I don't follow the creation v. evolution debate so this was new to me. I did google to see what the other side says about this and found this interesting:
"Human-designed devices, such as radios and computers, do not need to function until their assembly is complete. By contrast, living organisms must function to a high degree in order to thrive during every developmental stage from a single-cell zygote to adult. The embryo as a whole must be a fully functioning system in its specific environment during every second of its entire development. For this reason, adult anatomy can be understood only in the light of development."
I do not vouch for the science behind either article, but the concept that everything must work all the time rather than only at completion is an interesting concept that shows the difference between things I make and how I was made.
I'd disagree heartily with that quote. During development, multi-cellular organisms aren't "fully functional." They survive, but in barely functional states, in wombs, cocoons, or eggs.
Organisms do have to self-assemble though, which is pretty damn cool.
Human designed devices _also_ function in this regard throughout their assembly. Varying the definition of "function" for only one side would make the argument spurious.
They are not designed to do shit, lets just keep that clear.
Now, when we say that they have to remain functional at all stages of development, we mean like unlike your car, during normal development you can't cut various control lines and reroute them.
You can remove the brakes in autocad temporarily to let you tweak something else a bit easier. Evolution cannot do the same with RLN. Removing the RLN at any stage of development constitutes a negative adaptation.
i don't see how, lets take a car for example (like mentioned).
There is a thing called car only when it is fully assembled from different parts. therefore not functioning at every stage of assembly.
Also development of car is external process to car itself. Most of developments of car goes on on models. ( which are not physically the same thing )
I want to mention, in case anyone is uninformed, that the giraffe is not endangered and in fact is in the Least Concern category according to the IUCN.
When you look at all the cables behind any collection of devices, the way they are tangled indicates the order in which they were installed and moved around. Unless someone took the initiative to straighten the mess out.
Apparently, the human body is the same way. And no one has gotten around to cleaning up the mess. But all the wires work well enough.
How do we know if the wires work well enough? For example we can talk so our communication tools work well enough, but what if we were suppose to communicate telepathically, hence this form which works well enough limits our ability to even think properly? Or let's say if the wiring had a little tweak in it we could significantly expand our lifespan?
I believe the bigger ethics question is "Would we want to extend the length of an average life?"
We can easily surmise that saving our parents and grandparents would be an awesome thing (in many circumstances). As an individual choice, having loved ones around longer is good.
It gets stickier ethically the further we move away from the individual and go more towards populations. Where do we put them? Do we warehouse them? How do we manage to feed the bigger population? What will they do, as they must work?
And then there's the big scary word: Eugenics. It was advocated in the 1920's by Sanger, and later by the Nazis. However nasty the connotations are, China is currently going down this very path by taxation and restriction on number of children. Discussions that we thought were closed will come reopened rather quickly, when we have 10+ billion people here. Hopefully, we'll be mature, as a citizen of the world, to discuss these problems.
I think these questions could be answered if we truly spent enough ressources on them. We can scale up as opposed to horizontally. Food could be produced in labs and have more nutrients and taste better.
However, the hard facts we are dealing with today is the aftermath of the Baby Boomers. Normally, when we deal with population graphs, we see a huge base of young, a smaller base of young adults, smaller base of mid adults, and a small/pinnacle of elderly. It's supposed to taper off into a long tail.
Instead, we in the US (unsure about other cultures and areas) a huge bulge around 55-65. Social programs are meant to subsidise the elder through the younger. However in this situation, there's not enough younger to pay for the same care the elder have been receiving. So you either raise the age cap, or reduce service. And, AARP makes sure the second choice doesn't happen.
And about the food quip: back in 2000, the global food output was enough to feed 12 earths of people, yet people still died of hunger. Overall resource maintenance and allocation is the bigger, and unsolved problem.
Presumably if we could extend life, we could also extend the period of life in which you can produce and create useful things. There would be little point extending lives if it meant you spent an extra 30 years confined to a bed with no memory of your identity.
