Not another butchered understanding of science. First the laws of thermodynamics, now this. Dear me!
 Originally Posted by Riot Maker
The main scientific objection to Evolution is not that changes occur through time, and neither is it about the size of the change. The key issue is the type of change required—to change microbes into men requires changes that increase the genetic information content. The three billion DNA ‘letters’ stored in each human cell nucleus convey a great deal more information (known as ‘specified complexity’) than the over half a million DNA ‘letters’ of the ‘simplest’ self-reproducing organism. The DNA sequences in a ‘higher’ organism, such as a human being or a horse, for instance, code for structures and functions unknown in the sort of ‘primitive first cell’ from which all other organisms are said to have evolved.
None of the alleged proofs of ‘evolution in action’ provide a single example of functional new information being added to genes. Rather, they all involve sorting and loss of information. To claim that mere change proves that information-increasing change can occur is like saying that because a merchant can sell goods, he can sell them for a profit. The origin of information is a major problem for Evolution
Let's discuss some ways in which the amount of genetic code can be increased:
The transcription of DNA goes wrong somewhere along the line and a base pair is duplicated. This is obviously a small scale example
Cellular division goes wrong and more chromosomes (or plasmids if this is a bacteria) end up in the new cell/gamete. This is known as polyploidy.
Cellular division goes wrong, and some chromosomes splice to give Gene duplication
There are many ways in which DNA/RNA transcription and cell division can go wrong.
These changes may be good, they may be bad, or they may have no effect.
If it's good - the wheat plant is an example of a plant that has become tougher and a better crop plant by polyploidy and cross fertilization with a similar wheat species - then the organism will propagate
If it has no effect, the organism will propagate based on other factors. The extra DNA can also mutate with less risk of harmful effects.
If it's bad - and mutations usually are - then the mutation will be weeded out.
Let me give you an example of functional information being added:
There is a gene, Z, which is duplicated to give Z1 and Z2. This particular gene has no effect, good or bad, when duplicated. It is redundant genetically.
Z1 or Z2 then undergoes a mutation, giving rise to a completely new gene, and therefore protein. This has increased the information content.
Yes, this is an unlikely process. However, if you understood the sheer scale of the numbers we are dealing with here, it becomes apparent.
As an analogy, say the chance of winning the lottery is 1 in a billion. If you're exceptionally lucky, you might win with one ticket. Most however won't win even if they play every week, for their entire lives with multiple tickets.
However, let's say someone buys a thousand tickets a week and plays for millions of years. They would almost certainly win several times! What seems extremely improbable becomes almost certain given enough time.
Or as another example, imagine 1 person playing the lottery as above. It's very unlikely they would win. But if trillions of people play, it becomes almost certain that at least someone will win.
In genetics, the odds of mutations like this, and ones that are beneficial are low, but the number of players is exceptionally high, and they buy a lot of tickets!
And the natraul selction, Why would an animal grow wing stubs if it was really survival of the fittest. The wing stubs would slow them down and make them less mobile and easier for a predator to attack.
No, you assume that a wing stub would slow it down. That may or may not be the case, but they key point is that you make a blind assumption. Furthermore, even if this stub were to slow a creature down, it could well have some use in survival, in which case it will propagate. This is what evolution is about!
Let's give some examples where a wing stub might be useful:
A creature that lives in the trees and moves around a lot. A stub can allow them to survive longer falls than no stub, and glide for longer distances/make larger jumps. It can also allow them to expend less energy in doing so.
It can allow creatures to harness the wind. A sailing boat with no sail isn't going far. A small sail is better than none. A bigger sail is better than a small sail.
Those are just a handful of examples of the top of my head. But if such a stub is useless, it will eventually be weeded out by evolution.
How come it took us million years to evolve from apes to Homo sapiens who used basic natural instruments for survival, when in only 50 years we could produce a machine unique of its kind such as computer that can perform incredible functions? One hundred years ago, people used candles instead of lights, used carriages instead of cars and suddenly cars were introduced as the new vehicle in 1900.
I understand we evolve intellectually and move forward but who can explain the sudden huge advancement in only few years?
Because we have the advantage of our predecessors' knowledge.
We don't have to spent time inventing the wheel; it's been done. We can spend more time putting it to good use. If every time we advanced a generation all our technology was lost, we would still be in the stone ages.
A possible explanation for the massive increase in technology in the past few hundred years:
There have been some major new technologies that have dramatically changed the way we live and each one makes us more productive. For instance, the internal combustion engine, the internet, electric power
The population of the world has increased in size by an insanely large amount; there is a lot more manpower to do research, invent, etc.
Increases in communication have meant people can work together much more easily from all around the world, bounce ideas off each other, and find out what other people are doing. This is important because almost all of the key inventions are the works of many people. One person might come up with a new idea, but many people refine the idea. It also means less time is wasted reinventing stuff and technolgy is shared more quickly and more widely.
Technological advances have made us more and more productive, fueling the fire for further and quicker advancement. It's a chain reaction. Advances also allow many new things. It's like a tree branching out. New technology in addition to being able to advance in it's own right also allows previously inaccessable technologies to be developed further.
The double slit experiment is just one revelation that does not conform to an evolution theory at all.
It doesn't even have anything to DO with evolution! Yet another person misusing or misunderstanding science. A shame ignorant people are won over by crap like this.
Last time I checked, the interference patterns from photons passing through narrow slits in an object has nothing to do with evolution.
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