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A Scientific Response to Creationist on: Kinds
#21
RE: A Scientific Response to Creationist on: Kinds
(April 25, 2014 at 5:19 pm)ThePaleolithicFreethinker Wrote:
(April 25, 2014 at 4:39 pm)alpha male Wrote: Yes. So is family. So is species - there's no single definition suitable for all purposes. So what?

http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Family

http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Species

There is a definition for both. Nice try.
The species definition you linked to is ambiguous and doesn't give a single definition suitable for all purposes. Did you even read it? I would say nice try back to you, but it wasn't even a nice try. Heck, it gives one definition, then says "failing that..." and gives another, thereby demonstrating my point.
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#22
RE: A Scientific Response to Creationist on: Kinds
(April 26, 2014 at 3:15 pm)alpha male Wrote:
(April 25, 2014 at 5:19 pm)ThePaleolithicFreethinker Wrote: http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Family

http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Species

There is a definition for both. Nice try.
The species definition you linked to is ambiguous and doesn't give a single definition suitable for all purposes. Did you even read it? I would say nice try back to you, but it wasn't even a nice try. Heck, it gives one definition, then says "failing that..." and gives another, thereby demonstrating my point.

http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evosite/ev...cies.shtml

Ya again no. We can tell what a species is. If you want a more detailed explanation just ask.

Also to add lets read it shall we.

An individual belonging to a group of organisms (or the entire group itself) having common characteristics and (usually) are capable of mating with one another to produce fertile offspring. Failing that (for example the Liger) It has to be ecologically and recognisably the same.

Failing that means that the offspring that two different species has like a (lion and a tiger making a liger) can not have offspring. So it means failing at making a offspring that can reproduced. Try again and one more thing man

[Image: doglady.jpeg]

(April 25, 2014 at 5:48 pm)Fidel_Castronaut Wrote:
(April 25, 2014 at 5:19 pm)ThePaleolithicFreethinker Wrote: http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Family

http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Species

There is a definition for both. Nice try.

Prepare yourself for redefining the words, or failing that, the rules that define the words themselves.

Like when you point out a contradiction in a holy text, and theists reply with "well if you redefine what a contradiction is it's no longer a contradiction!"

:-|


^ your comment was on point he in fact tried to get rid of the definition.
[Image: guilmon_evolution_by_davidgtm3-d4gb5rp.gif]https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOW_Ioi2wtuPa88FvBmnBgQ my youtube
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#23
RE: A Scientific Response to Creationist on: Kinds
[quote='ThePaleolithicFreethinker' pid='657496' Ya again no. We can tell what a species is. If you want a more detailed explanation just ask.[/QUOTE]
OK, let's hear it.
[quote]Also to add lets read it shall we.[/quote]
Sure! Smile
[quote]An individual belonging to a group of organisms (or the entire group itself) having common characteristics and (usually) are capable of mating with one another to produce fertile offspring. Failing that (for example the Liger) It has to be ecologically and recognisably the same.[/quote]
Usually and failing that indicate ambiguity. Further, definitions based on fertility are not applicable in paleontology.
[quote]Failing that means that the offspring that two different species has like a (lion and a tiger making a liger) can not have offspring.[/quote]
Except, female ligers are fertile. So, you fail three ways.
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#24
RE: A Scientific Response to Creationist on: Kinds
(April 26, 2014 at 4:57 pm)alpha male Wrote: [quote='ThePaleolithicFreethinker' pid='657496' Ya again no. We can tell what a species is. If you want a more detailed explanation just ask.
OK, let's hear it.
Quote:Also to add lets read it shall we.
Sure! Smile
Quote:An individual belonging to a group of organisms (or the entire group itself) having common characteristics and (usually) are capable of mating with one another to produce fertile offspring. Failing that (for example the Liger) It has to be ecologically and recognisably the same.
Usually and failing that indicate ambiguity. Further, definitions based on fertility are not applicable in paleontology.
Quote:Failing that means that the offspring that two different species has like a (lion and a tiger making a liger) can not have offspring.
Except, female ligers are fertile. So, you fail three ways.
[/quote]