Upper middle class and above have little to no qualms about throwing scads of money at a little bit of extra time here, even if the quality of that time is approaching 0. And in the baby boomers case, they expect the government to send in their due. When that comes, though, we will not be able to afford it.
It's kind of what we talk a lot about in the entrepreneurial sense: We try to convert time to money in a reproducible sense. However, the older you get, money depreciates to 0 (dead people have no use for money), so you run that equation backwards, with large inefficiencies.
But this kind of talk seems to piss off the bulk of downvoters. So be it.
Because I don't think that "humanity tends to adapt to higher population densities as it needs to" is an appeal to emotion, but I do think that accusing someone's argument of being an appeal to emotion in what is traditionally a rather intellectual discussion venue is a pretty heavy accusation.
Signals from brain to some part would go faster few microseconds i guess, and vice versa. And maybe few other hard to reproduce consequences.
But why assume that this is bad designed in first place? We can't only by it's look conclude that it is bad design. Most of internal organs don't look nice anyway but they do the job. (they are in fact intended to look bad so average person would get upset if it see it)
It seems this nerve also controls breathing, so maybe we would be less susceptible to fractures and cuts rupturing it? Could be a tiny, but measurable increase in survival chance.
Edit
Apparently it's also a concern during invasive surgeries:
This is an excellent point. The article is pretty badly written, and oversimplified, I think. If the argument is somehow that this is evidence of evolution (an argument that is never made in the article, but only ever implied), and therefore evidence that there is no design to life (a pretty specious argument in the first place in my opinion), then the article should at least describe how this should have been plumbed, what the consequences of that would be and why it would be better.
The article does not even try to establish that there is no functional reason that it is plumbed this way in mammals. Actually, it doesn't even explain what the function of the nerve is. It is left to the reader to guess.
Most importantly, the article does not try to explain why there is an evolutionary obstacle to looping the nerve around the other side of the aorta. It argues that it is "monumentally inefficient" to do it this way, something that evolution should abhor, but does not even try to explain why evolution is so constrained.
It seems to me to be a science of the gaps argument. Despite the overwhelming appearance of design in nature, which is not disputed even by many atheists, they seem to be trying to argue for {insert favourite naturalistic theory of origins here} based upon personal ignorance of how a perfect designer would go about doing this.
I'm not clear why this even made it to the front page of HN. It seems to have been written solely to stir up debate with people who believe in intelligent design. I think I'd prefer to stick to coding, science and technology.
"Despite the overwhelming appearance of design in nature, which is not disputed even by many atheists"
This IS disputing that there is overwhelming appearance of design. That many atheists don't dispute it may just mean they are busy.
But "many" is not all or even necessarily more than one percent. But the word is frequently used when trying to give the impression of preponderance where none may actually exist.
Saying that there is no attempt to find a functional reason for the indirect path of this nerve is not the same as offering proof that there is a reason for it. If there is a reason, offer it. Can't find it? Didn't try?
Here is a quote from Richard Dawkins: “Biology is the study of complicated things that give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose.” {Richard Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker, 1996, p. 1}
He even uses the word "overwhelming": “Natural selection is the blind watchmaker, blind because it does not see ahead, does not plan consequences, has no purpose in view. Yet the living results of natural selection overwhelmingly impress us with the illusion of design and planning.” {Richard Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker, 1996, p. 21.}
Your attempt to get me to do your research for you is noted. The fact that I got voted down for expressing my (perfectly valid) opinion is also noted. This is why I do not like atheist/religious debates on HN. It's not the right forum for it. If I wanted my religious views attacked I'd be subscribed to talk.origins. This is a tech aggregator, not a forum for atheists and Christians to battle it out.
It was clumsily worded, for which I apologise. What I meant to be saying is that many atheists do not dispute the appearance of design, and even some scientists who are atheists do not dispute it.
I once sat with a large group of scientists at a certain institution and I heard the following words, "and no matter how much it appears things have been designed, we must resist the temptation to see design in complex systems" (statement was in the context of a discussion of complex biological systems). This became the topic of conversation, and there was broad agreement with this statement.
