Am I going have to give another history lesson? Maybe I should post it in the thread on Haeckel and textbooks.
Yes, please! I will order Gould's book and read it when I have time, but in the meantime, some sort of synopsis would be wonderful.
Show me one thing I have been factually ignorant of in regard to evolution, just one piece of data? and yes, then show another if you can find one?
You believe that mammals evolved after the dinosaurs were extinct.
You believe that there was no organisms filling the "whale niche" before whales.
You believe that there are no phylogenetic trees that include ancestors.
You believe that "aquatic and swimming" is a niche.
You, essentially, don't know what a niche is.
You believe that there are no examples of a feature being lost and then regained within a lineage.
You believe evolutionary theory predicts reversal within a lineage on the whole-species level.
You believe that evolutionary theory predicts that bacteria should evolve into something else than bacteria, ideally something similar to mammals or reptiles.
You believe, conversely, that evolutionary theory predicts that something that is not a bacteria should evolve into one.
You believe that the fact that we never see either is evidence against evolutionary theory.
You appear to believe that the fact that we never see either is
not evidence against Davison's hypothesis, despite it being a necessary consequence.
You believe that the non-existence of "junk DNA" means that the same DNA sections are no longer evidence for evolution.
You believe that phylum, class, and other higher taxonomic categories have an existence external to taxonomy.
You further believe that these higher taxa have no relation to the estimated age of a clade.
You, essentially, have no idea how taxonomy works at all.
It is also quite reasonable to draw the conclusion that you don't know what a "type" is.
You believe that there is some sinister reason that we cannot settle on a single species concept, and that this is somehow detrimental to the strength of evolutionary theory.
You believe that a proposed ancestral organism is necessarily
the ancestor of a more recent one.
You believe that the fossil record does not show transitional forms.
You believe that "convergent evolution" implies identical gene sequences.
You believe that Davison's bizarre hypothesis is in any way anchored even in a parallel reality which approximates our own.
You appear to have no idea what "analogous features" are.
You believe, following Davison, that "homology" is a useless concept.
You believe that
opinions of scientists before 1973 are more important than
data from after 1973.
You believe that a parent population or parent species continues to be regarded as a parent after one (or more) daughter populations have been split off.
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This was just from memory, and from a cursory reading of my replies to you in the "Evolution: the facts" thread to refresh my memory. It is still an impressive list, I think. I am sure others can fill in more detail from other threads, as you have been quite productive, post-wise. I can provide quotes for all these claims, if necessary.
truethat: I remember that picture. I have many fond memories of days spent playing with plastic dinosaurs and reading books on them (oddly enough, the text to picture ratio in books on dinosaurs hasn't greatly altered between my 5-year-old reading and my professional reading...we are a visual species). And it still hurts my neck and legs to see therapods standing like that. I can hear the hips popping, and my neck hurts just thinking about it......Thanks for that.
You might appreciate this, then:
There is an old Swedish sci-fi story from 1932 (or thereabout) called "Under the Drum-fire of the Meteors" by Ossian Elgström. It is a hilarious book, which I don't think would have been translated into English (I found it in Swedish by coincidence, and had never heard about it before; I doubt it has ever been reprinted). There are too many awesome things in it to list, but it does have dinosaurs living together with the Atlanteans, Monopeds, Kynocephalians and other creatures in vast caves underneath Russia, and in the end, everyone dies.
In one great scene, the party -- a Swedish engineer, an American sea captain, and a British explorer -- are attacked by a Tyrannosaurus that explicitly jumps like a kangaroo. The engineer shoots at it with a cold ray he has invented (for no real reason beyond Ossian thinking it's a cool thing, it seems) and hurts the dinosaur badly, causing it to
crawl away on its stomach like a lizard and hide in the bushes.
It's probably the best dinosaur book I have ever read, and it's a pity there isn't an English version.
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I would also be much obliged for your comments on this post, randman:
No, that is not correct. The argument is that in some cases, a land mammal has been found to have occupied an aquatic niche ahead of already existing aquatic animals. This could be for a variety of reasons, but getting there first is certainly good enough for our purposes.