PZ Myers – Perry Marshall Debate Evolution on Podcast

Atheist PZ Myers Debates Perry Marshall 

Darwinism vs. Evolution 2.0 on “Unbelievable?”

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Host Justin Brierley: Welcome to Unbelievable, the show that aims to get you thinking. Today we’re asking the question “Is it time to upgrade to evolution 2.0?”

Perry Marshall is an author, speaker, engineer, and world-renowned business consultant. So why has he written a book on evolution? Well, in Evolution 2.0 Perry claims to have found a way to break the so-called deadlock between Darwin and Design.

The book includes information on how organisms re-engineer their genetic destiny in real time. It talks about the amazing systems that living things use to redesign themselves, how every cell is armed with machinery for editing its own DNA, and much more.

And Perry’s even offering a public award for anyone who can answer the greatest question in all biology, he says, ‘Where does genetic information come from?’

We’re going to meet Perry in a moment’s time. But opposite him on the show today is PZ Myers. Well-known as an atheist biologist, who’s not afraid to speak his mind on his popular blog Pharyngula.

He regularly critiques the Intelligent Design community and has denounced Perry in the past too, though Perry doesn’t claim to be Intelligent Design. And we’ll get to that a little later. He’s had a chance to look at Perry’s new book and is going to be addressing Perry’s claims, so welcome both PZ and Perry to today’s program.

Perry, let’s start with you. This book is sort of the journey of ten years, more or less. Do you want to tell us about that journey, and why you, in the end, became dissatisfied with both Intelligent Design and Darwinist camps in this debate?

Perry Marshall: This started when my younger brother, who has a master’s degree in theology, was a missionary in China, and in the space of 4 years became almost an atheist. We’re very close, and there were emails and emails back and forth for a couple years, and one day I’m in China visiting him.

We’re sitting on this bus, and we’re having this argument number three hundred and twelve, and this has been going on a trajectory, and he’s very smart. I just was feeling like I was losing ground, and I found myself grabbing for science.

And I said “Bryan, look at the hand at the end of your arm. You don’t think this is a long series of accidents that produced this do you?” “Well, actually yes I do.” And he kind of pushed back with a Neo-Darwinist view of things. And I knew two things: I knew yes I did have my engineer’s intuition about this.

On the other hand, I knew, without him even telling me, that most biologists would be more inclined to agree with him than me. I knew I didn’t know.

I have an electrical engineering degree. I knew that there are things in engineering and in science that are powerfully counter-intuitive. And I knew I didn’t know. But what I did know was that engineering and science are a lot less ambiguous than theology. (Laughing) PZ might agree.

And I said ‘you know what, I’ve got the same question Bryan has. I’m going to let science settle this for me.’ And I went down the rabbit hole.

I’m an obsessive person and I bought probably 200 books. I started reading scientific papers, and I said I’m going to get to the bottom of this, I’m going to find the truth of this. And I think it’s probably going to inform where I go in the faith department.

For a while I just floundered helplessly. I would listen to both sides and all I could decide was: I’m not going to ignore any verifiable fact. And I’m not just going to learn “my side” or whatever the party line might be. I’m not even sure what it would have been anyway. I’m just going to take all the information and try to touch the bottom of the swimming pool at some point.

It was very unsettling at first. The waves would toss back and forth. Both sides kind of made sense and both sides didn’t.

There was a point where I first touched the bottom of the swimming pool and it was recognizing that: because I had written an Ethernet book in 2002 for a major professional society called the ISA which was for process engineers, I knew how 1s and 0s work, I knew how code works, and I came to realize that all of the math, and all of the principles of code, apply to DNA.

Now DNA is code. Cells are more than code, but at the very minimum the principles of communication applied to the cell, and now I could begin to break this apart. And I realized: evolution is a software engineering question. At least I can make a substantial amount of headway starting with that.

And I found a tremendous body of literature connecting genomics to communication theory. And there are journals on bioinformatics. Then things began to make sense. Now to fast forward the story quite a bit more, so we can get into this discussion.

I realized that error correction and error detection were absolutely critical to any kind of communication process and any kind of DNA replication.

Yet the Darwinian view was that random copying errors, among other things like population genetics and gene flow and things like that, were major drivers of evolution. And that it was inevitable that copying errors and things like that would inevitably produce new structures, new organs, new features; natural selection would select them, and that you would have constant improvement just naturally with time.

But everything I knew about software said software doesn’t work that way. And having written an Ethernet book, copying errors never – for all practical purposes – they never help.

So I had a giant discovery moment when – let me just say that for a while, I’m looking at evolution, I find lots and lots of anecdotal evidence that there is evolution. I don’t think the creationists are right on this. I don’t think this is all fake.

However the mechanisms they’re telling me about don’t make sense mathematically and engineering-wise. And then I discovered the work of Barbara McClintock. And her story is:

She kind of approached problems like a hacker. She was hacking corn plants in 1944 using varying measures of radiation. And she damaged a chromosome of a plant. And the plant threw her a curveball; it did something she totally did not expect.

And if I might use an analogy, what she had done was she had ripped a page out of a novel. So if you could imagine ripping a page out of a novel, giving it to one of your friends who’s a writer: “I want you to fill in the missing page by reading what’s before it and after it and use words and sentences that are already in the novel and make it all make sense.”

And this is essentially what the plant did. She called this transposition. Certain genes were moving around and changing the expression.

Host: It kind of re-wrote itself. It sorted of repaired itself at some level.

Perry: Yes, the cell repaired it; it rewrote its own code. She presented this at a symposium. Half the people there laughed at her. And the other half were angry. They were like ‘who does this women think she is, suggesting that plants can re-engineer their own genetics?’ And they didn’t accept i

Barbara McClintock discovered Transposition, which changes expression of genes by moving Mobile Genetic Elements in your DNA. This is similar to the way English changes when we re-arrange words.

If you transpose the sentence “you did have coffee this morning” to “did you have coffee this morning,” you change it from a statement to a question.

 

Well in 1983 she won the Nobel Prize for discovering transposition. And I believe that what she really had done was she was one of the very first scientists to observe evolution actually happening in real time and understand genetically what happened.

Host: Obviously this is just scratching the surface, which you delve a lot deeper into in the book.

But essentially what I take away from this is you develop this view which you say is simply bringing to the surface all this science that’s already out there, but essentially not talked about much in the public sphere.

That essentially there’s a sort of, for want of a better word, intelligence in the cell.

There’s a purposiveness in what the cell does, it’s not just a case of, as you say, random mutations naturally selected over a long period of time. There’s a sense in which the cell is doing a lot more than we ever gave it credit for, in that sense

Symbiogenesis a cell merger-acquisition. A chloroplast is algae inside a plant cell. Epigenetics switches genes on and off in real time. Ohno’s Hypothesis says genome duplications formed vertebrates in hybrids. Horizontal Gene Transfer exchanges DNA between cells.

The Intelligent Design community talks about “Irreducible Complexity” – systems that don’t work unless all the parts are in place. But McClintock proved cells perform sophisticated, irreducibly complex operations in minutes. She talks about rapid new species via hybrids for example. So unlike what Darwinists say, evolution isn’t always gradual. Isn’t fast evolution in live experiments a lot more intriguing than saying it’s impossible?

 

Perry: Yes, they are most emphatically non-random. They’re anti-random, in fact, I would say. So now evolution began to really make sense. And Barbara McClintock was only the tip of the iceberg. Then there was the work of Lynn Margulis on symbiogenesis. There was Ohno’s 2R Hypothesis. There was Epigenetics. And Horizontal Gene Transfer.

And when taken together, these mechanisms actually explain what’s going on, and you can observe them in real time. And I thought this is so much more interesting than what the Intelligent Design guys are talking about, and this is so much more interesting than the traditional Darwinists are talking about! Why isn’t anyone talking…?

Host: Well we needed to take some time to explain where the book came from and the central thesis behind it, so we can begin this conversation now with PZ.

PZ, you’ve run into Perry’s work before. You’ve not been very complimentary about it. So what’s your take on Perry? Do you think he’s just recycling Intelligent Design perspectives? What’s your take? 

If I were in PZ’s position of defending an outdated theory against an outsider, I would also pat the guy on the head and accuse him of not really understanding what’s going on.

But PZ shows poor understanding of Transposition. He makes false statements like “there was absolutely nothing in McClintock’s work that argues against the importance of chance in this business.”

Don’t take my word for it. Read or watch McClintock’s Nobel Lecture. Notice near the end when she talks about rapid “punctuated evolution.” You don’t need to know the stages of cell division to ask: Does anything she’s talking about sound “random”? Is PZ accurately representing her work?

Fact Check: Transposition is when the cell moves a defined cassette of coding sequences and plugs it into a new location. [The “cassette” link shows transposition cassettes in experiments with zebrafish]

Transposition is not just inserting unspecified DNA sequences. Transpositions are by their very structure non-random, and would be even if there were no pattern to where insertions occur.

There almost always is some pattern to the insertions. Yeast retrotransposons insert either >95% upstream of transcription start sites (Tf1, Ty1-Ty4) or >95% into silent chromatin (Ty5).

Contrary to what PZ said, McClintock’s work is explicitly about cells engineering solutions! That is her point. The name of McClintock’s 1983 Nobel Prize speech was “The Significance of Responses of the Genome to Challenge.”

From the first paragraph of her Nobel speech (emphasis mine):

“It was necessary to subject the genome repeatedly to the same challenge in order to observe and appreciate the nature of the changes it induces… In contrast to such “shocks” for which the genome is unprepared, are those a genome must face repeatedly, and for which it is prepared to respond in a programmed manner.

“Examples are the “heat shock” responses in eukaryotic organisms, and the “SOS” responses in bacteria. Each of these initiates a highly programmed sequence of events within the cell that serves to cushion the effects of the shock. Some sensing mechanism must be present in these instances to alert the cell to imminent danger, and to set in motion the orderly sequence of events that will mitigate this danger.”

All her examples (SOS etc.) trigger transposition.

PZ doesn’t appear knowledgeable about McClintock’s work. Her findings perplex Darwinists because Darwinism has no grid for cells re-engineering themselves… but that’s exactly what they do in experiments.

The real problem here is not that PZ misrepresents transposition. The real problem is: Any time you declare “it’s random,” you hit a scientific brick wall. There is no more order or structure to discover. “Randomness” kills curiosity and prevents scientists from doing their jobs. It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

The only way a scientist can discover anything is to NOT assume randomness, but assume there’s a pattern. That’s what McClintock did and it’s why she won the Nobel Prize.

PZ is correct in describing biological systems as “Fault tolerant.” Tolerance to faults is by definition non-random. Cells are fault tolerant because are able to protect and modify their DNA in pursuit of those goals. Notice PZ says “cells hate…” because they do.

 

 

PZ Myers: Well, he’s trying to put a new twist on it, but he’s getting it all wrong. You know for instance when he’s – what I thought was very telling, it’s also telling in the book – he’s a software person, he’s an electrical engineer, and he’s trying to impose his perspective on biology.

So he says ‘ok, biology doesn’t make any sense when I look at it as the way software works’.

Instead of saying well maybe my analogy is totally off base and wrong, he says what we’ve got here is a situation where the biology does not conform to his expectations of how it will work.

And yeah biology is far more fault-tolerant than electrical engineering. You can’t directly compare it to software or code or anything like that because it’s got a lot more complications going on with it.

But on top of that in his book what he tends to do is throw out science buzz words like ‘transposition’ and the transposition discussion is a good example of this. He throws them out, but he doesn’t really understand them.

