ThunderChunky
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I can decide to only discuss fetal development, but it is a given that the sperm and ovum and fertilization preceded that fetal development.
Unless you are cloning...
I can decide to only discuss fetal development, but it is a given that the sperm and ovum and fertilization preceded that fetal development.
Unless you are cloning...
I know you did not address selection pressures acting on the precursors to the replicating molecules. I am the one saying evolution theory extends back beyond the first replicating molecules. So tell me how selection pressures that put the pieces in proximity and the selection pressures of the conditions that led to the first replicating molecules differ qualitatively from selection pressures that result in changes to the replicating molecule once formed.Actually, I did not suggest anything about how those replicating molecules occurred. It could be a freak chance, it could be inevitable, given the circumstances of the young Earth, it could be seeded by aliens, or created by God.
Your analogy is akin to saying I'm claiming we should start at the Big Bang, or star formation when considering what is or is not part of evolution theory. It's a poor analogy if you intend it to illustrate why abiogenesis is not part of the evolution process.Of course I agree that abiogenesis is a fascinating and necessary theory, but I do not see why it should be part of the theory of evolution, just like I do not think that a book about bicycle development needs to start in the mines.
This is where I think several people in this thread are drawing a false conclusion. In fact, it is one of the side gripes I have with people who think abiogenesis is not part of evolution theory.They are governed by the same genes, whereas abiogenesis and evolution is not governed by the same rules.
Once again you use an unrealistic analogy that does not make your case.And that is exactly what I cannot understand: though one is a precursor to the other, but apart from that, they have nothing in common. The formation of the Solar system is also a necessary precursor for life on Earth, but surely we would not include that in a discussion of evolution?
(emphasis mine)When abiogenesis is brought up as a challenge to evolution, it it from a misunderstanding of what evolution is. Those creationists who are making this challenge have it all in one theory, but there lots and lots of religious believers who believe in a god who has created life, and still think that the theory of evolution has got it right. These people think that their god kick-started life, but evolution took over. They are not wrong about this: evolution really works exactly according to specification in this scenario.
Forgive me, but if that is part of your rationale, that's a surprisingly wimpy position on your part. If you can't defend evolution theory against ludicrous challenges, I suggest you need a bit more evolution theory study.When they mix up abiogenesis and evolution, I point out that they cannot blame a theory for something it does not cover, but that I am willing to discuss abiogenesis. It is important to distinguish because if we do not, we will be forced to deal with silliness such as "rocks mutating into life", along with the usual "cats mutating into horses".
My personal opinion is the research for how abiogenesis occurred is a lot further along that you seem to be aware of. But even if it weren't, the idea evolution theory explains the diversity of life on Earth but somehow falls short of providing overwhelming evidence the process of life developing was natural from start to finish is absurd. You can only take your position if you are still clinging to the possibility magic or gods were involved.Although I do not mind talking about it, I do think that we are overstating the case when we claim that we have evidence for abiogenesis. We cannot see any obstacles to abiogenesis, and we can see several possible pathways, but we certainly do not have positive evidence that it happened. This is quite contrary to evolution where w have positive evidence for it happening ranging from a distant past right up to now. Even if we could produce an abiogenesis event in a lab, we still would not have proof that we had reproduced the correct abiogenesis event.
To say abiogenesis is 'unique' and not part of evolution theory is an arbitrary distinction.
Semantics, arbitrary divisions, not a big deal. You say tomato, I say tomaato.If I understand you correctly, I think you are saying that abiogenesis is part of the big picture of evolution, but that not every question about evolution is going to relate to it. To you, evolution is both the origin and change of life over time. I see the connection there, and is does make sense, but I guess it comes down to semantics because other people leave off that origin bit (and you say that is arbitrary of them).
The selection pressures did not but without replication, there is no evolution.I know you did not address selection pressures acting on the precursors to the replicating molecules. I am the one saying evolution theory extends back beyond the first replicating molecules. So tell me how selection pressures that put the pieces in proximity and the selection pressures of the conditions that led to the first replicating molecules differ qualitatively from selection pressures that result in changes to the replicating molecule once formed.
It was not an analogy, it was reductio ad absurdum, intended to show that there is no natural lower boundary for when evolution should start.Your analogy is akin to saying I'm claiming we should start at the Big Bang, or star formation when considering what is or is not part of evolution theory. It's a poor analogy if you intend it to illustrate why abiogenesis is not part of the evolution process.
How can they be guided by the same rules when only half of the rules (ie the selection rules) apply to abiogenesis. Not everything that is undergoing selection is undergoing evolution.This is where I think several people in this thread are drawing a false conclusion. In fact, it is one of the side gripes I have with people who think abiogenesis is not part of evolution theory.
There is no difference. As I said, abiogenesis has no replication, so evolution cannot apply.Prove your claim. Describe the difference between selection pressures that acted on pre and post first self replicating molecules.
