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Creation vs Evolution

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:lol: @ Curt
Exactly what I was thinking when I read this thread.
We've had similar threads here before and I joined in the discussion. In the end everybody stays with his own views so I've decided these discussions are pointless.
It is fun to read every now and then though. ;)
 
Originally posted by CurtSibling
I know what makes sense to me...and it ISN'T some big white haired guy creating our species over night...
:goodjob:



Well if you're not going to post any "evidence" get out of the thread! :jesus:
 
This arguement should be discussed one on one in private messages. That's what I'm doing with Fallen Angel Lord.
 
Man. I miss out on this thread ONE day and the whole debate goes to, er, heaven! :D

Refutations:

TYRUS argues [I don't know why] that the early chapters of Genesis were written by Adam and his descendents. Impossible, since early man did not know how to write. This was discovered by Mesopotamia some 10 or 7 thousand years ago. The age of recognizable humanity stretches back 1.5 million years IIRC.

TYRUS argues that Neanderthals were not hulking cavemen. Credible scientists have already acknowledged this as fact. The stereotype was due to an inept scientist drawing this conclusion after seeing some skeletons riddled with bone disease, giving him the idea that they were all stooped and deformed. Bad science! ;) It IS true that on the average our brains are larger, especially in the areas assumed to control abstract thought, and we all know who'd do better on an SAT :D

TYRUS, again, argues that the fact that the Bible was preserved for so long is proof of God. I'd be interested to hear what you think of the Hindu ancient texts. They are several times as old as the New Testament, and many times longer [need several books to fit them all in]. It looks like Vishnu has the advantage over Jehova here, wouldn't you say? ;)

FREDLC does a great job debunking the idea that Moses could not be a microbiologist, as he'd just invent new words for what he saw, just as our modern scientists do. FL2 calls this a "pile of sound and fury". How so? Do you have any argument now that conclusively shows Moses could NOT have explained biology to his fellows? How is Moses different from Hume, Pasteur, Curie, Einstein, and so on?

FEARLESS argues: If Evolutionists can cite other Evos, Biblical Literates should be able to cite the Bible. Not necessarily true, as the Bible is a single source and most scientists are working independently on different projects gathering different data. One data sample can corroborate or disprove another - the Bible cannot corroborate or disprove the Bible.

FEARLESS argues: "Now back this up by citing a Biblical quote about plain ole History that research has proven inaccurate."

There were no researchers following Jesus to check up on his miracles and make sure they were not hoaxes, and there were no historical texts documenting these miracles besides the Bible and the Gospels, which are obviously slanted. There ARE historical events in the Bible which logic and science say MUST have been hoaxes [word-of-mouth tall tales] of some sort - for example, the parting of the Red Sea.

PERFECTION argues: "Well for starters Pi does not equal 3"

Ha! :lol: You're right, I should have remembered that!

FEARLESS argues: the whale was in a lower sediment layer, and thus the conclusion that evolution took place is illogical.

Illogical yourself! First of all, you're no scientist and neither is anyone else here. We make arguments by posting the research of CREDIBLE SCIENTISTS, not our own speculations.

As to your objection, ever heard of a phenomena called "subduction"? The earth is not a dinner platter... get with it please ;) .

FEARLESS argues: anything from TalkOrigins is crap.

I hate to copy from your diatribes, but "your say-so don't make it true". Please post a site debunking TO as discreditable science. And it can't be a religious site! :D Must be another credible scientists debunking it or else it does not count.

FEARLESS: ":Smirks: What about the other basis? You know, Mutation?"

I don't see how you can still use this argument. The rate of mutations in an ordinary cell has already been established, and it's more than enough to account for evolution - even taking into account that ONE sex cell must be mutated out of ALL the cells of the animal's body - the other mutations are worthless.

The two forces work together - mutations [and the natural diversity of any animal genome] work to provide the VARIETY from which natural selection [through death] culls the BEST ADAPTED genes to reproduce the oftenest [longest, safest life in the environment]. They're small factors BUT they work exponentially, they have a LOT of time, and they work FASTER when new niches are opened up for the taking because there's no competition and animals reproduce more often [that's why natural disasters like the meteor strike are followed by enormous diversity in the fossil record].