Except in reading comprehension, understanding of Biology, and knowing Alpha Male is dumb as a sack of bricks.
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#25
RE: A Scientific Response to Creationist on: Kinds
(April 26, 2014 at 4:57 pm)alpha male Wrote: [quote='ThePaleolithicFreethinker' pid='657496' Ya again no. We can tell what a species is. If you want a more detailed explanation just ask.
OK, let's hear it.
Quote:Also to add lets read it shall we.
Sure! Smile
Quote:An individual belonging to a group of organisms (or the entire group itself) having common characteristics and (usually) are capable of mating with one another to produce fertile offspring. Failing that (for example the Liger) It has to be ecologically and recognisably the same.
Usually and failing that indicate ambiguity. Further, definitions based on fertility are not applicable in paleontology.
Quote:Failing that means that the offspring that two different species has like a (lion and a tiger making a liger) can not have offspring.
Except, female ligers are fertile. So, you fail three ways.
[/quote]

Its bad to see that I already put the defenition there.

A. It does not say failing in indication. Did you read the source from Berkeley I gave you? Also it means failing to reproduce.

B. So what? A female liger is fertile, some species can interbreed some can't. Are you suggesting tigers and lions are the same species? If so source the paper

C. we can tell different species in paleontology. There is more than just DNA. Anatomical structures are another way. This is sad to see that on your part.

So not only did I give you definitions for the word species and the fact we can tell, you had to quote mine the source twice without reading it, and you are trying to take down the word species in order to make kind look good. So I can give a valid definitions of species and I can keep doing it, the problem is that you just want to make species look vague so you can use the word kind.
[Image: guilmon_evolution_by_davidgtm3-d4gb5rp.gif]https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOW_Ioi2wtuPa88FvBmnBgQ my youtube
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#26
RE: A Scientific Response to Creationist on: Kinds
Can't wait to see these semantic acrobatics from someone with Alpha Male's third grade reading ability. Perhaps he'll be able to source a paper and sound out enough of the "big words" by following them along the screen with his finger to make a truly entertaining argument.
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#27
RE: A Scientific Response to Creationist on: Kinds
(April 26, 2014 at 5:59 pm)Rampant.A.I. Wrote: Can't wait to see these semantic acrobatics from someone with Alpha Male's third grade reading ability. Perhaps he'll be able to source a paper and sound out enough of the "big words" by following them along the screen with his finger to make a truly entertaining argument.

Most creationist don't read past the abstract.
[Image: guilmon_evolution_by_davidgtm3-d4gb5rp.gif]https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOW_Ioi2wtuPa88FvBmnBgQ my youtube
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#28
RE: A Scientific Response to Creationist on: Kinds
ThePaleolithicFreethinker Wrote: Its bad to see that I already put the defenition there.
And? I didn't say that no definition exists. I said that the definitions are vague and "there's no single definition suitable for all purposes." Your own sources support me on this. You're arguing against a straw man.
Quote:A. It does not say failing in indication. Did you read the source from Berkeley I gave you? Also it means failing to reproduce.
Yes, I did. Did you read past the first paragraph? That source also agrees with me that the BSC has ambiguities and isn't suitable for all purposes.:
Quote:That definition of a species might seem cut and dried, but it is not—in nature, there are lots of places where it is difficult to apply this definition. For example, many bacteria reproduce mainly asexually. The bacterium shown at right is reproducing asexually, by binary fission. The definition of a species as a group of interbreeding individuals cannot be easily applied to organisms that reproduce only or mainly asexually. a dividing streptococcus bacterium

