Quote from traderNik:
D2.0, I noticed that your response to this was 'Got a million years?'. Just wanted you to know that we tried to make the Disgusting Troll (aka ZZZzzzzzzz) understand this point last year in the long ID thread he 'hosted'. In it, he asserts that the apparently finite human life span is proof that humans will not evolve. We patiently tried to explain to him that a million years is a long time and the life span of our distant progeny may be measured in centuries. Indeed, life spans have changing rapidly, in epochal terms, and many biogeneticists believe that there is no reason that humans shouldn't double their current life spans within a few thousand years.
Not sure how much experience you have with this creature ZZZ. He is ET's most hated member, a lying hypocrite whose pathetic life is consumed by his efforts to troll anonymous internet boards. He is an alcoholic currently in relapse. His marriage apparently failed due to his drinking. He has suggested that the children of other ET members be threatened with pedophilic rape (this was suggested as a good joke). He has been banned three times from this site, but remains because of the page views he generates. He lies through his teeth and contradicts himself with no hesitation if he believes he can get a rise out of his prey. He is despised equally by those on the right and on the left. For a great explanation of this pathetic loser, please see this post
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showt...302784&highlight=troll+zoologists#post1302784
It would be a mistake to expect anything resembling an intellectual exchange with this idiot. He will simply ignore those arguments which he cannot refute, and will accuse you of 'ad hominem, red herring or INOC (??)' if you attempt to point out the gaps in his logic. If you really back him into a corner, he will start to respond to your posts by cutting and pasting your text and then posting it as his response, or in extreme cases, he will post pictures of pink rabbits sniffing their fingers. I have driven driven the Disgusting Troll to these extremes a few times - good luck if you attempt to own him for kicks.
Quote from D2.0:
They can make a living cell? Or a plant?
Links please.
Quote from D2.0:
Jesus, this shouldn't be too hard for you, all things considered, but could you provide some proof of your assertions in that post above?
TIA.
Quote from D2.0:
Jesus, this shouldn't be too hard for you, all things considered, but could you provide some proof of your assertions in that post above?
TIA.
I agree and I'm not aware of any ID scientist that equates any chemical process to an engine. What they equate to an engine are things the peer-reviewed literature refers to as "molecular machines". In an article entitled, The Cell as a Collection of Protein Machines, Bruce Alberts, then president of the National Academy of Sciences stated:Quote from D2.0:
For instance, a certain chemical process "looks like" an engine.
The engine is not a wholly compatible frame of reference to the biological chemical process.
He is referring to examples like these for the F-ATP synthase:The entire cell can be viewed as a factory that contains an elaborate network of interlocking assembly lines, each of which is composed of a set of large protein machines. . . .Why do we call the large protein assemblies that underlie cell function protein machines? Precisely because, like machines invented by humans to deal efficiently with the macroscopic world, these protein assemblies contain highly coordinated moving parts ..
and for the flagellumWith parts that resemble pistons and a drive shaft, the enzyme F1-ATPase looks suspiciously like a tiny engine. Indeed, a new study demonstrates that's exactly what it is."
Science News vol 151, p173
and so"the flagellum resembles a machine designed by humans."
Cell 93, 17-20
These are not analogies, these systems are machines. In fact, some labs have already attached the flagellar motor to nonbiological surfaces and fed them ATP and they worked as if thats what they naturally did.we need to think almost in engineering terms about transmission shafts, mounting plates and bushings.
Trend in Genetics, 6/91
We can begin to answer these intriguing questions by asking a more ordinary one: What is a machine? Of the many definitions, I choose to take a machine to be "a device for performing a task." Going further, a machine has a design; it is constructed following some process; it uses power; it operates according to information built into it when it is fabricated. Although machines are commonly considered to be the products of human design and intention, why shouldn't a complex molecular system that performs a function also be considered a machine...Issues of teleology aside, and accepting this broad definition, nanoscale machines already do exist, in the form of the functional molecular components of living cells--such as molecules of protein or RNA, aggregates of molecules, and organelles ("little organs")--in enormous variety and sophistication. The broad question of whether nanoscale machines exist is thus one that was answered in the affirmative by biologists many years ago.
Life itself is machine-dependent.If all men were exterminated, this would not effect the laws of inanimate nature. But the production of machines would stop, and not until men arose once again could machines be formed once more.
Molecular machines are the basis of life. DNA, a long molecule that encodes the blueprints to create an organism, may be life's information storage medium, but it needs a bevy of machines to read and translate that information into action. The cell's nanometer-scale machines are mostly protein molecules, although a few are made from RNA, and they are capable of surprisingly complex manipulations. They perform almost all the important active tasks in the cell: metabolism, reproduction, response to changes in the environment, and so forth. They are incredibly sophisticated, and they, not their manmade counterparts, represent the pinnacle of nanotechnology.
http://www.physicstoday.org/vol-59/iss-5/p38.html
If you ask me what would cause me to merely suspect design I would point to certain aspects of biotic reality that look much more like products of advanced bioengineering and nanotechnology than the tinkering of a blind watchmaker. "Much of what we call biology is really nanotechnology ," says Michael J. Heller, a professor of bioengineering.quote for D2.0:
So I ask you, how do you know what constitues evidence of design and what doesn't?