(September 7, 2019 at 11:03 am)Mister Agenda Wrote:(September 7, 2019 at 9:13 am)John 6IX Breezy Wrote: I'm aware, but, its not the same thing. Fermentation and respiration are part of the organism's metabolism whereas bacteriocins are produced specifically to kill other bacteria. I haven't had the pleasure of producing wine, but I did take an elective course on microbiology.
Reference: Madigan, M. T., Martinko, J. M., Bender, K. S., Buckley, D. H., & Stahl, D. A. (2015). Biology of Microorganisms. Boston: Pearson.
There are many, many species of bacteria. Unless you're talking about a strain of bacteria that emits toxins that act specifically against its own species, there's no biological mystery to solve here. Emitting toxins to kill other strains of bacteria is just eliminating the competition and would obviously be selected for if it was more dangerous to other species of bacteria than it's own. .
(September 6, 2019 at 11:14 am)Acrobat Wrote: Our of curiosity, how do people in here determine which evolutionary explanation of how features like sacrificing our lives for others developed, is the correct one? We clearly can't repeat the process, and have no video tape of how it all took place?
So what determines whether one explanation is more likely to be true than another? Is it just a matter of cherry picking the one we like the best?
Do you think that if, among several explanations, you pick the one that best fits the available data as most likely to be closest to what's actually true, that it is an example of what most people mean by 'cherry-picking'?
If they’re several explanations of the same available data, how do I decide which one fits better? What exactly does fit mean?
Let’s take Bart historicist explanations of Jesus vs Richard Carriers ahistoricist explanations, how do I decide which explanation fits the data better?