Join For His Glory for a discussion on how
https://christianforums.net/threads/a-vessel-of-honor.110278/
https://christianforums.net/threads/psalm-70-1-save-me-o-god-lord-help-me-now.108509/
Read through the following study by Tenchi for more on this topic
https://christianforums.net/threads/without-the-holy-spirit-we-can-do-nothing.109419/
Join Sola Scriptura for a discussion on the subject
https://christianforums.net/threads/anointed-preaching-teaching.109331/#post-1912042
Strengthening families through biblical principles.
Focus on the Family addresses the use of biblical principles in parenting and marriage to strengthen the family.
Read daily articles from Focus on the Family in the Marriage and Parenting Resources forum.
I do, they aren't that much of a concern. they aren't flying around killing people just when YOU disturb them and don't back away they will then go on the attack. they do also produce honey.i have been in an area where they were before, and just missed them.Do you have any killer bees near you? Is there a way to undo the population, or minimize the effects?
Vaccine said:Your enthusiasm for meat from a petry dish made me smile. I'm sure it wouldn't be poison and would taste just great, but I would striggle with the idea of eating something made in a lab. Snap, I must be getting older since I don't like trying new things as much as I used to.
I read where in China they have a herd (~200) cows, mixed with human genes to make human like milk. This milk may hit the market in a few years as an alternative to formula.
I'd prefer formula for my kids. What do you think?
There is a huge difference between a plant that was selected over time for desirable traits, and a plant that was instantaneously (in reproductive view) made to have specific genetic variants.
The key here is time. It would take hundreds of thousands of generations to produce a plant that in labs, scientists can create instantly.
Over those hundreds of thousands of generations, those plants would first have to survive with their new phenotype to a reproductive stage in development. In this way, nature 'takes care of' those plants that for whatever reason cannot survive or that are a threat to the other members of the species, or environment.
(because in reality, even plants live in communities, which makes things difficult when they aren't symbiotic). You can see here that a plant genetically modified to produce pesticides would find it very difficult in nature to reproduce- since it kills all of its pollinators! It would necessarily harm any other plant in it's vicinity, having reduced the number of pollinators.
Secondly, what GMO's are is not simply a selection of traits that already existed. They are a 'brand new' organism, in no way the same thing as the regular type.
In traditional selection, the only thing that people can select for is phenotype.
So the genotype may or may not have been changed through time, but it is without doubt a variation that the organism itself was inherently capable of. Geneticists have yet to determine what exactly every gene affects even in the organism that they naturally occur. To say that they know what phenotypic changes will occur given any genotypic variation is beyond absurd.
Well, I think that my point here is that true genetic manipulation is what I believe to be absolutely wrong, and in no way comparable to traditional methods of artificial selection.
It is not the same genetic change. Changes in a plant occurring through traditional selection were variations that already existed within the genotype of the plant. In other words, it is inherently capable of producing those specific phenotypic variants.There is a huge difference between a plant that was selected over time for desirable traits, and a plant that was instantaneously (in reproductive view) made to have specific genetic variants.
I don't see how. After all, it's the same genetic change.
I'm not comparing the techniques, only their products.The key here is time. It would take hundreds of thousands of generations to produce a plant that in labs, scientists can create instantly.
That argument could be applied to any new technology. Print media, compared to electronic media, for example.
I never said it was 'good'. It is merely how things are. That was your own inference.Over those hundreds of thousands of generations, those plants would first have to survive with their new phenotype to a reproductive stage in development. In this way, nature 'takes care of' those plants that for whatever reason cannot survive or that are a threat to the other members of the species, or environment.
Natural selection isn't the beneficial force some people imagine it to be. It can produce monsterous things, dramatically alter ecosystems, and even lead species down the path to extinction. So "natural" isn't the equivalent of "good."
