Talk:Evolution/falsifiabilitydraft

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Falsifiability of the theory of evolution[edit]

The falsifiability of the theory of evolution often arises in discussions of the controversy between creationism and evolution. Falsifiability was proposed by philosopher of science Karl Popper as a way to distinguish between science and pseudoscience. The justice system has employed falsifiability to decide what is science and is not.

A statement or theory is falsifiable if there is an observation or a test that could be made that would demonstrate that the statement is false. That is, the theory is falsifiable if it is possible to prove the statement is wrong. Evolution is falsifiable since many observations and tests of the validity of the theory are possible.

Creationism or similar beliefs are not falsifiable, since by definition statements about supernatural beings in religions cannot be disputed or questioned, but must be accepted on faith. In these situations, the veracity of the belief is asserted first, and then evidence to support this belief is sought out. Any data that do not support the assumed belief are discarded, or the interpretation of this evidence is sufficiently distorted to explain why the evidence does not conflict with the a priori belief. This is the opposite of the scientific method, where the explanations for the evidence have to be updated and changed as new evidence emerges.

Falsifiability[edit]

Falsifiability was proposed by Popper as a replacement for the earlier principle of verifiability espoused by the Vienna Circle of philosphers of science. A theory was meaningful and scientific if it was empirically verifiable, according to the "verifiability theory of meaning".

Other philosophers and scientists have disputed Popper's verifiability criterion as being inadequate and unrealistic. For example, Thomas Kuhn, Imre Lakatos, Paul Feyerabend and Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont pointed out that falsifiability does not really describe the way real science operates.

Creationism and evolution[edit]

Creationism, and other related religious variants such as creation science and intelligent design, are based on the fundamental belief that the earth and its life forms were created by a supernatural being.[1] This fundamental belief is true by definition, assertion and asservation and cannot be tested, replaced or discarded.[2] Therefore, belief in religious creation accounts fail the falsifiability test to be called science. This is not the only reason that creationism, intelligent design, creation science and similar beliefs are not science.

Practicing scientists do not spend effort on worrying if their theories are falsifiable. No scientific education includes course material in falsifiability. No professional science texts or references discuss falsifiability. This is because scientists use the scientific method, and the replacement of theories that fail to adequately explain the data is an inherent component of the scientific method. Therefore, falsifiability is "built-in" to the scientific method already. The study of evolution is performed using the scientific method, and therefore evolution is a falsifiable theory.

For example, what is called the Theory of Evolution is merely the current accepted theory for process of evolution. The current theory of evolution is known as the neoDarwinian theory of evolution. Several other theories of evolution have preceded this neoDarwinian synthesis, such as Lamarckism, Transmutationism and Orthogenesis. These previous theories eventually fell out of favor and were discarded when they did not explain the accumulated evidence adequately. The Darwinian theory of evolution was modified to incorporate genetic information and eventually became the present neoDarwinist theory that we now refer to as the Theory of Evolution. This process of modifying and replacing theories of evolution is prima facie evidence that the Theory of Evolution is falsifiable.

However, in addition other tests exist that demonstrate the falsifiability of evolution.


Examples of falsifiability tests in evolution[edit]

There are many examples of tests to determine if evolution is falsifiable. The most famous example of such a test concerns finding fossil remains of a rabbit tens of millions of years old.

For example, Richard Dawkins, biologist and professor at Oxford University, explains that "If there were a single hippo or rabbit in the Precambrian, that would completely blow evolution out of the water. None have ever been found."[3] Similarly, the evolutionary biologist J.B.S. Haldane when asked what hypothetical evidence would disprove evolution replied "fossil rabbits in the Precambrian era"[4], a period more than 540 million years ago, a time when life on Earth consisted largely of bacteria, algae, and plankton. The absence of such evidence against evolution serves as one of the primary criticisms of creationism.

There are of course many other potential tests of evolution. For example:

  • A fossil record that does not change or show species turnover over time.
  • Discovery of a naturally-occuring true chimera, made from widely differing lineages, which could not have been created by lateral gene transfer (like a hippogriff or sphinx).
  • Discovery of some limitation on the accumulation of mutations.(As found here [1] which suggests that cells are programmed to hold off the damage of mutations as long as they can, but will ultimately collapse under a mutational load.)
This is not an example of falsification of neo-darwinian evolution: programmed cell death in the case of too many bad mutations is a fail-safe mechanism among multicellular eukaryotes to prevent the formation of tumor or cancer cells from the somatic cells, and does nothing to prevent the appearance of mutations in gametes.
  • The creation of a new organism (i.e. observation of direct creation, or spontaneous generation).
  • Incontrovertible evidence that the earth is too young to have allowed evolution to occur (e.g. thousands or millions of years old, rather than billions).
  • Discovery that genetic information could not be passed down from generation to generation.
  • Discovery that a subset of organisms within a clade (for example, a group of vertebrates) have a genetic code that is entirely different from the one currently observed to be universal
  • Discovery that many places on earth, widely separated from one another, have a nearly identical flora and fauna, without evidence of immigration.
  • Discovery of modern human fossils dating back to 65 million years ago.


The "father of falsifiability", Karl Popper originally was sceptical that evolution was falsifiable, and wrote "Darwinism is not a testable scientific theory, but a metaphysical research program".[5] The reason for this was Popper felt that evolutionary theory was a tautology, because the evolutionary hypothesis of natural selection predicts that only the fittest will survive, but then defines the fittest as those that survive. Popper therefore doubted the predictive power of evolution. Nevertheless, Popper wrote admiringly of the value of Darwin's theory.[6] Only a couple of years later, Popper changed his mind, and later wrote, "I have changed my mind about the testability and logical status of the theory of natural selection; and I am glad to have an opportunity to make a recantation".[7][8]

Legal application of falsifiability[edit]

For example, falsifiability was one of the criteria used by Judge William Overton to determine that 'creation science' was not scientific and should not be taught in Arkansas public schools. Overton ruled on Act 590 "The Arkansas Balanced Treatment Act" in McLean v. Arkansas, which was a law seeking to require the teaching of Creation Science in classrooms. This statute was advocated by its supporters as providing equal treatment of creation science as the Theory of Evolution in the science classrooms.

When Judge Overton struck down the Act in 1982, he used the criteria that a scientific theory must be tentative and always subject to revision or abandonment in light of the facts that are inconsistent with, or falsify, the theory. A theory that is by its own terms dogmatic, absolutist and never subject to revision is not a scientific theory.

In summary, Overton held that a scientific theory to be taught in schools must have the following properties:

  1. It is guided by natural law;
  2. It has to be explained by reference to natural law;
  3. It is testable against the empirical world;
  4. Its conclusions are tentative, i.e., are not necessarily the final word;

Falsifiability was also further enshrined in United States law as part of the Daubert Standard set by the Supreme Court for whether scientific evidence is admissible in a jury trial. For scientific evidence to be admissable, it has to has to satisfy the "reliability prong." The Supreme Court explained that in order for expert testimony to be considered reliable, the expert must have derived his or her conclusions using the scientific method. The Court offered "general observations" of whether proffered evidence was based on the scientific method, although the list was not intended to be used as an exacting checklist:

  1. Empirical testing: the theory or technique must be falsifiable, refutable, and testable.
  2. Subjected to peer review and publication.
  3. Known or potential error rate.
  4. Whether there are standards controlling the technique's operations.
  5. Whether the theory and technique is generally accepted by a relevant scientific community.


Other nonfalsifiable beliefs[edit]

There are many nonfalsifiable beliefs. Anything that is inherently believed, whether it is true or not, whether any evidence exists for this belief or not is not falsifiable. For example, astrology and other methods of divination can be nonfalsifiable beliefs. A belief in ghosts can be nonfalsifiable. For many people who believe in conspiracy theories (John F. Kennedy's assassination, the faking of the Apollo lunar landings, government coverups of the attack of September 11, 2001, alien abductions, etc), these theories are nonfalsifiable.

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Polytheistic faiths sometimes claim that the earth and life were created by several supernatural beings. Some attempt to claim that intelligent design does not depend on a supernatural being, but a full reading of intelligent design literature demonstrates that this is false, as confirmed by repeated judicial determinations
  2. ^ The belief that a supernatural being created the earth and its life forms is an a priori assumption in many religious traditions, and is taken as axiomatic. In many instances, to even question this is blasphemy.
  3. ^ The Evolution Wars, Claudia Wallis, Time Magazine, 15 August 2005, page 32. Also see Dawkins, Richard (1995). River Out of Eden. Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-06990-8. and Dawkins, Richard (1986). The Blind Watchmaker. W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. ISBN 0-393-31570-3.
  4. ^ Evolution, Third Edition, Mark Ridley, Blackwell Science, 2003
  5. ^ "Unended Quest: An Intellectual Autobiography", Karl Raimund Popper, Open Court Publishing Company, December 1982, ISBN 0875483437, originally published by Fontana/William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd, Glasgow in 1974.
  6. ^ Talkorigins summary of Karl Popper attitudes towards evolution
  7. ^ Natural selection and the emergence of mind, Karl Popper, Dialectica 32(3/4): 339—355, 1978.
  8. ^ Did Popper refute evolution?, Massimo Pigliucci, Skeptical Inquirer. Sept-Oct 2004.

