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- From: rh@smds.com (Richard Harter)
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Subject: Re: Topic for Discussion?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.061459.10193@smds.com>
- Date: 25 Jan 93 06:14:59 GMT
- References: <1jo29o$srt@agate.berkeley.edu> <106254@netnews.upenn.edu> <1jq3p3INNa89@fido.asd.sgi.com>
- Reply-To: rh@ishmael.UUCP (Richard Harter)
- Organization: Software Maintenance & Development Systems, Inc.
- Lines: 63
-
- In article <1jq3p3INNa89@fido.asd.sgi.com> livesey@solntze.wpd.sgi.com (Jon Livesey) writes:
-
- >Suppose you hold that macro-evolution and micro-evolution are in
- >some sense different in kind. Perhaps you believe that macro-
- >evolution takes place through a mechanism which is different to
- >"cumulative microevolution". Perhaps you hold that there
- >is some "limit" to micro-evolution which would prevent cumulative
- >micro-evolution producing macro-changes.
-
- >Then the question is, how is this limit implemented? If there
- >is to be some mechanism to prevent micro-evolution producing
- >cumulatively greater and greater changes, there has to be some
- >information stored somewhere which tells the mechanism of micro-
- >evolution, in effect, "this far, and no further".
-
- >In other words, starting from a species, there has to be a form
- >of representation of that species against which some future
- >variant can be compared, in order to see if the putative
- >micro-evolutionary step at that time is "allowed".
-
- >Where to store this representation? It can't be stored
- >centrally, outside the organisms - unless you believe in
- >Sheldrake's informational fields - so it must be stored inside
- >the individual organism, one copy per organism.
-
- Stop right there. This is the fallacy in your argument. [It's
- a nice argument though -- are you trying to see if people will
- catch it?] The fallacy here is the false dichotomy -- the
- presentation of two alternatives with the claim that they subsume
- all cases.
-
- Now quite obviously, if one thinks on it a bit, it is conceivable
- that the limit [if it exists] is viability. That is, a particular
- "kind" may be intrinsically limited in the range of variants that
- are viable. I use the word "kind" advisedly because if this were
- the case then it quite conceivable that a "kind" might actually
- involve a number of species. Now the interesting thing here is
- the steps that Jon takes. The first step is to infer that, if
- there is a limit, then there must be a mechanism. So far, so
- good. The second step is to infer that there must be a representation
- aand a comparison. This step in his argument is misleading; it leads
- us to think in terms of an explicit representation stored in the
- form of information and an explicit comparison mechanism. Once
- we accepted this implicitly suggested limitation we are led down
- the garden path to Jon's refutation, because we ask where can this
- information be stored, and the answer is that there is no plausible
- place to store it.
-
- The catch is that there need be no explicit representation anywhere.
- The constraints (again, on the assumption that they exist) are
- implicit in the environment and in the laws of nature. Likewise,
- the mechanism is not explicit -- those variants outside the range
- of viability die. No explicit "comparison" is needed.
-
- The question of the limits to macro-evolution is one of fact; it is
- not an issue that can be settled by theoretical arguments alone. It
- is the weight of an overwhelming preponderance of evidence that
- establishes that macro-evolution has occurred.
- --
- Richard Harter: SMDS Inc. Net address: rh@smds.com Phone: 508-369-7398
- US Mail: SMDS Inc., PO Box 555, Concord MA 01742. Fax: 508-369-8272
- In the fields of Hell where the grass grows high
- Are the graves of dreams allowed to die.
-