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Humans are still evolving...

Copernicus

Industrial Strength Linguist
Humans are still evolving...there seems no doubt or disagreement there.
Every living species is always evolving. There is nothing special about human beings in that respect.

There continues discussion, the source of the change....
But without discussion the point at which the change takes place...
is there any resolve for the human part?
Depends on what you mean by "human part". BTW, the very prolific Richard Dawkins devoted yet another of his books to exploring just the question that you seem interested in: Unweaving the Rainbow. He takes on the poet John Keats for accusing Isaac Newton of having destroyed the unscientific appreciation of rainbows. This is very similar to your idea that the scientific reductionism offered by evolution theory somehow misses out on explaining a key component of human nature. But your argument seems grounded mainly in your application of a kind of radical reductionism. Explanations of high level phenomena get lost in the noise when you insist that they can only be described in terms of low level phenomena. One might describe hunger in terms of the dynamic chemical composition of a brain, but that does not begin to explain how hunger motivates people to do the things they do.

Man is not the typical animal.
Some of us know how to connect the dots.
It appears to me that you are less able to connect dots than you are to type them, but I will agree that humans are not typical animals. They are certainly animals, but they have very unique properties that set them apart from other animals. In fact, the same could probably be said for just about every animal species. They are all unique in some ways.

And some of us can think.................................. between the dots.
And some of us are just plain dotty. :D
 

Thief

Rogue Theologian
Every living species is always evolving. There is nothing special about human beings in that respect.


Depends on what you mean by "human part". BTW, the very prolific Richard Dawkins devoted yet another of his books to exploring just the question that you seem interested in: Unweaving the Rainbow. He takes on the poet John Keats for accusing Isaac Newton of having destroyed the unscientific appreciation of rainbows. This is very similar to your idea that the scientific reductionism offered by evolution theory somehow misses out on explaining a key component of human nature. But your argument seems grounded mainly in your application of a kind of radical reductionism. Explanations of high level phenomena get lost in the noise when you insist that they can only be described in terms of low level phenomena. One might describe hunger in terms of the dynamic chemical composition of a brain, but that does not begin to explain how hunger motivates people to do the things they do.


It appears to me that you are less able to connect dots than you are to type them, but I will agree that humans are not typical animals. They are certainly animals, but they have very unique properties that set them apart from other animals. In fact, the same could probably be said for just about every animal species. They are all unique in some ways.


And some of us are just plain dotty. :D


Nothing like dragging people along..........

You can see it....but you won't pursue it.

Humans are evolving.
It's not just our bodies randomly being born different form one to another...
and it's not random natural events sorting out which one is better and continues to live.

Until you step up to the human portion...that part that is not animal....
this discussion will remain shallow.
 

Copernicus

Industrial Strength Linguist
Until you step up to the human portion...that part that is not animal....this discussion will remain shallow.
Thief, if you cannot understand that I see humans as just a species of animal, then the discussion will remain shallow. We have very specialized brains, but we are not the only animals with central nervous systems. You seem to have bought into the very common theme of human narcissism--that we are somehow more special than other animals.
 

Vile Atheist

Loud and Obnoxious
Humans are only special insofar as it is in our interest to preserve human interests (because we are ourselves human...at least most of us :)).

From a biological and physiological standpoint, humans are just another species of the Kingdom Animalia. We ARE animals. We have keen intelligence and complex society. So do other species.

Other species have tremendous advantages we do not possess. A cheetah runs faster than a human could ever run. A whale is bigger than a human could ever be (though I'm getting close). Every species has an advantage that it uses to survive and fill a niche. If all species held the same advantage, it wouldn't be an advantage at all.

Humans are special insofar as we develop close, complex relationships with other humans. Indeed, it is a part of our complex society that we have developed as a survival mechanism. But these relationships aren't unique to humans. They are present in other species as well and even between species (think human-dog relationships or even bees pollinating flowers).

Our complex society demanded the use of a complex language, so basic communication evolved and got more complex as needs and technology changed. We aren't the only species that can communicate ideas to each other. Other species are capable of this as well.

Do you expect dolphins to speak English? Do you expect lions to do algebra? These are human advantages that we developed because our environment demanded it, not because we have some sort of magical powers. Humans are special to each other, for sure, in an emotional sense. But biologically speaking, we are not. We're just another species among the diverse Kingdom Animalia.
 

Thief

Rogue Theologian
Thief, if you cannot understand that I see humans as just a species of animal, then the discussion will remain shallow. We have very specialized brains, but we are not the only animals with central nervous systems. You seem to have bought into the very common theme of human narcissism--that we are somehow more special than other animals.

Special?...no.
Unless you want to talk about awareness of theology.

Different?... yes.
We influence our environment.
We influence our chemistry.
We cheat a natural death at every opportunity.

Evolving?...yes.
But nature and all this discussion about genetics is falling to the wayside.

Time to step up the discussion.

Time to examine what Man really is.

This thread a shallow discussion so far?....yes.
 

Android

Member
It's not just our bodies randomly being born different form one to another...
and it's not random natural events sorting out which one is better and continues to live.

For the bazillionth time...
There is nothing random about natural selection.
Genetic mutation is random, natural selection is NOT!
 

doppelganger

Through the Looking Glass
For the bazillionth time...
There is nothing random about natural selection.
Genetic mutation is random, natural selection is NOT!
Though, to be clear, "random" is an attribute of the knowledge one has about a phenomenon, and not an intrinsic attribute of the phenomenon itself.
 

Android

Member
doppelgänger;2482441 said:
Though, to be clear, "random" is an attribute of the knowledge one has about a phenomenon, and not an intrinsic attribute of the phenomenon itself.

So are you suggesting that there is some, (as yet undiscovered) force guiding the "random" mutations?
If that were the case, natural selection would not be needed, yet we know it happens.
 

doppelganger

Through the Looking Glass
So are you suggesting that there is some, (as yet undiscovered) force guiding the "random" mutations?
If that were the case, natural selection would not be needed, yet we know it happens.
"Guiding"? No. That would be an error of anthropomorphizing. Do you think the universe is non-causal?
 

Android

Member
doppelgänger;2482483 said:
"Guiding"? No. That would be an error of anthropomorphizing. Do you think the universe is non-causal?

Not at all, perhaps "guiding" was a poor choice of words. I was going for the opposite of "random".
 

doppelganger

Through the Looking Glass
Not at all, perhaps "guiding" was a poor choice of words. I was going for the opposite of "random".
What is the opposite of "random"? It's not "determined", "purposed" or "guided." It's "predictable with complete certainty." Randomness and uncertainty are not a comment on how things come to be, but about how much we fully understand how things come to be. This is the cornerstone of the scientific method.
 

Android

Member
doppelgänger;2482441 said:
Though, to be clear, "random" is an attribute of the knowledge one has about a phenomenon, and not an intrinsic attribute of the phenomenon itself.

Well in that case, I see your point. It also explains why Thief and others think that evolution suggests we all got here by random accident.

I however don't think "random" mutations could ever be predictable, so it's fair to call them "random" mutations.
 

doppelganger

Through the Looking Glass
I however don't think "random" mutations could ever be predictable, so it's fair to call them "random" mutations.
Well, that's a tautology. They are "random" precisely because we don't have enough information to predict them with certainty. But nevertheless, if cosmic energy bounces through the atmosphere and alters a gene, it got there because of all the prior movements of energy/matter in in the Universe that led up to its being at that point in spacetime. In that sense, it is not intrinsically random. It was always going to happen just as it happened. We just didn't know enough to predict it with complete certainty. The probability collapses therefore, only when we determine that it has already occurred.
 
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