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Geek Culture / [LOCKED] Let's Talk About...Life

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Darth Kiwi
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Posted: 2nd Apr 2011 13:16 Edited at: 2nd Apr 2011 13:23
Quote: "Evolution and the mechanism behind it (Natural Selection) is an observable fact. Gravity is understood less than Evolution in Scientific terms."


Agreed. Evolution is not a hypothesis which scientists are still arguing about: it is a well-documented process which pretty much the entire scientific community agrees upon. Of course, just because everyone agrees on it doesn't necessarily mean it's true - 100 years ago everyone thought aether existed, for instance - but it certainly indicates that it's an extremely strong theory.

If you do not accept evolution then you have to explain the natural camouflage on animals' fur, the reason why so many animals resemble each other and appear to have common roots (eg. zebras, giraffes, and horses; species of snakes; species of dogs; the famous finches from the Galapagos islands who are each uniquely adapted to their own island but clearly still finches); you also have to explain why there are observable similarities between the bone structures of numerous apparently unconnected animals, why vestigial body parts atrophy when the animals carrying them move to an environment where those body parts are no longer needed, and why medicines such as antibiotics become less effective over time because the disease becomes more resilient to them.

I'm not saying it's impossible to form a worldview which does not include evolution, but if you do not accept evolution then you do have to explain a lot of things.

Quote: "I was simply trying to make the point that a variety of opinions does not mean that there is no answer. The fact that there are many religions in the world is no reason to conclude that there is no true religion; it is actually a reason to conclude that there are in fact many different religions, and that is all!"

Good point; I'd just like to make the point that I disagree that there is an "answer" at all. In my view, large groups of people just tend to reach a consensus about what is or is not acceptable in their society, based on what is good for the majority of individuals in that society. N008's post has a number of excellent examples in this regard.

Quote: "Take this as an example showing why this is problematic. In your case, you would argue that both good morals and bad morals have evolved. For example, feelings of kindness evolved into what they are, and also feelings of hatred. But isn't there something outside of both of those morals that tells us one is preferred over the other? Why value kindness over hatred? There is no reason to if there is no absolute standard. Even if you say it preserves the species to be kind, we then must ask why that is a good thing? And in fact, a lot of morals have nothing to do with preserving the species."

Those morals which are innate and derived from evolution - such as the instinct to preserve oneself, and the instinct to protect one's young - are neither totally focused on preserving the species, nor on totally protecting the individual. They are all focused on preserving the gene which causes them. This is Dawkins' theory of the "selfish gene". Let's take those two examples, kindness and hatred. Let's say a mother is kind to her child, to the point of being so protective of it that she is willing to die as long as it can survive. This will result in the death of the mother and the survival of the child, which means that the child's genes - which will probably contain the "kindness" gene - will be preserved and the cycle will continue. This will lead to the kindness gene becoming common. The kindness we feel towards strangers is probably a remnant of this gene, which originally only applied to close tribal and familial groups.

Now, let's take hatred. Imagine you are a member of a primitive tribe and you live alongside another primitive tribe. Because the other tribe hunts animals near your land, you hate them. Everybody in the tribe has a deep, seething, terrible hatred for every other member of the other tribe. So, your tribe goes over to the other tribe's land and you obliterate them. Their genes are removed from the gene pool; your genes (including the hatred gene) continue and become common.

In both cases, kindness (towards those like you) and hatred (towards those unlike you) result in the preservation of the genes which cause them, which is why we have them today.

To answer your question, isn't there something which makes us prefer the "good" morals over the "bad" morals? I don't think so, at least not innately. From nature's perspective, kindness is just as valid as hatred or even genocide: both are "good" from the gene's point of view because they lead to the preservation of that gene. There is simply no moral attitude to take: whether something in nature is nice or repulsive from our distant, civilised perspective doesn't effect whether something is "good" or "bad" in nature; better words than "good" or "bad" might be "useful" or "useless", since, in nature, function is all-important and comfort means very little.

And I think you can observe this in human culture. We like to think that kindness is better than hatred but human beings exhibit hatred as often as kindness, often with better results. The Roman empire, the slave trade, hate crimes - these are all things driven by hate, or at least by a tribal desire to protect people like you and to hate those unlike you, which led to a great deal of destruction and hardship for those who were the victims of that hatred. But they are also extremely powerful and result in the success of the hater's objective. Often, the only way to combat such acts is to stop them by force - that is, to hate back.

