What sounds unfalsifiable?Hammegk said:Gee, that's beginning to sound un-falsifiable. Do you hold other religious beliefs?
The purpose of Ev is not to model genetic propagation in nature, but to demonstrate that information can evolve in a genome. For this purpose, the exact encoding of the information is irrelevant.
Ah. Sorry. I looked at some information about it and saw that it was hardly a comprehensive model, and did not support many claims made for it by third parties, but given your explanation it would appear that the model is adequate for its intended purpose, and the fault lies with the inappropriate claims and not the model.Please note: Most of the detailed behavior of Ev that we have been discussing has nothing to do with Schneider's original intent. He did not claim to model the complete evolutionary landscape, and certainly not phyletic evolution.
Quite, and I apologize to Dr Schneider for any offense my remarks may have caused.The fact that Kleinman has decided to co-opt Ev as the be-all-end-all of evolutionary modeling is his problem, not Dr. Schneider's.
Outside the reality of the fossil record, you have zilch.The working definition for "macro-evolution" appears to be "whatever scientists don't have direct evidence for... yet".
Yeah, it's easy when "meaningful definition" is another moving goalpost; need another? no problem ... it's only words. (flap, flap, flap ...... we've observed speciation, for any meaningful definition of speciation. ...
Outside the reality of the fossil record, you have zilch.
You seem confused.Yeah, it's easy when "meaningful definition" is another moving goalpost; need another? no problem ... it's only words. (flap, flap, flap ..)
Why, yes species exist. Fossils so demonstrate them as does what we see as we look at existing life. That is not the question.How do you explain away the taxonomic classifications and DNA differences?
What you have done is move the goalposts on wheels to define "speciation" and then pretend you've demonstrated how speciation occurs -- there are cats & dogs, species, and we all know basically what I mean by species.PixyMisa said:We have observed new species evolve. Pick your definition of "species" - one that is scientifically valid, please - and we have observed a speciation event according to that definition.
You appear to have missed the evidence from genomic analysis. Now granted, that is a recent development, but do please pay attention.Hammegk said:Outside the reality of the fossil record, you have zilch.
Wait, you want to see birds turn into something else? I thought we were talking about speciation events. Or did I misunderstand your convoluted sentence here?A speciation event has not been demonstarted in labs, models, or nature. And please spare us a re-gurgitation of the pap that demonstrates -- in the lab and in nature -- the bacteria that remain bacteria, birds that remain birds, plants that remain the same plant, ring species that remain the same species.
If you trust that the fossil record shows speciation, then you should trust that genomic analysis shows speciation. Either they both show speciation, or god has rigged the evidence in both cases.*Nor do we need to review the fossils, which at least do demonstrate new species occuring.
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Perhaps you can educate me. Once cladistics identifies the proposed common ancestor of those different species (say, dogs & cats ... whatever), can a genotype for that ancestor be proposed? If so, if not now, soon ... build one; let's see if it's a viable phenotype.
In general, I'm not sure how you can work backward completely accurately, given that the mutations that led to the different species are more or less random. And how would you ever know about features of the common ancestor that have disappeared?Hammegk said:However, as my buddy drkitten likes to point out I'm not even scientifically semi-literate. Perhaps you can educate me. Once cladistics identifies the proposed common ancestor of those different species, can a genotype for that ancestor be proposed? If so, if not now, soon ... build one; let's see if it's a viable phenotype.
Oooh, you thought of a new lie!There is no way to explain mathematically all the new genes required to evolve reptiles to birds.
Of course not, you drivelling halfwit.Other than to ask if you call cats dogs, not really.
However, as my buddy drkitten likes to point out I'm not even scientifically semi-literate. Perhaps you can educate me. Once cladistics identifies the proposed common ancestor of those different species, can a genotype for that ancestor be proposed?
Perhaps you can educate me. Once cladistics identifies the proposed common ancestor of those different species (say, dogs & cats ... whatever), can a genotype for that ancestor be proposed? If so, if not now, soon ... build one; let's see if it's a viable phenotype.