Even if you, and many like you, do not personally believe that there is an appearance of design, that would not change the fact that it is in fact a very common position. Many atheists agree with Dawkins on this. My use of the word "many" should of course not be construed to mean "most". That was not my argument. Nor should it be construed to mean that I believe their position is that these things are designed. That should be clear from the quotation from Dawkins. Despite the fact that on this occasion I was careless with my wording, I do not, in general, use the word "many" to mean "most". I mean that it is not a position held by only a handful of individuals on the fringe. In speaking with many atheists, I conclude that it is in fact quite a common conception.
Incidentally, whilst it is very much a minority opinion (here I do mean only a handful of credentialled individuals), there are atheists who do believe that many complex biological systems were intelligently designed. And I am not referring to people who believe life on earth was designed by extraterrestrials (in the little green men sense), which I feel is usually (maybe even always) not a scientific position.
What is more common is academics such as myself who accept that evolution happens, but who also believe in a designer. And again, I do not mean to imply that this is any kind of majority opinion or concensus. I mean that relative to fringe technical opinions, belief in a designer is common. But I shouldn't need to qualify every single word I use, should I.
So, getting back to the article, although I did not articulate it well, my point is that the article not only simplifies the science, but it grossly oversimplifies the diversity of opinion that exists not only amongst atheists and people who believe in intelligent design of some kind, but of scientists in general. To my taste, and this is nothing more than a personal opinion, I found the article to be greatly oversimplified. Moreover, as I pointed out in a post above, the argument it makes is not a new one, but a recycled one from at least ten years ago. As such, I felt that it very directly conflicted with the injunction on the HN faq to not introduce classic flamewar topics unless there is something genuinely new to say.
Certainly it should be expected that there are going to be dissenting opinions when an article of this nature is presented. Again, this is only my personal opinion, but I felt that the article stuck out like a sore thumb on HN, not because it was about the design issue per se, but because of the way it attempted to deal with this controversial issue. I feel that a scientific approach to the issue would encourage a careful examination of the data and of various hypotheses on their merits. The thing that initially bothered me is that the article did not even attempt to examine why this gross inefficiency was preserved by evolution. To me this is always a clue that there is something further to be understood, and more science to be done. I am not a biologist, but I am a professional academic with a science degree. I expect more from articles such as this and am prepared to say so, and defend my opinion.
The way the nerve is wrapped around other structures is totally consistent with what the fossil record says about how life evolved.
The gross inefficiency was retained because it is more difficult or unlikely that one structure can be moved past another. It could be that if someone were born with a nerve that long and it doesn't loop around a structure, it might not work properly or get pinched very easily or flop around.
There are plenty of possible explanations for what we find in nature. And just because we haven't figured things out doesn't mean supernatural forces are responsible.
"There are plenty of possible explanations for what we find in nature. And just because we haven't figured things out doesn't mean supernatural forces are responsible."
I'm sure I don't need to point out on HN that this is a tautology. If we haven't figured something out, it doesn't imply anything at all.
We may only infer (in scientific terms) that a supernatural explanation is necessary when it can be shown that a natural explanation is impossible (by the law of the excluded middle).
I knew an atheist (dead now) who believed that a friend of his had levitated in full view of approximately 50 people at his father's funeral (the father of the guy who levitated). He believed that it was not a trick pulled by either his friend or any of the attendees at the funeral but that science would eventually explain this in a perfectly naturalistic way.
I also know a Christian who says he saw an amputee grow a new leg instantaneously when some friends of his prayed for the guy. He does not believe this was a trick pulled by either the friends of his or the amputee. He believes it was a supernatural miracle.
I do not believe either story on their say so. Either could in theory be lying to me. And I have no direct evidence to support their stories.
However, if I had had the experience of the atheist, then absent any evidence of a trick or circumstances which might suggest an alternative explanation, I would have supposed a supernatural explanation. And similarly if I had the experience of the Christian. However, I guess that the atheist would suppose a naturalistic explanation in both cases (I cannot ask him, as he is dead). In either case we have a predilection which is likely to influence our conclusion.
