Video games with irreducible complexity? - /v/ (#713057080) [Archived: 991 hours ago]

Anonymous
6/19/2025, 5:56:12 AM No.713057080
2
2
md5: 20916aa0016ef94f6334d638934d2dd5๐Ÿ”
Darwinists seriously think random DNA copying mistakes resulted in different mechanisms that are all useless or harmful by themselves until they're fully completed.

This is a really good example, it has two chemicals that when touch explode at 100C.

Every part of this is useless or harmful and would remain so for countless millions of generations, never having any reason to be selected for at best, until all of the different parts were completed... randomly.

This is essentially like me flipping random bits in your OS and expecting to get new features.
Replies: >>713057467 >>713057512 >>713057545 >>713057737 >>713058029 >>713058902 >>713059452 >>713059760
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 5:58:51 AM No.713057228
Colored_Demiurge
Colored_Demiurge
md5: d88bdebe3978bf2c8f541072314ca4d1๐Ÿ”
Why did he do it
Replies: >>713057972 >>713059223
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:02:59 AM No.713057467
>>713057080 (OP)
>beetle that farts like a flamethrower exists
>this proves that god is real
Replies: >>713057564
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:03:52 AM No.713057512
1685199243405
1685199243405
md5: 57959db34783468411d0627a8bfc1a15๐Ÿ”
>>713057080 (OP)
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:04:40 AM No.713057545
IMG_0557
IMG_0557
md5: 59963a912243968efd5a587961f4b79c๐Ÿ”
>>713057080 (OP)
God fag
Replies: >>713057858
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:05:02 AM No.713057564
>>713057467
God created everything at once and something just happen to share similarities.
Replies: >>713057805
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:06:22 AM No.713057631
That beetle must have a jaws of life grip when firing that thing
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:08:09 AM No.713057737
>>713057080 (OP)
>This is essentially like me flipping random bits in your OS and expecting to get new features
ironically enough, this is how microsoft made windows 11.
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:09:17 AM No.713057805
>>713057564
What's the purpose of making a bettle that can't be eaten?
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:09:43 AM No.713057832
>The full evolutionary history of the beetle's unique defense mechanism is unknown, but biologists have shown that the system could have evolved from defenses found in other beetles in incremental steps by natural selection.
Specifically, quinone chemicals are a precursor to sclerotin, a brownish substance produced by beetles and other insects to harden their exoskeleton.
Some beetles additionally store excess foul-smelling quinones, including hydroquinone, in small sacs below their skin as a natural deterrent against predatorsโ€”all carabid beetles have this sort of arrangement. Some beetles additionally mix hydrogen peroxide, a common by-product of the metabolism of cells, with the hydroquinone; some of the catalases that exist in most cells make the process more efficient. The chemical reaction produces heat and pressure, and some beetles exploit the latter to push out the chemicals onto the skin; this is the case in the beetle Metrius contractus, which produces a foamy discharge when attacked.
In the bombardier beetle, the muscles that prevent leakage from the reservoir additionally developed a valve permitting more controlled discharge of the poison and an elongated abdomen to permit better control over the direction of discharge.
Replies: >>713057991
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:10:04 AM No.713057858
>>713057545
I like this pic. Thanks.
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:11:52 AM No.713057972
>>713057228
I was bored
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:12:18 AM No.713057991
frank
frank
md5: 5116e8fb24f06d1b2b1bed09b034cd71๐Ÿ”
>>713057832
>Here's how it could have happened in my imagination

>Origin of life
There's no known way to turn non-living material into life, it's never been done before even in a lab. The belief that dust/water just randomly formed into functional DNA, proteins, a cell, etc. capable of reproducing itself is absurd.

>DNA
We OBSERVE genetic mutations delete data over time (e.g. we started with a grey wolf and only got increasingly retarded dogs like pugs and chihuahuas). You're just deleting or changing data randomly, and SELECTING from what is already there, and over time it always results in a net loss.

