daniel, annnnoid,
1) Do you accept that offspring tend to resemble their parents but are not perfect copies?
2) Do you accept that any offspring that does manage to breed has at the least demonstrated suitable adaptation to its environment to be able to breed?
If you accept those two, the theory of evolution by natural selection follows.
A complete buffoon @ the beginning of time could have arrived @ this conclusion by simply observing two successive generations of his family and/or a family of squirrels.
So that's the 'theory', eh?
Are you gonna get around to posting the Scientific Theory of evolution @ some point?
Ya see,
Actual 'Scientific Theories' are derived from Validated Scientific Hypotheses and
explain..."
The HOW" (
Mechanisms/Process) explicitly.
1. Natural Selection
is not a Mechanism. "Natural Selection" is a Concept and Concepts aren't Mechanisms, much like:
"Freedom" (Concept) didn't draw up the Battle Plans for the Revolutionary War.
"The Race for Space" (Concept) didn't construct the Apollo 11 Lunar Module.
The "Transition between Classical and Romantic Era's" (Concept) didn't write Beethoven's 9th.
William Provine, Cornell University: Professor evolutionary Biology.....
"
Natural selection does not act on anything, nor does it select (for or against), force, maximize, create, modify, shape, operate, drive, favor, maintain, push, or adjust.
NATURAL SELECTION DOES NOTHING….Having natural selection select is nifty because it excuses the necessity of talking about the actual causation of natural selection. Such talk was excusable for Charles Darwin, but inexcusable for evolutionists now. Creationists have discovered our empty “natural selection” language, and the “actions” of natural selection make huge, vulnerable targets."
Provine, W., The Origin of Theoretical Population Genetics (University of Chicago Press, Re-issue 2001), pg. 199-200
"
Natural selection does not shape an adaptation or cause a gene to spread over a population
or really do anything at all. It is instead the result of specific causes: hereditary changes, developmental causes, ecological causes, and demography. Natural Selection is the result of these causes, not a cause that is by itself.
It is not a mechanism."
Shermer, M., The Woodstock of Evolution (The World Summit on Evolution); Scientific American, 27 June 2005
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-woodstock-of-evolutio/
2. "evolution"...what's that?? What was Natural Selection 'supposedly' leading to before it Jacked 'YARD'?
No Validated Mechanism = No Scientific Theory. Simple, End of Story.
So to get back on Topic, can you Define Information...?
regards