Cars result from memes?
Actually, some creationists use the VW beetle to argue that similar
morphology does not imply common descent, because the Beetle in many ways
resembles a Porsche
On Sat, Jan 10, 2009 at 4:17 PM, Dehler, Bernie <bernie.dehler@intel.com>wrote:
> Schwarzwald is getting really hot... he said:
>
> "One would be to argue that cars/machines in general are just another kind
> of offspring of humans. That could arguably put them in the evolutionary
> chain, at which point you just have to draw the lines of descent back to the
> common ancestor between them."
>
> According to evolution (using Dawkins' terms), how are cars the "offspring"
> of humans, since cars don't have genes, and "offspring" usually inherit the
> genes of their ancestors (for biological systems, anyway)? You're super
> close!
>
> ...Bernie
>
> ________________________________________
> From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] On
> Behalf Of Schwarzwald
> Sent: Saturday, January 10, 2009 1:00 PM
> To: asa@calvin.edu
> Subject: Re: [asa] fun- an evolution test question ... a hint (was
> "riddle")
>
> I'm not sure if anyone gave this answer yet, but I can think of two
> possibilities.
>
> One would be to argue that cars/machines in general are just another kind
> of offspring of humans. That could arguably put them in the evolutionary
> chain, at which point you just have to draw the lines of descent back to the
> common ancestor between them.
>
> Another way would be to argue that they're both the result artificial
> selection by humans. Pigs have been successively bred to have certain
> features, cars have been made to have certain features, therefore another
> link is that they're both human-guided 'artificial' products of a descent
> line.
>
> I can think of other ways to justify as much, which alone probably
> highlights some problems with the whole evolutionary debate.
> - - - - - - -
> On Sat, Jan 10, 2009 at 1:20 PM, Dehler, Bernie <bernie.dehler@intel.com>
> wrote:
> As I think about it more- maybe "riddle" was a bad word, because it implies
> a play on words or some kind of trick. Actually, I'm thinking this could be
> on an actual exam if Richard Dawkins was teaching a class on evolution.
>
> And yes- it should say 'evolutionarily' not 'evolutionary.'
>
> Here's a further hint:
>
> If it was a picture of a mother big and a baby pig, you'd say "that is
> easy- the baby is the offspring, descended from, the mother." If I gave a
> picture of a fish and a human, you'd say "that's easy- they are 'cousins'
> because they have a common ancestor. All mammals directly descended from
> some kind of fish." This is expanding the range- can you see the
> evolutionary link, as proposed by Dawkins?
>
> ...Bernie
>
>
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Received on Sat Jan 10 16:39:53 2009
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