolution, all we have

are " speculations. " Just as there was no one to observe the 6 day

creation of the world. Both evolution and creation are based on

faith. There are currently no observations of life springing from

non-life. It is erroneous to say that evolution is based on science

since none of it is testable and repeatable. At least it hasn't been

done to this day. Those who say that evolution is science are

confused with what true science is. Gravity is demonstratable, as is

the first and second laws of thermodynamics. These types of things

are demostratable through the scientific method. Both evolution and

creationism are scientific " models " which can not be proved or

disproved by the scientific method (the scienfic method requires

observation, experimentation, and repeatablity). We are neither

observing the evolutionary process of kinds of creatures developing

into other kinds. Nor are we observing the creation of new kinds of

creatures. Since the scientific method requires observation and

repeatability of processes and since neither evolution nor creation

are truly observed nor are we able to repeat evolution or creation in

a laboratory situation, then neither are valid scientific theories.

Take care,

Marla

> In a message dated 2/26/04 7:30:06 PM Eastern Standard Time,

> dkemnitz2000@y... writes:

>

> > --- HEY Do you suppose when a tornado goes thru a junk

yard a

> > 747 or a cadillac is built? Dennis

>

> Dennis,

>

> This deserves a better answer than my last one:

>

> The analagous question would be to ask, do I think that a more

sturdy car

> would be more likely to survive a natural disaster than a less

sturdy car. A

> disaster that tends to cause destruction is analagous to the natual

selection

> component of evolution, not the random mutation component.

>

> A question for you:

>

> If people on two planets, or in two regions of the globe isolated

with no

> communication, were product designers designing from scratch, and

one was

> interested in inventing something to keep food cold, and the other

was interested in

> inventing something to put food on top of while eating, and the

first invented

> a refrigerator, would you expect the second to invent a table, or

would you

> expect him to invent a refrigerator, and turn it on its side to

make a

> makeshift table?

>

> A second question:

>

> If you were a designer and had infinite resources at your disposal,

and you

> wanted to invent tables and chairs, would you be more likely to do

a or b?

>

> a) You invent and construct a table. Independently, you invent and

construct

> a chair.

>

> B) You invent and construct a chair. Visualizing that if you were

to put four

> chairs adjascent to each other in the shape of a square, and remove

the backs

> from each you would have a large enough space at which several

people could

> eat, being only moderately problematic in that there would be

several spaces

> within the " table, " you then proceed, rather than inventing and

constructing a

> table, to construct four additional chairs. You then modify them

by placing

> them in the proper position and removing the backs of the chairs.

>

> The reason I ask you this question is because at both the

macroscopic

> anatomical level and the microscopic biochemical level, we find

that identical

> structures will be used in one species and another for two totally

different things,

> or that within a species there will be dozens of proteins that

might use a

> particular domain, sometimes completely revolutionizing the

function of the

> protein simply by pairing up two of them as a dimer or four as a

tetramer. You

> would think a designer with ultimate tools at his disposal would

invent each

> system with the proper tools such that it would function perfectly

and not

> malfunction. But life more closely resembles continual

modifcations of other

> systems to make make-shift products that often malfunction because

of their

> make-shift-like design.

>

> Chris

>

>

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