I don't think science enters into the picture in either case. Science is a process by which we discover the laws of nature and apply them. Science does not care what I believe. Its conclusions will be the same regardless of what I believe. Whether or nor science changes your beliefs may depend on how well you understand science, but it may also depend on your beliefs and the experiences you have had.
One should never eschew good science because of a commitment to either a religious or an atheistic perspective. All knowledge is subject to review and revision. What we believe however, is personal. And the two should not interfere.
See above discussion it is also explainable by other things ( like embryo development ) wich are not what you call "supernatural". by saying "evolution did it" you are dismissing all other valid explanations. and limiting yourself. evolution theory is also not well understood so by using it to explain things you are just passing hot potato to someone else. This exactly the same thing that creationist are doing. they will say Creator did it! but what? and how? it remains unanswered.
if it was understood we would now be able to induce it on living organisms ( things like grow wings on giraffe and such ). and i don't mean by classic genetic engineering, but by using different environmental parameters we would be able produce desired mutations.
I heartily agree with your first paragraph. It is precisely the same logical fallacy as a "god of the gaps" argument that we need to watch out for here, but in the guise of a "naturalistic theory of origins of the gaps" argument. We don't know how to explain something so we resort to our pet "explain all", rather than continue doing good science.
On your second paragraph, I am not sure I agree. If evolution happened as posited by the "concensus" view then it happened over many, many generations. I don't think growing wings on a giraffe is possible in reproducible experiments that anyone could feasibly carry out. Also, are mutations always caused by environmental parameters? I guess radiation may be an example where they are. But I don't know if it has been established that they always are. Sometimes mutations seem to be encouraged by the very mechanisms of the cell itself, within certain parameters.
So I would have to differ with you on your second statement. I think it is in general very hard to establish what the restrictions are on systems that evolve. In rapidly reproducing species, such as fruit flies or certain bacterial colonies it is much easier to test the boundaries, and in fact this has been done.
apropos second paragraph , at this point i believe that there are more than one way to evolve some organism or many ways to do the same desired mutation. like for example grow wings on giraffe, for example if i just control environmental parameters it could maybe be possible, but nature does it in many ways. (like viruses that inject DNA and what not.)
let us just take mutation by chromosomes (as in Down syndrom and others..), like chromosome deletion, insertion, and other known operations, i believe that by only this mechanism alone its enough power to change any part of DNA desired. (if artificially induced by controlling environmental parameters)but i may be wrong.
what mechanism is most common and most likely to occur in evolution i would like to know.
Down Syndrome itself is the duplication of all or part of chromosome 21, usually due to improper separation of chromosome pairs during meiosis. I kind of think of this like going around a factory and turning up every 23rd valve.
Gene duplication seems less severe. I agree it is not known how to make wings on a giraffe by manipulating the environment so as to control or "benefit" from gene duplication.
Your attempts to study this in nature might be frustrated by the difficulty in identifying paralogs vs orthologs, the fact that gene duplications are often not preserved between generations and the fact that many gene duplications are deleterious.
It's also the case that it is not yet fully understood how gene expression regulates the development and structure of body layouts. New body parts like wings are complex biological structures and do not usually just appear due to a change in genes. At least when I last left the debate conditions in the womb, fetal orientation, rna from the mother, "junk" dna and many other things were being examined for their role in the development of body layouts.
As you are probably aware, research has been done that shows duplication and deletion of body parts due to genetic abnormality. But this is usually not a good way to make an organism survive. How many people missing a leg or who have an extra arm do you know of who find life easier?
Anyhow, my point regarding the giraffes was merely that it is going to take very many generations of giraffes before anything at all happens. You and your great grandchildren will be long dead before then. In that sense I don't think it can be held against science that we haven't been able to demonstrate evolution of wings on a giraffe.
