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Old 09-20-2007, 01:37 PM
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Quotations on Odds of Evolution

Does anybody have any handy citations where I can quote actual evolutionists who admit the relative improbability of evolution? I know that I've seen some before where guys say something like, "we really don't know how we overcame those odds, but we feel that eventuall we will find ways to lower those odds." Quotes referencing any level of evolution would be helpful.
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Old 09-20-2007, 01:48 PM
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Here are some.
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Old 09-20-2007, 02:33 PM
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Thanks Bob!
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Old 09-20-2007, 03:29 PM
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Here is a famous one from Julian Huxley:

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Julian Huxley, a leading advocate of evolution, explains that it is mathematically impossible for natural selection to work. He asked a mathematician to tell him what the chances were that a horse could be produced by the random chance of evolutionary process. He was told that the mathematical likelihood of success would be:

". . the figure 1 with three million naughts [zeros] after it: and that would take three large volumes of about 500 pages each, just to print) . . No one would bet on anything so improbable happening; and yet it has happened." *Julian Huxley, Evolution in Action, p. 46.
Taken from here:
Evolution Facts
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Old 09-20-2007, 07:03 PM
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Take a look at this post from Christian Skepticism on a way to make the improbable probable...
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Old 09-20-2007, 08:08 PM
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Also see here: Post # 19

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Old 09-21-2007, 12:45 PM
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I never understood the argument against evolution from probability. It seems silly to talk about the probability of something after it already happened. To illustrate my objection, think about the 2006 baseball season (you can substitute your sport of choice here). What is the probability that all the scores from every game down to the inning would have worked out the way they did? It's nearly zero. Should we then say that because the outcome was so improbable that it didn't actually happen?
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Old 09-21-2007, 01:02 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SRoper View Post
I never understood the argument against evolution from probability. It seems silly to talk about the probability of something after it already happened. To illustrate my objection, think about the 2006 baseball season (you can substitute your sport of choice here). What is the probability that all the scores from every game down to the inning would have worked out the way they did? It's nearly zero. Should we then say that because the outcome was so improbable that it didn't actually happen?
The difference is that nobody is arguing that a particular mechanism caused the outcome of the 2006 season.

If someone were to propose that a series of factors lead inevitably to the outcome, then the probability method would be an interesting way to critique that theory.
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Old 09-21-2007, 01:06 PM
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Scott, this was actually the exact conversation I was having. Oddly enough, the topic of conversation was whether or not advanced alien life existed, and if so had they visited us. I asked, given the already large improbability of evolution being the cause of intelligent life here on earth, if it was more or less likely that other advanced life had evolved elsewhere in the universe. The answer I got was that the known universe was large enough and the elements needed for life common enough that it would be statistically improbable for life not to have evolved somewhere else.

Anyway, I made the statement that evolution always has in its back pocket, "well, in spite of statistical improbability, we're here, so I guess we beat the odds." I was looking for actual evolutionists who were daunted by the numbers in order to answer someone who said that no credible evolutionist would ever resort to that tactic. It was a secular board that doesn't allow "religious" discussion, and everyone was warned not to take it there, so I never got to really respond.
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Old 09-21-2007, 06:32 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by victorbravo View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by SRoper View Post
I never understood the argument against evolution from probability. It seems silly to talk about the probability of something after it already happened. To illustrate my objection, think about the 2006 baseball season (you can substitute your sport of choice here). What is the probability that all the scores from every game down to the inning would have worked out the way they did? It's nearly zero. Should we then say that because the outcome was so improbable that it didn't actually happen?
The difference is that nobody is arguing that a particular mechanism caused the outcome of the 2006 season.

If someone were to propose that a series of factors lead inevitably to the outcome, then the probability method would be an interesting way to critique that theory.
That's only because the mechanism in not in dispute; we all know that teams of players meet together to play games.

No evolutionist says that evolution inevitably leads to the outcome that we observe today. They say that evolution could have taken any number of paths.
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Old 09-21-2007, 07:08 PM
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If you scroll down on this page and click on the documentation to Don Patton (Geologist) lectures, he has a lot of quotes in there. He calls his approach the antagonistic witness approach. Lots of self-incriminating quotes from evolutionists in these documents.