To be honest, if one of the two emotions "is preferred over the other", I think it's hatred. Throughout human history humans have fought each other, killed each other, and hated their neighbours; if they have ever *not* been at war with their neighbours this is usually because they are either too weak to go to war and are building up their resources, or they are allied with that nation in order to go to war with another. The history of Europe from the Dark Ages to, basically, the fall of the Berlin wall is an example of this.

Kindness, by contrast, has had very little effect on human history. The only reason I personally prefer kindness to hate is because I don't want to live in a world where we're always at war with other people. I don't think this because I believe war is morally wrong: I think this because I like security, I like living in a nation which will not be conquered in the foreseeable future, and I like stability. I don't like the possibility of being killed. I also enjoy the company of my friends and I like it when they are kind to me, so, to facilitate that, I am kind to them. In my view, I just can't see why anything else needs to enter into the question. I don't think there is anything particularly sacred about kindness: it's merely one way of doing things which is suitable for given situations, just as cunning or hatred or trickery would be suitable for other situations.

And I'm really, really sorry about this massive wall of text :S

Secretary of Unknowable Knowledge for the Rock/Dink administration '08
Jeku
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Posted: 2nd Apr 2011 22:55
It appears like this thread is going into debate... i.e. "My view is right, and if you think yours is right, then explain X and Y." Isn't this just a thread for all of us to say what we think, and not be intolerant of the other views?


Senior Web Developer - Nokia
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Posted: 3rd Apr 2011 00:09 Edited at: 3rd Apr 2011 01:30
Quote: "Woah there, slow yo roll! "Only sensible solution"?, saying stuff like that crosses a line we didn't cross in this thread before."


I only say that becuase there's a difference to completely not existing and physically dying, to move on to whatever lies out there with God. I'm really not trying to dismiss others' opinions here, more so to add on to them.

One thing I try to imagine is if I die, and I completely cease to exist (say that my brain has just been completely cremated or something ), and I have no consiousness whatsoever. Then what happens next? How can it be possible to completely cease existing if there is only nothing after that? Because then you can still sense the nothing, you still exist in one way or another.

I guess over all my question, not rebuttal, is: Is it possible to comprehend complete nonexistance, without God nor your spirit ahead of you?

Sorry if I'm only sinking this thread into a flame war, I'm only trying to bring different perspective to it.


Uncle Sam
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Posted: 3rd Apr 2011 00:30
Quote: "It appears like this thread is going into debate... i.e. "My view is right, and if you think yours is right, then explain X and Y." Isn't this just a thread for all of us to say what we think, and not be intolerant of the other views?"


In theory, yes.
crispex
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Posted: 3rd Apr 2011 01:57
Quote: "Evolution does not disprove the possibility of a God, but it does disprove Creation (In terms of God creating humans and the rest of the species like we are now)."


Have to disagree. Evolution does not disprove the possibility of creation.

The funny thing about the Bible, is it never actually mentions a specific year, or even a time period in which the events happened.

The Bible never states that God created the earth in 6 consecutive days in a row. "After the first day", but how far after? It never exactly explains. That's why I believe the Bible was written, some parts to be taken literally, others to be taken mentally and morally.

This comes down to, we could have been created with things we would need at first, and then we would adapt to the environment around us after years. Look at the appendix. The appendix used to serve to help digest food containing things like stones, and other rough materials. This was back ages ago when we were a less civilized and advanced species. We no longer need it, and it simply hasn't gone away yet because these changes take many years to happen.

Let's take a look at other things. Dinosaurs existed before humans, by scientific proof. However, it was never stated in the Bible that man was created first and foremost. The Bible leaves out a lot of small questions that humans have, just because it never stated it directly doesn't mean that it never happened. That's like saying that a certain brand of soap was never recorded in history so it never existed.

This is another example of the fact: Most people never see a million dollars in their life. Does that mean a million dollars doesn't exist? Of course not. A lot of people formulate the theory of no God because lack of evidence.

Take it this way, science has yet to prove the Big Bang Theory actually exists. A prodigy 12 year old has already disproved a vast majority of the theory (I'll dig up the source in a bit). Not to mention, I don't honestly believe that it's possible to have a molten ball of lava stay burning for millions of years, especially being as there were minute traces of oxygen in the air at that theorized time. Heat and flames need oxygen, when the air has no oxygen, it must run off of combustible gases, but even then a significant amount of oxygen is still needed.

I look at it this way, regardless of whether we were created or we some how turned from ocean microorganisms into complex species, the fact is that there is no scientific evidence disproving God or anything of the sort.