Discussion points[edit]

I'm not sure how to do this, so I thought I would just add a section to discuss what was written. Here are a few of my points:

  • First of all, this is great. Very well written.
  • I think that there should be some discussion of the fact that falsifiability (is this a real word?) is not, in fact, a method that is employed by scientists on a regular basis.
  • Once again, I hate making these points more complicated, because the Fundies (love that word, even though it really is not an actual word) will seize on the nuance and start a whole new argument. But, the scientific process is to test theories. But at some point, a theory has been so tested that the probability of falseness must approach zero.
  • Each of your points that you make as test that could falsify Evolution are in of themselves almost impossible to falsify. The probability of the earth's age being anything less than 4-6 billion years approaches 0. In other words, you need to falsify one of the tests to falsify Evolution, and that probability again is so small as to define impossible. My point here is that some creationist can say (and trust me they will), "see here, this smart scientist dude says that Evolution is false if the earth is less than a few billion years old. Well we know the Earth is only 7000 years old, so there you go, them Evolutionists prove themselves wrong. We win."
  • Is there an example of one Theory somewhere that fell apart due to falsifying? I'm not talking about the Earth being flat, I'm talking something more recent. I'm not much into particle physics, and my brain is made of that material anyways, but maybe some weird physics theory was demolished by experimentation. If there is one, you could describe how it was tested and revised. If there isn't one, it probably doesn't matter.
    • Newton's laws of motion didn't 'fall apart' but where shown to be incomplete and inaccurate (by the factor of , arguably undetectable under normal (earth-bound) circumstances) when Einstein's theory of special relativity was proven experimentally. (see page 5 of Statics and Dynamics for details). -AndrewDressel 15:52, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
    • The Bohr model of the atom, though able to explain "the Rydberg formula for the spectral emission lines of atomic hydrogen", is now "considered to be an obsolete scientific theory". -AndrewDressel 15:52, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I would include phlogisten theory and caloric theory and the geocentric theory and alchemy and astrology and many many other obsolete theories that are discarded now.--Filll 16:26, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Those are my points. I couldn't even find a spelling error to correct!!!! OrangeMarlin 20:06, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Something that I have found confusing in the past, which may play a role in someone's understanding of this, is the difference between "falsifiability" and hypothesis testing in which, rather than proving the hypothesis, you reject or fail to reject the null. I remember in high school being taught something about this, and it was long muddled in my mind with the idea of scientific proof and falsifiability. Even now after having studied, used and even taught this method at a much more advanced level, maybe it's still muddled for me; who knows. Because I'm not sure how the statement that "falsifiability . . . is not, in fact, a method that is employed by scientists on a regular basis" meshes with the traditional practice of testing a hypothesis by testing the null. Surely it must have something to do with the difference between a hypothesis and a theory? But then I'm sure one of you can explain this better than I. I wonder if it would be helpful to add a section clarifying this.

I'll make some stylistic changes later, though maybe not today.--Margareta 21:21, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Oh, and I think we need to build in some in-text citations, if possible.--Margareta 21:22, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ok if this is confusing to you, it is worth putting a section in to discuss it. Hypothesis testing is just a statistical technique used when analyzing data. Falsifiability is a philosophical point. It is just the existence of a willingness to change the theory if it is proved wrong, not the method of proving it wrong. So first you do hypothesis testing. And then if based on the results of the hypothesis test, you can change your theory, then it is falsifiable. If you cannot change your hypothesis or theory because of religious convictions or some other reason, it is not falsifiable. Basically if a theory or hypothesis is not falsifiable, the results of a hypothesis test are irrelevant. One really is not even allowed to make a hypothesis test if the hypothesis or theory is not falsifiable, by definition.--Filll 21:45, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This really is the "Philosophy of Science." Very complex, abstract and highly nuanced ideas. I think we need to say the basic point--if you don't believe a hypothesis is falsifiable, it is not really a scientific hypothesis. For example, Creationists, by definition, cannot accept the idea that a supernatural being created the earth and everything on it, therefore they have a hypothesis that, by definition, is not falsefiabile.OrangeMarlin 21:56, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Orangemarlin, I think you meant that Creationists cannot accept the idea that a supernatural being did not create the Earth, etc. Dionyseus 22:03, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, that's what I did mean. Of course, we would have a lot less contentious discussions in these various articles if what I wrote WAS accurate! OrangeMarlin 00:00, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Strangely enough though many Creationists are happy to accept the idea that a different supernatural being from another religion did not create the Earth ;only theirs did. A form of what I call "asymetrical atheism" (obviously because I invented the term this morning you'll get no google hits but you get the idea that they don't believe in all the others gods except their own). Nice article so far - just needs a snappy page name. Ttiotsw 23:57, 24 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Snappy Page name like "Creation Science is Not Science." OrangeMarlin 00:00, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I am open to all suggestions, but I thought we might do a separate article which compared creation science and evolution more broadly, and this article would just concentrate on this one aspect. I do like a title like "Creation Science is not science", or "evolution is not a religion" or "Differences between Evolution and creation Science" or maybe "Why Creation science is not really science". But anyway, those are all minor details once we get some references and more solid information here.--Filll 04:24, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

OrangeMarlin, I am glad you said this: "Very complex, abstract and highly nuanced ideas," because I was starting to feel kind of stupid. Anyway, I think I might have gotten myself confused by misreading some of the comments. So let me make sure I have this straight now. Basically, any concept (hypothesis, theory, etc.) falls into the purview of science if it is possible to conceive of evidence that would contradict it. Not that it would prove the entire concept to be false, but it would force the idea to change. This existence (on a conceptual level) of potential contrary evidence makes something "falsifiable." The simplest example of this is in hypothesis testing, where the null hypothesis is either rejected or not rejected. By definition, for a hypothesis to be scientifically testable, we must be able to conceive of the null, making the hypothesis falsifiable. If I am correct in this sense, then "falsifiability" is something used by scientists on a regular basis, though not under that name, because when we craft hypotheses we must do so in such a way as to be able to test the null. But the idea becomes more complex when dealing with a theory. Because a theory is a model, and not an up-down proposition like a hypothesis, it is possible to modify the theory in the face of certain conflicting evidence, rather than rejecting it outright. In this case, the potential existence of evidence that would force the theory's modification makes the theory falsifiable, even if that evidence wouldn't make the theory "false." However, one can still conceive of evidence that would force the outright rejection of a theory: for example, if genetic information was not passed down from one generation to another, evolution as we know it could not exist. No modification of the theory could accomodate this information. And "falsifiability" is necessary to a scientfic theory or hypothesis, because if something is to be supported by observable evidence, it is necessary to be able to imagine evidence that does not support it, as well as evidence that would outright oppose it. Because if you can use a theory to predict any possible outcome, or explain any possible outcome in light of the theory, then by definition the "theory" is not a theory. Am I on the right track here?--Margareta 08:58, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Margareta I think that is beautifully stated. At least in my understanding of the concept of falsifiability, you are completely correct. Suppose that one has a deity that appears to solve any possible problems with a given theory or hypothesis, and one is convinced of this and refuses to be dissuaded. Any theory or hypothesis that included this deity as a component would not be falsifiable, since it would be impossible to get a theory or hypothesis without the deity. There is no hypothesis test that includes the null hypothesis of "no deity" possible. Or it does not have to be a deity; it could be magic, or a ghost, or a witch's spell, or an all-powerful extraterrestrial that is intervening invisibly, or the "FORCE" of the Jedi Knights. If something like this is an undeniable component of your hypothesis or your theory that cannot be removed, then the hypothesis or theory is at least partially unfalsifiable. I say partially because there might be pieces that are amenable to change and are falsifiable, but the parts that are absolutely unchangable are unfalsifiable. Suppose I was convinced the sun orbited the earth. Suppose I would accept no other explanation for what I observed. I would be forced to accept all kinds of retrograde motions of planets ("wandering stars") and other convoluted explanations to protect my geocentric theory. I could maintain the theory of course, but the fact that it was not allowed to change, possibly because of bias or scriptural reasons or tradition means that my science based on this geocentric theory is not falsifiable. I have not read Popper myself. I have not read the legal tomes that address this. This is just an amateur's interpretation. I will confess that when I first encountered falsifiability (again when talking to a creationist) I was somewhat confused. I was never taught falsifiability in any class. It did not appear in any textbook of mine. It sounded like a fake word and I doubted that it was in any dictionary. And here I had someone in my face belligerent, and calling me stupid, red faced, screaming, cursing, and threatening and bullying me and using the word "falsifiability". It was a bit disconcerting. Of course, like our vacuous friend, the creationist had memorized all the standard stock creationist arguments in their copious pamphlets and books. If you see them they are sort of simplistic. For example, I have had them give me the following sort of explanation for fossils: "There was a Great Flood. Lots of stuff died and was buried in the mud. The dead animals turned into fossils. Done. And anyone who questions this is stupid and an asshole and working for Satan. And you are not allowed to question me because every word out of my mouth personally is the Word of God. So f-off you s-head. I am holy and speaking for God and you are stupid." Sort of juvenile and really hostile to the idea of free thought. If you dispute them, they turn your words against you and accuse you of being close-minded. "Close-minded" and "unscientific" to a creationist is not being like a sheep and obeying blindly, and not agreeing with what the creationists say. It is almost perfectly predictable, like speaking to a robot.--Filll 14:47, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Problems[edit]

This article would be more credible if: a. It wasn't being composed by a mutual adoration clique
b. It wasn't so gong ho to prove that "creation science" is not a science. Nobody takes creation science as a science anyway. "creation science" is a marketing term in an information war. Real science is above this.
c. You focused on showing, without mention of intelligent design or creationists, that the theory of the evolutionary origin of species is in fact a scientific theory, and not just a story that fits the facts. Rather, you might include other examples that are not so inflammatory but still make the point, such as astrology.