He’s got McClintock totally wrong. McClintock’s work, which was marvelous work, and yeah it was not initially accepted because it was difficult stuff. If you read her papers, she’s got an amazing mind, it’s really complicated, really difficult things to understand, and that’s largely why it wasn’t immediately accepted.

But she was very convincing because she brought the data to bear. But all of her work was on something called genetic instability, ok? It’s not about cells engineering solutions.

For instance, the stuff on bridge break fusion that Perry mentions. That’s about random chance breakage of chromosomes that have exposed ends. They tend to re-fuse and then when mitosis and meiosis occurs they break. And they break in random places.

Not in designed, engineered, planned places. But in an entirely random way which means that the progeny of that cell will exhibit greater genetic variation than the parent.

There was absolutely nothing in McClintock’s work that argues against the importance of chance in this business.

Host: Can we maybe start to open up that area, before we progress onto any more. Just from the point of view, you’re saying, PZ, base: the analogy is all wrong–Perry’s come to this as an engineer, well this isn’t computer engineering that we’re talking about, this is biology. Very different thing. Different types of tolerances, different kind of thing going on.

And then you’ve obviously got specific criticisms about how he’s interpreted that particular work that he spoke about.

Ok, the obvious question that PZ has aired here: Perry is an engineer, so why, no matter how good he may be at engineering, is he writing a book on evolution? You aren’t a qualified scientist in that sense, and a lot of people will probably throw your claims out the window just on that basis alone.

Why do you believe an engineer does have the right to throw his hat into this ring?

Perry: We build models in science. And all scientific descriptions are models. All scientific descriptions are analogies. If I drop a steel ingot off the building onto the ground I can use calculus to calculate its trajectory. But the calculus is not a steel ingot and its gonna have a margin of error.

The question at hand is: do the models of information theory apply in biology to the rearrangement of code? And we have huge bodies of literature going back to the 60s that say: Yes it does.

Host: That DNA is an information code. It is not simply like an information code. It is an information code.

Perry: Yes, and I would certainly acknowledge that it is more than a computer program, but it is not less than a computer program. And the rules of information, entropy and all of that work.

Now PZ said biological systems are much more fault tolerant. The reason they’re more fault tolerant is because they have layers and layers of error detection and error correction. So when radiation damaged the chromosomes, the plant repaired the chromosomes non-randomly.

So, yes, the damage was random, but the repair was not.

Host: PZ, why do you think he’s got this research so wrong exactly, can you explain?

PZ: I have no idea, that’s very bizarre, because what’s going on in McClintock’s models are that chromosome ends are broken, and they tend to fuse back together.

Cells hate single stranded DNA hanging out there. So what they’ll do is the two broken ends will stick together. Then when the cell divides and they have to separate, they will break in some random position on the chromosome.

PZ says: “The only repair mechanism here is that it doesn’t tolerate dangling ends”

Transposition does far more than repair dangling ends! Transposition is one part of a very sophisticated programmed response to dozens of kinds of external threats like heat, DNA damage and starvation. Cells re-arrange DNA in highly organized ways.

 

 

The only repair mechanism here is that it doesn’t tolerate dangling ends ok? It fuses dangling ends together. But the actual repair is in essence randomly damaging to the ends of those chromosomes.

McClintock also studied transposons, transposition, which is basically where there’s an enzyme that copies out a piece of DNA and then inserts it into some random other spot in the genome.

It’s a well-understood phenomenon; it’s actually used in a lot of biotechnology techniques. And that again is also a random process.

Often what happens when you have a transposition is that it inserts that copied sequence into a place that’s damaging to the cell, or shifts regulation, or in many cases will be in a totally neutral place and does nothing at all.

Host: Perry?

Perry: There are two problems with what PZ said. One is that error correction in this case is just repairing broken ends. And the latest Nobel Prize discusses three layers of error correction, which result in a copying error rate of less than one in a billion base pairs.

And the correction of the errors is explicitly non-random. Transposition is also non-random because if you get a book on transposition, it shows that transposable elements tend to land in specific places and specific patterns. If you read McClintock’s work on this, what’s going on is explicitly non-random.

Now PZ’s claim that it’s random is not mathematically provable. And what I found was that in every instance when I started chasing things down I would find a pattern, rather than evidence of randomness.

Host: What Perry sees as patterns, do you just see as… I don’t know, what do you see it as PZ if it’s not a pattern and some kind of purposiveness within a cell?

PZ: Well, of course it’s a pattern, but it’s a random pattern.

Patterns can be random. So when McClintock describes the patterns of irradiation and corn, for instance, that are induced by these breakage models of the chromosome, what she was actually seeing is variation in the structure and the color of the tissues that was random. That was driven by random processes.

It’s hard to argue that there was a scheme or a plan behind them. Because we understand the mechanisms for how this was generated. And we can see exactly how it happens, and it doesn’t seem to involve any kind of design elements.

There’s no engineer inside the corn plant deciding where things go.

Host: Okay, you believe that there is some kind of an engineering principle going on. I don’t know if you would hazard to guess how that happens but as far as you can see, Perry, you observe it happening in all that you can tell?

Perry: I predict that there is a mathematical model or matrix that is dictating what is going on. And that that is a testable hypothesis. PZ’s assertion that it’s random is not a testable hypothesis, because it’s not even possible to prove that it is random.

So, PZ, my question for you is how do you know that it’s random and where is your proof?

PZ: So, in biology, randomness is an operational property. What you do is you do the experiment, make predictions about the results you’ll get. And what you typically see in these kinds of experiments is that you can’t predict where the mutation will occur.

For instance, if you’re inducing mutations, you can just predict that it will occur with some frequency. And you do many repetitions of the experiment, and you can get a nice distribution of where mutations occur in each event, you can plot these out.

And you can see that they’re actually fairly random in what they do. That’s all we care about is that there’s a process we can use to determine whether a particular event was predetermined by other prior consequences or whether it seems to be arbitrary.

And in this case when we look at things like transposons, when we look at bridge breakage fusion models. What we see is random variation in an operational sense.

Perry: So, PZ, I believe that you are imposing your view of things onto something and making a statement that you can’t scientifically prove. It’s mathematically impossible to prove that it’s random, so you’re making an assertion that can’t be confirmed.

Now I’ll give you an example of a way that you could confirm that evolutionary events are random, and they are the very popular fruit fly experiments and radiation experiments that have been done since the early 1900s.

If your assertion was correct those experiments would have produced some consistent percentage of fruit flies or moths or bacteria that were better, had better organs. But in fact those experiments didn’t make better fruit flies.

The best they ever achieved was getting the organism to activate its error correction systems; again, which were study of the recent Nobel prize. But those experiments were very disappointing.

Now if you were right, I believe those experiments would have been successful. But those experiments failed to do what the experimenters wanted them to do. Instead what they did was they achieved, they discovered which parts of the genome caused birth defects when damaged.

Which then told the scientists which parts of the genome build certain structures.

Host: Quick response from you PZ, and then we’ll go to break and continue this discussion.

PZ: He was cutting in and out there so I didn’t quite get it all, but I got the gist of it.

Here’s the thing, when we do these experiments what we do see is improvement of the organism. For instance, I work on zebrafish, and I work on a highly inbred strain of zebrafish, and what we find is over time strains of organisms raised in the laboratory become progressively better at living in the laboratory.

Which may mean they are less adaptable, less able to live in the wild. But it’s a routine thing that we see all the time. And under the understanding of ‘better’ as used by evolutionary biologists they fit the criterion.

They get better and better at living in their environment all the time.

Perry: So, PZ, you are taking for granted that this happened randomly, and communication theory indicates there’s no way that those adaptations were random. And my contention is that cells sensing hundreds of inputs from the environment make alterations to gene expression, epigenetics, maybe there’s horizontal gene transfer, there could be all kinds of things.

In the case of your zebrafish, I would think that it’s probably more along the lines of epigenetics and transposition types of events, and this is why the improvements are observed.

It doesn’t just happen with random inputs, it happens because the organism is responding to an input.

Host: Somewhat technical debate today, and we like to do the technical debate sometimes, and two excellent guests to join me for it. We’re asking today: is it time to upgrade to Evolution 2.0?

That’s the title of Perry Marshall’s new book. He claims to have found a way to break the deadlock between Darwin and design. It’s all about capability of the cell to organize itself, to reorganize itself.

There’s something rather special about the cell. It’s not all random mutations acting on natural selection says Perry.

Well, PZ disagrees. PZ Myers is our atheist guest on the line from the States.

[break, reintroductions]

Host: …Obviously what we’re hearing here from Perry, PZ, is as far as he can tell what you describe as randomness, the typical Darwinian-evolutionary model can just as easily, and more easily in Perry’s view, be described as this very purposed response to environment and stimuli and so on. And when we do try and do the experiments where we kind of influence that ourselves, and try to introduce mutations and so on, it rarely if ever produces beneficial mutations and so on.

So yeah feel free to respond and we’ll move things on in the conversation.

Transposition, Epigenetics and Horizontal Gene Transfer are not magic incantations that explain things. They are well-documented, non-controversial systems that organisms use to change their DNA. These systems operate in everyday life.

The only magic incantation in this conversation is the word “random.” When anyone says an evolution event happened because of a “random mutation,” that statement is indistinguishable from magic and equally unscientific. This is because randomness is unprovable and the event cannot be reproduced.

In real life, systems never evolve randomly. Automobiles don’t, computers don’t, chemical plants don’t, and neither do fruit flies or cells. Randomness is just another word for “magic.” Transposition events are not random. Over 75,000 scientific papers show that they are highly structured and obey rules.

A scientist’s job is to discover patterns. Not deny them. PZ is advocating an anti scientific position… and then trying to shame me for explaining McClintock’s work to the public. Nothing about MClintock’s work was the discovery of “random processes.” In the conclusion of her Nobel Prize speech, she says:

“In addition to modifying gene action, these elements can restructure the genome at various levels, from small changes involving a few nucleotides, to gross modifications involving large segments of chromosomes, such as duplications, deficiencies, inversions, and other more complex reorganizations.”

So when PZ says “It’s hard to argue that there was a scheme or a plan behind them” he’s pretending 50 years of molecular biology never happened. The eminent scientist Lynne Margulis said in her book Acquiring Genomes:

“Many ways to induce mutations are known but none lead to new organisms. Mutation accumulation does not lead to new species or even to new organs or new tissues… Even professional evolutionary biologists are hard put to find mutations, experimentally induced or spontaneous, that lead in a positive way to evolutionary change.”

 

PZ: So what’s frustrating about talking to Perry here is he keeps throwing out these words as if they’re magic incantations that explain things.

So for instance when he was talking about my zebrafish and how they get better at living in a laboratory environment over years. He says ‘transposition’ and I’m sitting here wondering what the heck is he talking about.

Transposition is a very specific genetic and molecular phenomenon. You don’t simply say “transposition” as if solves everything because it doesn’t.

Transposition is another mechanism that causes random mutations in the genome. So in a sense he’s right yeah we get random variations in individual zebrafish that are then selected for by their presence in the lab environment that leaves the next generation, the survivors, being better able to live in a lab environment.

But as far as directedness, there’s absolutely no evidence for that. There have been many experiments done with transposons and flies and other organisms.

They do have specific sequences they like to zoom in on, but those sequences are common throughout the genome. So you can’t simply say that there’s some kind of directedness. There’s no purpose.

In fact the whole argument rests on the fact that he is proposing this amazing mechanism in which there is purposeful modification of the cell by the cell, and he’s the one with no evidence for that.

We’ve got decades worth of evidence in biology supporting the idea of random genetic change.

Perry: PZ, none of your evidence supports random genetic change because there’s no way to prove randomness in mathematics.