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Old 09-21-2007, 07:15 PM
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Dr. A.E. Wilder-Smith has some pretty good lectures on this issue.

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Old 09-21-2007, 07:18 PM
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Today Andrew Sullivan took a swipe at anyone who believes in a recent creation as unworthy of civil discourse:

. . . But for me, the evolution issue is very hard to get past. Those who believe that the earth was created 6,000 years ago and that human life has not evolved from more primitive forms are people I cannot engage with in civil discourse. To posit faith in things unprovable and unknowable is one thing. To posit faith in something demonstrably falsifiable is another. I simply have no tolerance for creationism or for those who enable it. Creationists are as much an insult to reasonable Christians as they are to rational thought. And they perpetuate the notion that religious faith is indistinguishable from idiocy.
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Old 09-21-2007, 07:24 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SRoper View Post
I never understood the argument against evolution from probability. It seems silly to talk about the probability of something after it already happened. To illustrate my objection, think about the 2006 baseball season (you can substitute your sport of choice here). What is the probability that all the scores from every game down to the inning would have worked out the way they did? It's nearly zero. Should we then say that because the outcome was so improbable that it didn't actually happen?
It is an argument that differentiates between something happening without intelligence and with intelligence. A better baseball analogy would be the probability of a team scoring 20 runs without any intelligence involved. Just grab a few dozen people off the street, don't tell them any rules etc.

Now you find a team that has scored 20 runs in a game. The question is not denying the 20 runs, its a question of why it happened.

CT
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Old 09-22-2007, 11:52 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ChristianTrader View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by SRoper View Post
I never understood the argument against evolution from probability. It seems silly to talk about the probability of something after it already happened. To illustrate my objection, think about the 2006 baseball season (you can substitute your sport of choice here). What is the probability that all the scores from every game down to the inning would have worked out the way they did? It's nearly zero. Should we then say that because the outcome was so improbable that it didn't actually happen?
It is an argument that differentiates between something happening without intelligence and with intelligence. A better baseball analogy would be the probability of a team scoring 20 runs without any intelligence involved. Just grab a few dozen people off the street, don't tell them any rules etc.

Now you find a team that has scored 20 runs in a game. The question is not denying the 20 runs, its a question of why it happened.

CT
Right, and it didn't happen because some intelligence was there immediately orchestrating the runs (in other words, no one was there directing player X to get a run in the second inning). You missed the point and are confusing the issue by introducing the idea that intelligence has something to do with it. To use another analogy try flipping a coin 100 times and recording what you get. Then calculate the probability of getting the sequence you got. It will be very small (1 in 2^100). Does that mean that you didn't actually flip the coin but rather you purposely placed the coin down in that exact sequence?
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Old 09-22-2007, 06:43 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bradofshaw View Post
Does anybody have any handy citations where I can quote actual evolutionists who admit the relative improbability of evolution? I know that I've seen some before where guys say something like, "we really don't know how we overcame those odds, but we feel that eventuall we will find ways to lower those odds." Quotes referencing any level of evolution would be helpful.
Well - here is Darwin in his own words (Origin of Species): “Can we believe that natural selection could produce, on the one hand, an organ of trifling importance, such as the tail of a giraffe, which serves as a fly-flapper, and, on the other hand, an organ so wonderful as the eye?...To suppose that the eye with all its inimitable contrivances for adjusting the focus to different distances, for admitting different amounts of light, and for the correction of spherical and chromatic aberration, could have been formed by natural selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest degree.”
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Old 09-22-2007, 07:32 PM
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Originally Posted by ChristianTrader View Post
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I never understood the argument against evolution from probability. It seems silly to talk about the probability of something after it already happened. To illustrate my objection, think about the 2006 baseball season (you can substitute your sport of choice here). What is the probability that all the scores from every game down to the inning would have worked out the way they did? It's nearly zero. Should we then say that because the outcome was so improbable that it didn't actually happen?
It is an argument that differentiates between something happening without intelligence and with intelligence. A better baseball analogy would be the probability of a team scoring 20 runs without any intelligence involved. Just grab a few dozen people off the street, don't tell them any rules etc.