You also fail to mention that "Popper is perhaps most [well] known for repudiating classical observationalist-inductivist account of scientific method by advancing empirical falsifiability as the criterion for distinguishing scientific theory from non-science".

Now if the evolutionary origin of species is more than an observationalist-inductivist theory, you would do well to show that. Mention your fruit fly experiment, and how many times it has been repeated (zero?). Mention the criteria used for speciation, and how they decided if the fruit flies of one species could not mate with the fruit flies from the other species, or if it could be that they would not mate (e.g., because the mating dance was done poorly). If the mating was done in the dark, explain how scientists ruled out other sexual cues, e.g., smell, size, activity, etc. Be honest about the difficulties in precisly defining a species. Why do you care if creationists seize upon this; you are concerned with truth, not defending against creationists at any cost. Mention how many times speciation in the lab has been observed and/or caused in the lab using mammals. And please don't tell me it is zero.

The evolitionary theory of the origin of species is non-scientific in the Pooper sense. I know believe it, you know it haven't logically shown that it is, and the whole world knows it is scientific in the Pooper sense. But this article will be singing to the choir if you fail to be honest about the scientific problems with regard to speciation.

I have a falsifiable theory of the evolutionary origin of species in mammals. It does not exist, and cannot be done. You can prove me wrong. Cite just one time it occurred in the lab (you probably won't be able to do even this), and just one other time it was independently verified. Or if the generation time for mammals is too long, fine, just cite one study where inter-population breeding of populations sharing a common lab ancestory has been shown to be less viable than intra-population viability, and cite the experiment that has been independantly verified this result. Include this in the article, and you would have something worth reading. I already know that speciation in mammals has been inferred in the field and the fossil record. But let's make this a hard science. 65.73.44.65 06:25, 25 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]

Hey Poet, please check the tone. And I don't appreciate being called part of a "mutual adoration clique" when I have defended you--or at least your question--in the past. But your posts are sounding more and more like rants now, and this one is not helpful.--Margareta 08:58, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Hey Margareta, sorry to have included you, I was wrong. I know you don't agree with everything or perhaps even most of the things I say, but I appreciate your intellectual honesty and also your willingness to open your mind to differing points of view. I get a little frustrated when a point I made on falsifiability (which is used in other sciences, not just against evolution or creationism) is twisted, distorted, and obfuscated. And the tactics used to silence me...well, nevermind. 65.73.44.65 15:05, 25 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]

I don't care if you think I am intellectually dishonest or not. Go ahead. Get frustrated. I hope you are frustrated because we do not want to include pseudoscience claptrap in the article, and in fact we want to defend ourselves against it. And you are helping us do it, so thank you. --Filll 15:24, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Point by point answer to the vacuous one[edit]

This article would be more credible if: a. It wasn't being composed by a mutual adoration clique

I do not really care. You have been advised to go to Creation Wiki after all where the RULES are that only creationists are allowed. That is a perfect mutual adoration clique "Creationist". Don't think I don't know who you are, buddy. But since you are here, we will use your presence to strengthen our defense against your arguments. So thanks.--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
If by a mutual adoration clique you mean the 99.99% of scientists, ALL of the National Academy of Sciences, every Nobel Prize winner, numerous clergy and churches and a few editors here on Wikipedia who believe in Evolution as a science and a fact, then I am honored to be in that clique.OrangeMarlin 17:19, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

b. It wasn't so gong ho to prove that "creation science" is not a science. Nobody takes creation science as a science anyway. "creation science" is a marketing term in an information war. Real science is above this.

Actually the point is that intelligent design and creationism and creation science are serious challenges in the public's mind and in school systems to reasoned rational scientific inquiry. And so one has to defend against them, or suffer the consequences. Like being forced to live in a cave and smash rocks together, which is the logical end of the anti-science movement that creationism represents. This proposed article is not about science (since it is about "falsifiability", which is not really part of what is addressed by serious science; it doesnt have to be since it is already incorporated into serious science) but about material to help people defend themselves against pseudoscience like creationism.--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Vacuous you really need to figure out what side you're on. Read what Filll said, except you have shown a distinct inability to read and interpret well-written sentences.OrangeMarlin 17:19, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I am not a creationist, if that is what you mean. I am a skeptic. 65.73.44.65 03:30, 26 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]
Do note that there is such a thing as "excessive skepticism"--Mr Fink 04:04, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

c. You focused on showing, without mention of intelligent design or creationists, that the theory of the evolutionary origin of species is in fact a scientific theory, and not just a story that fits the facts. Rather, you might include other examples that are not so inflammatory but still make the point, such as astrology.

NOT JUST A STORY TO FIT THE FACTS???? What do you think a theory is? That is what a theory is!! It is a story constructed to fit the facts. What else is a scientific theory? Good lord. And the rejection of astrology by science is an example of falsifiability in action. The rejection of alchemy. The rejection of Usher's age of the earth. The rejection of the Genesis account of speciation. And on and on. There are many many examples. Literally thousands upon thousands of theories. We cannot list them all. The reason to mention creationism in particular is that no one is trying to push astrology into the schools. No one is trying to push alchemy into the schools. No one is trying to push Aristotle's theory of gravity into the schools.--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What do you think a theory is? Which kind of theory? It is a story constructed to fit the facts.: Don't take this to mean I am a creationist, but Genesis was also a story to fit the facts. What else is a scientific theory?: In my opinion, good scientific theories are testable at every level they are applied. No one is trying to push Aristotle's theory of gravity into the schools.: It is already there. Of course, the purpose is to refute it and provide a history of the theories of gravity. In any event, the evolutionary origin of species is in the schools. I am not sure M-thoery is, however, possibly because it is far too mathematically complicated for most educators, but possibly becuase it is just a story. 65.73.44.65 03:30, 26 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]
What kind of theory? A scientific theory. What did you think we were talking about, pray tell? Yes Genesis was a story constructed to fit the facts that they had at that time. It no longer fits the facts that exist, however. By definition, it cannot change like a scientific theory can, because Genesis is not a scientific theory. Duh. Of course scientific theories are testable. Why wouldnt they be? So there is a big well funded campaign to get Einstein's theory of gravity and Newton's theory of gravity and galileo's theory of gravity out of schools and replace them with Aristotle's theory of gravity? That is sure news to me. Pretend I am from Missouri. Show me. I do not believe you. Putting it in history of science is completely different from making it the dominant theory, which is what creationists want to do. Look I would have no problem teaching Genesis in the history of science, as long as you let me demonstrate how it is a huge load of horse**** and how creationists are all a**holes and stupid jerks and uneducated demented cretins. I might even throw in some material about how people who speak in tongues are exhibiting the same symptoms as people with Tourette's syndrome just for good measure. Then I would have no problem with that curriculum, but that is not what they have in mind, now is it? String theory is taught, but only in graduate schools. Or didnt you know that?--Filll 06:07, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
A scientific theory is not merely a "story constructed to fit the facts." If that were so, then Rudyard Kipling's "Just So Stories" would also be scientific theories. A scientific theory is an explanation that describes how a particular natural phenomenom, or a suite of related natural phenomena occur. And as such, given as how the Book of Genesis does not actually explain how the Earth, oceans and Heavens were created, the Book of Genesis is not, and never was a "theory."--Mr Fink 04:04, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well I was being glib. A scientific theory is a story that has to satisfy certain requirements. It has to explain certain kinds of data. Like it cannot use supernatural causes. It has to make predictions that can be tested. It has to be falsifiable. And so on and so forth. But it is basically an expository story. --Filll 06:07, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Astrology = Evolution????? Wow, that should be quoted in the list of Fundamentalists Say the Darndest Things list.OrangeMarlin 17:19, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Another ad hominem? 65.73.44.65 03:30, 26 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]
Actually in the Dover PA trial, one of the main creationist witnesses was forced to admit under oath that what they were proposing for the school system would also require the teaching of astrology in science class to give a balanced view of astronomy.--Filll 17:40, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You also fail to mention that "Popper is perhaps most [well] known for repudiating classical observationalist-inductivist account of scientific method by advancing empirical falsifiability as the criterion for distinguishing scientific theory from non-science".

This is just more philospher's nonsense. If someone is interested in Popper, they can follow the link. Whether the scientific method employs induction or deduction or transduction (in the reasoning sense, not the biological sense) or abduction or anything else is really the province of philosphers. Popper's work was in fact heavily criticized by other philosophers and is at least now viewed as partially obsolete, if you read up about him. The only reason to address it is because it is important in addresing the creationist anti-intellectual bigots.--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This is just more philospher's nonsense.: Say it with me now, "Ph.D." 65.73.44.65 03:30, 26 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]
Having a Ph.D. in Philosophy or Religion, or even Astrophysics does not necessarily allow a person, philosopher or professor, or otherwise, to become an authority on Evolutionary Biology. Actually knowing about Biology and or Paleontology is the prerequisite for being an expert in Evolutionary Biology, not a Ph.D.--Mr Fink 04:04, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Of course. I was referring to the Philosophiæ Doctor degree, which, in the sciences, might touch on, during the preliminary coursework, the philosophy of science. 65.73.44.65 05:48, 26 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]
The fact that you think that tells me you know nothing about it. Show me a reputable school that requires this.--Filll 14:55, 29 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Philosophers are not scientists. They think in the abstract. But I really don't care. OrangeMarlin 17:19, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Now if the evolutionary origin of species is more than an observationalist-inductivist theory, you would do well to show that.

We do not need to show that because it is SCIENCE. This is not philosophy. We do not give a crap what form of reasoning was used. We are not philosophers. I dont care if they used deduction or induction or abduction or transduction or anything else. All i care about is does the theory fit the data. Period. How one classifies this in logic and philosophy is just about irrelevant.--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Mention your fruit fly experiment, and how many times it has been repeated (zero?).