FEARLESS: "Uh, gee, boss, don't you think asking eohippus to birth a mesohippus foal that is about the same size as the mother is a tad much in the way of credulence?"

They don't progress DIRECTLY but GRADUALLY. False argument and you know it. How do you expect the average WWI era woman to give birth to a baby today? It'd be a stretch, don't you think, seeing as the average height then for men in the army [the taller ones too!] was some five feet two or three? And that's just better nutrition, not evolution.

In a side note, I can't believe that Fearless and Fallen are even ARGUING over whether the Ark existed : it's a complete impossibility. Fearless, care to calculate how much space and food two of every animal on earth would need? I know the roaming grounds of a tiger are 25 square miles and it can eat a few tons a week of food. And don't even start about the billion or so insect species out there. Diseases too? Remember there are some parasites that live especially off humans. That means between them the Noahs [don't know their proper name] would be infested. Cozy voyage. Not to mention that it would have had to rain, as I've said, 700 feet or more a day to even get CLOSE to the top of Mt. Everest [to get rid of all the evil, immoral Nepalese that an all knowing, omnipotent, future-foreseeing God placed there somehow without either making them good people or foreseeing that they would turn bad]. The whole Ark story is a myth probably cooked up to explain some natural disaster. I could apply the same logic to any other "miracle" in either Testament you care to name. Go ahead.

Also I'd like to note that Fearless did not even RESPOND to post 304. I'd like to see him do it.
 
Originally posted by FearlessLeader2
This younger whale (inexplicably found in a deeper layer, and therefore actually older), had the ability to move by vertically flexing its spine, like dolphins do today. Cetaceans that were younger than it did not have this ability, but modern one do. Apparently, the whale gained, lost, and then re-gained, its ability to swim during the course of its evolution. Now I ask you, how does an animal benefit from losing a highly beneficial trait like movement? Why would Natural Slelction favor such a change?
Sure it could, Some cetaceans do not need fast movement (Like Manatees) and not having that ability would save on calories used. It later evolved into having that ability again when a species required longer traveling, it lost its ability due to NatSel, and Later regianed it

Originally posted by FearlessLeader2
Yeah, and Eohippus to Meso hippus to Equus is NOT A GRADUAL PROGRESSION! Crimony! Do I have to BEG for a valid argument here?
Why isn't it part of a gradual progression?
 
Originally posted by FearlessLeader2
FredLC-
Very nice pile of sound and fury, and like its literary predecessor, it too signifies nothing, except perhaps that you have NOT done a search on Biological Species Concept yet, or have and did not like what you found.

When you are willing to address this one point, and quit blowing smoke, I'll get back to you.

Fearlessleader2, despite it is impossible to irritate me over Internet… it is possible to provide some amusement of masochistic nature. You are being the most successful person I ever met in doing so.

I am the one that is piling insignificant fury? As I said before, your perception of reality is rather unique, specially considering the enormously arrogant nature of posts such as this one of yours, that not only attacks me personally and directly, but also arbitrarily refuses to try refuting the several points I made, due to hiding behind a single one of the many, and one that happen to be quite secondary to all my line of arguing at that, since I never claimed to base myself in specialized biology, and in fact have being spontaneously claiming my lack of expertise in that discipline.

But I know that this sort of rationalization won’t work with you. Once you found a safe spot – my so called “dodging” of a subject – you will stick to it like glue and refuse to talk about the many other unrelated points, in particular my very descriptive demonstration of a biblical contradiction.

Well, The only reason why I didn’t perform a search for your proposed theme is because I really considered it quite unimportant in the big picture of my line of arguing. I had no intention in actually take the trouble to read about biology to debate here.

But since my masochistic amusement with your unbelievable posture has grown large enough, I actually took the time to do so. I performed a search in the yahoo engine. The terms I used were Biological+Species+Concept. I invite you to repeat the experiment and check for my results.

Well, dozens of pages were made available. In yet another concession to your demands, I willfully ignored anything .com, .org, .gov, and I certainly did not look in your so hatred “talkorigins”. For the purposes of this research, I have limited my acceptance only to .edu websites.

Thus, you were successful in convincing me to give up all forms of compilation and convenience, and actually take the time to read papers that are designed for people that specialize in the discipline.

