Yes, this example is a nice one because its implications are readily seen even by non-specialists. The point to drive home, however, is that this is but one example of thousands and thousands that converge on the same conclusion.
While science doesn't offer absolute proof, it can offer what my PhD supervisor used to call the "Bl**dy obvious test" - apologies for the language. Comparative genomics is well into "bl**dy obvious" territory on this issue. Only large-scale denial or misrepresentation of the issue will suffice for an anti-common descent apologetic.
So, in my view, game over for YEC and OEC, as well as for anti-common descent forms of ID.
Dennis
On 15/10/09 2:57 PM, "John Walley" <john_walley@yahoo.com> wrote:
"but the presence of pseudogenes don't imply the game is over for YEC"
Yes in a way it does because at least in the case of psi GULO, it forks their design argument by making them defend why God wanted humans to have scurvy.
This example of a pseudogene alone convinced me to become a TE. Any other example could conceivably be argued to have some type of unknown or unappreciated design characteristic to it but this one with its obvious deleterious effects is really hard to defend.
John
________________________________
From: Jon Tandy <tandyland@earthlink.net>
To: ASA <asa@calvin.edu>
Sent: Thu, October 15, 2009 1:42:23 PM
Subject: RE: [asa] Ken Miller's mantra
I don't think this is really the case. The standard answers probably apply here: "God made it that way", and "it may be that we will find a use for the so'-called junk DNA and pseudogenes" serve pretty well as answers, just like "the earth is young, even though it may appear old". Whether such arguments are convincing for those reasonably acquainted with the strength of the evidence is another matter, but the presence of pseudogenes don't imply the game is over for YEC.
Jon Tandy
From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] On Behalf Of Dehler, Bernie
Sent: Thursday, October 15, 2009 10:40 AM
To: ASA
Subject: RE: [asa] Ken Miller's mantra
I see your point.
How about this "We don't self-manufacture vitamin c; we win." Then you explain why we don't have vitamin c internally produced, unlike our descendents, because of bad gene copies (the pseudogene argument using vitamin c as a poster-boy).
Although fossils are easier too comprehend, it seems like the YEC's also have a good time-tested twist/story on them, at first glance. But when it comes to pseudogenes, the argument is over, and there's no good comeback for a YEC.
...Bernie
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Received on Thu Oct 15 18:16:28 2009
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