Thank you for pointing this out, as I actually did not know that. I was using the pesticide gene as an example of how change in one organism rarely affects only that organism, and would have consequences within the environment.(because in reality, even plants live in communities, which makes things difficult when they aren't symbiotic). You can see here that a plant genetically modified to produce pesticides would find it very difficult in nature to reproduce- since it kills all of its pollinators! It would necessarily harm any other plant in it's vicinity, having reduced the number of pollinators.
Not so. For example the BT variant in corn (which I studied as an undergraduate) affects moth and butterfly larvae, but not other insects. The corn borer, is a major pest of corn, and is the larva of a moth, so a BT variant of corn works really well. The issue is whether horizontal spread of the gene is possible. If it were to get into milkweed plants, monarch butterflies would be in big trouble. There is some evidence that BT corn pollen, drifting to milkweed plants near cornfields, could kill some monarch caterpillars.
I'm not sure how you can assert this, or rather, support it. A mutation is random change- the chances of a complete gene sequence 'falling out of the sky' and then being in an area that is usable, not to mention ends up being profitable to the organism, are so low as to be impossible.Secondly, what GMO's are is not simply a selection of traits that already existed. They are a 'brand new' organism, in no way the same thing as the regular type.
No more than any other mutation would produce. There's nothing magical about inserting a gene that makes it different than other mutations.
You can target a specific gene in breeding if you know the phenotype that it produces. Otherwise you're back to fiddling with genetics again.In traditional selection, the only thing that people can select for is phenotype.
Not so. We can target a specific gene in breeding, just as well.
I may not have been quite clear here, but it was traditional selection that I was talking about. A GMO is not something that its parental organism(s) would be inherently capable of producing.So the genotype may or may not have been changed through time, but it is without doubt a variation that the organism itself was inherently capable of. Geneticists have yet to determine what exactly every gene affects even in the organism that they naturally occur. To say that they know what phenotypic changes will occur given any genotypic variation is beyond absurd.
This is true of traditional breeding practices, as well. No magic.
My thesis, perhaps wrongly placed, is based on the evidence presented.Well, I think that my point here is that true genetic manipulation is what I believe to be absolutely wrong, and in no way comparable to traditional methods of artificial selection.
Beliefs are what they are. Evidence is another matter entirely.
It is not the same genetic change. Changes in a plant occurring through traditional selection were variations that already existed within the genotype of the plant.
Genetic manipulation creates a totally new genotype.
The key here is time. It would take hundreds of thousands of generations to produce a plant that in labs, scientists can create instantly.
Over those hundreds of thousands of generations, those plants would first have to survive with their new phenotype to a reproductive stage in development.
I never said it was 'good'.
It would necessarily harm any other plant in it's vicinity, having reduced the number of pollinators.
Thank you for pointing this out, as I actually did not know that. I was using the pesticide gene as an example of how change in one organism rarely affects only that organism, and would have consequences within the environment.
Secondly, what GMO's are is not simply a selection of traits that already existed. They are a 'brand new' organism, in no way the same thing as the regular type.
I'm not sure how you can assert this, or rather, support it.
A mutation is random change-
the chances of a complete gene sequence 'falling out of the sky' and then being in an area that is usable, not to mention ends up being profitable to the organism, are so low as to be impossible.
As I said earlier, these changes are not the same as we find in a variety that is selected by traditional methods.
However I leave it to you to defend that a genetically modified organism is no different than the traditionally selected.
In traditional selection, the only thing that people can select for is phenotype.
You can target a specific gene in breeding if you know the phenotype that it produces. Otherwise you're back to fiddling with genetics again.
So the genotype may or may not have been changed through time, but it is without doubt a variation that the organism itself was inherently capable of.
Geneticists have yet to determine what exactly every gene affects even in the organism that they naturally occur. To say that they know what phenotypic changes will occur given any genotypic variation is beyond absurd.
I may not have been quite clear here, but it was traditional selection that I was talking about. A GMO is not something that its parental organism(s) would be inherently capable of producing.
Well, I think that my point here is that true genetic manipulation is what I believe to be absolutely wrong, and in no way comparable to traditional methods of artificial selection.
My thesis, perhaps wrongly placed, is based on the evidence presented.