Now what we can do is we can say ‘does this fit certain patterns’ and you said it tends to conform to specific sequences. You know transposons don’t just jump to anywhere. There are certain places that they are more likely to go to than others. There is a definite pattern.

It’s kind of like if you read the newspaper the letter E is going to appear 13% of the time and the letter Z is going to appear about 0.1% of the time.

And we see a similar statistical profile in genetics where you see specific gene sequences specific percentages of the time, and if it was actually random you would not get these–they’re called, ergodic patterns–which is, for example the letter U almost always follows the letter Q in the English language.

That’s an ergodic pattern. There are ergodic patterns all over biology and they specifically and directly contradict your claims of randomness.

 

There is no way to prove that any specific sequence of symbols is random. I’m not ignoring the evidence; PZ is.

Darwinists assume random mutations cause evolution. This is impossible to prove. There is no evidence this is true.

Fact Check: “Code” in biology is not a metaphor. “Information, transcription, translation, code, redundancy, synonymous, messenger, editing, and proofreading are all appropriate terms in biology. They take their meaning from information theory (Shannon, 1948) and are not synonyms, metaphors, or analogies.” (Hubert P. Yockey, Information Theory, Evolution, and the Origin of Life, Cambridge University Press, 2005)

 

Host: You’re groaning, PZ. Why are you groaning?

PZ: Because he’s ignoring all the evidence. Yeah you’ve got a metaphor and you are shackled to this metaphor of a computer code or a language or whatever. It’s invalid here.

That when we do real biological experiments we can make predications about the results based on chance. And they work, they actually work.

So for example a really simple kind of experiment that I do with students every year is we are doing mapping experiments. We’re mapping genes in the genome. This is a process in which you encourage recombination. You do breeding experiments, and you get random recombination of pieces of chromosomes, and what that means if two genes are really close together there’s a low chance there will be a recombination event between them.

Fact Check: PZ’s example of homologous recombination is also a non-random process (it requires DNA sequence complementarity) and is subject to control by the cell. See for example:

Brick, K., F. Smagulova, et al. (2012). “Genetic recombination is directed away from functional genomic elements in mice.” Nature 485(7400): 642-645.

 

 

If two genes are far apart there’s a greater chance that there will be a recombination event between them. Just because of the physical properties of the chromosome. We can do this and what we see is that it works. That every time we can do mapping of genes, we can tell which genes are closer to other genes by looking at recombination frequency.

So this is a case where we’re using the predications of chance events in the genome to map out the structures there. Furthermore, when these same animals, these same organisms, are taken and subjected to a molecular gnome analysis, for instance we sequence the entire DNA strand what we find is that proportionally we’re largely correct.

Yeah that chance events do a really good job of mapping out the distribution location of genes on a chromosome.

Perry: But the breakage points are not random. You’re moving genes around, and the genes are staying intact or sections of the genes are staying in tact, they’re not just breaking anywhere.

When PZ says, “let’s not confuse this with a uniform random distribution… there are places that are hot spots for breakage” he’s just contradicted himself. A “hot spot” is a place where mutations happen more frequently. That by definition is non-random!

To a Darwinist, anything we don’t understand gets swept under a big giant rug called “randomness” or else “natural selection.” It’s abdication. PZ is just moving the operation of randomness from one level to another.

 

 

 

 

 

 

PZ: No they can… let’s not confuse this with a uniform random distribution. It’s not a uniform random distribution. There are places that are hot spots for breakage.

But when you look at this, yes, you do get cases where it breaks in the middle of a gene, and you get a recombination event that bridges right at the point of a gene.

You get them in the energetic region, but those are larger so you’re more likely to get them there.

Uh, that’s the point of the experiment is that when genes are far apart you get many more recombination events between them…

Host: Now, as a layman, coming in here between two people who obviously disagree, and I’m not following every aspect of this debate, but if I could try to boil it down as I often try to…

You’re saying on the one hand, PZ, when you get these events going on in the cell, at the genetic level, when you look at what’s happening when a cell’s repairing itself or whatever it’s doing, it’s doing it on the basis of statistical probabilities, will play their part.

Something will happen, but you can see that it’s happening because of the physics of the thing, and the way it all plays out.

Perry’s contention, on the other hand, is that no there’s something really purposive going on here that, in some way, the cell itself is exhibiting almost a desire let’s say to repair itself, rather than it just being the random events that, when all added together, do create something that ultimately helps the next generation to improve and all the rest of it. I’ve probably not described that brilliantly.

PZ: No, actually, I think that’s a good point to make. Yes, you would expect that if there was intent that this cell would be trying to optimize its condition, trying to select for, and without selection, just doing it by itself, designing and engineering a better solution.

But the thing is when we do those kinds of experiments what we’re typically comparing is deleterious and wild-type alleles. So we’ve got an allele that’s actually deleterious to the organism and we’re looking for a recombination event with a healthy allele.

And so what will happen is that by the distance separating them, they will sort out into some organism that will get two deleterious alleles, others will get a healthy one and a deleterious one and others will get two healthy alleles.

One prediction is if this was a purposeful event, you ought to get more with the double healthy combination, right? And what we find…

Host: So, it just looks like what you would exactly expect, from your point of view? 

PZ: Right, what we find is the distribution of the deleterious traits and the distribution of the healthy ones are dictated by chance, not by the well being of the poor fly that’s going to inherit them.

Host: Ok, what’s your response to that Perry?

Perry: There’s a video, it’s on the Evolution 2.0 Facebook page at the moment

where the University of Redding damaged a gene related to the tail of a bacterial flagellum. So the flagellum didn’t have a tail, and they came back after the weekend and the organism had repaired some gene and now had a tail.

Now, we see this over and over and over again when we look at genetic repair. That the cell is constantly trying to maintain the integrity of the genome, and, again, the latest Nobel Prize is specifically about the error correction. There are three layers of error detection and correction. The cell is militantly defending itself again random errors.

To give an analogy that listeners would understand – PZ, please tell me if I’m misquoting you – is suggesting that if this were a newspaper article, the words and phrases could get broken up in all kinds of unspecific, statistically random places and rearranged, and sometimes they’re helpful.

I’m saying they’re actually obeying the rules of a grammar, and the words are moving around intact, or subsets of words like words with two parts.

 

 

Host: There’s an editor somewhere in the background making sure that you don’t just end up with a scrambled article in some way. I’d like to move this to the bigger picture, because I’m obviously not going to get you guys to agree on these specifics about these genomes and so on.

One thing you make the suggestion of in the book is the Junk DNA debate that’s been going on for the last few years. You believe this is an example of the way in which your thesis is being born out in some way.

Perry: Yes. Craig Venter was asked not too long ago: “What is your opinion about junk DNA?” And he said a lot of arrogant people have prematurely announced that 90% of our DNA is junk, and he’s not willing to jump to that hasty conclusion. I think that’s a very hasty conclusion.

Nature is not nearly that wasteful. PZ says a lot of interesting things about junk DNA. He says ‘junk gibberish with occasional bits of translated code that convert to proteins with regulatory elements’.

PZ, your view of the genome as this kind of junkyard – I think it’s completely wrong. I think time will prove that wrong. I think it’s an anti-scientific position to take.

Host: Hmmm, throwing down the gauntlet there. PZ, explain briefly what junk DNA is, and why you think it is a good indicator of why evolution is, in that sense, a random process…

PZ: Well, yeah junk DNA–it’s a complicated term. There’s lots of things that are called junk DNA that are not junk DNA.

But roughly 90% of the human genome has no purpose along the lines of assisting us in our life, ok it has no functional role, no functional human role, although it may it have some selfish genome roles to play.

I have to throw the gauntlet back because, yes, I read Perry’s section on junk DNA. It was disgracefully dishonest. This is simply awful what he says here. I’ll just quote it from page 273:

It says:

…ENCODE’s finding were unambiguous. At least 80% of our DNA is active and necessary. If you deleted it, our bodies would fail. Our children or grandchildren would be missing something critical that they need to survive.

RETRACTION: PZ is right. Encode’s findings were not nearly as strong as my statement in the Evolution 2.0 book. My statement was misleading so I retract it.

“At least 80% of our DNA is active and necessary. If you deleted it, our bodies would fail” was MY opinion and not ENCODE’s findings.

I still predict that this is true, even though ENCODE’s findings don’t yet support it. ENCODE has found that over 80% of the genome is transcribed in a tissue-specific manner. 

I estimate at least 80% of our DNA is active and necessary. I believe it would take 100+ years of experiments with real humans to reach a definitive answer.

Do you know a pregnant couple who is willing to delete 80% of their child’s “Junk DNA”? If so, let us know.

One thing we do know about the non-coding regions of DNA is they contain sections of retroviruses.

In mammalian placentas there is a membrane one cell thick called the syncytium. It mediates transfer of waste and nutrients between mother and child.

Genome research indicates that the instructions to build the syncytium first came from code in the envelope gene of the HERV-W human endogenous retrovirus.

Also, so far as we can tell, different versions of the syncytium were constructed in mammals three different times from entirely different viruses. (Reference: Virolution by Frank Ryan.)

 

PZ: That’s a complete lie. I will say that right up front. Not even ENCODE, and I have a lot of disagreements with ENCODE, I don’t think they did a good job, but not even ENCODE would agree with that. That’s simply not something that they determined at all.

At the ENCODE experiments, they defined function as simply binding any other protein in the cell. It’s the loosest possible definition of function. They have done no experiments to determine whether those elements are active or necessary. And they definitely have not done any experiments in which they have deleted some of the junk DNA to see if it has an effect.

So to make that claim, this is very characteristic of his book, is that he makes this sweeping, strange arguments that are informed more by his prejudices than they are by actually evaluating the facts appropriately.

Another thing he says “the burden of proof that junk DNA is truly junk is on them until they understand everything and explain every nuance of the genome’s operation in precise detail until they can build a cell from scratch. Their job is not done.”

That is also false because most of the junk DNA we actually know what it does. For instance there are transposes that are part of the junk DNA that have no function for the cell. There are reverse transcriptases that are relics of past viral infections.

A lot of the junk DNA we have categorized, we know exactly what it does and it does not contribute to the well being of the organism.

Host: It’s kind of historic, hence the name Junk DNA that played a role at one point in our evolutionary history but no longer does, and, for you, is yet another reason to show why this – why the idea and purpose of this is –

PZ: Well, yes, and we actually know what it does. You know if you find a sequence – there are sequences called LINES or transcriptases, and we know exactly what they are, we know what their enzyme does. It copies RNA back into DNA, which is not a function that our bodies use, but viruses do.

Host: Let’s allow Perry to pick up this gauntlet again in order to throw it back across the line. [PZ: A little bit of gauntlet slapping.] Yeah absolutely, and I expected no less.

 

So far as I can find, the most DNA that has been deleted from a mouse with no discernible effect is 1-3%. Do you think extrapolating a 1 to 3% experiment to “90% junk” might be a bit of a reach? I welcome anyone with a better Junk DNA deletion example than the mouse experiment. Did it have “absolutely no effect?” The article says:

“Knowles cautions that the study doesn’t prove that non-coding DNA has no function. “Those mice were alive, that’s what we know about them,” she says. “We don’t know if they have abnormalities that we don’t test for.”

“David Haussler of the University of California, Santa Cruz, who has investigated why genetic regions are conserved, says that Rubin’s study gives no hint that the deleted DNA has a function. But he also believes that non-coding regions may have an effect too subtle to be picked up in the tests to far.

“Survival in the laboratory for a generation or two is not the same as successful competition in the wild for millions of years,” he argues. “Darwinian selection is a tougher test.”