I had a science teacher that told me long ago, science isn't set out to disprove God, science is set out to answer questions on how things work and possible ideas as to how things got the way they are. If there is clear amount of evidence that can be reproduced, it becomes a law. Very few things ever became a law because they were disputed.

Another thing to think about is, the first organisms apparently came from the oceans, shortly after the earth "exploded" together, but the thing is, science has yet to sufficiently explain how these organisms formed. They have no way to explain how non-living matter could some how create living things. There is still a lot of unknown answers that science has yet to answer, which leads me to believe there honestly has to be some source beyond what we can comprehend behind it.

As for the belief that you go to hell if you're not a Christian, nowhere in the Bible does it say that the Christian group gets to heaven while nobody else does. Different cultures worship in a different way. Notice how nearly all religions of the world except for polytheistic religions have the same striking views of God. There is no real way to disprove any of the religions, as the area you are in influences your religious decisions. Most countries that have religion can mutually agree that there is a God. It's sorta like 2012, multiple sources say it will happen, how is that any different than multiple sources saying God exists? People only here what they want to here.

I just now realized I've had a typo in my signature for the past 3 years.
jrowe
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Posted: 3rd Apr 2011 02:21
Before this gets locked, I thought I'd post my response to the questions Uncle Sam asked about my post, in a non argumentative way of course.

Quote: "Ok, in answer to the part about life, I see what you are saying. The question is, when did this lifeless matter suddenly cross the line and become able to reproduce? That's mainly what I can't understand."


The honest answer to this is that we don't know. We have several good guesses based on evidence and experimentation which are all feasible. There have been several experiments showing that nucleotides (the repeating constituent parts or RNA/DNA) can be formed from mixtures of their base elements under certain conditions, including those found on ancient earth. If you've got these nucleotides in a solution under such conditions, several would polymerise to form larger molecules and given enough time, some may form the self replicating units that we discussed.

Quote: "Also, I find the assumption that life is a species that can reproduce quite arbitrary. Also, there are people who are completely unable to reproduce (perhaps they have been sterilized). Yet, we do not say that they are dead, do we? "


Of course they're alive, they're just a sterile member of the species. What you've said emphasises one of the problems with our definition of 'life'. We have come up with a purely descriptive definition, because it's useful. It's easy to see why when you examine the awe inspiring variety of different species.

Quote: "In answer to your second part, I think this assumes that a negative mutation results in death for that member of the species. Why can it not work progressively, as with a positive mutation? That is, a negative mutation occurs, and that member survives and reproduces. Eventually, the whole species becomes extremely weak because of that one member's offspring slowly weakening the species, and then dies, or at least stays at its weak point. "


If the mutation was negative enough for it to kill off the whole species, then there’s VERY little chance of it spreading to the whole population unless the population size is VERY small.

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AndrewT
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Posted: 3rd Apr 2011 02:38
Quote: "Not to mention, I don't honestly believe that it's possible to have a molten ball of lava stay burning for millions of years, especially being as there were minute traces of oxygen in the air at that theorized time. Heat and flames need oxygen, when the air has no oxygen, it must run off of combustible gases, but even then a significant amount of oxygen is still needed."


I'm not sure where you heard about this "molten ball of lava burning for millions of years." That's not a very accurate description of the big bang. Just because something is very hot and dense doesn't imply that it's flaming, and heat certainly does not require oxygen.

The Big Bang Theory

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Ron Erickson
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Posted: 3rd Apr 2011 03:08 Edited at: 3rd Apr 2011 03:08
Quote: "It appears like this thread is going into debate... i.e. "My view is right, and if you think yours is right, then explain X and Y." Isn't this just a thread for all of us to say what we think, and not be intolerant of the other views?"


I would agree. Although it has not really been argumentative, it has turned into point/counter-point (debate) on the topics of evolution and religion. It is good to see that everyone has been able to stay polite with each other despite of our differring views. I don't think a thread like this has made it this long previously without blowing up. I don't think there is any doubt that the thread has now stepped over the AUP border with both feet. Great discussion, but time to lock.

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Ron Erickson
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Posted: 3rd Apr 2011 03:08
Political/Religious/Evolutionary

This thread has been locked because it contains political, religious, or other disallowed topic material. Please refer to section 3.7 - 3.10 of the Acceptable Usage Policy for full details:

http://www.thegamecreators.com/?gf=aup#forum

AUP Section 3.17 ...Moderators shall, at their discretion, determine what constitutes a violation of these terms, along with generally accepted netiquette standards, and can take action against those who violate these rules.

If you contributed to the reason for locking, you may now find yourself on moderation, or in extreme cases a ban.

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