But I didn’t stop at it. I myself filtered any paper which’s specific object is to support or analyze the theory of evolution, as they would undoubtedly be painted as biased, and accepted only the ones which’s focus is the conceptual analyses of the term “species”.

I really assume that even you will have to admit that I have being quite faithful to your own criteria of acceptance on this research, so we can really avoid arguments in the sense of “those people are biased as they are part of the international evolution conspiracy”.

That said, let’s look at the links.

Here is the first one:

This one is very simple and only brings several approaches on the definition of species. Despite it’s not an exhaustive line of arguing, I think this one is nice as a starting point for my purposes. The major merit of this link is to easily and quite visually demonstrate that, unlike what you state, the notion that species can be defined as “individuals capable of reproduction” is not being really contested, but only being considered incomplete when we look ate the subject of study under the light of multidisciplinary rigor, being reasonably valid only when you approach it by a purely biological angle.

Now it's time for the second link:

This one is just a small explanation. I wouldn’t have posted it to avoid being repetitive, but the matter about the difficulty in defining species through fossils in a short paragraph made me change my mind. I though that putting this to grab attention here would be interesting, and grow expectative for my later confrontation of the theme.

But my next links are actual analyses, not just small explanations. I really would like to comment all of them entirely but it would be too long and besides, they pretty much argue for themselves rather emphatically. I’ll just comment a few selected pieces as I make the texts available through links.

Now in the 3th we can really beguin to have fun…

The first that I found and the one that I find more interesting, as it follows a quite sequential line of arguing, I think this deserved more deep comments than the ones I plan to make, and certainly, to be fully commented, not only partially. Of course, however, that future debate on the other aspects of this link is rather welcome and will be gladly carried out as necessity presents itself.

The Species Concept
Biologists normally use what is called a "biological species concept". It is framed in different ways. At the organism level, it is defined as a set of actually or potentially interbreeding organisms: for example, all Homo sapiens can interbreed successfully with one another, but not with any other species.
At the genetic level, one talks of a gene pool: the set of genes that are contained within an interbreeding population. Thus all members of a species contribute to/are part of a common gene pool, which thus contains all the genetic diversity within the species.
However, in the real world, it is time-consuming and expensive to make the observations of organisms in their real habitat that would allow us to say with confidence that such-and-such a set of organisms really is a species. And in the fossil world, it is impossible.
So instead, most biologists and all paleontologists make a good-faith guess about the boundaries of the set of organisms they propose to name a species. Typically, the species is defined on the morphology it has, not on the genetics and behavior that is specified in the biological species concept. And when we use morphology, geologists and biologists are much on the same level, except that the biologists have soft parts as well as hard parts to work with. However, there are problems even for biologists working with living organisms:

Follow a series of cases that presents difficulties for the classical definition of species.

Basically, what is said here, and looking at the following examples, is that the classical definition of species is insufficient for two reasons:

1 – The existence of forms of reproduction that does not match the necessity of intercourse, such as the asexual:

This sounds reasonable, as it is clearly an refinement of the previous affirmative, which was shortsighted by only considering superior animal forms of life when developing the concept.

I say refinement, because the mediate premise – that the descendents will have a genetic material and general characteristics that are compatible with that of the ascendants, and able to reproduce in similar fashion. I can, however, gladly do as much as accept this as a complete correction, without having my stance threatened.

As anyone can see in this post, the only reason why I was dragged to this tangential discussion is because FearlessLeader2 said that “new species were being created only by a very contested definition of species”.

Well, if instead of saying that species are the animals that can reproduce between themselves, we adopt the definition of this link – that species are recognized by the morphological similarities between individuals – than we still don’t have a concept that dismiss the fact that evolution is happening, slowly, as we speak.

2 – There are animals that cannot technically fit the most classical definition of species, but still are able of reproduce and generate descendents with variant levels of fertility:

Well, this is probably the greatest support for evolution that I ever read in a discussion. Species that have enough similarities to be compatible, and yet, enough differences to not fit static definitions. All the talk about missing links is completely comprehensible around these lines. The way species grow apart is by cumulative changes that will gradually set the variations apart, by diminishing their degree of compatibility.