 

Perry: So, PZ, has anyone deleted this junk DNA and seen what you get?

PZ: Why, yes, there have been experiments where large structures of DNA have been deleted from organisms such as mice. And most of that has absolutely no effect. 

Perry: So I should predict that if you run the experiment 10 or 20 or 50 generations you will find that does get used. It is necessary, it is helpful and useful. I think it’s extremely premature to say that it’s junk. And if you can’t build an organism from scratch… 

Again, I go to what Craig Venter said, he engineered a synthetic genome, and injected into a cell, and got it to work. And if you did this on a grander scale, and you let the experiments run long enough, I think you would find there’s a whole bunch of stuff in there that’s not junk.

And one of the reasons I believe this is true, the human genome is only 750 megabytes; it’s about the size of a CD. Considering that 750 megabytes contains most of the instructions for building human, body yet Mac OS takes about seven CDs and Windows takes 20.

First of all I’m really impressed that the job gets done in 750. What you’re saying the job is actually being done in 75.

Which is just flat out extraordinary. I don’t think you can get that much good code in 75 megabytes. And if you can it’s the best code I’ve ever seen and so I think it’s really premature…

PZ might have a leg to stand on if bioinformatics was not such a successful discipline… or if DNA did not have so many strong parallels to computer information.

Excerpt from Evolution 2.0: DNA, like many human-made codes, also has redundancy (326), error correction (312), checksums (316), linguistic structure (403, 520), and codes layered inside of codes (675).

The nucleus of a cell stores data with a million times the density of our best hard drives. The genome stores an incredible amount of functional information into a very tiny amount of space.

So I predict that the 90% of DNA we don’t yet understand is not junk. The amount of so-called “Junk DNA” will fall every year until the term is abandoned entirely.

20 years from now, nobody is going to be defending the Junk DNA theory anymore.

About Metaphors: “DNA is a lot like software” is a metaphor. “DNA is code” is not a metaphor, because DNA by definition contains the genetic code.

trans_tcip_sTake a look at this visual comparison between transposons in DNA and the structure of data in Ethernet (click to open in a new window):

 

 

 

 

 

PZ: You don’t see that this metaphor is totally self-defeating? You’re trying to compare the human genome to information in code on a CD, and you’re pointing out that it’s really really tiny. Even if we count all the junk DNA as functional it’s still really really tiny.

Doesn’t that tell you right there that maybe you’re making an inappropriate comparison, that you’re dead wrong on trying to shoehorn the information in a cell into your rather naïve conception of digital information from an electrical information from an electrical engineer’s standpoint?

Perry: Well I don’t think that all of the information for building a human body is in the genome. I think it does reside in other places in the cell. But it’s a remarkably small instruction set that builds a remarkably sophisticated machine. Again we’re using metaphors.

Host: PZ’s fundamental objection though is that you’re using—you’ve come at this as an electrical engineer, a software engineer, so you’re seeing the biological processes with that set of filters and PZ says it’s not the same discipline—you’ve got the wrong analogy.

I’m interested to hear from you, Perry, why you think this is an absolutely valid analogy for biological systems.

Perry: Well, two reasons, Craig Venter, is not just a software engineer, he’s a biology engineer, and he’s very good at it. And he says this is premature, and he’s got a lot of credibility with me.

And secondly it’s because bioinformatics is such a rapidly advancing field, as is Systems Biology, that when somebody violates a basic mathematical principle—mainly information entropy, and I know that in all of the other analogous systems, what he’s saying would never work—then I question his model.

All I’m saying is what’s going on here is non-random, and the non-random hypothesis is more consistent with the spirit of science than the randomness.

Because as soon as you say ‘random’ inquiry stops, then there’s not further dissecting what’s going on. There’s a pattern here.

Host: PZ? 

This is not about Electrical Engineering or even software. This is about the fact that the math (“random” is a mathematical term after all) doesn’t work. And if the math doesn’t work, it’s a bad theory. No matter what. If you’re going to build a scientific model of anything, the math has to work.

Good-old-boys clubs always get offended when outsiders show up and raise the game. The taxi companies are very upset about Uber. But customers like Uber because taxis give them a lousy, over-priced experience and Uber gives them an affordable, pleasant experience.

 

PZ: Yeah I would love to hear Perry question his own model because he’s not doing that. Over and over again what you do is you tell me ‘well from my perspective as an electrical engineer this doesn’t work, it can’t work’ and I’m telling you yeah but biology does work, so maybe your perspective is wrong.

Maybe you’re coming at this from an invalid angle. Yet you just come back and insist on applying these fallacious ideas about electrical engineering to biology. It’s like we’re in a constant circle here where you refuse to consider the possibility that you’re wrong.

I also have to point out one other thing and that is every time I get in an argument with a creationist they fall back on this appeal to authority. Craig Venter is a smart guy, and he’s really good at what he does, but he’s not an evolutionary biologist in any sense of the word.

In engineering, the standard for claiming you understand something is: You can build it, and it works. Venter builds stuff that works. I won’t believe anybody’s Junk DNA hypothesis until they can demonstrate experimentally that the Junk DNA really is unnecessary.

I find an astounding lack of curiosity about how things actually work among Darwinists. They are too often content with hand-waving explanations that have no substance.

I also find the same tendency among creationists. If natural processes can bring about evolutionary events, wouldn’t you want to know about it?

 

He does not do evolution. He does brute force molecular biology. And so to argue that because Craig Venter is unfamiliar with the evolutionary arguments against his interpretation does not hold any water with me at all.

Perry: It’s the brute force molecular biology that I respect. Because he has to build a functional cell, and he doesn’t really concern himself with where it came from.

Your junk DNA theory comes from where you think it came from, or how you think it got there, and I believe you’re wrong. And the proof is in the pudding.

If you can build a successful cell then you must know something about the genomics. And I think he knows. 

[break]

 

 

Host: As we come back from break…

Perry, you’re a bit of a person who likes to throw challenges and gauntlets as we’ve already experienced in the program.

One of the things you’ve offered is a prize for someone who can solve this riddle in a naturalistic way. Do you just want to explain what this Evolution 2.0 Prize is?

Perry: Yes, the genetic code is one of those central discoveries of all modern science, and when I began to understand: encoding, decoding, copying, all of that, everything began to make sense.

And what I observed was that all of the other codes that we know the origin of are designed.

We of course don’t know where DNA came from, and we don’t know of any codes that aren’t designed that fit the definition of a code.

So early on I was going around and I thought ‘I’ve got a really awesome God of the gaps argument.’

But I shifted my position, because I got in this discussion with my brother and he’s like “So, Perry, what do you expect scientists to do? Say ‘OK, God did it’ and then go out to lunch? I mean come on.”

He had a point! When you shift from ideological concerns to doing the practical work of science… you know that all science can do is peel the onion another layer and another layer and another layer. 

Maybe this is solvable. And we should understand where codes and where information come from.

I heard Richard Dawkins say the origin of life was a ‘happy chemical accident’ and I was appalled at what an unscientific answer that was. And so I decided to put together a technology prize.

So with a considerable effort, forming a company, forming a private equity investment group, right now were offering 3 million dollars if someone can produce a patentable process that generates codes without cheating. And I think this would be a very valuable thing to achieve.

Host: And would that effectively disprove at some level your view that the cell is doing it itself or what would be the purpose, I suppose.

Perry: I think it might tell us something about deeper principles in the universe that what we haven’t yet discovered, that might explain a lot about what goes on in biology. Biological organisms are really amazing I’m sure Mr. Myers would agree with that, they are amazing. And I think there are some bigger pieces of mystery that we are missing.

The investors who are backing the Evolution 2.0 prize are serious. If this problem is solvable, then they want it solved, and they want to own the patent. If somebody solves this, they’ll get a LOT more recognition than just money. This will be one of the ten most important science discoveries of the 21st century. And yes, they’ll get the money

 

Host: What do you think about Perry’s prize, PZ?

PZ: Oh, I think it’s a sham.

Host: You’re not going to put your hat in the ring, and try and win this 3 million dollars?

PZ: No, because there’s no way he’s going to give the prize to anybody.

This is exhibit “A” of “begging the question: Assuming the very thing you’re supposed to prove… then offering it as proof.

Maybe the origin of DNA is a miracle. Or maybe it’s purely natural. But we can’t be sure it’s natural because there’s not yet any proof for how it got here.

PZ, where is your proof that it “spontaneously emerged”? How is this a scientific theory?

 

 

If I were to say OK I’ve got one for you it’s called DNA and genetics and biology. There is no designer behind it. It’s a code that spontaneously emerged and has evolved over 3 billion years–he’s not going to accept it, he’s going to say it’s not going to count.

Host: Well, I guess that’s what he’s saying—this is precisely a code which, in every other instance where we have a code of similar kind, we know it’s been designed, engineered and so on; why would we assume that this is the only counter example to that—I suppose is Perry’s point.

PZ: Well, one good reason is that the code evolved when there were no humans around. Humans are really good at generating codes and signaling and all that kind of stuff. But this is a case where we weren’t around 3 billion years ago, so we’re off the hook on that one.

But I would say the bias goes the other way. Perry has said specifically that all codes are created by a conscious mind. This is not demonstrated, this has not been shown.

What’s far more interesting is that naturalistic processes can generate something as complex as a cell. So just to assert that all codes are created by a conscious mind…

Host: Is that an assertion on your part Perry?

Perry: It’s a misquotation. All codes we know the origin of are designed.

And, PZ, you said it spontaneously emerged. Could you please give us evidence through a repeatable scientific process that confirms your assertion?

PZ: First of all let me just say that was not a misquote. It’s on page 192 of your book where you say “all codes are created by a conscious mind, there is no natural process known to science that creates coded information.” 

Perry: That was the way I originally stated it in 2005. And then you’ll see as you turn the page that I updated it a little bit to my current stance.

PZ: Which is no difference from your original stance.

Perry: …that all codes that we know the origin of are designed.

PZ: Ok, let’s get back to your original question—how do we know that these are a product of natural processes? It’s because we’ve got historical information, so we can’t repeat history of course, if would be nice if we could, but we can’t. 

But we’ve got historical information about when these code originated, and it was at a time when the earth was an oxygen-free hell, and so there weren’t our kinds of intelligences around at that time. It also rose entirely in single celled organisms.

So unless you’re going to argue that those single celled organisms were intelligent, that shows that no it had to be a natural process that generated them.

Perry: So you’re assuming that it was a natural process, but you can’t reproduce the event. And we don’t know that much about it.

PZ: Can you? Are you going to simply assert that it was magic? Or that it was a god who appeared or whatever that just did it with the wave of his wand?

Perry: I’m trying to get away from magic, which is why I’m offering a prize for somebody that can actually produce an experiment. Rather than make an assertion.

Host: We’ve gotten to the God question, which I did want to get to eventually, because what are you saying I suppose, Perry?

If you’re right and PZ is wrong let’s say, and that really there is this extraordinary ability in cells that most of science has not woken up to, the fact of that means it’s not random, that there’s this kind of purposive directiveness to the way that organisms change over time that’s built in from the first seed I suppose, the first DNA molecule that appeared — it was all there ready to roll.

Are you saying we can only actually at present explain that as the product of a conscious mind? And by that we’re probably going to be talking about something a bit like God I suppose. 

Perry: Currently that would be the inference. But I am reluctant to make God of the gaps arguments and pronouncements. 

What I would really like to see is somebody to make real progress on this issue. Because my theological views don’t hinge on God magically creating a cell.

Maybe there is a principle that we have not discovered, that gets you from matter to information and to cells. And if that exists, we sure should find out what it is. And if it’s a scientific theory, it’s repeatable, it’s based on principles.