This alone proves Darwinism couldn't happen. Natural selection is real but it has limits, Darwinists are so retarded they look at a process and think it must have no limit.

https://youtu.be/jyATE9StbK8

>Origin of sexual reproduction
There is no known way asexual creatures could develop sexual reproduction through mutation. Any benefits (or the obvious -50% efficiency) are irrelevant. It's not possible.

This is called irreducible complexity, one part is useless or harmful without the other part(s).

>Missing links
There is not a SINGLE transitionary fossil series. There is some speculated, but none show transitions.

The scientific community believed Piltdown Man was a human ancestor for decades before discovering it was a hoax. The entire "fossil record" is unscientific, lining up the remains of different animals is not evidence they evolved into each other.

>Horseshoe crabs claimed to be the same for 400 million years
They claim you were a fish 400 million years ago.

"They're just perfect" is not a legitimate answer to how an animal could remain unaffected by evolutionary force for 400 million years.
Replies: >>713058161
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:13:06 AM No.713058029
1024px-watmoughs_carpenter_xylocopa_watmoughi_on_cape_virgilia_virgilia_oroboides_flower_-_52681488347
>>713057080 (OP)
Watched an interesting documentary on carpenter bees, which explains the evolutionary journey of insects into hive social structures.

Essentially, carpenter bees lay eggs in a hole, separating each section with mud and providing nectar for the larvae. They lay one egg per section, but they can select the gender of their eggs. What carpenter bees often do is make the last egg (closest to the entrance) a female and provide half as much nectar as the other sections, resulting in stunted growth for that last larvae. Because the last larvae has the least nectar, it becomes a pupae first and grows into a smaller bee, which the mother can then bully to help feed the rest of the juveniles. This stunted female bee does not reproduce and often dies just feeding its siblings.

This is the hypothetical link toward hive behaviour with queens and workers. Workers don't reproduce, like the stunted bee. Over quadrillions of iterations, some bee species evolved into hives.

Evolution is inefficient, but incredible in the number of permutations it can produce.
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:15:34 AM No.713058161
>>713057991
Canโ€™t tell if youโ€™re being sarcastic or are mentally no different from a nigger
Replies: >>713059427
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:19:04 AM No.713058360
w
w
md5: 55676d088d27fc8069c13c131cb15fae๐Ÿ”
OP, this is a serious you post, you would gain a lot from becoming well versed into system theory and chaos theory, you can start with Chaos: Making a New Science, Book by James Gleick, it's a very fun read and doesn't require a degree or anything to undestand it, cheers.
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:28:50 AM No.713058902
>>713057080 (OP)
anything hypergolic chemical, that ignites spontaneously when mixed with another chemical like your beetle's ass juice is going to be corrosive, toxic or both all on its own, just like the corrosive or toxic ass juice squirted out by many, many other bugs. You are retarded for spouting this irreducible complexity meme.
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:34:21 AM No.713059223
>>713057228
Seemed like a good idea at the time, sunken cost, and to late to stop it
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:38:34 AM No.713059427
>>713058161
Brevity is the essence of wit; so no, he's a retard.
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:38:55 AM No.713059452
>>713057080 (OP)
People still try to push this after the Dubya era when they thought they could sneak it into actual science textbooks?
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:40:28 AM No.713059529
tiktaalik
tiktaalik
md5: 3629eacbc86a4cf271814937b4fb3ffa๐Ÿ”
why did he do it bros
Replies: >>713059598
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:41:56 AM No.713059598
>>713059529
it was quite literally free real estate
Anonymous
6/19/2025, 6:45:20 AM No.713059760
>>713057080 (OP)
If a computer can make a good evolutionary/genetic algorithm arrive at a nice 'coherent' solution by effectively switching random bullshit around for a few seconds, i think evolution can probably manage it after a couple million years
After all, weve seen how fast just reproduction and mutation can affect the characteristics of animals (and honestly people too if you dont mind being called racist) so its reasonable to believe it could happen after so damn long