For biologists, species and populations are frozen: they are either species or they are not, and the morphological, genetic, and geographic separation between species can almost always be seen as a sharp boundary, easy to establish. Biologists typically don't bother to worry about species through time: why should they? They deal with living things.
But in paleontology we deal with time, and since evolution has happened, taxonomic boundaries must somewhere be crossed as one species evolves into another. The first bird hatched out of a dinosaur's egg, though it obviously was not much different from its parents, and it found plenty of contemporaries as potential mates, at about the same level of morphology that it had.
What would we do with transitional forms if we found them? We would have to make some sort of arbitrary distinction that was never there in the original populations. Archaeopteryx was classified as a bird because it has feathers, but every other character is "dinosaurian". (And we have just found a new Australopithecus that appears to have been making and using tools, a behavior that we had always thought was a character of Homo.)
(...)

The spirit of this argument, and of what follows, as it can be easily attested by whoever takes the time to read it, is also a complete validation of evolutionary ideas (It was I that have made those bold highlights, just to make it even more visible at first glimpse).

It states, quite reasonably I must add, that as evolution is such a slow process, and as intermediary forms are, from it’s immediate antecessor, virtually indistinguishable, that to isolate determined type of animal in a determinate group called “species X” might be arbitrary, as in fact it’s not different enough from that antecessor to be classified as different.

It states, than that evolution process does not accept isolated compartments, and that the evolution follows a too linear path and that making that kind of classification can be arbitrary if not done very carefully.

to be continued in next post due to size
 
continuation

We cannot define fossil species using the genetic definition of a species. But then that's also true of most of the species that biologists define among living organisms. Instead, most biologists, and all paleontologists, use a morphological definition: a species is defined as a group of individuals that have some reliable characters distinguishing them from all other species. In biology, the characters can include behavioral or biochemical features, or morphological characters such as soft-part anatomy or coloration that are practically never found in the fossil record. Nevertheless, the procedures are practically identical, only differing in that the suites of potential characters used to define species are more limited in fossil material.
A paleontologist cannot look at the living creatures, so must interpret species on the basis of paleontological remains only. So there are potential problems. This does not mean that the problems are so difficult that a paleontologist cannot separate out species, but it does mean careful thought.
If you only collect a few specimens of a widely variable clam species, you might think you had several species. However, as you collect more and more specimens, you realize that in fact you are filling in the "gaps" between the original specimens. So you have only one species.
Taking material from another lecture, this actually happened with species of the dinosaur Triceratops. After 80 years of collecting, 30 species of Triceratops had been described, each one slightly different from the others. Eventually someone realized that all these "species" had been collected from only two counties in Wyoming. In fact, it was ONE species, with large and small males, large and small females, juveniles, and so on....
If you collect many specimens of scallops from a particular seashore, you will probably find that there is a range of numbers of ribs on the shell. In the example I showed, I believe the number ranged from 15 to 19, with an average of 17. Futhermore, most specimens had 17 ribs, and those with 15 and 19 were few in number. It is obvious that this is a sample from one species.

(…)
This is the last comment I’ll make about this link, and it’s just a small one. It estates very clearly that the difficulties in the interpretation of a partially complete fossil record are, despite considerable, not as decisive as the creationists try to paint them. And that the biggest of it lies in the sense that the lack of all possible intermediary forms may generate errors and arbitrary classifications in the process of enunciating two different species, but in any way threaten the value of inference in behalf of the existence of an natural development called evolution…

And all this, fearless, from people that are not from the “insane” talkorigins.com, but from a much cherished .edu website…

And here I go, with yet ANOTHER .edu Link… now the 4th.

This is the smaller and simpler of the explicative links I gathered, and was pretty much covered in the previous link and comments. I wanted to keep it only as a display that the previous opinion is not an isolated one.

And the last one of those I arbitrarily pick, among the many others I could even being so condescending to your many requirements:


Despite this one could be used to again support many of what is above, I’ll only bother to reproduce the first part of the argument here, what is quite enough to put in perspective the value of the arguments that we evolutionists are being exposed to here.

Nonetheless, I repeat yet again that I am all in favor of discussions on the entirety of the links, that I wont post in here just because of size issues.