I personally don't hold out much hope for it either. The changes that must occur in a giraffe for it to support wings as a viable organism may be so great that it is no longer anything like a giraffe any more. So the entire concept of wings on a giraffe might just be a natural impossibility.
The recurrent laryngeal nerve actually gives off several filaments to part of the cardiac plexus. On its way up it gives off fibres to the mucous membrane and muscular coating of the esophagus and similarly for the trachea, and then some pharyngeal filaments before reaching most of the laryngeal muscles (See Gray's Anatomy 1980).
During development the nerve elongates as the heart is forced down from the neck region into the thoracic cavity due to formation of structures in between. The RLN is surrounded by an unusual amount of connective tissue and actually supports the ductus arteriosis during development (the arterial duct that bypasses the baby's lungs during fetal development).
It has also been argued that the recurrent laryngeal nerve is actually less prone to damage by following the "groove" that it follows.
What is known is that the two sets of laryngeal nerves are responsible for innervating different vocal characteristics.
In effect, the proposed route of the design critics already exists. But the RLN exists anyway, providing, in the case of the larynx, a somewhat "redundant" backup, after performing other more obvious functions. As is well-known, the body is full of "redundant" backups, e.g. if a given artery is cut, blood can often still reach the intended destination through secondary backup routes.
Stimulation of the vagus nerve, off which the RLN branches, is known to lower heart rate and blood pressure. This can occur as a result of emotional stress. At this time, not enough is known about either the innervation of the larynx or the sympathetic interplay between the organs that the RLN innervates to be certain of any conclusions.
Multiple possibilities remain: (i) there is a function (possibly sympathetic) which is not yet understood, (ii) developmental considerations impose restrictions on possible trajectories, (iii) the nerve follows a very different route to that of the superior laryngeal nerve to provide additional protection not available in a more direct and developmentally viable route, (iv) it's bad design, (v) it's merely an artifact of unguided evolution, (vi) something we didn't think of.
What I was complaining about is that the article basically ignored all of this and presented a highly simplified argument. Even the first diagram gives the impression that the nerve comes down from the brain in a single sealed bundle like a pipe, loops around the aorta, then heads straight for the larynx without interruption. This is misleading at best. It is coincidentally the case that there is a great deal of variation in the course of the nerve from individual to individual. There are some hard constraints, and other things that are not constrained at all.
As with any complex interacting system, understanding the precise constraints in this particular biological feature is a challenging scientific problem. To simply assume "evolution did it" without careful investigation is moribund science.
The original argument of the article was made in published literature at least as early as 2001 (Intelligent Design Creationism and its Critics, Kelly C. Smith) and has been recycled very often since then. It is not the only example of supposed poor design in the body of mammals, some of which are now understood to have very important functions, which may be either viewed as evidence of good design or of elements that have been preserved by evolution for a reason.
Another example are the nerve fibers that dilate the eyes. They travel down the spinal cord, exit at the base of the neck into a ganglion, travel back up along the carotid artery into the brain, and finally connect to the eye.
I've been an atheist all my life and especially because of that it saddens me to witness the slaughter of an animal for the sake of fundamental research in order to debunk a nonsensical belief in the first place.
I think you are misunderstanding. The primary purpose of this is to point out that what we would expect to happen with evolution in mind does in fact seem to happen. The data jives with the theory.
Now, the secondary purpose is to provide some amusing snark: Anything that would "design" such a thing would be anything but "intelligent".
Why wouldn't the fall change our bodies. Didn't God say if you eat of it you will surely die? There are hundreds of other passages both in the new and old testament that say we are disease ridden evil individuals.
So the "fall" rerouted the recurrent laryngeal nerve. Makes sense!
Anyway, you asked why some people might think humans are perfect, and wnoise answered why some people who read the bible might reasonably make that assumption. What exactly is your continued issue here?
None, like I said I was just curious why people thought that.
Now I get it, people are willingly lazy and stupid.
I guess I think too much of people, I'd expect them to get past page 1 in the bible.
Believe it or not, it is possible for people to read the same text as you, have a differing interpretation, and not be "willingly lazy and stupid".