Many times, but that is irrelevant for this article. All this article needs to show is that conceivable experiments or tests exist--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Mention the criteria used for speciation, and how they decided if the fruit flies of one species could not mate with the fruit flies from the other species, or if it could be that they would not mate (e.g., because the mating dance was done poorly). If the mating was done in the dark, explain how scientists ruled out other sexual cues, e.g., smell, size, activity, etc.

This is a perfect example of how creationists will stand on their heads to attack evolution. My gosh. Mating dance??? What the heck? This is retarded. ALL THAT ONE HAS TO DO IS SHOW THAT A TEST EXISTS. And it does. So?--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
There have been numerous experiments done involving fruit flies, all of which are relevant to Evolution, directly and indirectly. If you want, I can dig up information concerning the ones I know about, including ones concerning how females of one population prefer to mate with males with a wingbeat of a specific octave, of how a subpopulation of stunted-winged fruit flies will increase as the winged subpopulation gets blown out of the container one by one, of how fruit flies prefer to feed on substrates containing specific amounts of acetic acid, or even various experiments concerning the wing markings of Tephritid fruit flies, and how they are used by their owners to ward off jumping spider predators.--Mr Fink 04:04, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
My comment was on the perhaps incorrect assumption that part of what lead researchers to believe that they observed speciation was based on a failure of one population to mate with a different population, with both populations sharing a common ancestory. Maybe this was not the case. If it was the case, I was wondering how they knew the failure was because the could not mate, and not because they did not want to mate. The whole point would be moot, I suppose, if you can artificially inceminate a fruit fly (which might be ludicrous in the case of fruit flys.) Anyway, yeah, thanks, if you have links that discuss these problems (in my mind) I would certainly read them. 65.73.44.65 05:54, 26 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]

Be honest about the difficulties in precisly defining a species. Why do you care if creationists seize upon this; you are concerned with truth, not defending against creationists at any cost.

I for one would like there to be things like the National Institutes of Health and the Centers of Disease Control and double blind studies and allopathic medicine which are able to use science to cure diseases. I do not want to go back to witch craft of laying on of hands or spirit surgery or psychic surgery or praying only for the sick. So yes, I want to defend against pseudoscience. Is that wrong? If you do not like it, I don't care. In fact, if you don't like it, it is a sign I am on the right track. What do you think of that?--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Mention how many times speciation in the lab has been observed and/or caused in the lab using mammals. And please don't tell me it is zero.

Of course it has not been done. BUT IT COULD BE. That is the point. The point is that a test exists, nothing about whether the test has been performed and what the results are. Or didnt your creationist web site tell you that?--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The evolitionary theory of the origin of species is non-scientific in the Pooper sense.

Great grammar and spelling. The evolitionary theory? in the Pooper sense? I think that the creationist theory is more the one that only has meaning in the Pooper sense.--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Evolution is falsifiable. And that is all one needs to satisfy this Popper requirement. After all, the supreme court said it. Other judges said it. You think the Supreme Court Justices, most of whom were approved by republican congressmen and many of whom are appointed by republican presidents are somehow evil liberals and Satan worshippers? Give me a break.--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I know believe it, you know it haven't logically shown that it is, and the whole world knows it is scientific in the Pooper sense. But this article will be singing to the choir if you fail to be honest about the scientific problems with regard to speciation.

You are completely confused. Speciation has been observed in the lab, in the field and in the fossil record. We have put many references to this on the talk page. So what more needs to be done? We will put them i the article and that is that. What is your point?--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]


I have a falsifiable theory of the evolutionary origin of species in mammals. It does not exist, and cannot be done.

Wow that makes a lot of sense. Could you be any less clear?--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You can prove me wrong. Cite just one time it occurred in the lab (you probably won't be able to do even this), and just one other time it was independently verified. Or if the generation time for mammals is too long, fine, just cite one study where inter-population breeding of populations sharing a common lab ancestory has been shown to be less viable than intra-population viability, and cite the experiment that has been independantly verified this result. Include this in the article, and you would have something worth reading. I already know that speciation in mammals has been inferred in the field and the fossil record.

It is irrelevant if it has been done in the lab for mammals or not. The point for falsifiability is that it could be if you lived for a few million years and carried on the experiment. That is the point. It is a gedankenexperiment. Ever heard of that? And also, lab experiments are not the only way to get data:
  • Astrophysics is an observational science. No lab experiments.
  • Geophysics is an observational science. No lab experiments.
  • Meteorology is an observational science. No lab experiments.
  • Volcanology is an observational science. No lab experiments.
  • Oceanography is an observational science. No lab experiments.
And on and on and on. There is no need for empirical evidence to make a science. So this is a ludicrous line of reasoning. --Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

But let's make this a hard science. 65.73.44.65 06:25, 25 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]

You never defined what a hard science is. The problem is, you do not know what science is, or what a hard science is, or really much of anything, isnt that correct?--Filll 16:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I am not in charge of definitions. But you might want to look at Hard Science. I concur with the article that electrodynamics is a hard science, as an example. I might even lump in the bilogical study of evolutionary theory of the origins of species if I knew more about the experimentation being done there, and the results that back up the theory. 65.73.44.65 03:30, 26 December 2006 (UTC) Vacous Poet[reply]
Can I ask you why you think electrodynamics is a "hard science," whereas the examination of fossil specimens, from trilobites to the bones of brontotheres, is not? Does it have something to do with playing with transisters in the lab versus not playing with transisters in the lab?--Mr Fink 04:04, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

More pooper[edit]

---

Examination of fossil specimens sounds more like examination than science. Many people visit museums every year to examine fossil specimens, and most of them are probably not scientists. I suppose classifying life forms into various categories might be science, if you consider librarians scientists. I suppose refining a story to fit observed facts might be science if you consider conspiracy theory science.
Electrodynamics, on the other hand, is quantifiable, mathematical, testable, and falsifiable.
If biology were a hard science, you would see theories like:
It takes between M and N generations of a species S to turn into a species T in an environment E.
With M, N firmly or statistically bound, S, T, and E all precisely defined. Such a theory would be reproducible, testable, and falsifiable.
What do you think makes a science a hard science? Are the library sciences science? How about a search for the ruins of Noah's Ark using the scientific method? How about observing that little Johnny has his father’s lips and his mother’s eyes? Is that a hard science? Is political science science? Is computer science science? How about digital signal processing, is that a science? Information theory? If any of these are science, are they hard science? 06:20, 29 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet

---


Obviously, you don't understand that not all sciences are completely mathematical in nature. On the other hand, you also don't care to understand, or even bother to comprehend that biology, and paleontology, are sciences JUST AS VALID as electrodynamics, even though large portions of them are not mathematical in nature. Your idea that if biology was a "hard science," we'd be able to formulate how many generations a particular species would be able to speciate in a particular environment is bunk especially since the fact that it's currently impossible to predict how all of the millions of known species of organisms would speciate in given environments, given as how there are millions of different kinds of environments.
Furthermore, What in the hell makes you think that examination is not science? HOW ON EARTH DO YOU THINK SCIENTISTS DO SCIENCE IN THE FIRST PLACE IF THEY DON'T DO EXAMINATIONS? Do you think the mathematical formulas magically pop in to their dome-like heads? So, do you think that, since we are unable to tell exactly how many generations it took Eotitanops to become Brontotherium, paleontologists are a bunch of bunkum peddlers? And what the hell do you mean by "library science"? Why do you think that cataloguing the various anatomical and genetic features of organisms so people can compare and contrast species in order to create the understanding of the interrelatedness of all life, extinct and still living, is not real science? Or are you just making up these stupid neologisms just to sound smart?--Mr Fink 07:02, 29 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I had to look up neologisms, so I am not that smart. Your vocabulary obviously exceeds mine, and I admire that. Really, no sarcasm. However, I am not sure which words your referring to. In any event, science does of course involve examination, but examination by itself is not science. Why do you think that cataloguing the various anatomical and genetic features of organisms Librarians perform a useful function to, cataloging and organizing books so that patrons can find them, some of these patrons being scientists. I don't think this task is in and of it self science, however. Biology is a science, but I don't believe that most branches of science are hard science. 16:18, 29 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet
It really does not matter what you think Vacuous. Answer the question:
What is a hard science?
Back it up with a good 5 citations and references when you answer.--Filll 16:36, 29 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Mr. Fink, you are just getting your chain yanked by someone with no degrees no publications and no knowledge. He obviously refuses to answer the question and just pushes your hot button. The quantitative prediction question he asks actually can be answered quantitatively I understand from genetics. We can know how many generations approximately it takes to go from genome 1 to genome 2 in a given environment. But that is irrelevant. He is not interested. The question is, and remains for this "gentleman":
What is a hard science?
Back it up with a good 5 citations and references when you answer.--Filll 14:55, 29 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I got bored with replying to the vacuous poet. I'm glad you did OrangeMarlin 17:19, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The term "hard science" is another sort of nonsense term, even worse than "falsifiability". But I do notice that we are now dealing with the "Pooper" criteria for the "bilogical" sciences. I have no idea why evolution is less hard than String Theory. He wants equations maybe? I do not know. It is tedious to go around and around in circles with someone who does not seem to know anything at all about science or evolution but claims to be a scientist, with no degrees or publications mind you and certainly no knowledge that is evident.--Filll 05:54, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I don't think this is a good addition[edit]

