Hi James, you wrote:
The strongest argument I see for there being some other answer to this is
Dick Fischer’s argument that it was an n=2, but they were the first ancient
Hebrews, not the first man. However, I have to state that I don’t accept
that position (although I haven’t read his book yet, it’s on order Dick).
The Bible seems generally clear that it refers to the origins of mankind –
all of mankind.
If you were sitting on an aiplane next to someone reading about the history
of the Vikings it might interest you enough to ask them about the book, and
maybe you would check it out of the local library. But no matter how
interesting the book, you would know, unless you were from Norway, that it
wasn’t your history. Unfortunately, we weren’t smart enough in the 1st
century to figure out that Genesis was simply Semitic history. Today, we
should be able to see that.
If Genesis 2-11 is viewed as a continuum of information with people and
events, and we don’t just focus on Adam or the flood, it all fits neatly
within the historical framework of southern Mesopotamia. Working backward
from Abraham we see that Ur was destroyed around 2000 BC marking the end of
Sumer, so he must have lived there prior to that event and left before the
Gutians and Elamites attacked it. So he is pretty secure at that time but
no later.
Next going backward in Genesis we have the incident at the Tower of Babel
around 2300 – 2100 BC during the age of the ziggurats that stretched from no
earlier than 3000 BC to no later than 2000 BC. What began as mud brick
platforms to survive the spring floods became massive structures that can be
seen to this day as dilapidated mounds of crumbling clay in Iraq. All the
major cities had them.
Next going back is the dispersion of the sons of Noah. Note that tradition
reverses the biblical sequence of events so that everyone can get their
languages scrambled at Babel before setting out to populate the earth.
Another typical error from a failure to recognize the local history. The
dispersion was at Noah’s death about 2550 BC, 350 years after the flood.
Almost every tribe named in Genesis 10 has been traced and none are dated by
archaeologists to earlier than 3000 BC.
The flood layers in the central cities along the Euphrates in Mesopotamia
were dated to 2900 BC. This date also marks the beginning of the Early
Dynastic Period. A break in culture is universally recognized by
anthropologists although they are disinclined to speak of a “flood” due to
their scientific perspective.
Next going back we have the two lines of Seth and Cain. The city of Enoch
was identified by the Sumerians as “Unug” and dated by archaeologists to no
earlier than 4200 BC. Genesis talks of farming, livestock, tents, stringed
musical instruments and implements of bronze (or copper) and iron during
this pre-flood time frame. Not possible to push this period back to the Old
Stone Age.
This takes us back to Adam who according to Babylonian tradition lived near
Eridu. Eridu was excavated and dated to 4800 BC. Working the genealogies
back from Abraham 20 generations to Adam using the Septuagint chronology is
within 400 years of that date.
In essence, everything fits – the science, the Genesis narrative, the
history of Mesopotamia, everything. If there was only a few thousand years
of discrepancy between the biblical Adam and the first mammalian biped, or
the first Homo sapiens, it might be remotely possible to make a connection
but the time frames are vastly different. The culture gap is enormous.
James, if you do read the book, I would appreciate your candid remarks here
on the list. I am meeting tomorrow with a Georgetown professor who is
attending the Catholic conference on evolution in Rome next month. These
are the very issues I intend to raise with him in the hope I can instill
this method of apology.
Dick Fischer, GPA president
Genesis Proclaimed Association
"Finding Harmony in Bible, Science and History"
www.genesisproclaimed.org
-----Original Message-----
From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] On
Behalf Of James Patterson
Sent: Sunday, February 22, 2009 8:47 AM
To: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: RE: [asa] Two questions...Ayala's article
David wrote:
-- do you accept the evidence for an old universe and earth?
Yes, absolutely.
If so, aren't you being inconsistent in rejecting the conclusions population
geneticists draw from the MHC data based on the presumption you've drawn
from the Bible that there must have been only one pair from whom all present
humans directly are genetically descended? The YEC's, after all, make
exactly the same argument about the "days" of creation, the age of the
earth, and the nature of Noah's flood.
No, I don’t think so, not at all. First, and as I said, I don’t think MHC
data should be used much, if at any, for this kind of thing. I am also not
sure how that ties into the next part of your statement. But the evidence
for the Big Bang, the age of the universe, the age of the earth, that’s all
“hard” science – physics and cosmology. It is much more defined and clear
than the biological sciences. It’s very hard to argue with mathematical
equations like those that define our universe. However, the math used in
Ayala’s paper is *much* less clear, and the math used in the entire field of
population genetics isn’t nailed down yet…just look at some of the
references. We don’t understand this field well enough in general, and I
don’t accept or understand the science well enough to take a position that
it is impossible to have an n=2. I think that some very good evidence for
their being an n=2 is that is what the Bible tells us, and it seems
reasonably clear that an n of 2 is what is indicated – I don’t see a way
around that. The strongest argument I see for there being some other answer
to this is Dick Fischer’s argument that it was an n=2, but they were the
first ancient Hebrews, not the first man. However, I have to state that I
don’t accept that position (although I haven’t read his book yet, it’s on
order Dick). The Bible seems generally clear that it refers to the origins
of mankind – all of mankind.
