P
Peter_Plato
Guest
You shouldn’t make “fun” of the way other people “talk.”No they’re not. They are “examples” of how a particular “component” is used in the same way in different “structures” (using quotes when they’re not required really looks odd, doesn’t it).
That’s one way to see it.Parahomology refers to the similarity of a component which has evolved to be used* in a different way in different structures.*
A gear is a gear is a gear. It doesn’t do anything else other than act like a gear (unless you want to hit someone on the head with it, then it’s like a rock or you could use it as a paper weight etc). But a component that was, for example, originally an arm has now evolved into a wing. And you can see the gradual transformation from one to the other in the fossil record. This is what TTWWCD predicts.
For example, in the manner in which a steering wheel has evolved to be used in a different way from a wheel or tire and used in different structures (wagon and car)?Parahomology refers to the similarity of a component which has evolved to be used* in a different way in different structures.*
There have been all manner of changes in the evolution of the wheel over time and some are even quite useless (a steering wheel on a playground climber) and others discarded (old tires in the dump).
This assumes that you have reverse-engineered all of nature adequately and have the competency to determine how “useless” these parts really are. I noticed you didn’t mention junk DNA. Why not?It also predicts redundancy which means that the original claw on the end of the original arm which would be pretty handy for tearing flesh is now a pretty useless nub of bone on the end of a wing. Some salamanders have vestigial legs, as do whales. Humans have a vestigial tail, the cocckyx. If these had had been designed, then they wouldn’t have any useless features.
Unless maybe God threw in a few now and then to make it look like it had evolved so He could test us. Or you have another explanation.