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June 6th 2011, 07:06 PM #1
Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
Questions, anyone?
I must state this up front : I will not be able to answer all questions on account of the
most disturbing (and disgusting!) thing that I learned at this conference.
That said, I will answer whatever I am able.
The Symposium was, in a word, outstanding! Superb science being carried out
with results that, sadly (hehe) do nothing to promote Darwinism. One of the
presenters (name withheld upon request) is a Darwinist and even he admitted this.
I was surprised that he didn't convert right then and there but I guess that would
have been too much to ask -- akin to Tiggy becoming a Biblical Creationist.
To start things off: one of the papers was by a graduate student in Evolutionary
Biology. He used the program Avida to see if he could get a net gain in information
using every realistic combination of parameters that he could construct. He began
his presentation by noting that the ONLY way to get any information "gain" was
by using biologically unrealistic parameter settings, in particular with regard to
the "selection" settings. His conclusion was that under any biologically relevant
conditions, there will always be a net loss of genetic information. He compared
Avida with Mendel's Accountant under the same parameter settings and obtained
essentially the same results.
The Proceedings (including his paper) should be published in 2-4 months.
The publisher is highly reputable and secular [I will let you know in due time].
To me this work / paper only provided further confirmation of something that I
have long known. It was, nonetheless, excellently done.
Jorge"Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him." Job 13:15
"Choice trumps knowledge" JAF
Macroevolution: Unmitigated extrapolation coupled with unrestrained imagination generously sprinkled with wishful desires.
Macroevolution: If you don't think about it, it makes a lot of sense.
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June 6th 2011, 07:18 PM #2
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
Well, we figured out pretty quickly that the "biologically realistic" parameters of Mendel's Accountant weren't really biologically realistic. Do you have a paper of this presentation concerning Avdia that we could look over?
--Sam
ETA: Ah, 2-4 months. Sorry, my browser skipped below that paragraph. Well, can you give us a summary of the presentation, in that case?"Rats and roaches live by competition under the law of supply and demand; it is the privilege of human beings to live under the laws of justice and mercy."
► Wendell Berry"As soon as men decide that all means are permitted to fight an evil, then their good becomes indistinguishable from the evil that they set out to destroy."
► Christopher Dawson
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June 6th 2011, 07:41 PM #3
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
As a more pointed question, I would like some clarification concerning Universal Information. Under Gitt's system, Universal Information requires that the "message" be presented in abstract code, meaning that the code shares no inherent relationship or resemblance to the reality represented." Gitt claims that information contained in pulsars, for example, does not meet the requirements for UI, whereas information contained in DNA does. What is the distinction? Does not DNA share an "inherent relationship or resemblance to the reality represented?" It seems that there is a confusion between the reality of an organism and the reality of the DNA. Gitt seems to treat DNA like computer code that outputs the image of a person, where in reality (at least physical reality), the DNA has an "inherent resemblance to the reality represented."
Also, why can Gitt claim that pulsars are not UI when it's just as conceivable that an intelligent "sender" is manipulating a specific set of pulsars in order to send a meaningful message that intends a response for a purpose? In other words, it seems difficult to specify a domain for Universal Information, despite claims to narrow the field. If one cannot quantify semantics, pragmatics and purpose, how can one defend a narrow interpretation?"Rats and roaches live by competition under the law of supply and demand; it is the privilege of human beings to live under the laws of justice and mercy."
► Wendell Berry"As soon as men decide that all means are permitted to fight an evil, then their good becomes indistinguishable from the evil that they set out to destroy."
► Christopher Dawson
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June 6th 2011, 07:52 PM #4
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
You mean a handful of IDiots rented some hall space at Cornell (which did not sponsor or endorse the meeting) and sat around stroking each others' fragile egos.
I liked this write up from Creation Evolution Headlines
What if they gave an ID Symposium and nobody came?Here’s something that should make you mad. One of the organizers had invited Cornell professors, some known to be Darwin skeptics, but they all declined. In addition, he had tried to interest area churches in participating, either by sending people to hear the talks or assist with volunteer help, and they all declined, too. Some of them did not even answer the emails. There is still fear among many scientists toward being associated with a controversy like intelligent design. And, sad to say, many churches these days are more concerned about looking good to the world than dealing with matters of truth.
...
Because of potential harm to careers of some participants, names of all are being withheld from this review.
Pity you still haven't defined 'biological information' in any relevant terms.To start things off: one of the papers was by a graduate student in Evolutionary Biology. He used the program Avida to see if he could get a net gain in information using every realistic combination of parameters that he could construct. He began his presentation by noting that the ONLY way to get any information "gain" was by using biologically unrealistic parameter settings, in particular with regard to the "selection" settings. His conclusion was that under any biologically relevant conditions, there will always be a net loss of genetic information. He compared Avida with Mendel's Accountant under the same parameter settings and obtained essentially the same results.