The essential foundation of my argument is that in general, what the Bible
says and what science says agree. YOM doesn’t mean a literal day. The
Hebrews didn’t mean a global flood. How Genesis is interpreted is obviously
not easy, and not clear, or we wouldn’t be here talking about it.
-- you say, ". . . we see the emergence of man in the correct *general*
location, from (at least) a small population, sometime in the past." I used
to find this kind of argument from RTB et al. somewhat persuasive.
However, let's be honest: central Africa is not the same "general location"
as Mesopotamia,
Yes, it is. First off, I think it’ East Africa. But I’m not going to split
hairs. And even if you draw that circle down to Tanzania and Ethiopia, it’s
still in the same general location. We do not understand mans origins well
enough to put him in anything other than Africa. That’s fine. It’s not
Europe, it’s not Australia, it’s not America, it’s not Russia, it’s not
China, or India. God said he created man west of Eden. Africa is west of
Eden. Sure, most of it is also south…but it’s still west. I don’t really
think that’s worth belaboring…it agrees well enough. Science puts the
origins of man in Africa, and the first civilizations in Mesopotamia. The
Bible put’s the creation of man west of Eden, and Eden in Mesopotamia. That
agrees well enough for me. Here’s the map again, since it wasn’t in this
email. http://www.pattersonhistory.net/map01.jpg
and "sometime in the past" -- if that is 150 kya or so even for
Mitochondrial Eve -- doesn't fit with the Bible's description of the culture
into which Adam's immediate descendants were placed.
I am working on that presently…and answering this thread is detracting me
from that work…
Moreover, "(at least) a small population" isn't two individuals. I am no
expert either, but my sense is that for the MHC data to be accounted for by
a single pair, you'd either have to have (a) diversification of the MHC at a
truly astonishing (not just 'fast') rate; or (b) a whole set of miracles not
mentioned in scripture.
Not mentioned???? God creates man and woman, breaths their spiritual nature
into them, and you tell me that’s not mentioned? Come now. He doesn’t give
out details on how He did it…or what He did. If so the world would be a much
simpler place. But I think it’s clear – He did something.
Isn't it more parsimonious to suggest, as John Stott did in his Romans
commentary, that the "image of God" and "original sin" are essentially
spiritual qualities rather than genetic ones? It seems to me that this
removes much of the burden of trying to tie Adam to the genetic record.
That’s not a bad point, but parsimony can be taken only so far. Occam’s
razor can slice down to the bone of metaphysical naturalism, if you let it.
Perhaps Adam lived in (or was removed from the "garden" into) a context
where there were other "humans," but this says nothing of the spiritual
aspects of those other homo sapiens who shared the physical world with Adam
and his descendants for a time.
Well, I don't like that either, but I haven't been able to conceive of a way
to pull these threads together more tightly without resorting to
presuppositional logic that ultimately leads to YECism.
I don’t deny that PC is a tough position. The one thing that brought me here
to this position is the strong Biblical foundation, and the thing that keeps
me here is that there is a model. Models can be revised based on new data,
and other opinions and interpretations can be incorporated. This is not true
of YEC – the entire foundation of their position is based on a unbalanced
premise that only the Bible is true, and not science (at least not anyone’s
science but their own). The PC position is balanced: both Bible and science.
