Do you happen to have a link?El_Machinae said:bgast: you asked if life had been spontaneously generated in a lab. It depends on whether or not you believe that viruses are alive, because they've been assembled spontaneously in a lab.
Do you happen to have a link?El_Machinae said:bgast: you asked if life had been spontaneously generated in a lab. It depends on whether or not you believe that viruses are alive, because they've been assembled spontaneously in a lab.
Hope, I didn't leave anyone out. Oh yeal el_machiae (sp-I did it from memory). To me your comments about viruses being created spontaneously still doesn't hold water for me. The necessary components to do so already existed. They didn't come from nothing.
bgast1 said:how is that we all know that murder is wrong.
all of which can be opined to apply, also pursuant to several precedents, such as the forum autocensor and multiple locked posts, indicating that the "knowingly" clause applies only to "knowingly false" as the autocensor removes words without care for intent.You agree, through your use of this service, that you will not use this forum to post any material which is knowingly false and/or defamatory, inaccurate, abusive, vulgar, racist, hateful, harassing, <snip various forbiddances>.

I refer you to the talk.origins Observed Instances of Speciation document, specifically section five, listing speciations where what used to be one group of animals split into two groups that would not breed with one another. Extract:bgast01 said:CarlosMM -- If I describe "kind" to you I probably might fall into "taxon". Especially since I am not as versed in definitions as you. "Kind" or "Type" to me are synonomous. A bird is a bird and always has been a bird. A dog is a dog and always has been a dog. A human is a human and always has been a human. God created us as male and female. I accept the Biblical story.
5.7 Speciation in a Lab Rat Worm, Nereis acuminata
In 1964 five or six individuals of the polychaete worm, Nereis acuminata, were collected in Long Beach Harbor, California. These were allowed to grow into a population of thousands of individuals. Four pairs from this population were transferred to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute. For over 20 years these worms were used as test organisms in environmental toxicology. From 1986 to 1991 the Long Beach area was searched for populations of the worm. Two populations, P1 and P2, were found. Weinberg, et al. (1992) performed tests on these two populations and the Woods Hole population (WH) for both postmating and premating isolation. To test for postmating isolation, they looked at whether broods from crosses were successfully reared. The results below give the percentage of successful rearings for each group of crosses.
WH × WH - 75%
P1 × P1 - 95%
P2 × P2 - 80%
P1 × P2 - 77%
WH × P1 - 0%
WH × P2 - 0%
bgast1 said:Erik Mesoy-- But aren't they still worms? They didn't evolve into a snake did they?
El_Machinae said:So - if it's not enough that a 'living' organism could spontaneously form from unliving components, then why are you asking if spontaneous generation has ever occured in a lab? I mean, the abiogenesis theory states that the unliving components were there to form into life. Did you want life appearing in a vacuum instead?
bgast1 said:Erik Mesoy-- But aren't they still worms? They didn't evolve into a snake did they?
Try to breed a fish with a pig.
Yes, you can breed different breeds of dogs with each other, but you still get a dog
<sarcastic parody of extreme Creationist argument> Snakes are worms, so no evolution would have taken place even so. </sarcastic parody>Erik Mesoy-- But aren't they still worms? They didn't evolve into a snake did they?

Eran of Arcadia said:Given the hundreds of millions of years that life has had, a worm-like creature could evolve into a snake-like creature. But it doesn't happen overnight.
bgast1 said:Isn't that generally what Creationism is? The word vacuum is accepted provided that you mean nothing. God existed outside of time and space (of course this defys explanation) a spoke all of everything we see around us into being. Or, are we mincing words here and I don't understand what this thread is all about? Because I don't honestly see how either side can scientifically prove it's point. Which brings me to the point. Intelligent Design can be taught scientifically as well. It isn't about religion vs. science. Why can't both sides be taught along side each other and let the students make up their own mind?
Regardless, (I never took chemistry in high school, it wasn't required back in the day) weren't the compounds necessary to create viruses organic? I'm here to learn just as well. I can't and won't dispute the truth.
Take the blinders off:bgast1 said:I think that if the world worked like this, then we would see all sorts of intermediary steps even now.
We did not evolve from apes, we were always human and apes were always apes.
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Eran of Arcadia said:No, birds started out as single celled creatures, then protovertabrates, then fish, then reptiles, then dinosaurs, then virds, and the fossil record shows this. Worm-like creatures (in appearance, not in physiology) became vertebrates. Etc.