Since Aristotle, species have been paradigmatic examples of natural kinds with essences. An essentialist approach to species makes perfect sense in a pre Darwinian context. God created species and an eternal essence for each species. After God's initial creation, each species is a static, non evolving group of organisms. Darwinism offers a different view of species. Species are the result of speciation. No qualitative feature — morphological, genetic, or behavioral — is considered essential for membership in a species. Despite this change in biological thinking, many philosophers still believe that species are natural kinds with essences. Let us start with a brief introduction to kind essentialism and then turn to the biological reasons why species fail to have essences.
Kind essentialism has a number of tenets. One tenet is that all and only the members of a kind have a common essence. A second tenet is that the essence of a kind is responsible for the traits typically associated with the members of that kind. For example, gold's atomic structure is responsible for gold's disposition to melt at certain temperatures. Third, knowing a kind's essence helps us explain and predict those properties typically associated with a kind. The application of any of these tenets to species is problematic. But to see the failure of essentialism we need only consider the first tenet.
Biologists have had a hard time finding biological traits that occur in all and only the members of a species. Even such pre Darwinian essentialists as Linnaeus could not locate the essences of species (Ereshefsky 2001). Evolutionary theory explains why. A number of forces conspire against the universality and uniqueness of a trait in a species (Hull 1965). Suppose a genetically based trait were found in all the members of a species. The forces of mutation, recombination and random drift can cause the disappearance of that trait in a future member of the species. All it takes is the disappearance of a trait in one member of a species to show that it is not essential. The universality of a biological trait in a species is fragile.
Suppose, nevertheless, that a trait occurs in all the members of a species. That trait is the essence of a species only if it is unique to that species. Yet organisms in different species often have common characteristics. Again, biological forces work against the uniqueness of a trait within a single species. Organisms in related species inherit similar genes and developmental programs from their common ancestors. These common stores of developmental resources cause a number of similarities in the organisms of different species. Another source of similar traits in different species is parallel evolution. Species frequently live in similar habitats with comparable selection pressures. Those selection pressures cause the prominence of similar traits in more than one species. The parallel evolution of opposable thumbs in primates and pandas is an example.
The existence of various evolutionary forces does not rule out the possibility of a trait occurring in all and only the members of a species. But consider the conditions such a trait must satisfy. A species" essential trait must occur in all the members of a species for the entire life of that species. Moreover, if that trait is to be unique to that species, it cannot occur in any other species for the entire existence of life on this planet. The temporal parameters that species essentialism must satisfy are quite broad. The occurrence of a biological trait in all and only the members of a species is an empirical possibility. But given current biological theory, that possibility is unlikely.
Other arguments have been mustered against species essentialism. Hull (1965) contends that species have vague boundaries and that such vagueness is incompatible with the existence of species specific essences. According to Hull, essentialist definitions of natural kinds require strict boundaries between those kinds. But the boundaries between species are vague. In all but a few cases, speciation is a long and gradual process such that there is no principled way to draw a precise boundary between one species and the next. As a result, species cannot be given essentialist definitions. (Hull's argument against species essentialism is very similar to one of Locke's (1894[1975], III, vi) arguments against kind essentialism.)
Sober (1980) raises a different objection to species essentialism. He illustrates how essentialist explanations have been replaced by evolutionary ones. Essentialists explain variation within a species as the result of interference in the ontogenetic development of a species" organisms. Organisms have species specific essences, but interference often prevents the manifestations of those essences. Contemporary geneticists offer a different explanation of variation within a species. They cite the gene frequencies of a species as well as the evolutionary forces that affect those frequencies. No species specific essences are posited. Contemporary biology can explain variation within a species without positing a species" essence. So according to Sober, species essentialism has become theoretically superfluous.
In a pre Darwinian age, species essentialism made sense. Such essentialism, however, is out of step with contemporary evolutionary theory. Evolutionary theory provides its own methods for explaining variation within a species. It tells us that the boundaries between species are vague. And it tells us that a number of forces conspire against the existence of a trait in all and only the members of a species. From a biological perspective, species essentialism is no longer a plausible position
(...)

Enough said.

Now that I took the time and the work to exhaustively address the point you adhered to in such an adamantine manner, no matter the fact that is incidental and secondary to my entire proposition of discussion, I really encourage you to address those matters, and I also want to remember you to DO confront the other points that you refused to analyze while this one was not faced by me.

