As you wish, buffalo,
Yes, necessarily the fusion occurred in our line, not that of the chimpanzees. We’re the ones with the fused chromosome, not them. But the chimp chromosomes 2a and 2b still line up right next to each other in our chromosome 2, and require some kind of explanation. They’ve been visibly identical well before genome sequencing was available, using nothing more than staining techniques. This, by the way, was a prediction of evolutionary theory. Given a common ancestor, we expect that it would have had 48 chromosomes because all of the other primates close to us had 48 chromosomes, and so we should have a fusion region. When we looked for it, we found it.
There is no such prediction from creationism. The similarities and fusion region from that perspective are nothing more than divine whimsy. Or, perhaps, a deliberate act of subterfuge, created in order to mislead us about our ancestry.
That’s really bizarre. It’s not the case, either, but it’s so far wrong that the first thing that strikes me is how bizarre it is. Even Answers in Genesis
acknowledges a 95 percent similarity. You have to count the indels to get that low, however. So long as you’re just looking at protein-encoding DNA, it’s still 98.6.
That particular adaptation is nothing more than controlling the order of offspring by sex. While the results are quite visible, the actual change is very minor. The first eggs yield larger offspring. Large scale evolution, such as the transition from scales to feathers, has been seen to have occurred over the course of tens of millions of years. Calling that speed glacial is nearly hyperbolic.
Yes, a better measure. The more we know about biological and molecular processes, the better we can measure evolution. Seriously, they’ve got formulas and everything. Laughter may make the heart lighter, but it doesn’t change basic reasoning. The closer we look, the more detailed the image we observe, the better we understand.
Actually, that’s not the case, either. I wonder if you haven’t perhaps confused your origins paradigms. Creationism is the one that represents a one time event. Evolution is not. It has not stopped. It’s been an active process for billions of years, encompassing millions of speciation events, and is still continuing. It is observable to all palaeontologists. It makes predictions that have been checked and found to confirm the theory, such as the existence of a fusion region in one of our chromosomes. Other than religious objections, it is entirely uncontroversial.
The science that allows us to infer common ancestry is the exact same science used to demonstrate paternity in court. Case closed, so to speak.
This is an example of something I noted earlier in this thread. While ID would like to be able to perform such calculations, as it would like to be able to present explanations, it doesn’t. These formulas you’d like to think could possibly some day be performed cannot be performed today. This is Dembski’s thing, and while he’s been promising a theoretical framework to do so for many years, he still hasn’t delivered. As the entire “information” argument he presents is incoherent, this isn’t surprising.
Allow me to point out that by the tenets of creationism, that rock is just as surely designed as my computer. This is Paley’s nemesis. While we need only assume that humans created the watch, he has to assume that his god made the beach.
One of the things we use to infer deliberate design is a knowledge of the design criteria being used along with evidence of an actual, living designer. We don’t have that for anything other than living organisms, and especially, we don’t have that for gods. If we were to use design criteria that we ourselves consider plausible, we’d never end up with a human. Our eyes are wired backwards, for one thing. We’ve got nerves that do a meters-long loop that’s easily explained if we assume that evolution was constrained by the location of pre-existing structures, a constraint that can’t reasonably be imputed onto a god mixing it all up from scratch.
As ever, Jesse