The Origin of Species
discussion
On the Origin of Species--is it necessary to read it to have an opinion?
date
newest »

message 1:
by
blereader
(last edited Sep 22, 2015 08:04AM)
(new)
-
added it
Sep 22, 2015 06:07AM

reply
|
flag

(Who's Rachel Carson, btw? Have to look her up.)
I'm strongly against the Bible as I think it has little merit.
It's plain badly written, it has no real storyflow and, well, the plot doesn't make that much sense actually, does it?



“Don’t get mad, get even… Run, don’t walk, to the nearest nonschool library or to the local bookstore and get whatever it was that they banned. Read whatever they’re trying to keep out of your eyes and your brain, because that’s exactly what you need to know.”
Of COURSE one needs to read a book in order to criticize it. People who do not want you to read a book because it might change your mind about your faith are people with a faith that will not stand up to close scrutiny.
Natural selection is not a theory and should never be referred to as such. It is fact and therefore 'opinions' do not come into it.

It is a truly beautiful book, I was surprised at how easy it was to read, how accessible. The real question, is did Darwin get there first?


I find that Darwin himself negates that in his book, he's quite open about the fact that his research did build, as all in science, on other peoples groundwork.

The fuzziness of the public perception of theory and thought is frightening to me. That fuzziness or sloppiness is the reason that a huge proportion of the American public disputes the truth of Darwin's theory of evolution. It also explains the disdain that creationists can safely display for what has been shown to be true countless millions of times in microbiology, genetic research, geology, and paleontology. They escape serious ridicule only because the general population is ignorant about the distinction between scientific hypotheses (with results) and nonsense on stilts.
Yes, I borrowed that term from Massimo Pigliucci's book called "Nonsense on Stilts: How to Tell Science from Bunk." I recommend it to anyone interested in Karl Popper's problem with defining the "demarcation problem" between science and pseudo-science.



so... yes.

Origin can stand on its own. But I would also suggest people read Voyage of the Beagle as a companion book to it. The two together may provide a better picture of natural science in those days. I say that because pure natural science generates little interest today, probably because of the thousands of specialty areas that exist now in the hard sciences.

Darwin's laying out of the theory and the data that supported it is breathtaking in its studious concern for truth. He discovered and elucidated the laws that govern how life adapts. He overthrew the great Linnaeus' assumption that all species are fixed from creation. He didn't get to the source of how life capable of adaptation came to exist and we are still none-the-wiser about that, but he spelled out a beautiful theory that for believers can paint a better picture of an immanent God, rather an AWOL Creator; that is what creationists miss.


Natural Selection is a theory. Ask any biologist. A fact is experimental data. A theory is generated from facts. A theory is never considered proved, only that facts strengthen the theory. Any scientific area of research cannot claim (technically) a theory has been proved. People who work in that subject area may believe it with all their heart, but according to the rules of scientific inquiry, they may not claim it proved. At best it is a working hypothesis that everyone who works with it may consider it true, but they cannot claim it to be so as per the rules of scientific inquiry.

No, it was anticipated somewhat by Wallace, but Darwin put it all together, just as in the same way much of Einstein's theory of relativity was anticipated in part, but Einstein was the person who put it all together.
Richard wrote: "Tony wrote: "Natural selection is not a theory and should never be referred to as such. It is fact and therefore 'opinions' do not come into it."
Natural Selection is a theory. Ask any biologist. ..."
Evolution is a fact. That's enough for me. Life has evolved over time.
Natural Selection is a theory. Ask any biologist. ..."
Evolution is a fact. That's enough for me. Life has evolved over time.

Natural Selection is a theory. Ask any biologist. ..."
All theories of science are vulnerable to rejection if they are falsified. They are not unalterable, as opposed to the revealed dogmas of religion. And there are numerous cases in the evolutionary literature of provisional evolutionary theories that were eventually rejected. The belief that a gene can be the direct object of selection is one such refuted theory. Still other rejected provisional theories are transmutationism and transformationism.
The fact that natural selection has survived since The Origin of Species was published gives it great credibility, especially when the research began to look closely at how phylogenetic variations produced new phenotypes in even small populations. Darwin knew this in his own time, but did not know the exact mechanism that produced those changes

Natural Selection is a theory. Ask..."
I agree with that; pretty much what I said, from a different perspective
all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic