Rincewind
Philosopher
I have to say that your posts are more interesting than a lot of others.
I look forward to meeting with you again.
Ciao!
I look forward to meeting with you again.
Ciao!
Every form is transitional.You place great value on seeing now. Yet without seeing transitional forms in the rvolution record
you accept it as fact. No demand to see there.
You place great value on seeing now. Yet without seeing transitional forms in the rvolution record you accept it as fact. No demand to see there. Furthermore, punctuated equilibrium, or rapid evolutionary changes you accept. But of course not rapid enough to account for post flood speciation. Isn't that a bit inconsistent?
If I were trying to explain it away as a miracle I would explain it away as a miracle.
Every form is transitional.
No eyeless skulls? Not evidence of transitional eye development? Why?
AGAIN!
Sir! I took biology classes in college and read biology textbooks sall the time. They are poart of my personal library. So your typical assumption that people who don't accept your fish ancestor as true is totally unfounded. Actually it constitutes fallacious reasoning. Hasty conclusion based on insufficient evidence motivated by prejudice.
BTW
I don't like to be wrongfully accused or falsly described or categorized by people who are more than likely less educated than me and don't even know how to reason properly.
Yes.
Probably ...
... maybe?
I dunno.
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No, it's not. I could get into an argument about evolution with you but the actual scientifically accepted parts are not relevant to my question for you and so I don't want to get sidetracked with them. Heck, for now I will even let you say that evolution as commonly known by science is dead wrong. That's fine.
The question still remains: If it worked as you are suggesting, it would be plainly evident with everything all the time. That is clearly not the case - why?
Okay, thanks for clarifying. So it is your position that this is scientifically sound then.
That still leaves me with some confusion as to why we don't see this kind of super-rapid evolution now.
....
But snce you can't, then you invent punctuated equilibrium. It's a sort of a game-isn't it?
My time is limited and going back to the same site unnecessarily is time-wasting. So hopefully your not attempting to frustrate.
Noah's Ark suggested ventlation problem solution:
http://www.worldwideflood.com/ark/ventilation/ventilation.htm
. . . What was part of the part of the mammalian brain called the occipetal lobe doing before it became the visual center? Show some eyeless fossils. Those that are supposed to have been present before the eye formed. Then show me fossils which gradually show the transition from eyeless creature to an eyed creature.
Show me a socketless skull. Then show me, via fossils, the gradual depressions as the skull developes sockets over millions of years. Then show me transitional forms of the skull as it gradually developes eyes. Explain to me in detail via those discovered fopssils just how each eye part developed and what the area called the occipetal lobe was doing in the meantime and why. No eyeless skulls? Not evidence of transitional eye development? Why?
What were these different eye parts doing for millions of years before they unanimously AGREED to hook up as a finely coordinated team in order to make visioin possible? After all, one part would be useless for vision without the others. So what benefit was the supposed or mythical blind creature deriving from lugging around a partially developed optic nerve? Sho ing me the fossils of these transitory stages shouldn't be hard since there werre supposed to be millions of them. . . .
Radrook:
In response to my suggestion of checking patterns of genetic drift to see if for all, most or even many types animals these would lead back to the region of Mt. Ararat, you said that your belief in an Intelligent Designer did not depend on the Bible. Yet in previous and subsequent posts you have made specific arguments for the seaworthiness and general practicality of Noah's ark and have as well mentioned biblical kinds. It's pretty obvious that you are a young earth creationist, so why dodge the idea of setting up the genetic drift experiment?
So far, neither your nor 154 have responded to my question regarding genetic drift. Here it is again: If we could conduct such an experiment, and the results failed to support a geologically recent dispersal of all land animals from the ark at Ararat, would you accept these results as either falsifying the ark narrative or at least as significant evidence against it?
.Here's a quote.
Many other aspects of animal care were considered, including arguments revolving around the need to ventilate the Ark,
Plenty of good technical materiel there.
What does the seaworthiness of an ark have to do with my belief in an ID? I am NOT, never was, and never will be a young earth creationist. Earth has been around for billions of years. Thre point something billion, I believe is the estimated time as opposed to the five-billion year estimate for our sun.
Seaworthiness of the described vessel is all I'm interested in discussin on this thread.
Seaworthiness of the described vessel is all I'm interested in discussin on this thread.
Perhaps for the same reason that I don't see your punctuated equilibrium sprrouting new speciies all over the place today? Your question is applicable to your evolution idea. Yet it doesn't faze you one bit.
Why would you even care about the seaworthiness of the ark if you aren't arguing for the literal truth of the Flood, etc.?
This post demonstrates you complete ignorance of the subject. First of all, since even flatworms have eyes, you won't find anything advanced enough to have a skull, i.e. vertebrates, that wont have eye sockets.
As to the development of complex eyes from simple, your assertion that "one part would be useless for vision without the others" (hilited area) has already been roundly refuted by Richard Dawkins in The Blind Watchmaker. For example, a very primitive visual organ that only sensed differences between light and dark would have survival value to a bottom-dwelling creature, since such a system could show the animal that a predator swimming over it.
However, this thread is really supposed to be about Noah's ark, and you still haven't effectively answered my question concerning my proposed genetic drift experiment.
. . . Your assumptions are based on the premise that post flood climate was identical to the pre flood one. That is not believed to be the case. The change in climate along with geographical isolation would have induced adaptation and eventual speciation creating the great varieties seen today. If true, there would have been no need to deal with animals such as penguins who need very low temperatures.
The behavioral or instinctive peculiarities also would have changed. The original biblical kinds might not have had the habits you describe. That too could have developed in response to geography isolation, mutation, and subsequent adaptation leading to speciation. It all hinges on what the knids mentioned in Genesis were really like as opposed to the species that developed from them later. . . .