Regards :).
 
I think this thread is past its lifespan. You know that when the posts get long, dull, technical, flaming, and way off topic.

So who won? ;) :lol:

CG
 
Umm FL is hopeless. The horse link did not only show possible intermediates, it showed the complete branch of horses which we have fossils for every member on that branch.

You know, there's a reason they don't teach creation in school anymore, because science has proven that evolution has more ground to it. Believe in what you want, its impossible to convince you, even if I brought you a fossil of an intermediate, you'd probably find some way to deny that.
 
Yes, I reckon the debate's about over. Sorry FL2 ;) you can go ahead and rebut my posts, but I'm done with this thread.
 
Originally posted by Fallen Angel Lord
Okay, we have a link now. I have lots of books with examples of intermediates but I can't paste books now can I. Here are some links anyways:

http://www.txtwriter.com/Backgrounders/Evolution/EVpage16.html

http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/horses/horse_evol.html -- Detailed hourse evolution

The first URL you list is worthless. The author stuck his/her neck out only on probability and aptly demonstrated a lack of understanding of probability.

The 2nd URL concerns horse evolution. The following is my response.

Actually, the fossil record of the horse fits in well with the Creationist model. It is nushy, it is variation around a mean with some devolution (i.e. loss of genetic information.

Epihippus, Orohippus, and Haplohippus most likely would have been able to interbreed and should be considered subspecies of the same species.

Marsh and T. Huxley, anxious to show Darwinian evolution from the fossil record, propagandized that Hyracotherium, which they called eohippus, was the ancestor of the modern day horse.

Owen, who discovered Hyracotherium, did not see any horse in it. In fact he noted that the fossil very closely resembled the modern day hyraxes (Damans, rock rabbits). evolutionists Kerkut and Nillson concurred. Mcfadden, 1994, disagrees citing possible differences in the mouths nerve system. Whether they were Hyraxes or not, there is no reason to believe they were ancestors to the modern horse. Curiously misssing from these horse evolution scenarios is a fossil contempory to Hyracotherium and that looked a lot more like a horse and was three times the size of Hyracotherium.

Niles Eldredge called the transitional series used for the horses:
"Lamentable" The American Museum of Natural History no longer displays their long standing horse series display as an example of evolution in action. Their current display on horses is one of of diversity of horses overlapping through time, a very bushy picture. They even show a horse 3 times the size of hyracotherium as a contemporary of Hyractherium.

Dr. Colin Patterson had the horse series removed from display at the British Museum in London, despite pressure and complaints from many evolutionists. Dr. David Raup had eohippus removed from the horse series display at his museum in Chicago.

Evolutionist and Professor G.A. Kerkut stated in his book 'Implications of Evolution', concerning the horse series:

"The evolution of the horse provides one of the keystones in the teaching of evolutionary doctrine, though the actual story depends on who is telling it and when the story is being told. In fact, one could easily discuss the evolution of the story of the evolution of the horse."

Heribert Nilsson writes (Synthetische Artbildung): "The family tree of the horse is beautiful and continuous ONLY IN THE TEXTBOOKS [Emphasis mine]. In the reality provided by the results of research it is put together in three parts, of which only the last can be described as including the horses. The forms of the first part are just as much little horses as the present day damans are horses. The construction of the whole Cenozoic family tree of the horse is therefore a very artificial one, since it is put together from non-equivalent parts, and cannot therefore be a continuous transformation series."

The remaining horse's mentioned in the Hunts' FAQ (i.e. one toed and 3 toed) are all variation of the same species around a mean. Evolutionists have never demonstrated that these horses can not interbreed. Many of them are known to overlap and coexist at the same time and this overlapping may very well greatly exceed current estimates based on currently known fossils. The variations can easily be accounted for per the creationists model as natural selections of existing traits plus information losses caused by migration to diverse geological areas, isolation, and ecological changes over time.

Feeding habits, environmental changes and genetic limits, can account for all horse size variation. Variations in sizes of living horses today are compatible to those of all horses of the past. Long term trends in diet changes can also account for the tooth evolution observed in the fossil record. It is now known that the presence of certain proteins can trigger the observed transformation of molars.

