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#34 | ||
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Feb 2006
Brasรญlia, Brazil
3×71 Posts |
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You've quoted him as meaning "while great apes didn't change a lot, humans did", which is favourable to your argument. However, I read him as meaning something a bit like "Great apes, that is, chimps, bonobos and humans, have changed little." This would seem consistent with what I had said and against your position. Thus, I'd ask Paul himself to please clarify this point, if he wants to. Bruno |
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#35 | |
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Sep 2002
86310 Posts |
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For those of us who have tried all through school to understand science with anything more than, "I just have to learn this for the test" or "I want to understand this more than, 'just accept it'", but failed, it does seem as some kind of secret that we're not being let in on now. At least, that's how I always felt. I always had very low grades in science classes because it always felt cold and I don't do well with fact memorizing. It never had any meaning to me the way it was taught. I don't even know if science can have any meaning to me where I could learn it well enough to do it. I always did better in subjects like English because that had meaning for me beyond some kind of artificial construct. Science feels like, to me, someone walking into a big blank room that all of a sudden becomes filled with stuff I have no hope of making sense out of unless something enhanced my brain. |
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#36 |
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Sep 2002
863 Posts |
Using the word "test" would mean there is no physical test that you could run that I know of that could exist. Until we would confirm that there is at least SOMETHING at all outside the universe, and how we do that I'm not smart enough to guess, we can't even begin to conceive of a test for that kind of thing. It's like trying to reverse engineer the fabric of space, so to speak.
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#37 | ||
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Dec 2003
Hopefully Near M48
2·3·293 Posts |
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Last fiddled with by jinydu on 2006-09-13 at 05:02 |
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#38 | |
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Feb 2006
Brasรญlia, Brazil
3×71 Posts |
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Now, as it has been pointed out here: the existence of God(s) as an idea in human minds cannot be questioned; its existence as something else, however, is what's being discussed in another thread. Perhaps there would be the place to ask this, but here it goes: if I told you the Sun is a chariot which rides above us every day, you'd certainly ask me for a proof, for evidence. Since you're claiming there exists a supernatural, purpose-giving being called God, you'll certainly reckon that it's up to you to prove its existence. Please note, however, that for what I said above about the ancient gods which people no longer believe, that any reasonable evidence mustn't derive from your belief itself. For the things I had mentioned (e.g. gravity and evolution) there's evidence which doesn't depend at all from belief. Regarding your post about your school years: I honestly believe it's never too late to learn; our discussion has been positive, fruitful and pleasant, at least to me, and perhaps from what's being talked about you can try to look at the same things you didn't learn too well with a different perspective. Cheers, Bruno PS: please note, however, that there's already a "Does God exist?" thread; perhaps there'd be a better place for you to try to answer that question, and please don't forgive reading the previous posts, which have already presented some common arguments for that. |
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#39 | |
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Bamboozled!
"๐บ๐๐ท๐ท๐ญ"
May 2003
Down not across
2E1416 Posts |
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To be completely transparent: I include humans in the collection of species which go under the name "great apes". That collection also includes chimps, bonobos, gorillas and orang-utans. I didn't specifically mention the last pair because I was concentrating primarily on how little Homo sapiens differs from Pan troglodytes and Pan paniscus. By the way, this page http://www.williamcalvin.com/teaching/bonobo.htm is a delightful description of Pan paniscus and indicates how little they differ from us. My claim is that we as a species have not evolved an enormous range of differences in the last few megayears. Neither have the other great apes. There have certainly been changes, but nothing out of the ordinary and certainly nothing which is markedly different either in nature or in degree from many other species. Consider, for example, how the grasses have evolved in the last 20 megayears or so. Their present day variability is immense, from tiny creeping mats to immense tree-like bamboos; from tidy clump-forming mounds which propagate primarily through wind-distributed seeds to species which flower at most once every few centuries and yet will spread their rhizomes many meters per annum even through or above the hardest and stoniest ground. Some species are deciduous, some evergreen. They live everywhere from tundra to steamy jungles; some are epiphytic and, although none are purely aquatic(as far as I know), a number of species (including rice) are adapated to living in areas subject to frequent and prolonged flooding. I would claim that grasses have evolved much more variability in the last 20 megayears than have primates. Paul |
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#40 | |
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Jun 2003
The Texas Hill Country
32×112 Posts |
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The true grasses are monocotyledonous plants (Class Liliopsida) in the Family Poaceae. The bamboos to which you refer are not even in that Class, but they are still in the Family Poaceae. Class Mammalia is a class of animal within the Phylum Chordata. Hominidae are but a small portion of that Class. |
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#41 |
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Sep 2002
863 Posts |
The only example I can think of, and it doesn't involve science, at least, I don't think it does, is if I created something for a purpose and told someone, but that's not really a test.
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#42 | |||
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Sep 2002
863 Posts |
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#43 | |
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Dec 2003
Hopefully Near M48
2·3·293 Posts |
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But perhaps you could answer my earlier question: How can tell whether any system has a purpose or not? Last fiddled with by jinydu on 2006-09-13 at 15:20 |
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#44 |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
Repรบblica de California
22×2,939 Posts |
And note that there is no small amount of evidence indicating that the changes in the 2 (e.g. by way of changes in the nature of the flora and fauna of the African savannah) may be interrelated. Fewer trees and more grass makes it advantageous for a bipedal-capable species to be able to stand and walk upright for long periods. You still have chimp-like and ape-like species inhabiting the the forested regions of the continent, but if the study of these processes has taught us anything, it's that when a new niche opens up, species will move (both in physical and evolutionary terms) to exploit it.
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