PZ is not giving us any principles. He’s asking for a free diplomatic pass of immunity, if you will. And I’m saying really there’s very little we know about origin of life that currently qualifies as science. And let’s improve that. That is what I’m saying.

I don’t believe in pitting theology against science. I’ll tell you what I’ll ask for a diplomatic pass of immunity is: I believe God created a universe that is orderly and structured and discoverable and directional; and all the rest is discoverable because evolution makes the universe an open book.

So my bias is to believe that we can uncover the mysteries, but there is, at minimum, a principle that’s being ignored here.

And I’m very serious about finding it. This is not a joke.

Host: Alright, what do you have to say to that, PZ? 

PZ: Well, a couple things. I would recommend that he read Princeton’s Nick Lane’s recent books on the subject. Currently what a lot of people are pursuing is this metabolism first model of the origin of life where it’s not a matter of code, it’s a matter of chemistry.

And that seems to be really successful. I would also point out that we do have a lot of information about the origin of these things. There have been a number of studies for instance where we do comparative genomics, and we ask ‘ok what’s in common with every creature on earth’, and we can thereby work back and figure out what the early gene set was.

And doing that we can determine something very specific about what genes were present in early organisms, what kind of environment they lived in, what kinds of chemistry they had to do to survive.

What we see is again a pattern of common decent derived from these ancestral organisms that implies, of course it doesn’t prove, but it implies that if we keep going back we’ll get simpler and simpler, and we can figure out what those early organisms were.

And that is a productive scientific approach rather than saying ‘it can’t happen, that all codes are created by a conscious mind therefore there was no natural process that could generate those’. 

If we’re scientists, we’re looking for natural processes, that’s what real scientists are doing.

We’re not sitting around writing books based on electrical engineering to impose their views on a discipline totally inappropriate to that perspective.

Host: So, I don’t think you’re going to get a good review from PZ on Amazon, Perry, but if someone is teetering on the edge of getting hold of your book, what reason could you give them to pick it up?

Jerry Coyne’s and Richard Dawkins’ books give good anecdotal evidence for evolution itself. They teach you nearly nothing about how it works.

Much of what they do say about how evolution works is awful. They largely omit and downplay epigenetics, transposition, symbiogenesis etc.

They offer very little in terms of real-time evolution experiments. They are peddling a model that is 30+ years out of date.

Bill Nye’s book is very nicely written but it’s essentially for sixth graders. It’s just as outdated as Coynes’ and Dawkins’. The evolution book by “the science guy” contains almost no science education at all.

I’m surprised because Bill Nye is a mechanical engineer. I expect better work from an engineer. Engineers tend to like Evolution 2.0. It’s often the first explanation of evolution they’ve heard that makes sense.

 

Perry: When I started reading evolution books, I was… ‘disappointed’ would be a mild word… at the lack of rigor that I found in popular books by Richard Dawkins, Bill Nye, Jerry Coyne, people like that.

They told you very little of any real substance about how the evolutionary process happens.

They told you what happened, but they didn’t tell you how. As I went down the rabbit hole and discovered things like horizontal gene transfer and symbiogenesis, I found this extraordinary experimental evolution which many people were strangely silent about, and this tells that story.

I said: This story needs to be told! People can come to philosophical conclusions on their own. But they at least need to know what these experiments achieved.

Host: I’m glad for PZ taking up the challenge, at the very least, to come and debate it with you. Because I think there’s loads of people who simply wouldn’t take that up in the first place. But thank you, PZ, for being on the line to us. If you want to find out more about PZ – pharyngula.com or look him up on Google. Same for Perry: https://www.evo2.org/evolution for more on Evolution 2.0.

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220 Responses

  1. pat says:

    Ummm.. Venter et al actually “engineered” the M. laboritorium genome by deleting the “junk” in the M. genitalium genome. what they got was an organism with no survival deficit, with an enhanced replication period (iirc)

  2. Also see: And then there was life by Gordon Howard http://creation.com/and-then-there-was-life

    Excerpt: “Trying to put a living thing together using only materials, without information, is like soldering wires together to try to produce a computer program. Just as a robot without a program is no better than a statue, so a cell containing its biotic chemicals without its instructions—its DNA—would be no better than disorganized ‘primordial soup’. It’s no wonder that Craig Venter produced his ‘synthetic life’ using the information and reading machinery of previously living cells.4

    A living cell lives, not because it contains bio-chemicals, but because it can carry out its encoded instructions for life processes—processes for making and deploying those bio-chemicals. Thus, a living cell lives on information; information necessarily conceived in the mind of its Creator, before life began.

    First there is information, and then there is life.”

  3. George Louridas says:

    The biologists are naïve in their thinking that genes and natural selection/adaptation are the only factors responsible for the origin and progression of life. Earlier on they were discussing about evolution only in terms of natural selection and later on they added to their repertoire genes and cells. The biological reality seems to be more complicated than was originally thought. New advances in the fields of complexity (mathematical, physical and biological) and the advent of epigenetics, postgenomics and systems biology are changing the concept of complex biological entities in biology and medicine. Systems biology has a holistic approach while molecular biology is a reductionist example. Non-coding regions in the genome may have a significant effect in the organization of biological complexity and in the emergence of novel properties. Complex entities like cells, tissues, organs and phenotypes are organized in the form of networks, modules and phenotypes in a multilevel construction. This construction provides new emergent properties at each level of complexity and gives important plasticity in the behavior or adaptation of the biological entity. The emergent concept about the origin and progression of life is not directed only by the Darwinian natural selection which has limited effect and is not the result of chemical accidents or of randomness. There is strong scientific evidence to accept interference in the form of a design. To believe in interference by God is not absurd and it is not possible to deny, as the complexity of the physical and biological world is impossible to be explained by chance. This interference could be applied at the level of the elementary physical particles and/or in every physical or biological structure. Probably, in the future, humanity will have some answers. Certainly the answer is not the prerogative of the evolutionary biologists. The evolutionary biologist current opinion about origin and progression of life is somewhat obsolete and unscientific. Their denial is questionable in view of the current advances in physics, biology and medicine. A succinct dialogue between physicists, biologists, scientists, theologians, and laymen will improve the understanding and the unnecessary conflicts.

  4. Tom says:

    I don’t what you mean when you say “one cannot mathematically prove a distribution is random”. Take a coin toss. If it is fair after many tosses we’d expect to see 50/50 heads/tails with some small deviation. In what sense are not able to conclude it is random?

    • You only know the outcome was random because you know you tossed a coin.

      It’s not the same working the other direction. If someone gives you a sequence like 1000101101000110010101011101001011 or 827595967261894956847364769, it’s impossible to work backwards and know for certain that sequence is random.

      It MIGHT be from tossing a coin. But it might not.

      It’s possible to prove that it wasn’t from tossing a coin (111111111111111111000000000000000000 is almost certainly not from tossing a coin), and you can even calculate the probability that it’s NOT a coin toss. It would be something like 99.9999% certainty.

      For all you know, it might be your credit card number after it was encrypted, or a language you don’t know how to decode. There is no formula for proving randomness, and not even a formula for judging the likelihood of randomness. You can only determine the likelihood of NON-randomness. The odds against the genetic code coming from randomness are unfathomably huge. 99.99999999999999999999999+ percent chance it’s not random.

      This is why mathematically, neo-Darwinism is an unscientific hypothesis.

      • This is interesting: “The argument from probability that life could not form by natural processes but must have been created is sometimes acknowledged by evolutionists as a strong argument.1 The probability of the chance formation of a hypothetical functional ‘simple’ cell, given all the ingredients, is acknowledged2 to be worse than 1 in 10^57800. This is a chance of 1 in a number with 57,800 zeros. It would take 11 full pages of magazine type to print this number. To try to put this in perspective, there are about 10^80 (a number with 80 zeros) electrons in the universe. Even if every electron in our universe were another universe the same size as ours that would ‘only’ amount to 10^160 electrons.

        These numbers defy our ability to comprehend their size. Fred Hoyle, British mathematician and astronomer, used analogies to try to convey the immensity of the problem. For example, Hoyle said the probability of the formation of just one of the many proteins on which life depends is comparable to that of the solar system packed full of blind people randomly shuffling Rubik’s cubes all arriving at the solution at the same time3—and this is the chance of getting only one of the 400 or more proteins of the hypothetical minimum cell proposed by the evolutionists (real world ‘simple’ bacteria have about 2,000 proteins and are incredibly complex). [Note added 2013: see update to How simple can life be? at http://creation.com/how-simple-can-life-be%5D As Hoyle points out, the program of the cell, encoded on the DNA, is also needed. In other words, life could not form by natural (random) processes.” READ MORE AT http://creation.com/cheating-with-chance “Cheating with chance” by Dr. Don Batten

      • Tom says:

        In the coin toss experiment you do not know a priori if it is a fair coin. Let’s say we toss the coin 1000 times in each run experiment. If we repeat the experiment many times and the mean is roughly 500/500 and the standard deviation is sufficiently same we would conclude it is a fair coin (with a degree of certainty determined by the precise statistics – there is no absolute certainty in science). This is how we experimentally discover that the coin is fair and conclude that the coin will come up heads randomly with probability 1/2. This kind of analysis is used all the time in science. Looking for correlations, even if they fail to appear, is perfectly good science. I don’t actually understand why you care about this “random” point in any case; the genetic code is certainly not random and standard evolutionary theory does not claim that it was generated randomly (where did you get that idea from?). Although specific mutations, which may collectively lead to significant physiological changes over huge periods of time, may be caused by random events, certain changes are systematically preferred by selection pressure – it is driven by the environment. The picture you paint above is that evolutionary theory essentially picks one code out of the bag of all possible codes at random. This is a very misleading representation.

        • Tom,

          One finds “evolution is produced by random mutations filtered by natural selection” in literally 1000 biology books.

          This is manifestly untrue. And I care about it because it makes Darwinism an anti-scientific enterprise. I explore this issue in depth in Evolution 2.0.

          And the pattern in DNA is not a combination of coin tosses. Not even close. The coin toss analogy is inappropriate on many levels.

          • Tom says:

            I never meant to suggest that DNA is a random sequence – it is not. We absolutely agree on this point. I make that very clear in my second post. That is exactly why I question your concern with this issue. I was merely using the coin toss example to refute your claim that the hypothesis that a set of outcomes is probabilistic (random) cannot be scientifically tested. It can be tested and indeed routinely is (of course, with all the usual caveats about certainty in science).

            Your characterisation of standard evolutionary biology is rather narrow. Genetic variation is caused by, for example, mutation, recombination and gene flow. Evolution is driven by natural selection (given enough genetic variation), biased mutation, genetic drift, genetic hitchhiking etc. Natural selection in particular is not random – beneficial variations are systematically preferred – even if the cause of those variations is random. Your hypothesis appears to be that the causes of variation are never random. This has nothing to do with whether or not DNA is random (it isn’t), which is why I asked my question.

            Funnily enough, the ideas of biological evolution through variation and selection pressure are used in programming (e.g. evolutionary programming). I am not suggesting this is a good analogy to biological evolution, but it does give a clear and concrete example of how beneficial adaptation can be driven by variation with selection pressure (in this case the fitness of the program as measured by how efficient it is at the desired algorithmic task, which in the biological case is survival and reproduction).

            Surely you would concede that variation caused by induced mutation is random or does the cell know that a specific portion of its DNA will be hit by, say, a UV photon?

            • Genetic algorithms / evolutionary programs do not work by random mutation and natural selection. The work through highly constrained permutations and natural selection. Not the same thing by any stretch of the imagination.

