









Two More Fleas
552. Comment #149465 by robotaholic on March 25, 2008 at 4:23 pm
553. Comment #149524 by Jon_Sociologist on March 25, 2008 at 8:33 pm
Comment #149436 by clearmind:
[Please give us a link to the post where I said that planets "created" the organic chemicals.
294. Comment #139439 by Jon_Sociologist on March 5, 2008 at 8:47 pm
Comment #149436 by clearmind:
MANIPULATION, OR DEFINATION AND MTATION TYPO OR YOU CANNOTEXPLAIN eVOLUTION BY LOGIC SO YOU ARE MAKING A U TURN? i GUESS IT IS QUITE CLEAR.
554. Comment #149527 by Jon_Sociologist on March 25, 2008 at 8:49 pm
Comment #149445 by clearmind:
God's creation cannot be deemed with the worldy conceptions and understanding.
Comment #136361 by Jon_Sociologist on The Salamander's Tale thread:
Chemistry is what genes do best; a chemical receptor would be a simple cell for DNA to come up with. Having a chemical receptor that allows an organism to smell something poisonous, and thus avoid that danger would give a clear advantage in terms of natural selection. Once you have one it becomes easy for a random mutation to duplicate that receptor, thereby sharpening the sense of smell. A sharper sense of smell again confers an advantage for natural selection. Once you have more than one receptor it becomes easy for a random mutation to cause some of the receptors to be sensitive to different things, allowing an organism to avoid a wider variety of threats, with obvious natural selection benefits. With this sense of smell it is also easy to see how a random mutation could cause certain scents to be attractive rather than repulsive, natural selection would then favour those organisms that were attracted to food sources. Of course it may have happened in the reverse order with attraction to food coming first, and avoidance of poison coming later
Comment #149445 by clearmind:
This is so funny that with your limited understanding and perception, you are asking how god did it.
Comment #149445 by clearmind:
God created all the animals and still creating and will create in the lab of the world
Comment #149445 by clearmind:
still you are asking childish questions to cover the logical fallacies in evolution?
Comment #149445 by clearmind:
This is barely deciving yourself or burying your logic into sand? Give up jon. The more you write like that tne more people believe that evolution is a hoax
555. Comment #149530 by Diacanu on March 25, 2008 at 8:51 pm
556. Comment #149540 by Jon_Sociologist on March 25, 2008 at 9:54 pm
Comment #149449 by clearmind:
How and why do the beavers build dams? You cannot explain any animals's God dreiven intution by evolution? No You can't
Comment #135126 by Jon_Sociologist on The Salamander's Tale thread:
With the rise of multi-cellular organisms it became possible for cells to specialize into the various rolls that a living organism requires to survive. Thus we have the various structures such as nerves, muscles, and etc. that we see in complex organisms.
Once organisms developed brains, complex behaviour began to have an impact on the course of evolution. Hormones and other bio-chemical reactions have been clearly demonstrated to have a major impact on behaviour (picture a woman with PMS, or a man with "roid rage"). The structure of the brain also influences behaviour.
Comment #149449 by clearmind:
This is How God created all the animals on purpose with their specific duties.
Comment #149453 by clearmind:Comment #149372 by Jon_Sociologist:If you cannot connect the logic between
Are you seriously suggesting that the fact that someone has to program an animated show about DNA proves that DNA in nature must have such a programmer? The depths of your stupidity never cease to amaze me.
animated DNA show requires the design and correct order to show the audience how DNA is built IN ORDER TO SHOW HOW THEY ARE BUILT IN REAL LIFE SITUATION, THEN, I AM AFRAID THE STUPIDITY BELONGS THE PERSON WHO SAY IT.
Comment #149461 by clearmind:
Neither beavers nor bees can fit into evolution idea or TREE.
Comment #149297 by The Reverend Dark:
Funny that evolution has given us an excellent picture of the history of the beaver.
Paramys - among the earliest of rodents
Paleocastor - a burrowing pre-aquatic beaver
Castorocauda Lutrasimilis from the Jurasic some 145-200 million years ago (The emergence of that most lovely of creatures, the wet beaver)
The more recent Repenomanus Giganticus from about 130 Millions years ago (A beaver of such prodigious size that you would end up wearing the bear trapper's hat)
Even more recent Castorides Ohioensis (10,000 years ago) If I am not mistaken We have one of these in our Nature Museum. (I like big beavers and I can't deny)
557. Comment #149561 by alovrin on March 25, 2008 at 11:36 pm
Then watch Bee movie
558. Comment #149676 by The Reverend Dark on March 26, 2008 at 5:22 am
Wooter quoting someone with an actual command of the language.
