P
pepipop
Guest
That’s the crux of my scepticism re: evolution, ‘humans ARE considered to be apes’, not all of it, i.e. prehistoric man and the human timeline and other species timelines - but the fact humans were thrown in along with other ‘primates’, in the first place.I’m surprised that Dr. Lightner played so fast and loose with the genetics terminology. She has used “chromosomal rearrangement” and “centric fusions” as if they are indistinguishable. They are not, making this paragraph a little suspect. A centric fusion is just one type of rearrangement. There are also deletions, translocations, etc. I don’t know all the papers about “chromosomal variations which were not eliminated by selection” to which she is referring; therefore, I can neither agree nor disagree with what she is saying about Dr. Miller’s ideas on chromosome 2 fusion. Bottom line: centric fusions may still result in a new species.
Where exactly did Miller say that humans “descended from apes”? In what paper or lecture does Dr. Miller not consider the current science? Lightner never mentions which paper or lecture of Dr. Miller’s that she is talking about. The one footnoted video does not contain the first statement and doesn’t support her second. I guess she thinks this tact makes it easier for lazy people to agree with her.
I find it hilarious that Lightner says here that “[Miller] makes the ludicrous claim that the only way creationists can respond to this evidence is: ‘That’s the way the designer made it’” when the fact of the matter is that she does exactly that!
Ummm, humans **are **considered to be apes.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ape
Initially, because apes and men walked upright, used their hands, etc… followed by the controversial DNA chromosome 2 evidence. As genetics is not a very advanced science ATM and the evolutionists, I assume, would wish the DNA analysis to match their initial clinical observations, it could be seen to fit that purpose. Just my opinion.
Time will tell if it is correct.
Why would God require humans, in his evolutionary design, to be derived from the same common ancestor as apes, which ‘common ancestor’ needless to say has never been discovered. I suppose, it could be said why not, but it does not seem to fit well considering animals were created separately from man, in Genesis.
Could God possibly just have created upright animals that could use their hands.
*The difficulty with this idea is that there is no obvious advantage to having 46 chromosomes instead of 48. What matters is our DNA, not how it happens to be packaged.
It is possible that there was some advantage to fusing the chromosomes together. For example, maybe a new gene was created at the fusion point. Or maybe genes that were shut off before were now turned on in the new fused chromosomes.
There isn’t any evidence of these kinds of things. And even if there were, a designer who can easily put in the 60 million or so differences between humans and chimpanzees should be able to accomplish whatever results a chromosome fusion gives more elegantly than sticking two ape chromosomes together.
Also, when you look at the fusion point, you can see that the DNA isn’t exactly what you would expect if a fusion happened in the last 10,000 or even 100,000 years. The results look more like an event that happened millions of years ago.*
science.kqed.org/quest/2008/05/12/chromosome-fusion-chance-or-design/