              Evolutionary programs are also very limited in what they can accomplish. They get used some, but they are no panacea. They actually highlight the weaknesses of traditional Darwinian theory. We will have to make a major discovery in biology, and uncover the operation of some very sophisticated systems, before we know how to build GAs that really are universal problem solvers. Current GAs have to be set up and run by pretty smart people who are trying to achieve very specific outcomes. That by definition is not “Darwinian.”

              The causes of evolution are not random. UV photon strikes are not predictable by the cell, and they do not cause evolution at all. What they sometimes do is cause repair mechanisms to kick in which then cause genome modifications performed by the cell itself. This is almost exactly what Barbara McClintock discovered and won the Nobel Prize for.

              Read http://evo2.org/pz-mcclintock/ for more on this.

              Also see http://evo2.org/evolution-untold-story/

  5. Quotes by Evolutionists and Atheists Stating Evolution Is Religion — Not Science by Henry Morris, Ph.D.
    http://www.icr.org/article/455/8/

    Excerpt: The writer has documented in two recent Impact articles from admissions by evolutionists that the idea of particles-to-people evolution does not meet the criteria of a scientific theory. … In closing this summary of the scientific case against evolution (and, therefore, for creation), the reader is reminded again that all quotations in the article are from doctrinaire evolutionists. No Bible references are included, and no statements by creationists. The evolutionists themselves, to all intents and purposes, have shown that evolutionism is not science, but religious faith in atheism. – From: http://www.icr.org/article/455/8/

    Example: “Evolution is promoted by its practitioners as more than mere science. Evolution is promulgated as an ideology, a secular religion – a full-fledged alternative to Christianity, with meaning and morality. I am an ardent evolutionist and an ex-Christian, but I must admit in this one complaint. . . the literalists (i.e., creationists) are absolutely right. Evolution is a religion. This was true of evolution in the beginning, and it is true of evolution still today.” – Dr. Michael Ruse http://www.icr.org/article/455/8/

  6. Doug Brewer says:

    Perry –

    The Discovery Institute says that the word “evolution” can mean at least three different things. The following text is copied from their booklet, A Briefing Packet For Educators. I have divided their first definition into two halves, just to help with clarity:

    Start of Quote:

    Evolution #1a: Evolution can mean that the life forms we see today are different than the life forms that existed in the distant past.

    Evolution #1b: Evolution as “change over time” can also refer to minor changes in features of individual species — changes which take place over a short amount of time. [My note – this appears to be a reference to what is sometimes known as “micro-evolution”. All sides agree that this process takes place, although they may disagree about how and why it happens and what the implications might be].

    Evolution #2: Some scientists associate the word “evolution” with the idea that all the organisms we see today are descended from a single common ancestor somewhere in the distant past. The claim became known as the Theory of Universal Common Descent. This theory paints a picture of the history of life on earth as a great branching tree.

    Evolution #3: Finally, some people use the term “evolution” to refer to a cause or mechanism of change, the biological process Darwin thought was responsible for this branching pattern. Darwin argued that natural selection had the power to produce fundamentally new forms of life. Together, the ideas of Universal Common Descent and natural selection form the core of Darwinian evolutionary theory. “Neo-Darwinian” evolution combines our knowledge of DNA and genetics to claim that mutations in DNA provide the variation upon which natural selection acts.

    When you see the word evolution, you should ask yourself, Which of the three definitions is being used?” Most critics of neo-Darwinism today focus on Evolution #2 or Evolution #3. But the discussion gets confusing when someone takes evidence for Evolution #1 and tries to make it look like it supports Evolution #2 or Evolution #3. Conversely, someone may discuss problems with Evolution #2 or Evolution #3, but is then falsely accused of rejecting Evolution #1, as well. This is simply not the case. Even biologists who dissent from neo-Darwinism accept Evolution #1.

    End of quote.

    Perry, when you use the word “evolution”, it is often not clear to me which of the above three senses of the word you are referring to. As such, it is often not clear exactly what you are arguing for or arguing against.

    So, Perry, can I ask you to please clarify what you mean when you use the word “evolution”?. If you use the word in more than one sense, can you please clarify which sense you have in mind each time you use the word? If you are unhappy with the above definitions, feel free to create your own definitions, if you like. As long as you make it clear what you do and what you do not mean by the term, each time you use the term.

    For example, which of the above three types of evolution to do agree with? And which do you disagree with?

    Thanks.

    Doug

    • Evolution as I define it is very similar to your #2. I reject #3 because natural selection is not the driving force, it’s only the cleanup crew. #1 is much narrower than what we have empirical evidence for. We can produce new species at will and it happens all the time.

      #Evolution in 140 characters or less: Genes switch on, switch off, rearrange and exchange. Hybrids double; viruses hijack; cells merge; winners emerge.

      • Doug Brewer says:

        You seem to be saying that you have found a new “third option” between ID and Darwinism. However, it is still not clear to me if this is case, and, if so, how.

        For example, you seem to be saying that “… the cell’s astonishing ability to re-program itself [as seen in] …systems like transposition and symbiogenesis.” does not qualify as an example of either Neo-Darwinian Evolution (hereafter NDE) or ID.

        So let’s try to clarify that point – not by looking at what these systems do, but by looking at how these biological systems came into existence in the first place.

        If you believe that systems like transposition and symbiogenesis were created entirely by the interaction of random genetic mutations and natural selection over a long period of time, then your position is just one more variation of NDE.

        If you believe that systems like transposition and symbiogenesis are an example of something which was designed at some point in time by an intelligent agent, then your position is just one more variation of ID.

        If you do not advocate either of these two positions, what exactly is your position, and how is it fundamentally different to the two mainstream positions outlined above?

        If your definition of evolution is very similar to Evolution #2, but you reject Evolution #3, your position is essentially the same as that of Michael Behe, a well-known advocate for ID who also accepts Evolution #2 but rejects Evolution #3. If so, your position is just one more variation inside the broad campsite of ID. Yes, the examples might be new (in the sense that they have not previously been used to illustrate either NDE or ID) and they might be important (which they do appear to be, so thanks for bringing them to our attention), but you still fall into one of the major established “camps”, even though you might have set up a new tent in the campsite.

        • Doug,

          I believe I address most of these questions at
          http://evo2.org/id-blind-spot/
          and
          http://evo2.org/michael-flannery-intelligent-design/

          By the way, Michael Behe debated James Shapiro a few years ago at Wheaton College. Behe’s position was: cells can’t do this stuff. Shapiro insisted they can – and offered proof.

          • Doug Brewer says:

            In 2012, William Dembski wrote an ENV article about the 1997 debate between Shapiro and Behe. Dembski makes the same point that I have been making – that it is all very interesting to learn about these systems of “natural genetic engineering”, but the fundamental question still remains – where do such systems come from in the first place? Shapiro rejects Darwinian explanations based on the science, but he also refuses to consider ID as an alternative explanation, so Shapiro has no answer to this question. Much of Shapiro’s approach implicitly supports ID, but Shapiro refuses to consider that option, so the origins question for Shapiro remains unresolved.

            http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/01/is_james_shapir055051.html

            In sum, Shapiro is not claiming to have found some third alternative to Darwin and Design in terms of explaining the origin of complex biological systems (although, having rejected both Darwinism and Design, he may well be hoping to find one).

            I was also interested to see that Dembski uses the analogy of the “DMZ” to refer to the (search for, or the hope of finding, some kind of) middle ground between Darwin and Design. Is that where you got the “DMZ” analogy from?

            • Doug,

              Yes that is probably where I got the DMZ analogy from.

              Do I believe the cosmos came from God?

              Yes I do.

              How many layers between where we are now, and God?

              I have no idea. They may be innumerable.

              Yes, the fundamental question remains unanswered. But I want to point out that:

              SHAPIRO’S APPROACH HAS A CHANCE OF BEING ACCEPTED IN MAINSTREAM SCIENCE because science per se is not concerned with ultimate questions. Science can only peel the next layer of the onion.

              The ID approach has no chance of being accepted as science, because it steps outside of experimental science.

              What’s currently happening is, ID people want to say science proves God (more or less anyway) and this automatically creates defensiveness where secular people circle the wagons and go into denial.

              The only way to stop this is to give people permission to be in the DMZ. It’s a no fire zone where we search for empirical data instead of building ideological walls.

              This is the essence of the technology prize at http://www.naturalcode.org: “Stop philosophizing and stop making !@#$ up and just solve the problem. And if it’s unsolved, then admit it’s not been solved.”

      • Doug Brewer says:

        You say that “We can produce new species at will and it happens all the time”. That may or may not be true, depending in large part on how we define the word “species”.

        However, rather than wasting time debating how we should or should not define the word “species”, or whether certain examples do or do not qualify as new species, let’s jump to the main point: Do you believe that these same processes which create (what you refer to as) “new species” are also capable of creating new genera, families, orders, classes, phyla and kingdoms?

        If so, how?

        If not, all you have done is make a slight adjustment to the position (or to the name) of the line which marks the limits of biological change, but the very real limits remain. If so, we still come back to some form of ID as the only other explanation for the origin of new genera, families, orders, classes, phyla and kingdoms.

  7. Tim Heaton says:

    I was disappointed that so little basic philosophy came up in the debate. Both debaters were simply reading their biases into nature. One explained the unknown by invoking chance and natural selection. The other explained the unknown by invoking some unspecified and untestable higher force. Both simply concluded with the premises they began with. I was also disappointed that neither debater tried to evaluate the analogy of computer code with DNA code in a serious way (one claimed it was useful while the other simply dismissed it as fallacious). To me, the main problem with this analogy is that life (based on the DNA code) is a system built for flexibility, while computer code is not. The most obvious example of this is sexual reproduction. What computer code undergoes recombination with other similar code to produce diverse copies of a program that are all a little different? So while there are similarities, the vast differences make it dubious that limitations in one system automatically impose such limits on the other like Mr. Marshall claims.

  8. Cat Leverett says:

    OMG, sometimes I forget how many things a person can talk about. Perry, I am glad to know the conversations continue. CLeverett

  9. The central mistake of modern science is the elimination of the concept ‘soul’ and the belief that all the incredibly huge amount of information created during evolution has a material basis. In order to understand evolution, we must go back to the pantheism and panpsychism of Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464, theologian, philosopher and scientist).

    As enzymes are animated beings (like animals), they can repair their cells after partial destruction in the same way as termites can repair their rather complex mounds after partial destruction.

    “During evolution, psychon-animated molecules have been joining together in always bigger units. Animated molecules such as amino acids and nucleotides began sometime to form chains. By specialization psychons emerged which dominated such chains. Proteins are conceivable which replicate by adding corresponding amino acids to one chain end, until an identical protein can split off. Reproduction by base pairing of two complementary strands is even more efficient. The invention of translation, a complex symbiosis of various ribosomal psychons, was certainly one of the most essential steps during the evolution of life.” http://www.pandualism.com/z/E/psychon.html#a09

    Our apriori arbitrary genetic code emerged as a symbiosis of animated proteins and animated RNA and DNA pieces. Therefore it is impossible (at least in the short and middle term) to create an alternative genetic code (maybe with the exception of a code already having evolved on another planet). For every material enzyme being able to do useful work in a cell or in a test tube, a corresponding enzyme-soul has evolved over millions of years.

    Cheers, Wolfgang

  10. Hello Perry, I’ve just listened to the Unbelievable show with you an PZ Myers. I was glad I heard it, since I have thought much about the way DNA resembles code.

