ginjawarrior
Well-Known Member
thats not what i was sayingYes, it's kind of presumptuous to assume evolution cannot ever be described in terms of an equation or underlying computations...
thats not what i was sayingYes, it's kind of presumptuous to assume evolution cannot ever be described in terms of an equation or underlying computations...
and its called organic algorithms . . . the mathematics that predict DNA sequencesthe goldern rule?
possibly with all the variations you could make such an equation (it would be mind bogglingly complicated tho)
however biostudent was saying that people are now treating the theory of evolution as a law
without the elusive equation how can it possibly be treated as a law?
unless of course he is misunderstanding scientific theory and scientific law
i dont thnk he siad that . . he siad laws like th elaw of gravity . . . and theors are theores . . .laws unproven to be true . . . . seems pretty basic to methe goldern rule?
possibly with all the variables you could make such an equation (it would be mind bogglingly complicated tho)
however biostudent was saying that people are now treating the theory of evolution as a law
without the elusive equation how can it possibly be treated as a law?
unless of course he is misunderstanding scientific theory and scientific law
Paging Dr. Feynman... Dr. Feynman, you are needed in operating room #6...the goldern rule?
possibly with all the variables you could make such an equation (it would be mind bogglingly complicated tho)
however biostudent was saying that people are now treating the theory of evolution as a law
without the elusive equation how can it possibly be treated as a law?
unless of course he is misunderstanding scientific theory and scientific law
I think Feynman would turn in his grave if he heard you comparing evolution to social sciencesPaging Dr. Feynman... Dr. Feynman, you are needed in operating room #6...
[video=youtube;M5fc4oV2F3o]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M5fc4oV2F3o[/video]
Then there is his classic clip on the Scientific Method...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OL6-x0modwY
Whoa there, champ... I'm not here saying anything about evolution.I think Feynman would turn in his grave if he heard you comparing evolution to social sciences
He goes on about organics not being proven to be better
Evolution has been shown again and again to be true
Again I'll ask how can you treat evolution as a law when a law is an equation (one we haven't discovered yet)
I'll settle for one example in lieu of explanation
Please define the 2 as separate from each other?i think you are mixing up the theory of evolution and the term evolution . . .they are independent of each other
evolution happens it is true 100%
the theroy or evolution is a theory not a law and has continued to be argued to this day . . .genetic drift and random mutation/variation have very strong arguments as causality to evolution being true vs Darwin's theory based on observations and conclusions at the time
You quoted me for that clip and bolded my quoteWhoa there, champ... I'm not here saying anything about evolution.
I can't treat evolution as a law... unless you can parametrize variables for it.
Perhaps Agent-based modeling can be useful in exploring particular "micro-theories" of evolution?
And I don't think Feynman would care over me posting an old clip of him on a stoner forum. But he might play the bongos for you while you rhapsodize on about the differences of laws and theories...
Indeed I did quote you and use that clip... The reason being I wished to address the thread's original question:You quoted me for that clip and bolded my quote
If that was not your purpose then why?
However it's mindbogglingly complicated and I doubt even in the next thousand years we wouldn't have comps powerful enough to run such equation even if we did find it
people treating scientific theories like scientific laws, as such is the case with the theory of evolution in contrast to the law of mass conservation.
Moore's law cannot carry on indefinitely it's already starting to fail[/B]
A thousand years is a long time for Moore's Law
Is it a law? It has equations!
Is it testable? Depends on definitions...
Is it Science?
And yes, I agree; his original statement was poorly crafted.
But, these changes we observe as Evolution are mostly (completely) random. For it not to be random, there has to be a design.Yes, it's kind of presumptuous to assume evolution cannot ever be described in terms of an equation or underlying computations...
Heheh... Moore's Law was a calculable limit in the first place, based on the gap limits for layering silicon (if one looks at processing speed).Moore's law cannot carry on indefinitely it's already starting to fail
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9226758/Physicist_says_Moore_s_Law_is_collapsing_?pageNumber=1
While I pulled a thousand years out of my arse I stand by it wrt the complexity needed to for evolution equation
Here's a differing perspective on some of the observed evidence. It's generally assumed that the Universe is expanding - based on what we observe. But think about us if we were circling the drain of a bathtub. Things on the edges of the bathtub would appear to be getting further away - because we are going down the drain at a significantly greater rate than the rest of the water (or Universe) is. It's possible either way, but sometimes we just like to jump to conclusions. And I'd argue that some people's belief in science and the scientific method (and, by proxy - the people - key world being people - who practice them) is well beyond reasonable and well into the grounds of religious. If only because their egos are really gigantic and overwhelming their ability to reason and think objectively. I see it plenty from many folks on here who claim to be kings of objectivity and who probably even have degrees applicable to some field of study (but hold some really foolish and religious like positions based on bad science - see the entire GMO debate where traditional safety study standards have been thrown out the window for "substantive equivalence").I dont know Mr Neutron..... The Big Bang Theory didnt just arise out of some guys wet dream..... It arose from observational evidence, in fact! Previous to the "BBT", scientists thought that the Universe was in a "Solid State" where galaxies created new matter as they moved further away. Since Hubble (you know, the guy they named the telescope after) showed that the Universe was not in a solid state, but expanding, if its expanding, it has to have started from something small, right?
There's also the Cosmic Background Radiation, which is everywhere at about 3 degrees in temperature. That's the static you see on analog televisions when a television station isnt on the channel you are watching. Since the CMB is "everywhere" around the Universe, that also suggests pretty strongly that our modern view on cosmology is accurate enough that we're at the very least in the right direction, if not pretty spot on. The WMAP data is very very easy to read!
Many less people argue the big bang "theory" these days because of so much observational evidence in so many different fields that suggest the very same thing.........
Sorry for typos, posting on a stupid smartphone.
If we were circling the drain we would be rapidly moving towards our neighbours while moving away from edge of bath...Here's a differing perspective on some of the observed evidence. It's generally assumed that the Universe is expanding - based on what we observe. But think about us if we were circling the drain of a bathtub. Things on the edges of the bathtub would appear to be getting further away - because we are going down the drain at a significantly greater rate than the rest of the water (or Universe) is. It's possible either way, but sometimes we just like to jump to conclusions. And I'd argue that some people's belief in science and the scientific method (and, by proxy - the people - key world being people - who practice them) is well beyond reasonable and well into the grounds of religious. If only because their egos are really gigantic and overwhelming their ability to reason and think objectively. I see it plenty from many folks on here who claim to be kings of objectivity and who probably even have degrees applicable to some field of study (but hold some really foolish and religious like positions based on bad science - see the entire GMO debate where traditional safety study standards have been thrown out the window for "substantive equivalence").
For every obsession, there is a zealot.It's possible either way, but sometimes we just like to jump to conclusions. And I'd argue that some people's belief in science and the scientific method (and, by proxy - the people - key world being people - who practice them) is well beyond reasonable and well into the grounds of religious.
Depending on where you were, these things might not be as readily perceptible - especially on a gigantic scale if you're not really looking.If we were circling the drain we would be rapidly moving towards our neighbours while moving away from edge of bath...