Tuesday 19 July 2011

More evo-doublethink

Rather trivial, you may say, but life is made up of lots of little details.

walking back from the train station yesterday, I saw a council notice up about a public consultation concerning a new local settlement. Shall we call it Blackheath although that isn't it's name.

the headline read 'Blackheath is evolving!'

what was the consultation meeting about? Planning. So, in fact, Blackheath is being intelligently designed. The use of the word 'evolving' is completely incorrect. The opposite of the truth. Of course, I am not suggesting any dishonesty on the part of the local authority, just another example of how our language has been manipulated and its meaning mangled.

The word 'doublethink' comes from George Orwell's future dystopic novel 1984 and refers to one of the tricks whereby the language was manipulated by the ruling power, who of course controlled education and the media, to steer people into thinking and saying only what was approved.

Darwinian evolution cannot plan, it has no goals, and is as likely to walk over a cliff as it is to walk along a path. In fact, much more likely to walk over a cliff or just lay down and die given what we know about DNA mutations. People know from their everyday experience of life that unguided proceses do not build useful or beautiful things. Intelligence is required to produce meaning, always. The planners of Blackheath know this, that's why they are asking for ideas and thinking about design and purpose. This is not evolution.

The way that the word evolution has been laden with false meaning is a classic example of doublethink. The idea that planned, purposeful improvements are the same thing as Darwinian evolutionistic processs is completely inaccurate, so to promote this is a deliberate lie. A lot of people are taken in by it. Who was it that said if you repeat a lie often enough it becomes the truth?

Of course, the English language changes. However, if the meaning of a word changes beyond all recognition, we need a new word to describe the thing the word used to mean. If designed improvement can now be described as evolution, we need a new word to describe the supposed process whereby life, having originated without a designer, adds complexity by random mutations and natural selection, despite the abundant evidence that this does not happen.

How about Dawkinism? But then I already use that term for an approach to debate that involves grandstanding, special pleading, distraction tactics, misprepresentation, bombast, character asassination and denial of contrary evidence and arguments.

On the other hand, if deceit is the aim, we can leave things as they are and let people be bamboozled into thinking that evolution and design are the same. But they are not, and it matters.

4 comments:

  1. Do you think it is clever or honest to base your attacks on science on an equivocation over the meaning of the word 'evolution'? In the English language words can have many meanings. When someone describes a fast train as 'flying' down the track, do you take them to task because the train is not actually airborne?

    'Evolution' to a biologist or geneticist means the empirically observed change in the allele frequency of a population over time. 'Evolution' to a paleontologist means the evidence for observed patterns of change in life forms on Earth over time. 'Evolution' in the common vernacular (such as used by the Blackheath council) merely means 'change over time' of any sort. It doesn't specify intelligence or purpose.

    It's sad when the best the anti-science folks can muster are cheap rhetorical arguments based on childish wordplay.

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  2. Sad (but no surprise) that Darwinians so quickly resort to abuse such as 'anti-science, childish, cheap' etc.

    If as you say the word 'evolution' can mean so many different things to different people (my point exactly) then don't you agree that Darwinian evolution needs to be firmly defined by a term that is not capable of being assocoated with entirely different processes, so that it can be rigorously criticised and falsified?

    The fact that I can't budget time tonight to address your other points doesn't mean I accept them. In particular, allele frequency variation over time (as with peppered moths) does not create new genes so is not Darwinian evolution. and the fossil record still shows sudden appearance followed by stasis and extinctions.

    Elwin

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  3. If as you say the word 'evolution' can mean so many different things to different people (my point exactly) then don't you agree that Darwinian evolution needs to be firmly defined by a term that is not capable of being assocoated with entirely different processes, so that it can be rigorously criticised and falsified?


    I think demanding that science somehow control the meaning and usage of a common English word is one of the most ridiculous arguments against the theory of evolution I've ever seen, and that's saying something.

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  4. The fact that I can't budget time tonight to address your other points doesn't mean I accept them. In particular, allele frequency variation over time (as with peppered moths) does not create new genes so is not Darwinian evolution.

    The processes that create new genes have been empirically observed and well documented - gene duplication with point mutations, frame shifts, insertions/deletions, etc. In addition there are other empirically observed factors like sexual recombination, genetic drift, and horizontal gene transfer. Differential reproductive success that leads to the accumulation of beneficial heritable traits from new genes is also an empirically observation. The result of all those processes is an empirically observed change in allele frequencies in a population.

    and the fossil record still shows sudden appearance followed by stasis and extinctions.

    Where 'sudden' means geologically sudden, tens of millions of years. There are also hundreds of clearly identified fossil transitional series.

    Transitional Vertebrate Fossils

    You may want to consider learning at least a little bit about a subject before attempting to criticize it.

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