Now you find a team that has scored 20 runs in a game. The question is not denying the 20 runs, its a question of why it happened.

CT
Right, and it didn't happen because some intelligence was there immediately orchestrating the runs (in other words, no one was there directing player X to get a run in the second inning).
Actually player X, Y or Z are all intelligent beings. Evolution does not have room for intelligence anywhere. Remove the intelligence and the counter breaks down.

Quote:
You missed the point and are confusing the issue by introducing the idea that intelligence has something to do with it.
But intelligence does have something to do with it. I have yet to see the argument that demonstrates that one can even get off the ground without intelligence. Lots of hand waving, yes, but nothing more than that.

Quote:
To use another analogy try flipping a coin 100 times and recording what you get. Then calculate the probability of getting the sequence you got. It will be very small (1 in 2^100). Does that mean that you didn't actually flip the coin but rather you purposely placed the coin down in that exact sequence?
In this analogy, just remove the intelligent agent (you) and don't replace yourself with any intelligent coin flipping system or system constructed by intelligence. Just leave the coin on the ground, and a piece of paper with a pen for recording the outcomes. Come back and see the coin there with 100 marks on the paper for heads and/or tails. Then lets have a discussion.

CT
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Old 09-23-2007, 02:18 PM
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Actually player X, Y or Z are all intelligent beings. Evolution does not have room for intelligence anywhere. Remove the intelligence and the counter breaks down.
You are equivocating. The baseball players are actors no different than the organisms in evolution. Again, there is no grand intelligence orchestrating the events of the game.

Quote:
In this analogy, just remove the intelligent agent (you) and don't replace yourself with any intelligent coin flipping system or system constructed by intelligence. Just leave the coin on the ground, and a piece of paper with a pen for recording the outcomes. Come back and see the coin there with 100 marks on the paper for heads and/or tails. Then lets have a discussion.

CT
But that reduces the "intelligence" to a being that mechanically flips a coin and records the results. That's not a very interesting definition of intelligence. The sequence produced cannot be said to be designed in any meaningful sense. You've only shown that intelligence is needed to observe and record results.
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Old 09-25-2007, 10:21 AM
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Actually player X, Y or Z are all intelligent beings. Evolution does not have room for intelligence anywhere. Remove the intelligence and the counter breaks down.
You are equivocating. The baseball players are actors no different than the organisms in evolution. Again, there is no grand intelligence orchestrating the events of the game.
[/quote]

One does not need to posit a sovereign God to refute evolution by way of intelligent design. If intelligence is required at any point, then the game is over. For example, one could not hold to open theism and evolution as it is taught in the universities.

Quote:
Quote:
In this analogy, just remove the intelligent agent (you) and don't replace yourself with any intelligent coin flipping system or system constructed by intelligence. Just leave the coin on the ground, and a piece of paper with a pen for recording the outcomes. Come back and see the coin there with 100 marks on the paper for heads and/or tails. Then lets have a discussion.

CT
But that reduces the "intelligence" to a being that mechanically flips a coin and records the results. That's not a very interesting definition of intelligence. The sequence produced cannot be said to be designed in any meaningful sense. You've only shown that intelligence is needed to observe and record results.
I am not reducing intelligence to any degree, but instead, I am just pointing out that one needs intelligence for minimal activities.

Even using the term, "mechanically" implies a intelligence to design a machine to do a task, however trivial one believes it to be.

Lastly, the whole analogy breaks down because one has to first show that the whole thing comes down to various coin flips or steps from one stage to the next. The whole deal with irreducible complexity is to attempt to show that various simple systems could not rise due to simple steps.

CT
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Old 09-25-2007, 10:29 AM
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Gentlemen, I really appreciate your dialog here.

Hermonta, not to derail your discussion at all, but I do disagree that using the word 'mechanically' implies intelligence. It doesn't, it only implies 'mechanism' and that's what the whole debate is about isn't it? Natural selection and mutation are both part of the Darwinist's mechanism and they do not need intelligence to work. However, this mechanism cannot account for 'information' and so there in lies the need for a mechanism that does require intelligence.
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Old 09-25-2007, 10:32 AM
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Hey:

Mathematics destroys evolution.

WISTAR DESTROYS EVOLUTION

Check it out.

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