Is Darwin's Theory Of Evolution True?

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Bacteria have a built-in ability to transfer bits of genetic material between each other, including different types of bacteria.
Yes. This is just one of the ways variation is introduced into a population alone with mutations and recombination.
Bacteria found “in the wild,” have shown resistance to both natural and manmade antibacterials.
Mutations and HGT are both random. That meant they may, or may not, be useful at the time and that they may or may not be useful in future. That is the nature of random changes, their usefulness is also random. You will also find that some bacterial have increased vulnerability to those same natural and manmade antibacterials.

rossum
 
Not to worry. The Theory of Endless Comments on Evolution has been demonstrated as true.

Ed
 
Good 'ol Bradski. So, if I move from my backward hick small town to the big city, my IQ will automatically go up? I’ve seen that implied.

Best,
Ed

Stopped reading Doonesbury years ago.
 
Not to worry. The Theory of Endless Comments on Evolution has been demonstrated as true.
Sorry Ed, I can’t agree with you. “Endless” requires an infinite amount of time to test. There is however a great deal of supporting evidence. Enough to make science accept the theory, provisionally, unless and until a better theory is found. 😀

rossum
 
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Techno2000:
In the beginning there was NOTHING.
So, according to you, there was a time when God did not exist, since God is not “NOTHING”. Forgive me if I’m wrong, but isn’t that contrary to Catholic theology?

rossum
I mean nothing as in a barren earth.
 
I mean nothing as in a barren earth.
In other words you start with chemicals; the earth is made of chemicals. Animals are made of chemicals. Our bodies are made of chemicals. Whatever you are starting with, it is not nothing: you are starting with the ingredients of material bodies.

rossum
 
Adaptation is true.
Evolution (at least the darwinism definition of evolution) is wrong.
 
Great! Thanks. That’s very helpful.
rossum
November 16 |
ratio1:
It’s a theory, but it’s the best we’ve got scientifically. But there are some problems I can’t understand.

evolution (by this I mean one species evolve into another species, so bacterial resistance doesn’t count) has never been demonstrated in the laboratory (please correct me if i’m wrong on this)

See Observed Instances of Speciation and also Some More Observed Speciation Events.

rossum

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ratio1
November 16 |
It’s a theory, but it’s the best we’ve got scientifically. But there are some problems I can’t understand. evolution (by this I mean one species evolve into another species, so bacterial resistance doesn’t count) has never been demonstrated in the laboratory (please correct me if i’m wrong on this) …
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You could then claim that God is the cause, but you are doing that in amy case for the things that happen in a natural way. So you haven’t addd anything different but you are setting yourself up to look foolish if science does come up with a natural answer.
It will never be demonstrated that inanimate matter can naturally give rise to a living organism and that humans evolved from a microbe, so it is impossible to “look foolish” by not accepting these materialistic beliefs.
Evolution has very many scientific explanations. Much much more than either of us has of even being remotely able to understand even a tiny fraction of it. And that’s on the assumption that we would be interested in learning about it. In your case, that is not the case.
Naturalistic evolutionary explanations work fine as atheist folklore, but their reliance on a non-stop stream of baseless assumptions means that, as science, they are laughable. Theistic evolution can resort to divine intervention to account for the seemingly impossible, but that isn’t science either. So whichever way one approaches evolution, it isn’t scientific. This is why, even though I’m generally interested in scientific explanations for things, I’m not at all interested in evolutionary explanations, as they represent junk science.
 
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You are a fundamentalist in the true meaning of the term.
I don’t know what you mean by “fundamentalist”. Is it sinful to be a “fundamentalist” or is it virtuous? Is a “fundamentalist” a good Catholic or a bad Catholic? Can a “fundamentalist” Catholic make it to Heaven?
 
All life started as chemotrophs. Some chemotrophs evolved to eat other chemotrophs, thus becoming heterotrophs. Given a population of imperfect replicators in a resource-constrained situation then evolution will happen. If the supply of basic chemicals is constrained then there is an advantage to grabbing those chemicals from inside another organism.
Sounds scientific, but it’s just a story, as it’s all untestable conjecture. It’s not science, in other words.
 
However, never hear scientist reporting that E coli can evolve to become S aureus.
I heard that the Tooth Fairy actually evolved from a butterfly, but I don’t think this theory has been been confirmed in any experiment. Sounds feasible, though.
 
Chemotrophs are just one small part of God’s interconnected Ecosystem.You can’t just cherry pick one small piece to try an extrapolate and apply this to something that might of happen so-call billions years ago… its pure speculation.
Ye of little faith. If you end up being burnt at the stake as a an evo-heretic, you will have only yourself to blame. May the Lord have pity on your sorry soul.
 
There is however a great deal of supporting evidence. Enough to make science accept the theory, provisionally, unless and until a better theory is found.
The theory that all life on earth evolved from microbes doesn’t need evidence to be accepted. It’s an a priori position taken by the scientific community, which is a free-for-all for athesits.
 
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In other words you start with chemicals; the earth is made of chemicals. Animals are made of chemicals. Our bodies are made of chemicals. Whatever you are starting with, it is not nothing: you are starting with the ingredients of material bodies.
That’s right … in much the same way that sand castles are made of sand. No one denies that sand castles are the result of a fluke of nature.
 
You miss the point, ed … it’s all about glorified story-telling, not real science.
 
Bacteria have a “memory” and communicate rapidly. It is not a proof.
The fact that bacteria have memory and communicate means that they can survive better. The fact that their genetic material changes and that gives them opportunity to fit in environment better means that they evolve.
 
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