I don't think this is a worthwhile addition to the article. Is this a major issue? Maybe. However, a lot of this seems more related to either the scientific method or the United States' courts' defintion of science than it does evolution, and I'm pretty sure this is elsewhere in Wikipedia. It might belong in, say, creation vs evolution controversy or something, but not in the main Evolution article. Titanium Dragon 09:59, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I do not propose adding it to the article. I think the evolution article is too long as it is. We might have one sentence in the evolution article about this someplace, with a link. Period. I am more thinking of a suite of articles that address the controversy more carefully than that one sad "evolution creationism controversy article" which is sort of a mess. These issues can not be adequately developed in one article. And frankly, as we discussed, "falsifiability" is not really part of the standard science of evolution and the evolution article should be about evolution, not about creationism or defending ones self from creationism or about philosophy of science. I think there is too much already about defending ones self from creationism. I would advocate a much more abbreviated section with links in the evolution article about the controversy. So I do not think it should go in the evolution article. The evolution article should be for real science, not this kind of stuff.--Filll 14:57, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Titanium Dragon, I somewhat disagree with you mostly because the arguments against Evolution include that Creationism is a science rather than a myth. But Filll is right, the Evolution article has evolved (couldn't help myself) into a rather unwieldy article. But it should reference the fact that Evolution is falsifiable, and supernatural myths like Genesis are not. But you're right that maybe the reference on the Evolution page to the Creation vs Evolution article. OrangeMarlin 17:23, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"falsifiability" is not really part of the standard science of evolution: But other scientific disciplines do employ falsifiability to critique proposed theories. For example [falsifiability in physics], [falsifiability in chemistry], etc. 65.73.44.65 15:14, 25 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]

Just because you can type some phrase into google does not mean it is a prominent part of science. No professional physics text or reference includes it. No graduate classes in physics include it. You can get a bachelors masters and phd in physics and teach and do research in physics for 50 years and never encounter "falsifiability." Philosophy is basically horse**** and philosophers of science have essentially zero influence on science itself. Once in a while a phrase like "paradigm shift" will leak out of philosophy into the general culture, and influence people's speech, but otherwise, they are irrelevant.--Filll 15:22, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Philosophy is basically horse**** and philosophers of science have essentially zero influence on science itself.: Okay fill. 65.73.44.65 15:25, 25 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]

If you do not know this and do not recognize this as true, you are not a scientist. You are a dilettante, an outsider. If you want to get a Phd in a scientific field from Cambridge or Oxford or MIT or Harvard do you need a course in philosophy of science? Nope. So how important is it then? --Filll 16:20, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Issues with the list[edit]

There are of course many other potential tests of evolution. For example:


This is terrible, mostly because it is wrong.

  • A fossil record that does not change or show species turnover over time.
This isn't really correct. A lot of evolution research is done via DNA comparisons, not the fossil record; as such, this isn't really true. It is somewhat true, but even without a fossil record we'd know evolution occured and the trees of organisms.
I think there is a falsifiable prediction here but it needs to be worded better. It needs to be more than just a changing fossil record, the fossil record must change in a very specific way or evolution is falsified. Because evolution is a time dependant process is should leave time dependant evidence; in other words, the fossil record must reflect the correct order of ancestor - descendant relationship between species (ancestors must show up before descendants as predicted by the phylogenetic tree). I believe the way to say this is that phylogeny should be positively correlated with stratigraphy. If they are negatively correlated (descendants are before ancestors) or if they are not correlated at all (Like if they were jumbled up in a flood) then that falsifies evolution. Bgplayer 21:29, 20 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Discovery of a true chimera, made from widely differing lineages, which could not have been created by lateral gene transfer (like a hippogriff or sphinx).
This isn't true either; widely unrelated species may be able to breed, though it is highly unlikely. There's nothing saying it is impossible though, and it wouldn't disprove evolution. And a chimera like this is easily produced by humans via grafting, and more recently DNA manipulation.
I do agree with this falsification, though it might be worded better. Evolution results in a series of nested hierarchies and organisms may not mix and match traits from separate hierarchies (i.e. fish can't have the echolocation of dolphins no matter how advantageous that might be. They are free to evolve their own version of echolocation, which would demonstrate convergent evolution, but that version would necessarily be distinct from dolphin echolocation just as bat wings are distinct from bird wings even though they serve the same function). Consistently demonstrating a pattern of identical structures shared between organisms in different branches of the pylogenetic tree would falsify evolution Bgplayer 21:29, 20 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Discovery of some limitation on the accumulation of mutations.
This is poorly worded. Maybe "Discovery of a limitation on the accumulation of mutations which makes evolution impossible." Even still, ugly.
I agree with Dragon, this is poorly worded. It seems obvious that there is no limitation on the mutations themselves, I think what you're trying to say is a limitation on an organism's ability to handle harmful mutations. If it could be shown that harmful mutations accumulate faster than negative selection can get rid of them then that might falsify evolution. This seems like a bit of a stretch though, maybe this one should be omitted. Bgplayer 21:29, 20 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • The creation of a new organism (i.e. observation of direct creation, or spontaneous generation).
This has absolutely NOTHING to do with evolution. Evolution describes what happens to extant organisms, not how they came to be in the first place. As such, this should be removed as it is simply wrong.
Agree with Dragon. I would remove this one and replace it with something entirely different. What I suggest is if it could be demonstrated that DNA always make a perfect copy of itself during replication then evolution would be falsified because evolution must have a source of novel variation on which to work. I don't see this falsification in the article but I think it is important. Darwin predicted that there must be a source of variation among organisms and had this prediction not been borne out (by the discovery of mutations; that DNA does not perfectly copy itself) then evolution would have been in trouble. Bgplayer 21:29, 20 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Incontrovertible evidence that the earth is too young to have allowed evolution to occur (e.g. thousands or millions of years old, rather than billions).
This is fine, though I'd remove the parenthetical statement.
  • Discovery that genetic information could not be passed down from generation to generation.
This is fine.
I might choose a different word than genetic. Evolution doesn't predict the exact mechanism of heredity just that traits must be hereditable. Bgplayer 21:29, 20 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Discovery that a subset of organisms within a clade (for example, a group of vertebrates) have a genetic code that is entirely different from the one currently observed to be universal
This isn't true; it'd have to be entirely random. I'd just remove this as it is too ugly to explain and I doubt we'd be able to source it, as this is OR as far as I know.
  • Discovery that many places on earth, widely separated from one another, have a nearly identical flora and fauna
Again, not true; it wouldn't disprove evolution. Moreover, it isn't even a meaningful statement.
I think this is a falsifiable prediction, though maybe it could be worded better. Evolution is a location specific process (i.e. species generally evolve in a location consistent with their common ancestor) so there should be geographical evidence. In other words species cannot be found in an environment that they can’t reach. You can’t have elephants on pacific islands even though they might thrive there (unless you can show how they might have traveled there). Similarly you can’t have Penguins in the arctic even though they are adapted to that environment. Finding species distributed willy nilly across unreachable environments will falsify evolution (note that humans have greatly facilitated species reaching new environments). This was also pointed out in the Origin of Species as something that might falsify evolution. Bgplayer 21:29, 20 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Discovery of modern human fossils dating back to 65 million years ago.
This is redundant and not even necessarily true, as what if we found ancestors to them? This wouldn't disprove evolution either, and occurs periodically - some species shows up way earlier than expected, but it turns out it just evolved earlier than we thought.
I agree it's redundant. And besides, there are occasions when a fossil is found outside its predicted stratum due to mixing or some other geological event. This type of thing happening occasionally won't falsify evolution. The real falsification is what I said above about phylogeny being positively correlated with stratiography, the whole fossil record must demonstrate a consistent time line. Bgplayer 21:29, 20 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

This whole list is ugly and seems to be riddled with OR. I don't think it is really necessary. Maybe some mention of the age of the Earth thing would be appropriate, because it is relatively common to see, but the rest...

Titanium Dragon 10:11, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

That is the reason I put it out here for comment and discussion. What other fasifiability tests could you imagine, besides the famous precambrian bunny example? And bear in mind, this is a draft. We have no references yet for example. This is just for discussion. So put your thinking caps on and lets get some more falsifiability tests here!--Filll 15:03, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
When I came up with my list on the Talk:Evolution page, I was mostly just giving it as something to think about and discuss, but the ideas came from other web sites discussing the matter--some more credible than others, for sure. So not exactly OR, but probably most of them don't meet the verifiability criteria, either. But maybe they could provide a start. Here are some places where you can see these ideas in other contexts:
--Margareta 00:06, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Evolution describes what happens to extant organisms, not how they came to be in the first place. As such, this should be removed as it is simply wrong.: For the record, I did not say this today, but I did ask the question on another discussion page. If this is correct, thanks. My reading was that evolutionary origin of species was silent on the common parents (or, even if there were only one pair). 65.73.44.65 15:00, 25 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]

