M
Metis1
Guest
That probably would be the case.If the evolution of man happen in let’s say Alaska, then man would not have lost its fur?
That probably would be the case.If the evolution of man happen in let’s say Alaska, then man would not have lost its fur?
I’m new here and it appears I still don’t have the quoting mechanism down pat. Sorry.I can’t believe you ascribed this quote to me!
I take it this was an accident?
But not all do, and that’s what’s important.It is the “embryo problem”. When embryos experience mutations they usually are deformed (birth defects) or do not survive.
Because science finds no other process at work. The theory is a product of science and must fit in the domain of science. Not metaphysics nor theology.Why call it random at all?
False on both counts.We do not do science by consensus or authority.
It only takes one scientist with a major finding to overturn an entire paradigm.
This is what is happening now.
The above appears to be a non-sequitur.That the Theory of evolution is nonsense is proven every time the X-ray technician leaves the room to turn the switch rather than staying in order to have smarter and stronger kids.
I think it very likely there is more going on than young Mr Darwin proposed.Darwinism really has no means of explaining this.
Are the top “Evos” highly religious or are they, as Glark says, all atheists?The top evos know it and so should you.
An alternative approach is that ALL work must proceed from first principles. Whatever comes around goes around…On the backs? That is an appeal to authority. If the base assumptions are wrong a whole lot of people are wrong and barking up the wrong tree.
So the top evos are not seeing a designer in the sense you, Glark and others claim is evident ??Many are atheists,
So now deformities are a case for evolution?
We’re done as it seems that all you want to do is argue out of ignorance as to how we do things in the real world of science, not your fairy-tale version.On the backs? That is an appeal to authority. If the base assumptions are wrong a whole lot of people are wrong and barking up the wrong tree.
Your right as I shouldn’t have done that-- sorry.When out of arguments always follow Rule #1, attack the poster.
I don’t doubt that such structures can evolve that rapidly, but that this has been shown does not at all show that Darwinism (random mutations over lots of time) actually accounts for it.Professor Behe has shown that such structures can evolve within 20,000 years. See Behe and Snoke (2004). Yes, that is the same professor Behe.
Two problems here: again, rapid change is not a characteristic of Darwinian evolution, and, if the changes are truly random, how can one explain how the second iteration of flagella ended up just like the first? (That last is an assumption on my part; I’m not that familiar with the details of the experiment.)I would need to see the reference to the research paper that published this experiment. Of course, one possible explanation is that it only takes four days to evolve a flagellum from scratch.
This evades the problem. Darwinian evolution is a bottom-up phenomenon; genetic changes produce new organisms. It was Lamarck who proposed the alternative possibility that environmental pressures on the organism could effect genetic changes. That is a fundamentally different mechanism for evolution. The suggestion that Lamarck was right is now being taking seriously after over a century of derisive dismissal.“Acquired characteristics” can be either the result of inheritance or of a mutation(s). However, even acquired characteristics can still mutate after fertilization.