Ultraviolet signals in flowers attract bees; these ultraviolet signals have no purpose for the current life of the current flower itself; they only have purpose for the bees, to draw the bees to the flower, so the bees can produce honey -- coincidentally, bees pick up flower pollen, distributing it to other flowers during the gathering of the honey ingredients. "Unthinking' flowers and bees "think ahead" and embed ultraviolet signals in flowers to draw bees to pick up honey ingredients and as a mere after thought, sprinkle pollen along the way to other flowers so future, unborn flowers might live?
Your above quote starts with a bullshit statement concerning the use of ultraviolet signals. They do serve a very important purpose for the current life of the current flower. Pollination. This drives reproduction, and through it, the survival of the particular flower series. Flowering plants expend energy to attract bees - as attracting bees caused greater instance of pollination and through the increased rate of reproduction selected those particular genes. This is an example of a mututalistic relationship; co-evolution between a plant and its partner - in this case between bees and angiosperms. Bees use flowers for food; flowers use bees for pollination. This is not 'thinking ahead' as these traits developed over time.
You can start here; it is fairly simple and has some pretty pictures.
http://www.raci.org.au/chemaust/docs/pdf/2004/CiA March2004p4.pdf
It also should be noted that the relationship between bees and angiosperms is not perfect. There are some angiosperms that expend less energy by mimicking the mating pheromones of bee species. The males copulate with the flowers, thinking them to be females of the species. In this case the bee expends energy for the benefit of the plant; engages in pollination for the benefit of the plant, but does not get a reciprocol benefit in pollen or nectar.
559. Comment #149802 by alan baylis on March 26, 2008 at 8:37 am
Comment #149459 by ThoughtsonCommonToad560. Comment #150228 by alan baylis on March 26, 2008 at 3:33 pm
Wooter,561. Comment #150440 by clearmind on March 26, 2008 at 11:19 pm
Sorry reverend, I am a kind of late for answering. I just stopped laughing about expelled movie. Are really happy days are over for evolution?562. Comment #150492 by Jon_Sociologist on March 27, 2008 at 2:10 am
Comment #150440 by clearmind:
How evolution taught beavers to build up dam?
Comment #150440 by clearmind:
(he can't explain how god could make noses)
Do I have to?
Comment #150440 by clearmind:
I already smell thousand kinds of smell and if evolution cannot explain it how, then do I have to explain?
Comment #136361 by Jon_Sociologist on The Salamander's Tale thread:
Chemistry is what genes do best; a chemical receptor would be a simple cell for DNA to come up with. Having a chemical receptor that allows an organism to smell something poisonous, and thus avoid that danger would give a clear advantage in terms of natural selection. Once you have one it becomes easy for a random mutation to duplicate that receptor, thereby sharpening the sense of smell. A sharper sense of smell again confers an advantage for natural selection. Once you have more than one receptor it becomes easy for a random mutation to cause some of the receptors to be sensitive to different things, allowing an organism to avoid a wider variety of threats, with obvious natural selection benefits. With this sense of smell it is also easy to see how a random mutation could cause certain scents to be attractive rather than repulsive, natural selection would then favour those organisms that were attracted to food sources. Of course it may have happened in the reverse order with attraction to food coming first, and avoidance of poison coming later
Comment #150440 by clearmind:
God's creation is self-explaining and self-proving since it is based on science and logic.
Comment #150440 by clearmind:
You cannot win a battle against logic.
Comment #150440 by clearmind:
If Animated DNA program needs a program to show how DNA is designed, then, in real life situation, DNAs need to be designed. What part of this is really confusing you? It is very simple logic. Don't play the words to be evasive.
Comment #150440 by clearmind:
So how did evolution design bees to protect the balance on the earth by teaching them a sophisticated job, making honey?
Comment #150440 by clearmind:
(You're an idiot. I ask you where I said that planets created organic chemicals and you point to a post where I said that stars did it.)
(Stars 'create' helium by fusing two hydrogen atoms together. You think this is some great propaganda victory for you? )
Jon, now you are saying that again;
Stars cannot create chemicals but they can create helium and planets can create organic chemicals but they cannot create helium.