    About me: I have a masters degree in computer science, and have been doing system programming for the past 17 years. I am a Christian, and I grew up thinking evolution was a problem for my faith. As I grew up I rejected YEC and came to the conclusion evolution was probably the best explanation for the common descent (which I think is true) and diversity (which is evident). I didn’t exactly believe in guided evolution, but it was more like believing that the nature itself was tailormade to evolve. Mostly I didn’t concern myself too much with it, after giving up on the YEC. The reason I explain this, is that I did not really have an issue with evolution, and I thought it was perfectly alright to combine it with my Christian faith. I believe *that* is a very good starting point for thinking about ET, since I’m not biased into rejected it – I could live perfectly fine with it! However, I think PZ Myers may not have the same option, and I’m afraid that can have a profound effect on his thinking. I’ll come back to that.

    Anyway, many years later I came to the same conclusion as you did – that DNA is a code. And being a programmer I was tremendously impressed. The more I thought of it, the more impressed I was. As you said in the show, the code is 750 MB, which I compared to Microsoft Office 2001. The thing that hit me was simply this:

    Would anyone working on MS Office 2001 ever consider “natural selection” (NS) as a working method to improve the product? You see, I was more and more convinced that NS was a very weak mechanism, and I tried to see if my thought experiment could be made in such a way to really prove or disprove the strength of NS:

    First, let me be perfectly clear that one reason a programmer wouldn’t use natural selection is that the change is undirected. Obviously the programmers at Microsoft wanted to make MS Office 2003 which still should do text editing, not any kind of feature. Even so, the thought experiment might still be valid. Let’s consider an analogy:

    – The chimpanzee shares 98% of the human genome.
    – Our common forefather must therefore share ~98% of our genes.
    – Our common forefather lived 5 million years and 250 000 generations ago (assuming a 20-year generation span).
    – Assuming 750 MB code, this translates into 15 MB change in 250 000 generations.
    – This in turn requires 60 B code change (on average) every generation.
    – Let’s assume the start population was 100 000
    – Let’s assume every individual gets 10 children
    – Let’s assume a random change in code every generation

    Ok, this is what proponents of NS would have us believe happened, isn’t it? But how would it work out for MS Office 2001? First we must define a selection criteria, and that is simply: Let the thing compile and run! Or maybe, just skip the compiling – just edit the executable. Since we have more than enough hardware resource to pull this off, why don’t someone test this? The obvious answer is of course than noone think it will work. It might work out for the first generation, but eventually the whole thing will collapse. The problem is of course that even changing 60 B in MS Office will more than likely cause a compile error. And if you somehow mananged to simply ignore those compiler error, it would probably throw the computer into a OutOfMemoryException or something else. But *how* unlikely is this approach to work? Can it work if we have 100 000 copies of MS Office to start with, generating 10 “offspring” with 60 B change? Can some late descendants survive? I think not, since the odds of the 60 B change leading to something beneficial is extremely small, way smaller than the number of offspring. You might still argue that MS Office 2001 might not develop in the direction you want to (if it ever developed), but on the other hand, if it improved anything like our forefathers into humans, it would extremely valuable no matter what it improved to be! I for one would start using this technique right away if I believed it could come something out of it – it would be exciting!

    The big question here is of course if this analogy is valid? What do you think?
    How can it be improved and tested?
    Can we learn something about NS in this way?
    Are NS mostly for “small adaptions” to the environment, and not for the big changes?
    Are NS really fast enough for the change required?
    Is really 5 millions years all that long?

    I take it from Myers that he rejects this kind of thinking, but what I could not understand was *why* it was rejected. There was some talk about biology being something very different from electrical engineering, but without any explanation as to why the computer-way of thinking was wrong it was hard to take it seriously. I certainly don’t know much about biology, but at the same time I think biologists may not know all that much of programming – and it struck me that maybe that’s why they’re so casual about the enormity of the gene changes. I know that changing my code is hard, even simple and trivial things can be hard if the program has a average size (certainly a *lot* less than 750 MB). And I know that adding a new feature to my system (like giving “vision” to an organism) is a HUGE thing. More often than not, it requires a lot of me to add a significant new feature. Many times I would have to alter the basic architecture, otherwise the new feature will be just a ugly “sidekick” to the overall structure. So, it’s unbelievable that the jump from chimpanzee to humans could be done in tiny 15 MB!! It’s incrediable. It’s like I could write an “Hello World” application in one single byte!

    Just think about the number of features a human has got. I don’t know how to count them, but I believe if you put everything together, one could easily think of a number like 1 million features. Then each feature has to be programmed in merely 750 B! Also, think about how often these gene changes does not cause a total disruption. We know that the computer program would crash quickly, but the DNA doesn’t seem to “crash”, the organism can go on living quite allright even with bad mutations. The more I think like this, I get the feeling that our DNA is not a code – it’s configuration. I know that is absurd, but it would explain a lot.

    Finally about Myer: I noted that he often presupposed the very thing he wanted to prove, especially at the end of the show. I also thought it was telling that he questioned your willingness to pay the prize money no matter what – in my book that is crossing the line into rudeness and suspiciousness. All in all, I think it was that kind of arguing which exposed the bias within Myers thinking, even though he might have a lot of experience as a biologist.

    This was a long comment, I just had to get it out!! I will probably pick up your book some time soon, and I’ll hope you’ll respond to my comments.

    Thanks!

    Morten Simonsen

    • Morten,

      Thanks for your patience. All of your questions are valid and I think your intuitions are essentially right. My version of what you are asking, in 2004 when I started down this rabbit hole, was:

      “If mutation + selection can produce just about anything you can imagine, how come they never taught us this in engineering school? Do the engineers know something the biologists don’t, or vise-versa?”

      As you know – good luck getting ANY kind of evolution out of a large software program with nothing at your disposal but random variation and selection. The statistics are stacked against it to an unimaginable degree and NOBODY writes software this way.

      Natural selection without goals is outrageously inefficient. Smoking gun.

      Now, all these questions you ask – there is a whole genre of literature on “genetic algorithms” and I devote an entire chapter to them in Evolution 2.0. Essentially they ALL require pre-programmed goals in order to work and they also require systematic, “swiss army knife”-like mutations. Otherwise they get stuck. I provide numerous references on this.

      YES Myers was presupposing the very things he intends to prove and if you read the blog war between me and him that followed, you can see that clearly.

      Thanks for posting. Enjoy the book and post a comment when you’ve got a few chapters under your belt.

    • About Myers, and others like him who do not choose faith, research in neuroscience is establishing a biological basis for free will / free won’t. For links to some relevant research and Quranic verses addressing the topic, please see: http://signsandscience.blogspot.com/2014/08/divine-will-and-human-free-will.html

  11. BJ says:

    Hi. Great stuff Perry. Very interesting.
    I have a question:
    You say: “Both ASCII and DNA are formal communication systems according to Shannon’s model because they encode and decode messages using a system of symbols.”

    I guess I am wondering about your use of the word “symbol” here. Do you use it as Peirce uses it, as one of three types of sign (index, icon, & symbol)? Peirce would say that a thermometer is an “index” in that it is a sign that gives meaningful information but that this information (the length of the little red bar) is strongly related to the temperature of the red liquid in the tube (ie there is a fixed physical cause-effect relationship governed by scientific laws). So in a way, I believe that some sources of information/meaning are present in nature. eg the clouds moving across the sky communicate meaningful information about the direction of the wind.

    However Peirce’s key idea behind signs that he classified as “symbols” is that the assignment of meaning to that sign is arbitrary (driven by some kind of convention). For example “dog” is a sign that means, well, one of those 4 legged barking animals… But this is an arbitrary meaning established by the conventions of English. There is no reason at all why a group of people could not decide that from now on that “cat” is the symbol for the animal that barks. The ASCII code is truly symbolic in this Peircean sense. That the ASCII code number 65 means “A” is totally arbitrary. The code is only meaningful because many computers follow this convention. Therefore Pierce would call this 65 code a symbol. You cant use the arbitrary rule ’65 ASCII means “A”‘ to figure out what ASCII code would produce an “a” on the screen. Of course the ASCII code could never have created itself. Some mind had to connect the symbol to its arbitrary meaning. So heres my question: are you saying the DNA codes are also arbitrary symbols? ie that by looking at all these codes and their meanings (eg YGGFM “means” Met-enkephalin and MRTGNAN “means” Microcin C7 etc…) there is no pattern (ie cause-effect relationship that would make DNA an “index” in Peirce’s classification) that explains (and predicts) what sequences will produce which proteins?

    PS Excuse me if I am displaying my ignorance about biology & DNA etc… I come from a digital communications and semiotics background so this whole idea for me is very intriguing!

    • DNA codes are also arbitrary symbols. The genetic code table is a certain way and it would be literally a million other ways. In fact some other variations of it are found in nature. They appear to be arbitrary in the exact same way ASCII is. GGG codes for Glycine but it could just as easily have coded for something else. However the existing coding scheme is very highly optimal for minimizing copying errors. See the famous paper “Genetic Code is one in a million” by Freeland.

  12. Doug says:

    Hey Perry –

    I missed the Meyer / Lamoureux / Krauss live discussion because of the time difference in Australia, but I will certainly be looking for a recording of the discussion on YouTube.

    We had some interaction on your blog earlier this year about your debate with PZ Myers late last year. One thing we were discussing was your position on the spectrum of views about issues of creation, design and evolution.

    It was starting to sound to me like you might be a design theorist, because it seemed to me that your position was close to that of Michael Behe. He accepts common ancestry (unlike most ID theorists, most of whom at least question common ancestry, some of whom also reject common ancestry,) but Behe rejects the neo-Darwinian idea that all living things on earth have been created by nothing more than natural selection acting on undirected genetic changes which are themselves produced by nothing more than random mutations.

    However, in light of your enthusiastic endorsement of Denis O. Lamoureux in a recent email, combined with the absence of any comparable enthusiasm for or endorsement of Stephen Meyer in that same email, I am now thinking that you may be a theistic evolutionist after all.

    Lamoureux himself created a chart with 5 views in 5 columns – a chart which I cannot include in this blog (because there is no provision for attachments), so I will have to describe it.

    At one end are “young earth creationists” like Ken Ham. Next is “old earth creationism”, a.k.a. “progressive creationism”, including “intelligent design” (ID) proponents such as Johnson and Meyer. Third is what Lamoureux calls “evolutionary creation” or “theistic evolution”, probably best represented by the people at BioLogos (although they are not included on Lamoureux’s chart, probably because BioLogos did not exist at the time when the chart was created). Fifth and final at the other end are “atheistic evolutionists” like Richard Dawkins. The fourth position between these two is called “deistic evolution”.

    I get the impression that Lamoureux would most likely describe himself as a “theistic evolutionist”, which would place him in the middle column. If so, this means that he would most probably reject ID. Presumably that is one reason why the recent debate was set up between Meyer, Lamoureux and Krauss, because each person in the debate represents a clearly different (and clearly contrasting) viewpoint to what is advocated by the other two.

    So, Perry, which column would you place yourself in? The second? (where most ID advocates would be)? Or the third? (where, eg., most people at BioLogos would be)?

    BTW, when Lamoureux created this table more than a decade ago, he placed Denton in the fourth column. I always thought that this was a mistake on Lamoureux’s part, if for no other reason than the fact that Lamoureux also placed Charles Darwin in the same column! How could Denton be placed in the same column as Charles Darwin himself, if the primary aim of Denton’s 1985 book was to argue against the scientific basis for Darwin’s theory of macro-evolution? In terms of Denton’s views on the science (not his views on religion or the Bible), Denton should have been placed in either the second or the third column. Denton now works for the Discovery institute, so, presumably, he would now clearly be in the second column.