I believe that this point is correct. Abiogenesis is not part of evolution, at least for biologists. This statement should be rephrased to emphasize Genesis-style creation processes.--Filll 15:03, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The issue is that the genesis of organisms in the first place is not part of the modern synthesis; it only effects organisms which already exist. As such, I think the point is misplaced, though depending on the article mention of the whole abiogenesis thing (which, while likely, may not have even happened on Earth) might be appropriate. However, the genesis of life is not a part of evolution, and as such, it cannot be a way of falsifying it. Even genesis style creation wouldn't violate the modern synthesis; it would violate a lot of other things, though. Unless you mean a literal reading of Genesis, as in all current creatures were created simultaneously and made to look like they had evolved from one another, but that's just silly. If creationists believe it, then it might be worth of inclusion somewhere, but I don't think it is notable as a means of falsification - I think other examples would be better and clearer, as it has to be explained/clarified too much to be a useful example. But even if a dragon suddenly emerged fully-formed from rock, evolution would work on its decendants assuming it has an analogical particulate means of inheritance of traits. Titanium Dragon 22:28, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This wouldn't disprove evolution either, and occurs periodically - some species shows up way earlier than expected, but it turns out it just evolved earlier than we thought.: Which was one of my main points that lead to this proposed article. Discovering evidence of a species before we thought simply causes trees to get rearranged, not the theory to be falsified. I do want to make it clear that this is not bad; that is, changing a theory to adapt to the facts is not bad. It is done in the scientific method. However, the question is falsifiability. Titanium Dragon--thanks for intellectually honest answers. 65.73.44.65 15:00, 25 December 2006 (UTC) Vacous Poet[reply]

Modifying the trees, or incorporating other new data I believe is falsifying the theory. The theory has to be replaced with a new theory that includes the new tree. Just as the anamolous transit of mercury or the Michelson Morley experiments forced the change of Newtonian dynamics. Newtonian dynamics was not thrown out the door completely, but it had to be changed. It was falsifiable. Now of course one can imagine tests that would force Newtonian dynamics to be completely thrown out, such as information about gravitational and inertial mass equivalency. (Which is a huge mystery in physics I might add). But the fact that the theory has to be modified and can be modified is EVIDENCE of falsifiability. Now some tests are so substantial that they would force the whole theory to be chucked out, as has happened to caloric and phlogisten theories in thermodynamics, for example. Other tests only force the modification of part of the theory. The modification of Darwinism to NeoDarwinism was an example of modifying the theory to accommodate new results, new data that had come in and had to be incorporated. If Darwinism had some other mechanism for how generational information was passed on and it could not be changed by fiat (say it was written in a holy book or something) then this part of Darwinism would not be falsifiable, since the new Mendelian information could not replace the old part of the theory. So I am arguing that the modification of the trees, which is essentially a small change to the theory, or a new theory that is only slightly different than the old theory, is evidence of falsifiability, particularly when the entire theory can be tested and discarded if the correct evidence appears.--Filll 15:18, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Correct me if I am wrong, but there is more than one tree. There is no single agreed upon tree of life in biology, right? This doesn't proove or disprove the evolutionary theory of the origin of species. The trees are catalogs that show that the evidence is consistent with the theory, and are sparsely supported, and holes and rearrangments are the status quo. They are not identical to the theory. And controversy regarding some tree doesn't proove or disprove the theory. In fact, the theory does not change, just the trees.. 65.73.44.65 15:39, 25 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]
Modifying the trees, or incorporating other new data I believe is falsifying the theory.: I'll have to think about it. It sounds more like a living breathing alternative to Genesis. Or new theories that replace problematic theories. My intial reaction is that simply because a theory has been modified is not sufficient to say that the first or subsequent theory was/is falsifiable. Falsifiabilty, in my understanding, is applied to a theory to see if it meets a philosophical/scientific threshold. I'll keep thinking. 65.73.44.65 03:36, 26 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet[reply]
The issue here is that this article is about evolution, but evolution (as in the modern synthesis) doesn't actually state what familial trees look like, simply that they exist. As such, finding ancient mammals doesn't invalidate the modern synthesis or evolution; it invalidates that particular phylum's theory of descent, but it doesn't impact the theory of evolution - that they evolved. As we're trying to falsify the theory of evolution, rather than any particular phylum's tree, it isn't a great example. Finding something which clearly could not have evolved from other organisms would be an issue, which is why finding a bunny rabbit in the precambrian would be very strange; conversely, finding a bunny rabbit in the late Cretaceous would simply mess up that phylum's theory of descent. Titanium Dragon 22:40, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well my understanding is that there is no one "theory of evolution". There is one dominant accepted theory, and then lots of proposed changes to it, and different details, like different proposed trees. It is a theory in flux, since it is exciting and dynamic. It is science that is active, not complete and inactive like Newton's theory of gravity. So of course there are multiple proposed trees. These are not big enough changes to the theory to mean the whole theory is thrown out. Just has to change some part of it. Like Einstein's theory did to Newton's theory. The whole thing was not thrown out like caloric theory or phlogisten theory or Ptolemy's theory.--Filll 16:18, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You're right and wrong. "Theory of evolution", when used by the professionals I've met, almost always refers to something quite specific - the modern synthesis. A lot of people refer to evolution as everything from abiogenesis to the modern synthesis to goodness knows what. Nonbiological uses of evolution, such as evolution of computer programs or political agendas make things even murkier. Particular trees are often referred to under the broad umbrella of evolution. It is a very active field, though. The theory itself - the modern synthesis - is very well accepted, and though the power of the various parts of that are not entirely nailed down, that they are the major causes of evolution is undisputed. There may be other things we're not aware of or haven't thought of yet (genetic drift, for instance, seems obvious but took a while to work out), so it may be added to, but it is doubtful anything in the modern synthesis will ever be removed, mostly because it has been so well confirmed and has allowed for observations and predictions of the behavior of other things, such as memes and commputer programs. Titanium Dragon 22:40, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Hello, this is my first time entering a discussion on WP but I really enjoy this topic and want to help out. Overall I think the article pretty good but I do agree with the Dragon that some improvements could be made to the list. I've added my comments to his in the bulleted list above. Bgplayer 21:29, 20 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Margaretas list[edit]

This article:

is provocative and apparently a creationist article, but it has a lot of references. I would like to hear other opinions about it. What I find irritating is that it seems to be written by someone who has very limited knowledge of evolution or science, so it misrepresents the situation. I would not be surprised if the references do not support completely the position the author is trying to take. I notice the author completely ignores the well-known principles of co-evolution. I also notice that the author either is ignorant of or ignores laboratory and field observations of evolution occuring. The author also tries to imply that any observational science such as seismology, astrophysics, geomagnetism, oceanography, meteorology etc is not falsifiable since observations are not repeatable, etc. All that the author has stumbled on is that some sciences are observational and some are experimental and some are both. Evolution happens to be both. And now with DNA evidence, it is far more well-established than many sciences. Just because something happened a long time in the past does not mean that the evidence of the event is not scientific evidence. He also gets all wound up about the phrase "survival of the fittest" which he claims is part of evolution and completely mischaracterizes. This sort of nonsense is deadly to science, because it looks well written and well researched and well cited. It makes it look like there is a huge controversy and that lots of scientists and scholars disagree in substantial measure with evolution. It selectively presents the facts and misrepresents the facts it does present. Very dishonest and dangerous. Too bad scientists do not have burning at the stake, like rival religious faiths do. This author might be a candidate for immolation based on blasphemy, dishonesty and general stupidity.--Filll 13:19, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

since the vacuous one is so interested in the Pooper[edit]

I wonder if he is not associated with Ted Haggard or Fred Phelps?--Filll 16:22, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

No, but I assume you're trying more guilt by association. Without even know who the two people are (I have not looked at them) let me guess, they are creationists or belong to some other despised group. 65.73.44.65 17:50, 25 December 2006 (UTC)Vacuous Poets[reply]
Yep, just checked. Please just stick to the conversation at hand, and quit trying to impugn me with association. I never heard of either of those guys, but even if I did, it doesn't invalidate ideas I share. 65.73.44.65 17:52, 25 December 2006 (UTC) Vacous Poet[reply]

You are the one who wants to talk about the Pooper so much.--Filll 18:48, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I have to ask why we keep responding to the sock puppet, vacuous puppet, errrrrrr poet. His IP address and user name has been banned so many times, I think he's on his 5th version. Maybe if we do not respond to his drivel, we can proceed with healthy discussions of this topic. I'm really tired of his pedantic discourses, which only serve to get us in an uproar over essentially nothing. He has repeated himself, pretends to be a "scientist" when in fact he is a creationist lackey, brings up references that have been debated and found lacking, and takes up significant time for absolutely nothing. If there were an ignore feature on Wiki, I'd use it. I personally would ignore him, but then innocent bystanders get involved, and I feel as though I need to help out. I have filed so many complaints against his sock puppetry, I'm truly bored with that effort. I suggest Filll that you quit responding to him, and keep filing complaints with WP:SOCK and maybe he'll go away.OrangeMarlin 22:58, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Filll, are you sure you haven't been hitting the egg nog? I don't think this is appropriate here. Anyone mind if I delete it?--Margareta 23:21, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I mind. I've filed complaints against him, and if you go to User Talk:VacuousPoet, you'll note that an administrator has banned him. I have taken the time to list out his several IP addresses. I believe others should do the same. I hate egg nog. OrangeMarlin 23:24, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Sorry, I wasn't actually referring to your post, but the preceding "dialog." Anyway, I'll revise my request: I think it would be a good idea, and beneficial for the tone of this page, if Filll and Poet voluntarily deleted their hasty and heated remarks. (Try grappa-soaked chesnuts sometime.)--Margareta 23:42, 25 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Now that sounds interesting. Is it a store-bought item, or, do I just take a load of shelled, roasted chestnuts (over an open fire, of course) and soak them in grappa? OrangeMarlin 00:45, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Sorry if my wisecracks about Haggard and Phelps and the Pooper offended anyone. I was just making a joke. A bad one admittedly.--Filll 05:41, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Umn, it seems easier to understand how I would type pooper instead of popper, as opposed to you typing mute instead of moot. The difference is typos and mis-spellings, as opposed to just selecting the wrong word (but I am sure I due that two from time too time). This section on pooper could go, but I won't delete it (I've learned that lesson). 65.73.44.65 06:18, 26 December 2006 (UTC) Vacous Poet[reply]