Comment #150440 by clearmind:
Creation is the word that evolins never used because creation points out creator.
Comment #150440 by clearmind:
Newton, Einstein and other are all believers that there is a creator.
563. Comment #150498 by epeeist on March 27, 2008 at 2:47 am
564. Comment #150568 by The Reverend Dark on March 27, 2008 at 5:56 am
How evolution taught beavers to build up dam? Your answer does not constitute any logic? Reverend if you can, just watch any beaver documentary objectively. It is really amazing. You will see yourself.
565. Comment #150890 by alan baylis on March 27, 2008 at 2:10 pm
Wooter,566. Comment #150987 by GordonYKWong on March 28, 2008 at 12:00 am
Next is GordonThough I am still a little confused by your answers, could you help me understand your God a bit better?What does it means that dogs are created separate from wolves? Does it mean one is a servant of man and one is a servant of the wilderness?Look Gordon, wolves are wolves and dogs are dogs... I explained it many times that biologically, scientifically and logically INTERBREEDING OR EVOLVING FROM ONE KIND TO A SIMILAR KIND IS IMPOSSIBLE. All kinds of animal breed with their own kind.
How can a person tell if a creature is a dog or if it is a wolf?
567. Comment #152424 by clearmind on March 31, 2008 at 2:16 am
to Richard Morgan568. Comment #152426 by Quetzalcoatl on March 31, 2008 at 2:19 am
Self entertaining is another way to deceive yourself
569. Comment #152430 by Steve Zara on March 31, 2008 at 2:27 am
570. Comment #152721 by Jon_Sociologist on March 31, 2008 at 12:04 pm
Comment #152424 by clearmind:
Attempts to wipe out the influence of Expellded all ovet the world will not go beyond being expelled from logic land. The movie Expelled cannot be expelled from minds of people since it defends the creation which is based on logic.
571. Comment #153272 by jwherrmann on April 1, 2008 at 10:31 am
I haven't got my hands on a copy of Berlinski's new book, The Devil's Delusion, yet, but the brief excerpt in the April editon of Harper's reveals at least a dozen misunderstandings of current science and provides a real howler as well. Berlinski "proves" that it is science, not God, that does not exist. (He uses the circumlocution "Nothing [in italics] answers to the name of science.")572. Comment #154119 by Calilasseia on April 2, 2008 at 5:45 pm
1. How did god make our sense of smell?
The general features of the olfactory system are remarkably consistent across vertebrates. A phylogenetic analysis of central olfactory projections indicates that at least three distinct olfactory subsystems may be broadly present in vertebrates and that a fourth, the accessory olfactory or vomeronasal system, arose in tetrapods. The origin and function of the vomeronasal system have been the subject of much controversy, but some conclusions can be drawn. The vomeronasal system did not arise as an adaptation to terrestrial life, as indicated by the presence of a vomeronasal system in modern aquatic amphibians and the increasing paleontological evidence that the last common ancestor of amphibians and amniotes was aquatic. The vomeronasal system is involved in both foraging and reproductive behaviors in reptiles and has been shown to be involved in some pheromonally mediated behaviors in mammals. However, among mammals, some pheromonal responses are not mediated by the vomeronasal system, and the possible involvement of the vomeronasal system in other type of behaviors has not yet been investigated. Thus, the relative functions of the olfactory and vomeronasal systems of tetrapods remain unclear. Other hypotheses that features of the olfactory system are specialized for aquatic chemoreception or for pheromone detection are similarly insupportable. For example, the suggestion that members of the olfactory receptor family can be separated into two groups that function for transduction of air-borne or water-borne odorants is contradicted by the presence of both groups in aquatic amphibians and by a phylogenetic analysis of the sequences for these genes. Interestingly, the putative odorant receptors from the vomeronasal epithelium share little sequence similarity with those from the olfactory epithelium, indicating that these receptors may have been independently co-opted from the larger family of seven transmembrane domain receptors for use in odor transduction. A phylogenetic analysis of the distribution of olfactory receptor cell types indicates that microvillar olfactory receptor cells are widespread among vertebrates and are not restricted to aquatic animals or to the vomeronasal epithelium of tetrapods. Previous suggestions that all microvillar receptor cells are specialized for the detection of pheromones are not tenable. Attempts to recognize features of the olfactory system that are common to all vertebrates and might be specialized for the detection of pheromones vs. more general odorants, or for the detection of water-borne vs. air-borne odorants, are not supported by current evidence.