    I would be interested to hear your opinion of Denton’s new book, Evolution – Still a Theory in Crisis. I hope you review this book on your blog. Which column you would place Denton in?

    Thanks.

    Doug

    • I don’t know Denton’s work well enough to categorize but it sounds interesting.

      Re: Theistic Evolution – see http://evo2.org/faq/#theistic

      As I discuss at http://evo2.org/evolution-biblical/ the view I’m most favorable towards is “deistic evolution” because it’s the framework that allows us to discover the most about the universe through the lens of science. I do not think it takes away from the handiwork of God in the slightest, in fact it only makes it more impressive.

      But am I a deist? Not on your life. In fact my personal experiences of the divine make me very comfortable with a deistic view of creation because I don’t feel threatened by that. See http://www.coffeehousetheology.com/miracles.

  13. Don Smith says:

    PZ keeps saying its random. Is he saying an event is random and/or the gene reaction is random?

    PZ said: Yeah I would love to hear Perry question his own model because he’s not doing that. Over and over again what you do is you tell me ‘well from my perspective as an electrical engineer this doesn’t work, it can’t work’ and I’m telling you yeah but biology does work, so maybe your perspective is wrong.

    Maybe you’re coming at this from an invalid angle. Yet you just come back and insist on applying these fallacious ideas about electrical engineering to biology. It’s like we’re in a constant circle here where you refuse to consider the possibility that you’re wrong.

    I also have to point out one other thing and that is every time I get in an argument with a creationist they fall back on this appeal to authority. Craig Venter is a smart guy, and he’s really good at what he does, but he’s not an evolutionary biologist in any sense of the word.”

    He needs to do this as well.
    I’d love to see PZ do work to recreate a cell.

    • Don Smith says:

      PZ was at pains to say making analogies are inappropriate, but I was hoping he’d take the time to talk about why and what happens in DNA. He didn’t.

  14. Don Smith says:

    PZ needs to show that his science is replicable. That’s the role of an analogy, they are based on experience and predictions. I wasn’t aware that anyone who uses an analogy expects them to be so exacting.

  15. Jonathan Pinchbeck says:

    Yes there is a solution in the great divide between science and religion, its called Deism. The fact that the natural world can be uderstood by mathematical abstractions and logical deduction lends to an idea that the Universe is governed by logic. If you pull away from all of this mysticism, focus on science and accept intelligence as an operating force in the Universe as is, you have the chance to understand the intricacies through the created object of reality without the distractions of the surreal. Its a tactical decision based on a re-evaluated risk assessment known as Pascale’s Wager, except in this case discard promises from the possibility of an afterlife and simply choose to favor a reality that is not chaotic or nonesensical. Be content in the ability to contemplate that there is a possibility of forethought to the Universe and that should be sign enough.

    Time to stop running after burning bushes. Run after signals, constants, lattice structure, cloud nebulae, genetic algorithms, AI, gene sequencing, migration patterns…not bad analogies in tired fables that barely pass as culture anymore. Intelligence is in all these things; in the process of their discovery and scrutiny…attainable by every person, here and now. God is in that fact alone, if nothing else.

  16. Bill McClymonds says:

    I recently watched your very interesting debate with PZ Meyers so I am late entering the discussion. Hopefully this discussion is still active.

    I have been interested in the creation evolution debate for a long time. Although we raised our daughters in a Christian home, one of them stated that she no longer believed in God when she was college age. Since that time I have been very interested in trying to provide young people with information to counteract the naturalist evolutionary claims. My daughter is now in her late 20’s and has returned to believing in Christianity but I have not lost interest in helping others who have been adversely influenced by the claims of naturalism or atheism.

    As you know. one of the most basic difficulties for the naturalist when it comes to evolution is explaining the relatively rapid (from a naturalistic perspective) development of the first bacterial life on the early Earth. The naturalist starts with absolutely no intelligence on the early Earth (rocks and chemicals). Another way to describe the initial intellectual condition of the early Earth is zero intelligence. Starting with zero intelligence, the naturalist assumes that somehow that void of intelligence was able to arrange the existing chemical elements of the early Earth into a living bacterial organism containing DNA. I understand they propose intermediate steps in the process, but the bottom line is that they have to quickly move from zero intelligence to one of the most complex codes that we know about. Going from absolutely no intelligence to brilliance (assuming the DNA code is a brilliant code), in what is essentially the first major naturalistic evolutionary step, seems absurdly improbable to me.

    The other extremely difficult problem for naturalism is the development of the human brain. This is a field of study that I think you would find very interesting. It essentially involves developing a primitive neural network of some sort and then progressively re wiring the existing network into what will eventually become the human brain. Since wiring is something you understand well, I think you can appreciate the difficulty of progressively rewiring the brain of an organism, in a naturalistic manner, until you have a human brain with 86 to 100 billion wires (neurons) connected in an intellectually functional manner. The other problem with naturalistic brain development is that each neuron is connected to other neurons through synaptic connections. There are at least 10^12 synaptic connections in the human brain, probably many more.

    The following quote is from Stephen Smith who is a professor of molecular and cellular physiology at Stanford University. He is a neuroscience researcher.”One synapse, by itself, is more like a microprocessor–with both memory-storage and information-processing elements–than a mere on/off switch. In fact, one synapse may contain on the order of 1,000 molecular-scale switches. A single human brain has more switches than all the computers and routers and Internet connections on Earth.”

    I am not a neuroscientist, but I have written a short article about human brain development so there is much more I could write about it. The post is already getting a little long so I will simply refer you to a web site called Marclab.org. Robert Marc is a retinal researcher and neuroscientist. One of the sidebar categories toward the bottom right is connectomics & eternity. I will try to paste a link for you to evaluate. The information was posted in 2013 so it may already be dated in computer terms, but I think you will find it interesting. Thank you for a very interesting and informative debate.

    http://marclab.org/connectomics-eternity/

  17. Bill McClymonds says:

    Thanks for the reply Perry. I am certainly glad my daughter decided to return to Christianity. I can only hope and pray that your brother will also return to his faith.

    One of the things that really caught my attention on the Marclab website was the number of potential or possible connections for the human brain. The number was approximately 10^300,000. An astonishingly large number. Given that there are 86 to 100 billion neurons that could be potentially connected in about 10^300,000 different ways, there is a big problem for any proposed naturalistic explanation of human brain development.

    If an electrical engineer was to start with a working functional information processing system of about 100 wires (comparable to a primitive neural network system) and try to progressively improve that system until it contained over 86 billion wires, while improving the system at every step of the way, what do you think would happen? The problem is much worse for naturalistic brain development. The proposed natural brain construction process is not natural selection, it is mutation or copying errors. Natural selection cannot work until natural construction has provided a better brain at each step of the naturalistic evolutionary pathway to human brain development. The difference between an electrical engineer developing a progressively improving multiply wired functional information processing system and natural construction doing the same thing is significant. Natural construction lacks intelligence. It does not understand the information processing system that is being constructed. It has no foresight, so it cannot plan. All of the construction is being done blindly. No external intelligence is helping with the process.

    Any random or unplanned alteration to the non biological functional information processing system being developed by the engineer would be highly unlikely to improve the system. In the case of natural construction, the developing brain is a biological functional information processing system. In the same way that the system being developed by the engineer would most likely be harmed by a random alteration, I would also expect a random alteration to the developing biological information processing system, called the brain, to be harmed by a random alteration. If not harmed, then certainly not improved. No functional information processing system that I know about is progressively improved by unplanned random alteration to the system. In the case of the developing human brain there are 86 billion or more wires (neurons) to connect and over 10^300,000 possible ways to arrange those wires by the time the human brain is fully developed. Expecting natural construction and natural selection to explore even a small percentage of those possibilities and come up with a fully functional human brain defies all reasonable logic.

  18. Bill McClymonds says:

    Thanks for the reply Perry. I am certainly glad my daughter decided to return to Christianity. I can only hope and pray that your brother will also return to his faith.

    One of the things that really caught my attention on the Marclab website was the number of potential or possible connections for the human brain. The number was approximately 10^300,000. An astonishingly large number. Given that there are 86 to 100 billion neurons that could be potentially connected in about 10^300,000 different ways, there is a big problem for any proposed naturalistic explanation of human brain development.

    If an electrical engineer was to start with a working functional information processing system of about 100 wires (comparable to a primitive neural network system) and try to progressively improve that system until it contained over 86 billion wires, while improving the system at every step of the way, what do you think would happen? The problem is much worse for naturalistic brain development. The proposed natural brain construction process is not natural selection, it is mutation or copying errors. Natural selection cannot work until natural construction has provided a better brain at each step of the naturalistic evolutionary pathway to human brain development. The difference between an electrical engineer developing a progressively improving multiply wired functional information processing system and natural construction doing the same thing is significant. Natural construction lacks intelligence. It does not understand the information processing system that is being constructed. It has no foresight, so it cannot plan. All of the construction is being done blindly. No external intelligence is helping with the process.

    Any random or unplanned alteration to the non biological functional information processing system being developed by the engineer would be highly unlikely to improve the system. In the case of natural construction, the developing brain is a biological functional information processing system. In the same way that the system being developed by the engineer would most likely be harmed by a random alteration, I would also expect a random alteration to the developing biological information processing system, called the brain, to be harmed by a random alteration. If not harmed, then certainly not improved. No functional information processing system that I know about is progressively improved by unplanned random alteration to the system. In the case of the developing human brain there are 86 billion or more wires (neurons) to connect and over 10^300,000 possible ways to arrange those wires by the time the human brain is fully developed. Expecting natural construction and natural selection to explore even a small percentage of those possibilities and come up with a fully functional human brain defies all reasonable logic.

    Up to this point I haven’t even mentioned all of the synaptic connections that would have to be constructed by natural construction. Wiring a brain is not as simple as connecting two electrical wires. Each connection is, in and of itself, an extremely complex system of information processing and transfer. It is much more complicated than twisting two wires together.

    In my opinion the proposed natural construction process doesn’t work. It is completely inadequate for the proposed brain construction project. Without something properly constructed, natural selection can’t work. Natural selection requires a functionally improved system for each proposed developmental step on the pathway to a fully functional human brain. The proposed naturalistic evolutionary human brain construction system is totally inadequate to provide such a system on a progressively consistent and improving basis.

    • The problems for brain science that you describe are quite analogous to the problems in explaining evolutionary adaptation. What the organism does consistently defy all statistical odds that one would have based on chance alone. There is much more going on here. Thanks for posting.

  19. Martin Bartholow, PhD says:

    Just found your book Evolution 2.0 and this site. I will read the book and print off and read this column before I jump into the discussion. However, I am attracted to a discussion of probability. One has to ask which is more likely; designed creation of order, or random movement towards order.

  20. Pinchbeck’s hypothesis reminds me of what I think is a very wise observation, which I’ll quote.
    It reads:

    “The more we can delve into the world with our intelligence, the more clearly the plan of creation appears. In the end to reach the definitive question I would say: God exists or he does not exist. There are only two options. Either one recognizes the priority of reason, of creative Reason that is at the beginning of all things and is the principle of all things—the priority of reason is also the priority of freedom—or one holds the priority of the irrational, inasmuch as everything that functions on our earth and in our lives would only be accidental, marginal, an irrational result—reason would be a product of irrationality. One cannot ultimately ‘prove” either project, but the great option of Christianity is the option for rationality and for the priority of reason. This seems to be to be an excellent option, which shows us that behind everything is a great Intelligence to which we can trust ourselves…
    (Josef Ratzinger [a.k.a. Pope Benedict XVI] L’Oservatore Romano, April 12, 2006, p.8)

    Seems to me that Pinchbeck is in good company.

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