If this page gets too long, we can archive the discussion. I think there is clearly enough interest that it is worth continuing it however. We really need to clean up our list of tests and get some references in the text.--Filll 06:22, 26 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

So what are we doing?[edit]

Have I missed something, or did we just give up? I think this section is well written, and should be added to the Evolution article (or maybe it's own article). OrangeMarlin 19:56, 27 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Maybe we're planning to ruminate on it, and then prepare the final version when we're ready to have it proofread?--Mr Fink 23:03, 27 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well at the moment I am waiting for:

  • more references and citations for these tests
  • eve to get back to us after the Holidays
  • a rewrite of a few points, as suggested in the comments above and on the main talk page
  • maybe a few more tests
  • a good title

Then I think I will attempt to launch it as one of several new articles expanding on areas of interest in the creationist-evolution controversy area.--Filll 00:18, 28 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Wow, I didn't realize anyone was waiting for me! Sorry. I have a project due on January 2, plus family commitments, house-hunting, and a party to host on the 1st. So I will be pretty useless for awhile. I think the article is good, with the exception of needing references. I could probably improve some of the wording, but that's not reason to hold off on posting it. We would post it with a cite needed tag, or wait to post until we get more citations. Either one is fine with me.--Margareta 18:08, 28 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I am in no rush to post it. I have this and several other articles addressing aspects of the creationist complaints that I am working on, in rough draft form. I think a more concerted effort to produce an accessible, well referenced set of anti-creationist, pro-science articles is called for, and this can be one of them.--Filll 18:40, 28 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
You guys don't get it, do you. Wikipedia articles are not allowed to be "anti-, pro-" anything. That's not what wikipedia is for. ፈቃደ (ውይይት) 18:46, 28 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This is to summarize the arguments that exist that evolution is falsifiable. Those arguments exist. So a summary of published arguments should not present a problem. They are just a statement of the facts. Period. If it is pro science, so be it. I think an article in Wikipeida on physics or chemistry is pro science, and why shouldnt it be? Should an article on astronomy include a long diatribe about astrology? Should chemistry have a huge long section on alchemy? That is pure nonsense. Your reasoning will destroy wikipedia, which appears to be your goal.--Filll 18:58, 28 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"Why shouldn't it be?" Because the Wikimedia foundation has a clear written policy that is more inviolable than all others, that articles are not to be pro- or anti- anything, but are to be what we like to call "Neu-tral". An article on physics, chemistry or astronomy can certainly be neutral. This is the closest to an open admission to a POV-pushing agenda as anything I have ever seen on Wikipedia. ፈቃደ (ውይይት) 19:11, 28 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Should an article on the bible or Jesus or creationism include huge sections stating that the material is all clearly nonsense? Articles about science have to describe the science. Part of the science is that it is falsifiable. So this article WILL (eventually when it is made an article) describe the ways in which evolution is falsifiable. What is wrong with that? Do you have evidence that demonstrates evolution is NOT falsifiable? Do you have evidence that creationism IS falsifiable? I would dearly love to see your documented evidence that:

  • evolution is NOT falsifiable
  • creationism IS falsifiable

Please include solid references and citations only from peer-reviewed scientific journals. If you are unable to do so, then I know how to classify your objections. Thanks so much. --Filll 20:09, 28 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

  • Codex Sinaiticus, or ???, the intent of this article is only anti-creationist in the way of properly explaining falsifiability and the reasons behind why evolution is science and creationism isn't. It's not merely a point of view, it's an explanation of particulars often misunderstood in the Evolution-Creationism controversy. Compare the concept of this article with creating an article explaining why Anthropology is a social science and Geology isn't, if this was a subject of major misunderstanding. Delta TangoTalk 20:19, 28 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Science blogs as sources[edit]

(It's important to note here that Darwin proposed evolutionary theory long before DNA was identified. That’s called the “predictive” power of a scientific theory.)-- From http://www.acepilots.com/mt/2005/08/26/falsifiable-evolution-not-just-precambrian-rabbits/

As though people before Darwin did not recognize that little Johnny had his mother's eyes and father's lips. This constitutes predictive power of Darwin's theory?

When Darwin wrote Origin of Species in 1859, there were no pre-human fossil remains. If none had ever been found, that would have falsified evolution (or human evolution, at least). --From same source

Wow. If none had never been found. Give me a break. This would not falsify, it would only look bad.

combinations from different lineages -- From same source

Like fertile whale/dolphin hybrids?

In fact, all the geological evidence indicates a 4 billion year age of the earth. -- From same source

Which is not inconsistent with a literal reading of Genesis.

Evidence of whales and humans and kangaroos and horseshoe crabs coming into existence at the same time. -- From same source

I hardly think that this would disprove evolution. This would falsify a dating technique, perhaps.

I am surprised he didn't throw in an experiment that required a time machine, e.g., traveling back in time and filming creation.

Now I know where you are getting your ideas from. 05:57, 29 December 2006 (UTC) Vacuous Poet

This sort of contribution should be deleted on sight. I have had enough of disjointed incoherent ramblings.--Filll 14:59, 29 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Rossnixon's claim that evolution is not falsifiable[edit]