Just like you let us know the source of your 'doctorate' in due time, right?The Proceedings (including his paper) should be published in 2-4 months.
The publisher is highly reputable and secular [I will let you know in due time].
Can't wait to see your papers in Reader's Digest.
Shouldn't that be Doctor Jorge? I mean, you paid good money for that phony doctorate, you might as well get some mileage from it.Jorge
- T"First understand, then criticize! Not the other way round." - Per Ahlberg, TR
Jorge Stock Excuse Quick Reference Guide:
1) You're drunk / high on drugs
2) You're too stupid / ignorant / dishonest to understand
3) Explaining is a waste of time
4) This assertion is true because I said so
5) This assertion is even truer because I said so twice
6) I already provided evidence (in huge detail) but I won't repeat it or link to it.
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June 6th 2011, 08:46 PM #5
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
I'm surprised (not really) that you are so secretive about this Jorge. Given your proclaimed expertise on evolution (including Avida), you should easily be able to argue the case the paper made, without any problems.
Hinting that there are these huge problems, and that one day soon we are going to see them does not mean a thing. Recently we were told that the rapture was going to happen too. We are still here. I'll guess that your little secret performs no better.
Regards, Rolandrjw
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June 6th 2011, 08:50 PM #6
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
Just two questions then I'll go away....
Did you learn anything new? and
Did the Llamas get you?PATER aeterne, offero tibi Corpus et Sanguinem, animam et divinitatem dilectissimi Filii Tui, Domini nostri, Iesu Christi, in propitiatione pro peccatis nostris et totius mundi. PRO DOLOROSA Eius passione, miserere nobis et totius mundi.
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June 6th 2011, 09:12 PM #7
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
The last example of this I'm familar with was at SMU. At that "conference", they rented space the school rents out to non-school-related events of all kinds. And like Jorge here, they were careful to say the event was held AT SMU, with the implication that it was held BY SMU. So it should be noted that neither SMU nor Cornell has sponsored these events, the school didn't invite anyone, the school does not endorse anything anyone says. They only rented out an auditorium.
Next, at SMU, they advertised the fact that numerous evolutionary biologists were invited to give presentations. They carefully didn't mention that none of them showed up. Then they implied that actual published (or accepted to be published) research papers were presented by these noted scientists. But of course, it was only creationists preaching at one another and trying to do all they could to create the false impression that SMU's reputation was somehow at stake.
Now, one of the purposes of REAL scientific conferences (there are several purposes) is for lesser-known researchers to make names for themselves by presenting interesting work. The very LAST thing they would do would be to request that their name be withheld.
Moving right along, "biological information" remains undefined. And this is essential to the creationist approach, because one can ponitificate about not finding something, without somehow remembering to mention that what wasn't found isn't defined. What we have here is the quintessential foregone conclusion. And sometimes it takes a careful eye to notice that this "graduate student in evolutionary biology" is not named, nor is the school where he is presumably studying. What interesting omissions. So we don't know the names of the presenters, we don't know where they are going to school, we can't track any of them down, we can't read their papers, and we deliberately are not told where we might someday find them, nor when exactly. At real science conferences, each attendee is handed as many copies of each paper as he wants. These are explicitly public documents.
But of course, the purpose of this "conference" wasn't to DO science, or PRESENT science, or DEBATE RESULTS. It was to to create the false impression that ID is a healthy field of research recognized as such by Cornell (and SMU). An impression being created by unnamed people, investigating undefined terms, in unavailable papers. I wonder how many times the creationists will try this before they decide the return per PR dollar isn't quite enough anymore.
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June 6th 2011, 09:14 PM #8
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
I wonder if Jorge is getting all excited over this:-
Originally posted by ref inside
Here is the creationist take:-
http://crev.info/content/110605-gene...ropy_confirmed
Regards, Rolandrjw
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June 6th 2011, 09:18 PM #9
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
Oops, dupe.
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June 6th 2011, 09:30 PM #10
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
You don't know whether to laugh or cry.Here is the creationist take:-
OK, for anyone who wants the thumbnail version, it has long been observed that as organisms in new environments become increasingly suited for that environment, the rate at which adaptation to that new environment occurs slows down. And the astounding discovery of the reason for this is, essentially, that the more nearly optimally an organism fits its environment, the less likely any mutation is to be particularly beneficial. Increasingly small improvements face increasingly less need to be adopted. Change the environment, and once again adaptation occurs rapidly.
And the creationist take is, this proves evolution doesn't happen naturally! Of course, this was the creationist doctrine before the study as well. Isn't that amazing?