Also, many plants, and some animals, form hybrids in nature. Hooded crows and carrion crows look different, and largely mate within their own groups—but in some areas, they hybridize. Should they be considered the same species or separate species?[quote]
[quote]B. So what? A female liger is fertile, some species can interbreed some can't. Are you suggesting tigers and lions are the same species? If so source the paper
Is a liger a species?
Quote:C. we can tell different species in paleontology. There is more than just DNA. Anatomical structures are another way. This is sad to see that on your part.
We apparently don't classify fossils by their reproductive capabilities, so give me the definition of species used in paleontology. If you can do this, you'll further support my claim that "there's no single definition suitable for all purposes." Smile
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#29
RE: A Scientific Response to Creationist on: Kinds
(April 27, 2014 at 7:48 am)alpha male Wrote: [quote='ThePaleolithicFreethinker' pid='657560'] Its bad to see that I already put the defenition there.
And? I didn't say that no definition exists. I said that the definitions are vague and "there's no single definition suitable for all purposes." Your own sources support me on this. You're arguing against a straw man.
Quote:A. It does not say failing in indication. Did you read the source from Berkeley I gave you? Also it means failing to reproduce.
Yes, I did. Did you read past the first paragraph? That source also agrees with me that the BSC has ambiguities and isn't suitable for all purposes.:
Quote:That definition of a species might seem cut and dried, but it is not—in nature, there are lots of places where it is difficult to apply this definition. For example, many bacteria reproduce mainly asexually. The bacterium shown at right is reproducing asexually, by binary fission. The definition of a species as a group of interbreeding individuals cannot be easily applied to organisms that reproduce only or mainly asexually. a dividing streptococcus bacterium

Also, many plants, and some animals, form hybrids in nature. Hooded crows and carrion crows look different, and largely mate within their own groups—but in some areas, they hybridize. Should they be considered the same species or separate species?[quote]
[quote]B. So what? A female liger is fertile, some species can interbreed some can't. Are you suggesting tigers and lions are the same species? If so source the paper
Is a liger a species?
Quote:C. we can tell different species in paleontology. There is more than just DNA. Anatomical structures are another way. This is sad to see that on your part.
We apparently don't classify fossils by their reproductive capabilities, so give me the definition of species used in paleontology. If you can do this, you'll further support my claim that "there's no single definition suitable for all purposes." Smile
[/quote]

The word species isnt vauge then. We can define it, that is the point. Yet no one defines the word kind, because when you do you end up making it easier to debunk.

also.

A. We are talking about the definition of species, not how to separate different species. Never did I say reproductive capabilities are the only way, there are many others.

B. Yes the liger is a species. We can tell it is a different species.

C. The part you put in bold explains the difficulty of apply species, not that they can't do it. There a certain things a animal most have from its relatives to make it a different species.

D. http://www.theguardian.com/science/lost-...rs-fossils

Also let me do the quote mining for you.

Quote:The real question of course though is how can species be recognised and identified? This is where things get complex and disagreements can arise between biologists, since species are more fluid than elements or atoms. By definition, species evolve and over time populations change, diverge and lineages split into new species. Humans now might be considered the same species as humans ten thousand years ago, but it's also undeniable that we have changed in that time. You might well be familiar with the definition of a species that runs roughly as "a group of animals that can reproduce and have fertile offspring", and that's all well and good, but it's also profoundly limited.

Plenty of species don't have sex (bacteria, some lizards and sharks, many plants) so this definition is irrelevant for these cases (and there's tons of them). We can't separate out fossil species by this definition either, and some things can produce fertile offspring despite being very different in appearance, or being separated by another non-genetic barrier (behaviour, geography etc.).

Thats what you were going to point out be here is the rest that destroys that notion that we can't tell different species in paleontology.

Quote: To account for these and other issues, biologists and palaeontologists use a whole raft of different 'species concepts' that can help separate species from one another and also identify new species. We might recognise them as separate because they can't interbreed with close relatives, but also on their anatomy, behaviour, genetics or evolutionary history. This can naturally lead to disagreement with which definition is best for a given putative species, or just how much difference is required to identify a separate species, but in general agreements are quite broad, and quibbling comes down to certain problematic specimens or populations. It's also worth noting of course that many of these definitions line up – tigers can't produce fertile offspring with leopards, but they also have anatomical, behavioural and genetic differences, and the leopards in Africa at least can't physically mate with tigers and so on.

The task however is vast, the number of taxonomists is shrinking and while new techniques make it easier to identify possible new species, it also means we are finding new species long hidden and some species classified as being a single entity apparently consist of multiple species. Even large mammals and birds are turning up with some regularity, so what hope have we of identifying every kind of parasitic worm, fungus or bacterium? Identifying a new species is only the first step, as then it needs to be formally classified and named, and yes, that's the cliffhanger to the next post.
[Image: guilmon_evolution_by_davidgtm3-d4gb5rp.gif]https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOW_Ioi2wtuPa88FvBmnBgQ my youtube
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