Three toed and one toed horses still coexist today.

Stephen Jay Gould points out the existence of small three toed horses that died out in America allegedly 1mya. Our current horses are the survivers of Old World stock. Gould points out that had it been the other way around, the net evolution of the horse would be zero. To me, the horse evolution series is merely micro-changes and that evolutionists only cling to it because they simply have nothing better to offer and need it for propaganda purposes to influence or convert the gullible.

Ultimately, the evolutionists horse series has been much ado about nothing. As Kerkut pointed out, one can talk more about the evolution of the stories of horse evolution than one can talk about horse evolution itself.
 
Fallen Angel writes: "The point is in scientific texts of evolution texts you can always find the scientists can justify themselves with earlier evidence from other works and then follow it up with his own findings. ..."

This is usally true in science, but for evolution, it seems to be just the opposite. Evolutionists often find themselves explaining away the evolutionary claims of their predecessors while trying desperately to put out new evolutionary ideas to promote evolution. But if you ahve any examples of an evolutionists justifying their work from earlier findings, please present a few examples.

Fallen Angel writes: "Observations have been made in the field and every test concludes that the basis of evolution--survival of the fittest is true."

This is pure nonsense, evolutionists have already conceded that Darwins' "survival of fittest" is nothing more than a tautology and has no merit whatsoever, logically speaking of course.

"And you can't deny that snakes evolved from lizards, they still have tiny leg joints in their hip areas. I don't see how you could deny the evolution of horeses either, in fact, there are detailed descriptions coming down to the modern horse over 60 million years."

Snakes and lizards may well share a common ancestry. The loss of legs is devolution and it fits well into the Creationist model of origins.

Fallen Angel writes: "And at leat macroevolution has microevolution as a basis, ... "

Do you read anything that is posted here. I thoroughly refuted this concept on page 11 or 12. If you wish to insist that micro-evolution can account for macroeolution, then please give examples. I know I can give examples that demonstrate micro-evolution can not account for Macroevolution.
 
Judt because something can Interbreed doesn't mean its the same species.

And the principle of Evolution is gradual change not abrupt speciation.

What about size differences, the horse liniage grew over time.

Genetic mutations DO occur it has been thoroughly proven by microbiology and they can bringabout NEW genetic material.
 
Originally posted by civ1-addict
:lol: @ Curt
Exactly what I was thinking when I read this thread.
We've had similar threads here before and I joined in the discussion. In the end everybody stays with his own views so I've decided these discussions are pointless.
It is fun to read every now and then though. ;)

But not all posts and opinions are equal. of all who posted on this thread, my posts dealt directly with the scientific evidence regarding origins. My answers were non-flaming and detailed and specific.

The posts by the evolutionists tended to be declarations of their beliefs in evolution without any scientific substantiation, as well as expressions of their incredulity toward the bible. The best they could muster was to mine some Faq's on the internet and say, look at this. And I have even responded to these by providing valid criticisms based strictly on the scientific evidence. Their non-responses and responses tells me they do not know the science involved, that they have accepted evolution simply because it is neccessary for their world view, or simply because they have been told by alleged authority fgures that evolution is true.

To call this discussion pointless is to be mindless (e.g. a lack of discernment) concerning what actually was posted.
 
Originally posted by Perfection
Judt because something can Interbreed doesn't mean its the same species.

And the principle of Evolution is gradual change not abrupt speciation.

What about size differences, the horse liniage grew over time.

Genetic mutations DO occur it has been thoroughly proven by microbiology and they can bringabout NEW genetic material.

Concerning species, as I have said, there is no legitimate scientific definition for species. Your statement reinforces my statement.

As for gradual change, yes, this is the prediction of evolution. However there are no examples from the fossil record of gradual change ever accomplishing a major morphological transformation. The fossil record is clearly one of abrupt appearance followed by stasis. This alone refutes Evolution and is precisely what one would expect from the Creation Model.

There is NO gradual increase in the horses height found in the fossil record. The oldest known horse stood at 5 feet tall and todays shetland ponies grow to about 3 feet tall.

Please provide your examples of mutations accounting for major morphological transformations. Genetic mutations that cause morphologcal changes are always detrmnetal with very few exceptions. The exceptions are micro changes and always produce varaition around a mean, unless of course, devolution takes place.