Well, I mean they are looking for fact in a thousands year old collection of fairy tales by assorted authors, but they're not particularly any more willingly lazy or stupid...
I would have to completely agree with you. That's why I use the bible for at least a common ground. Or a read the fucking manual moment when people just start spewing random crap. Just doesn't help their case.
Actually the details are irrelevant. The entire premise can be disregarded out of hand. That anybody bothers to address specifics such as this post, or matters of dogma/biblical interpretation is more to make it relatable than relevant.
Because it's not relevant. The entire epistemic concept of a "Creator" who is supernatural is nonsensical, and without any superior merit to any other meaningless hypothesis.
Wait, so it's not relevant to ask why people think a way they think? I mean if someone makes such an uneducated assumption it makes me question their logic in general.
I don't really care why people believe in their many gods. From one god to the next, the premise is still invalid for the same reasons. I don't take them any more seriously than I would a person suffering from a schizophrenic episode.
It's not like you seek out worshipers of Thor to find out why they believe that. Your hypocrisy in expecting people to listen to you would be comical if it weren't annoying.
Rewind a bit.
Do you know what epistemology is? If you do, then you know why the answer to the question doesn't change from one religion/holy book to the next and you're just trolling.
If you don't, you're just wasting both our time when you should be reading. MIT OCW isn't a bad place to start. Nietzsche's various works (Beyond Good & Evil, Twilight of the Idols, Antichrist, etc) are also good.
Well being ignorant on purpose is not the trait of a good scientist or engineer.
I am not asking why this person doesn't believe in God, but rather why they believe what they believe (that we're supposed to 'perfect'.) This has little or nothing to do with religion. It is an inquiry into human behavior.
Also, do you know what the bible says about the Greeks and their knowledge? Because if you don't then you're just wasting our time. ;-)
You are making a very uneducated presumption by clumping these gods together. How very unscientific.
How am i expecting people to listen to me? WTF? Because I posted one post on this thread? I'm not the person writing a blog and claiming that I know there is no God.
I know first hand just how useless college education is, along with those books. Which to be honest, I've only skimmed through a few.
I honestly can't get past the self-righteous bullshit that those people assume. I just can't stand when they make simple mistakes regarding the texts they're arguing against.
I hate it how they assume their conclusions are better than the conclusions of thousands of years of accumulated texts.
I hate it how it's being taught to even dumber people who can't get past the bullshit. And I hate it because I'm forced to read them to find out the dumb shit people believe in.
If I learned anything in school is this: humans are stupid.
There has been few if any scientific truths achieved by a man that have stood the test of time. I would never rely on their conclusions for anything. (Much less any conclusions from a silly philosopher.)
(Sorry for the rant, I've just recently been forced to read stuff from Joseph Campbell and I'm still annoyed by it. Even though he makes an occasional good point or gives me an idea, he's still an idiot.)
It's not science, it's epistemology. Gods are not relevant to science by definition, as they cannot be tested.
>I know first hand just how useless college education is, along with those books. Which to be honest, I've only skimmed through a few.
:\
You don't know what science is, and you don't value knowledge.
>There has been few if any scientific truths achieved by a man that have stood the test of time.
You definitely don't understand science. It's about process, methodology, testability, and continually expanding, refining, and testing our understanding of the universe.
What's that Bible thing you speak of? Does it contain any more gems of wisdom, possibly about dinosaurs? Or its' recurrent laryngeal nerve? I'm in great anticipation of your reply.
"Human-designed devices, such as radios and computers, do not need to function until their assembly is complete. By contrast, living organisms must function to a high degree in order to thrive during every developmental stage from a single-cell zygote to adult. The embryo as a whole must be a fully functioning system in its specific environment during every second of its entire development. For this reason, adult anatomy can be understood only in the light of development."
http://www.icr.org/article/recurrent-laryngeal-nerve-not-evi...
I do not vouch for the science behind either article, but the concept that everything must work all the time rather than only at completion is an interesting concept that shows the difference between things I make and how I was made.