Here is an interesting article that discusses whether or not Evolution is falsifiable. http://members.iinet.net.au/~sejones/PoE/pe05scnc.html To me it appears that it is not falsifiable, since at least one of it's proponents states that all observations can be made to fit into the theory. rossnixon 00:52, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I am sorry to tell you, but it seems to me you have misunderstood what a scientific theory is. This is to be expected if a scientific theory is falsifiable. If the theory never changes, as in the case of creationism, then this is a strong sign that the theory is not falsifiable. To take another example, the theory of gravity has changed over and over and over in the last 2300 years or so, to fit the facts as we knew them at the time. Does mean that the theory of gravity is not science? Clearly not. I might also mention that over 99.9% of professionally trained biologists in the US, and the US supreme court and several other US federal courts have all agreed that evolution is science, and it passes the falsifiability test. So if I accept your premise, what is wrong with all those people?--Filll 01:04, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Ross, is your only argument for evolution being unfalsifiable that "at least one if its proponents states that all observations can be made to fit into the theory"? What if one of its proponents says that, and nine hundred ninety-nine others don't? Does that still make it unfalsifiable? Obviously it is absurd to appeal to any one person's authority to demonstrate that evolution is or isn't falsifiable; rather, you would need to show that no possible scenario would contradict evolutionary theory's predictions. This is not the case: many examples have already been provided above of ways to falsify evolution. One person's word, whether that person supports or opposes evolution, cannot on its own change that. Besides, if you're going to try to appeal to authority, you'd want to appeal to the best authority possible; Karl Popper, the very man who proposed the notion of falsifiability as a criterion for whether something is scientific, once erroneously claimed that there is no known way to falsify evolution, but a couple of years later recanted and determined that evolution is indeed falsifiable. If even people like Popper and Dawkins concede that, obviously one man's word isn't going to contradict the scientific consensus. You'll need real arguments if you want to demonstrate that evolution is unfalsifiable. -Silence 01:28, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
OK, I worded my comment poorly. I agree that my appeal to one person's authority was inadequate. I would state instead that the "general theory" of evolution is now so accepted as "fact"; that all observations of the past 150 odd years have been accommodated into the theory. The theory itself is no longer questioned; only the mechanics of it is. Quote: "I suspect that even now he (Popper) does not really believe that Darwinism in its modern form is genuinely falsifiable." (Ruse, 1982,p.133). However, this was 20+ years ago; perhaps someone will find a good falsification is possible. And to Filll - what is wrong with all these people? - they have strong agendas and biases. rossnixon 02:11, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Ross, I understand your concerns: you personally doubt evolution, so it is natural for you to be surprised and concerned that so many others don't seem to doubt evolution at all. To explain this discrepency between your doubts and their seeming certainty, you first allege that they are just not paying attention to possible contrary evidence anymore, because they're so used to trying to fit all the facts to evolutionary theory that they aren't willing to consider any alternatives. The problem with this explanation, Ross, is that (1) what are the facts that contradict evolution? if there are none, then their reliance on evolution is justifiable; and (2) none of this has anything to do with falsifiability. The fact that scientists have successfully fit countless billions of facts into the evolutionary framework in the past in no way implies that there is no possible observation in the future that could falsify evolution. You could just as easily argue that any theory is unfalsifiable, based on the fact that the facts have been fitted to them all in the past; this is not a reasonable way to determine falsifiable from unfalsifiable claims. Rather, we must consider hypothetical scenarios which could contradict evolution, and see whether those scenarios would falsify evolution. Several such scenarios were provided higher up on this page; if you feel that evolution is unfalsifiable, you should try to show how current evolutionary theory would survive such occurrences unfalsified. Otherwise, your criticism is trivial: the fact that evolution hasn't already been falsified ("all observations of the past 150 odd years have been accommodated into the theory"—not strictly true, by the way, since the theory has changed in many, many ways over the last 150 years, in accordance with new observations) in no way implies that it can't be falsified.
Consider the example of gravity: you might allege that the theory of gravity is unfalsifiable, because scientists seem so dogmatically sure that gravity "explains everything", because the facts have been fitted to gravity for so very long, and because you can't readily imagine any scenario that would falsify gravity. None of this implies that gravity is unscientific. Gravity's not a non-theory, it's just an enormously well-supported theory, and while gravity, like evolution, is likely to be revised in a number of (unforeseeable) ways in the future, the vast majority of both theories is likely to remain the same, because it's so well-supported by the observable evidence. In both cases, too, the theories are not unfalsifiable, just so central to how the world seems to work that it's difficult to imagine a world where they don't.
It's like the statement "it's currently nighttime in this part of the world", a scientific theory devised to explain and unify a number of individual observations/facts (e.g., "it's dark out", "the stars are visible in the sky", "clocks say it's 10:00 PM", etc.). Such a theory seems obvious, but its obviousness doesn't make it unfalsifiable; it could very well turn out that the darkness is just an illusion, and that it's actually daytime right here, right now. There are conceivable tests we could do that would falsify this theory: we could look in a telescope and discover that the "sky" is actually a giant domed ceiling projecting an image of the night sky, for example. The fact that a statement is fundamental to how we interact with the world, that it's practically taken for granted as true for practical reasons, that it's almost inconceivable for it to be truly falsified, and that it's enormously well-evidenced and that we interpret all the evidence in terms of that statement, in no way implies that the statement is not a scientific theory. Indeed, a number of those things are what make something a scientific theory. The fact that scientists rightly acknowledge when a theory is incredibly unlikely to be falsified, and therefore treat criticisms of such theories with appropriate skepticism, doesn't imply that such theories are unfalsifiable. The evidence would just have to be suitably extraordinary and compelling.
The second thing you allege in order to account for the difference between your skepticism of evolution and scientists' apparent credulity is that scientists have some sort of secret "strong agendas and biases" that cause them to misinterpret the evidence, either to suit their nefarious purposes ("agendas") or to conform to their skewed world-view ("biases"), or both.
Obviously, every individual is biased; science cannot possibly escape all bias, but rather takes as many measures as possible to try to minimize that bias as much as possible. Hence science's reliance on intersubjective verification and on many different independent observations and experiments for confirmation, rather than appealing to any one person's authority; one person will necessary tend to be more biased than a group. Science, therefore, because of its bias-minimizing methods, is one of the least bias-prone groups in the world; to accuse all scientists of "bias" seems silly, considering their dedication (at least as a group) to intellectual honesty and empirical evidence. Nobody's perfect, but part of science's immense value is that it acknowledges its own imperfection, and adjusts itself accordingly as much as possible. I'd rather trust the man who admits when he's wrong than the man who says he's always right. What harmful "bias", specifically, do you believe that scientists as a whole are subject to?
As for "agendas", this is an even more dubious claim. It smacks of conspiracy theory paranoia to allege that all scientists must be working in concert on a goal any more nefarious than the pursuit of reliable knowledge. :) What sort of "agenda" could all scientists, or even all evolutionary biologists, have in common? Such allegations, even you must admit, seem patently absurd; do you have any real, substantial evidence to back up any sort of global conspiracy on the part of all scientists to pursue a dastardly agenda? If not, it seems much more likely that this is a case of jumping to erroneous conclusions to try to explain a disagreement. You think things are one way; most scientists think they are another. The simplest, most plausible explanation is that both you and the scientific community are just trying to do what's right, live good lives, care for themselves and their loved ones, learn the truth as best they can with the methods available, etc., and that you simply have a difference of opinion resulting from different life experiences or, arguably even more likely, from a misunderstanding. Unless you have strong evidence that this simple and likely explanation is wrong, and that you're unbiased and pure-hearted while millions of scientists in the world are biased and corrupt and that that's why people disagree with you, your allegations of corrupting biases and agendas on the part of the scientific community seem quite unwarranted. -Silence 03:25, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Well if they were so biased that they would not change their theory, so determined that one theory was right that they would not change it (which is what nonfalsifiable means), why did they change it, exactly as is required for a scientific theory? I do not understand what you are getting at. I am left with the conclusion that perhaps you do not know what falsifiability means. It also makes no sense to me that all these people-literally several hundred thousand at least in the US, and several million worldwide- have some secret agenda. What is this mysterious agenda? And as Silence points out, the reason we are listing examples of falsifiability tests is that we want to show it is possible. All it takes is one test that if the theory failed, would make the theory untenable, and that means the theory is falsifiable. And we have a bunch above. And we will get more. All we need is one. Also your comments about how the theory is not questioned and only the mechanics are makes no sense to me. I am afraid I cannot understand you and I cannot spend any time or effort trying to help you since it will not be viewed positively. You just will have to realize that I do not understand you and I have the distinct impression you do not understand this issue. Sorry.--Filll 02:28, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Sorry that I was not clear enough. Instead I will give an example of how I think. Dawkins says that "If there were a single hippo or rabbit in the Precambrian, that would completely blow evolution out of the water." If this in actual fact occurred, one of the following would happen:
  • Oh dear, obviously we were wrong to classify this stratum as pre-cambrian.
  • OK, who put it there! Where is the Candid Camera. It's not April 1st, is it?
  • No, that can't be a rabbit. It only appears morphologically similar to a rabbit.
  • That's interesting; rabbits appeared far earlier than we thought!

Would anyone expect a different reaction? I'd like to see more than the four possibilities listed. rossnixon 02:57, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

You are correct that there would probably be initial skepticism, because it's more likely that an anomaly will be explained within the current theory than that the theory will be revamped altogether. If you saw a bird that seemed to violate the theory of gravity, would you immediately jump to the conclusion that gravity is false, or would you first try to find simpler explanations? However, once those explanations have been reasonably exhausted—which is possible both for a gravity-defying bird and a common descent-defying fossil—scientists will conclude that gravity or evolution is false in some respect, and must be revised. Specifically, radiocarbon dating could confirm that the stratum is indeed pre-cambrian, eliminating the first explanation; if the site had never been tampered within the past, that would eliminate the second explanation; if the morphological similarity was anything more than very rough (e.g., if it looked like a worm or trilobite with a vaguely rabbitoid shape, rather than an actual rabbit with a nose, four limbs, ears, etc.) that would effectively eliminate the third explanation by making coincidence less likely than actual rabbit (or at least rabbit-like animal, which is enough to falsify common descent anyway) appearance; and if rabbits appeared far earlie than we thought, that would falsify common descent, because rabbits cannot have arisen out of the blue before simpler animals like fish and other tetrapods; if the radiocarbon datin gof the fossil itself demonstrated a pre-cambrian age, or if rabbits were discovered in many different pre-cambrian strata around the world, that would eliminate all the concerns. So, although you are correct that our first impulse would not be to leap to the idea that evolution is false (which is very reasonable, because evolution is so strongly supported by all past evidence), you are incorrect in assuming that no matter how much evidence piled up, we'd still stubbornly cling to evolution, and still try to "fit" the evidence to it; to do so would simply be impossible if the evidence was conclusive enough, and that would falsify common descent. -Silence 03:47, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

If it was really truely repeatably confirmed that a 200 million year old fossil of a rabbit existed, then there would be a substantial revolution. They would still call the theory that replaced the NeoDarwinian theory the "theory of evolution", probably. But it would be a new theory. Just like the many many small changes to Darwin's theory in the last 150 years. It is not the same theory, but it has some of the same features still. However, it is a new theory, since these all theories are falsifiable. They were tested, they failed the test, and so they changed. Got it?--Filll 03:07, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, that's what I would expect, except that I wouldn't call it a new theory myself. I would just say that it's a reshuffle of the mechanics of the original theory. My original understanding of what would it take to falsify the theory of evolution?, was "what would it take to prove that life on earth has not developed by common descent?". I expect you to say that this is a different question that does not belong in this article? rossnixon 03:20, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Ross. If we discovered that God causes allele shuffling and that the Genesis account is literally true, we'd revise evolutionary theory accordingly—and it would still be called evolutionary theory. You're moving the goalposts. Completely revamping a theory is falsifying it; the fact that it uses the same name afterwards for the sake of convenience is 100% irrelevant. In that sense, many aspects of evolutionary theory have already been falsified dozens of times, such as Darwin's claim of pangenesis. If it truly turned out that rabbits were alive when the earliest other organisms were alive, that would falsify common descent, which is the aspect of evolution you really want to see falsified, isn't it? After all, that would be sufficient to make room for the "created kinds" of Genesis, with God individually creating each "group" of organisms rather than having them develop from each other. So that should satisfy you: every aspect of evolution that's of any concern for you is easy to falsify (e.g., find such an anomaly in the fossil record, that is independently confirmed and has no other reasonable explanation than "common descent is false"), and even the ones that seem almost impossible to falsify (e.g., the clearly-observed fact that organisms change their genes from one generation to the next) are at least hypothetically possible to falsify, because we could all turn out to be in the Matrix or something and all our observations could thus turn out to be defunct. If that doesn't satisfy you: suppose we built a time machine, traveled back in time, and saw God creating the original Created Kinds. That would conclusively and blatantly falsify common descent. Thus, common descent is falsifiable. -Silence 03:37, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Silence, I would like to thank you for the time and effort that you put into your comments - much appreciated! P.S. If you ever feel like reading some of the "opposition", I quite like www.crev.info (mainly because it's updated often). rossnixon 05:05, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the link! I'll check it out. :) A pleasure talking to you. If you have any concerns or questions about this at any point in the future, feel free to give me a ring. Obviously we will disagree on certain things, but progress is always being made when we show that the two sides can have a civil discourse and explain their points undogmatically. -Silence 05:59, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Another example of falsifiability test[edit]

Evidence in human chromosomes of fusion of one pair of primate chromosomes to go from 48 chromosomes for primates down to 46 chromsomes for humans (or some comparable mechanism).--Filll 18:07, 29 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Other falsifiability references[edit]

—Preceding unsigned comment added by Filll (talkcontribs) 18:18, 17 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]