The TE position is (in my opinion) a bit unbalanced the other way – too much
reliance on only natural explanations. I know most of you don’t agree with
that, but hey if I wasn’t here testing your positions, you wouldn’t be
having so much fun. :-)
God bless, JP
--- David W. Opderbeck Associate Professor of Law Seton Hall University Law School Gibbons Institute of Law, Science & Technology On Sat, Feb 21, 2009 at 2:47 PM, James Patterson <james000777@bellsouth.net> wrote: All, I've finally been able to get back to this thread (and sub-threads) and read them. I wanted to go read the Ayala manuscript first. I have read it as well as the comments on the article, and a few other related articles. I must also classify myself as "not an expert" in this field. However, I find it quite interesting to look at how often the words "presume" and "presumption" are used in the Ayala article. If you look at this article specifically and the field as a whole, there is significant controversy over the various models and how to interpret the results…more so than I am comfortable with. This is reflected in the comment in reply to the Ayala article, as well as several other articles (see below). All that as an aside. The main issue is the size of the "n" required to pass thru a bottleneck. Ayala argues there wasn't even a bottleneck, but I think most would agree there is plenty of evidence that there was at least one if not more bottlenecks. So I am not going to belabor that issue. Ayala's point is that, for a given chunk of DNA, including mtDNA chunks, you may be able to trace that chunk back to a common ancestor. However, the next chunk of DNA will be from a *different* ancestor, not the same one, implying not one, but a population of "Eves". I am NOT familiar enough to state for certainty, but I thought that the mtDNA was looked at more as a whole than other DNA? It's size is about 15-17 kbp, and codes for 37 genes. When we get to the point of whether there was a n=2 vs an n=X, Ayala puts X at ~100,000. He describes how it would be impossible for all the alleles of the MHC to survive a population smaller than (I think) about 10,000 sexually active humans, which equates to a total population that is of course larger. The issue here of course is the MHC region. If one is going to look at comparative regions and molecular clocks, it seems to me that the MHC has got to be the *worst* possible choice to use. Within the field of immunology, this region of the genetic code is sometimes called the G.O.D. (interesting, yes?) region, for Generator (or Generation) Of Diversity. Mutation rates here can be quite rapid. See the Hogstrand or Carrington articles below. Given that, Ayala's work does not seem to distinguish itself any greater than other studies on this topic. And that gets to the heart of the matter: From a strict, naturalistic, population genetics viewpoint, a bottleneck of an n=2 is unacceptable. The only way to have an n=2 bottleneck is if this couple were quite special in some way or ways, and that isn't "natural". Thank God, I am not a strict naturalist. :-) The integration of science and faith is why we are here. You may want to find a strict natural explanation of everything, because you think that's the way God works at all times. If you extrapolate this to the extreme, the TE viewpoint becomes the DE viewpoint. I think I mentioned this in another thread recently. At the very least, I think you should at least consider this to be a prime example of Russell's OSP hard at work. You may be able to track the lineage of the descent of man genetically, but tracking the hand of God is another matter. It becomes very difficult, very quickly, to reconcile God's creation of our spiritual selves (as well as original sin) with a (large) population of humans that evolved slowly. No matter how you slice it, God's handiwork is present. And if we are going to presume the hand of God being involved, then strict naturalistic explanations will ultimately fail. However, if you *presume* that God was involved, and that God created Adam and Eve (as the Bible tells us), and look at what the natural sciences show us, we see the emergence of man in the correct *general* location, from (at least) a small population, sometime in the past. How exactly, may remain unclear. We will have to save the time question for later, tho. :-) If you choose not to believe that God was intimately involved with the creation of man through Adam and Eve, then that's your choice. As for me and my family, we choose God. God bless, James P A few interesting references: Gibbons A, (1993). Mitochondrial Eve refuses to die. Science, 259(5099):1249-1250. Ayala F, (1995). The Myth of Eve: Molecular Biology and Human Origins. Science, 270(5244):1930-1936. Erlich HA, Bergstrom TF, Stoneking M, and Gyllensten U (1996). HLA Sequence Polymorphism and the Origin of Humans (in reply to Ayala's article). Science, 274(5292):1552-1554. Watson E, Forster P, Richards M, Bandelt HJ, (1997). Mitochondrial footprints of human expansions in Africa. Am J Hum Genet, 61(3):691-704. Carrington M, (1999). Recombination within the human MHC. Immunological Reviews, 167(1):245-256. Gray M, Burger G, Lang BF, (1999). Mitochondrial Evolution. Science, 283(5407):1476-1481. Högstrand K, Böhme J, (1999). Gene conversion can create new MHC alleles. Immunological Reviews, 167(1):305-317. Cann R, (2001). Genetic Clues to Dispersal in Human Populations: Retracing the Past from the Present. Science, 291(5509): 1742-1748. Stumpf M and Goldstein D, (2001). Genealogical and Evolutionary Inference with the Human Y Chromosome. Science, 291(5509):1738-1742. Zimmerman S, (2001). Population size at the time of mitochondrial eve. Human Evolution, 16(2):117-124. Curnoe D, Thorne A, (2003) Number of ancestral human species: a molecular perspective. Homo, 53(3):201-224. Hagelberg E, (2003). Recombination or mutation rate heterogeneity? Implications for Mitochondrial Eve. Trends Genet, 19(2):84-90. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_histocompatibility_complex#MHC_evolution_ and_allelic_diversity To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with "unsubscribe asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.Received on Sun, 22 Feb 2009 19:20:50 -0500
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