The following will give you some incite into the magnitude of the problem evolutionists face, and this is only the tip of the iceberg that sinks evolution.

"The frequency with which a single non-harmful mutation is known to occur is 1 in 1000.The probability that two favorable mutations will occur is 1x10e3 x 10e3 = 1x10e6, 1 in a million. Studies of Drosophila have revealed that large numbers of genes are involved in the formation of separate structural elements. There are as many as 30 - 40 genes involved in a single wing structure.It is most unlikely that fewer than five genes could ever be involved in the formation of even the simplest new structure, previously unknown to the organism. The probability now becomes one in one thousand million million. We already know that mutations in living cells appear once in ten million to once in one hundred thousand million. It is evident that the probability of five favourable mutations occurring within the a single life cycle of an organism is effectively zero.

Let us consider the alternative possibility that five mutations occur spontaneously within a large population of interbreeding organisms. They will have to be brought together eventually in a single organism, if they are to generate the structure of a new level of complexity, favourable for natural selection.

According to our definition, each of the genes we are considering is due to a mutation which will give rise to hitherto unknown
structure of additional complexity once it meets the other four genes in the fertilized egg cell. It would be indeed be surprising of any [one alone] of these mutations could, at the same time, modulate an existing structure in the manner that it would be selected favourably by natural selection. It is only when the five genes find themselves together that a selective advantage will emerge. They are more likely to be present independently, within the population, as so called neutral genes. ... In the absence of selective advantage, the probability of the five genes coming together simultaneously within a single organism is extremely small." [about i in 1x10e15].

"Improbability increases at an enormous rate as the number of genes Increases."

Evolutionist and cell biologist E.J. Ambrose, "The Nature and Origin of the Biological World", Ellis Horwood, 1982, pp 120-121, 123.
 
Tyrus88. Perhaps you should explore the merit in accepting something simply because it is necessary for a world view. The way things are today, it is impossible to live entirely by the scientifically proven facts. To do so would be contrary to civilization. Alot of these debates hover around such cognitive blocks. People argue for what seems right, yet cannot support their arguments logically. They carry a socially useful illusion.

Which belief is better for humanity: evolutionism or creationism?
 
Originally posted by Tyrus88
"The frequency with which a single non-harmful mutation is known to occur is 1 in 1000.The probability that two favorable mutations will occur is 1x10e3 x 10e3 = 1x10e6, 1 in a million. Studies of Drosophila have revealed that large numbers of genes are involved in the formation of separate structural elements. There are as many as 30 - 40 genes involved in a single wing structure.It is most unlikely that fewer than five genes could ever be involved in the formation of even the simplest new structure, previously unknown to the organism. The probability now becomes one in one thousand million million. We already know that mutations in living cells appear once in ten million to once in one hundred thousand million. It is evident that the probability of five favourable mutations occurring within the a single life cycle of an organism is effectively zero.

Let us consider the alternative possibility that five mutations occur spontaneously within a large population of interbreeding organisms. They will have to be brought together eventually in a single organism, if they are to generate the structure of a new level of complexity, favourable for natural selection.

According to our definition, each of the genes we are considering is due to a mutation which will give rise to hitherto unknown
structure of additional complexity once it meets the other four genes in the fertilized egg cell. It would be indeed be surprising of any [one alone] of these mutations could, at the same time, modulate an existing structure in the manner that it would be selected favourably by natural selection. It is only when the five genes find themselves together that a selective advantage will emerge. They are more likely to be present independently, within the population, as so called neutral genes. ... In the absence of selective advantage, the probability of the five genes coming together simultaneously within a single organism is extremely small." [about i in 1x10e15].

"Improbability increases at an enormous rate as the number of genes Increases."
THIS IS UTTER CRAP!!!
It takes ONE SLIGHT change to change the entirity of a structure. You have thousands of genes in every cell, muations are highly likely, whast you end up with is a slight genome change, and thats only for one cell in an organsim, it takes hundreds of divisions to create sex cells, all these have a probobilty of change and than we have different organsims doing the same thing. ITS NOT IMPROBOBABLE ITS PROBOBLE. Don't base the entirity of you arguement on bad math.
 
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