The olfactory receptor (OR) gene cluster on human chromosome 17p13.3 was subjected to mixed shotgun automated DNA sequencing. The resulting 412 kb of genomic sequence include 17 OR coding regions, 6 of which are pseudogenes. Six of the coding regions were discovered only upon genomic sequencing, while the others were previously reported as partial sequences. A comparison of DNA sequences in the vicinity of the OR coding regions revealed a common gene structure with an intronless coding region and at least one upstream noncoding exon. Potential gene control regions including specific pyrimidine:purine tracts and Olf-1 sites have been identified. One of the pseudogenes apparently has evolved into a CpG island. Four extensive CpG islands can be discerned within the cluster, not coupled to specific OR genes. The cluster is flanked at its telomeric end by an unidentified open reading frame (C17orf2) with no significant similarity to any known protein. A high proportion of the cluster sequence (about 60%) belongs to various families of interspersed repetitive elements, with a clear predominance of LINE repeats. The OR genes in the cluster belong to two families and seven subfamilies, which show a relatively high degree of intermixing along the cluster, in seemingly random orientations. This genomic organization may be best accounted for by a complex series of evolutionary events.
We went to the lab again?
God's creation cannot be deemed with the worldy conceptions and understanding.
This is so funny that with your limited understanding and perception, you are asking how god did it.
I want to see God doing it in the lab?
while God created all the animals
and still creating
and will create in the lab of the world
still you are asking childish questions to cover the logical fallacies in evolution?
This is barely deciving yourself or burying your logic into sand?
Give up jon. The more you write like that tne more people believe that evolution is a hoax.
573. Comment #154261 by Jon_Sociologist on April 3, 2008 at 2:11 am
Comment #154119 by Calilasseia:
The abstract reads as follows:[snip]
the increasing paleontological evidence that the last common ancestor of amphibians and amniotes was aquatic.
Comment #154119 by Calilasseia:
Always assuming of course that your reading comprehension has graduated beyond crayon.
Comment #154119 by Calilasseia:
Jon, on the other hand, is being listened to because, unlike you, he paid attention in science class.
574. Comment #154638 by Calilasseia on April 3, 2008 at 2:27 pm
575. Comment #154660 by Philip1978 on April 3, 2008 at 2:47 pm
576. Comment #154718 by Jon_Sociologist on April 3, 2008 at 3:43 pm
577. Comment #156218 by The Reverend Dark on April 7, 2008 at 6:07 am
578. Comment #156219 by Quetzalcoatl on April 7, 2008 at 6:10 am
579. Comment #156227 by The Reverend Dark on April 7, 2008 at 6:24 am
580. Comment #156300 by Quetzalcoatl on April 7, 2008 at 9:26 am
581. Comment #160226 by moderndaythomas on April 13, 2008 at 8:32 pm
582. Comment #160791 by JohnQ on April 14, 2008 at 11:48 am
Prof Dawkins, Please be careful of these fleas. Comical as they are, one of them could become the new bible. I envision Scientology's "phrophet", in 2000 years, will be revered as "EL Ron the Hub". Crazier things have been believed as we know.583. Comment #169833 by TonyA on April 26, 2008 at 11:08 pm
584. Comment #175864 by King of NH on May 6, 2008 at 7:02 am
585. Comment #175872 by MPhil on May 6, 2008 at 7:20 am
586. Comment #176772 by King of NH on May 8, 2008 at 2:09 am
587. Comment #176782 by MPhil on May 8, 2008 at 2:54 am
588. Comment #177973 by King of NH on May 10, 2008 at 5:00 am
551. Comment #149461 by clearmind on March 25, 2008 at 4:15 pm
(This fits perfectly with the predictions made by the theory of evolution by natural selection.)reverend at least, once if you can, answer my question wiyhj logic and comon sense, in the animal kingdom, forget about DNA difference,, there are a lot of diffrences between animals and they are amazing sepeartely. Neither beavers nor bees can fit into evolution idea or TREE.
iF THE BEES DO NOT MAKE HONEYS WHAT WILL IT HAPPEN?
Curious?
Then watch Bee movie.
Other Comments by clearmind