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June 6th 2011, 09:36 PM #11
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
I've posted this quote many times, but the observation continues to be 100% accurate:
"In all of these efforts (to push Creationism), the creationists make abundant use of a simple tactic: They lie. They lie continually, they lie prodigiously, and they lie because they must. "
- William J. Bennetta, The Textbook Letter, 1995
- T"First understand, then criticize! Not the other way round." - Per Ahlberg, TR
Jorge Stock Excuse Quick Reference Guide:
1) You're drunk / high on drugs
2) You're too stupid / ignorant / dishonest to understand
3) Explaining is a waste of time
4) This assertion is true because I said so
5) This assertion is even truer because I said so twice
6) I already provided evidence (in huge detail) but I won't repeat it or link to it.
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June 7th 2011, 02:48 AM #12
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
Doctor Gilgamesh will see you now
Jorge is a funny chap
Who over-estimates his worth
And that of so called 'study' done
On the origin of Earth
By people who have sworn an oath
To disregard all evidence
In the name of fragile faith.
(They haven't got a lick of sense!)
Instead they have a conference
To pat each other on the back
For 'research' done by graduates
With expertise they clearly lack.
They make sure that nobody stirs
The calm composure of their day
By pointing out the glaring flaws
In what they do and what they say.
Jorge bought a PhD
To add prestige I guess he thought
While hawking his unwieldy tome
But, what a shame, his ruse was caught.
It turns out that his poor degree
Was bought from a Diploma Mill
Because any self respecting school
Would find his views distinctly ill.
He insults and he bullies
Even other Christian folk
And this, more than creationism
Reveals his faith to be a joke.
For faith must be transforming
And prefers humility
In short our good old doctor
Should be a little more like me.
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June 7th 2011, 05:12 AM #13
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
***********************************************************************
I did give a summary. You will have to wait for the details. I guess I can add the following (from abstract) : both Avida and Mendel's Accountant establish the existence of three potentially prohibitive barriers to the evolution of novel genetic information: (1) the selection threshold and resultant genetic entropy; (2) irreducible complexity or the waiting time to beneficial mutations; (3) the pressure of reductive evolution.
In short, when this young scientist was done, so was Avida and all of its pretentious claims.
Jorge"Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him." Job 13:15
"Choice trumps knowledge" JAF
Macroevolution: Unmitigated extrapolation coupled with unrestrained imagination generously sprinkled with wishful desires.
Macroevolution: If you don't think about it, it makes a lot of sense.
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June 7th 2011, 05:30 AM #14
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
Correct.
No, it does not. Let me offer an example: consider the word 'cat'. You have three letters c-a-t.What is the distinction? Does not DNA share an "inherent relationship or resemblance to the reality represented?" It seems that there is a confusion between the reality of an organism and the reality of the DNA. Gitt seems to treat DNA like computer code that outputs the image of a person, where in reality (at least physical reality), the DNA has an "inherent resemblance to the reality represented."
Do those three letters resemble in any way a mammal that purrs and meows and everything else
that people love and hate about cats? Nope - not in any way. If you spoke and read ONLY
Hebrew and saw CAT you would not in any way "see" a cat. Yet, if I showed you a picture of a
cat then in ANY language you would "see" a cat because the image resembles the actual entity.
That is what we mean by an abstract code -- the code does not resemble the entity being represented.
We identify another type of information (not UI) that we call MII - Mental Image Information.
MII does not have an explicit code and syntax (cosyntics) as does UI. Anyway, lots more ...
You are confusing things. A naturally-occurring electrical pulse is not UI but we can certainlyAlso, why can Gitt claim that pulsars are not UI when it's just as conceivable that an intelligent "sender" is manipulating a specific set of pulsars in order to send a meaningful message that intends a response for a purpose? In other words, it seems difficult to specify a domain for Universal Information, despite claims to narrow the field.
manipulate this pulse in such a way as to encode it in, say, Morse Code - now it would be UI.
The electromagnetic radiation that we receive from a star (or a pulsar) is just EM radiation - period.
But this same radiation could be manipulated into UI. There is no issue here.
In the book we actually propose (a rough) approach to quantifying semantics, pragmaticsIf one cannot quantify semantics, pragmatics and purpose, how can one defend a narrow interpretation?
and apobetics. I expressed mixed feelings about this - it's not an easy issue. For one
thing, NOT everything that is real is necessarily quantifiable. To wit: how many "units" of
love do you have for your spouse or children? Yet, would you deny that this love is real?
There is also a subjective element. I'm not giving up just yet but there do seem to be
aspects here that are beyond mere superficial quantification.
Jorge"Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him." Job 13:15
"Choice trumps knowledge" JAF
Macroevolution: Unmitigated extrapolation coupled with unrestrained imagination generously sprinkled with wishful desires.
Macroevolution: If you don't think about it, it makes a lot of sense.
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June 7th 2011, 05:34 AM #15
Re: Symposium on Biological Information at Cornell
"Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him." Job 13:15
"Choice trumps knowledge" JAF
Macroevolution: Unmitigated extrapolation coupled with unrestrained imagination generously sprinkled with wishful desires.
Macroevolution: If you don't think about it, it makes a lot of sense.
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