I do not think that the theory of evolution should be reformulated only to use it as tool against theism. The theory of evolution should be what we can gather from the evidence. There will always be holes in our knowledge, or we would not have a need for scientists, and as long as there are holes in our knowledge, there will be religious believers who fill out the holes with their god. Pretending that there is not a hole at abiogenesis seems to be dishonest.You sooo illustrate my point here. The purpose of claiming evolution theory doesn't have to deal with the beginning of life is, if we keep abiogenesis separate we can continue to pretend god beliefs and science are perfectly compatible.
How can you eliminate theism without evidence? As I mentioned, even with a viable pathway for abiogenesis, we still do not have the evidence that this was how it happened. A god of the gaps could still have done it.Once you acknowledge that evolution theory doesn't leave room for a magical beginning, life is as natural as the rest of the Universe, life is not consistent with the god myths, you eliminate yet one more door for theists to fit the evidence to their conclusions.
OK, I am a wimp. I cannot defend evolution by extending it to claim that inanimate matter is undergoing mutation and selection in the same way as life. Or for that matter that we have evidence that it has happened.Forgive me, but if that is part of your rationale, that's a surprisingly wimpy position on your part. If you can't defend evolution theory against ludicrous challenges, I suggest you need a bit more evolution theory study.
I am claiming that evolution is valid from start to finish! What I am not claiming is that evolution is even applicable before the start!My personal opinion is the research for how abiogenesis occurred is a lot further along that you seem to be aware of. But even if it weren't, the idea evolution theory explains the diversity of life on Earth but somehow falls short of providing overwhelming evidence the process of life developing was natural from start to finish is absurd.
My position is that of using Occam's Razor to cut away superfluous gods from physics, and I have confidence that there are no gaps that a god must fill out, leaving the believers with the weaker position of filling the gaps with theirs because they could be there.You can only take your position if you are still clinging to the possibility magic or gods were involved.
Amen!And there is no evidence of any such thing. Life is natural, not magical. The Universe is natural and mythical gods were not involved in creating it.
So you don't think construction of the first self replicating molecule can be described as having evolved from it's components given certain conditions (aka selection pressures)? Do you see the problem with your concept of evolution? Because I do.The selection pressures did not but without replication, there is no evolution.
Regardless of the point you sought to make, you used a bad analogy to try to make that point. The analogy did not make your case because it was a bad analogy.It was not an analogy, it was reductio ad absurdum, intended to show that there is no natural lower boundary for when evolution should start.
The ovum and sperm are not growing until fertilization occurs. It's still a continuum before and after fertilization. You can choose to only talk about fetal development and you can describe how it differs from pre-fertilization. It is valid to do that. But you cannot divorce fetal development from what came before as if the two are unconnected and/or unrelated.How can they be guided by the same rules when only half of the rules (ie the selection rules) apply to abiogenesis. Not everything that is undergoing selection is undergoing evolution.
Sperm and ovum are not growing. They are still on a continuum with fetal development, rather than being completely segregated.There is no difference. As I said, abiogenesis has no replication, so evolution cannot apply.
You are on the other side of the coin here. The side I am on is the one preventing theist myths from encroaching on science. I am not trying to use science to refute theism, (though there are times I certainly do use science to address god myths such as the evidence against irreducible complexity).I do not think that the theory of evolution should be reformulated only to use it as tool against theism. The theory of evolution should be what we can gather from the evidence. There will always be holes in our knowledge, or we would not have a need for scientists, and as long as there are holes in our knowledge, there will be religious believers who fill out the holes with their god. Pretending that there is not a hole at abiogenesis seems to be dishonest.
This borders on a separate topic. I believe there is evidence that gods don't exist, not merely "no evidence" they do exist. The evidence is overwhelming that people invented god myths. Again, what stops many skeptics from concluding that ALL gods are mythical beings is the problem of theism influencing science. We draw conclusions all the time without proof of the negative. But not when it comes to concluding the evidence clearly supports gods are myths people invented.How can you eliminate theism without evidence? As I mentioned, even with a viable pathway for abiogenesis, we still do not have the evidence that this was how it happened. A god of the gaps could still have done it.
Gap god hypotheses have all failed. You can't just make things up without any evidence and say, I'm going to propose this hypothesis, and you cannot disprove it, therefore it is a valid hypothesis. That is not how the scientific process works. If we used the criteria that any UNSUPPORTED hypothesis is valid, the scientific process would be rendered useless with an overwhelming infusion of nonsense.When I was taught religion as a child, one priest described evolution as being guided by God, and we can think of this god as doing it by either exerting a magical selection pressure, or nudging mutation by tiny in a way that he preferred, for instance by sending a cosmic ray at the right moment, or causing an interesting replication failure. You can simply not use evolution as a weapon against religion, except against dogmatic, biblical beliefs.
This is a bit of a straw man mixed with some truth. I have not claimed, "undergoing mutation and selection in the same way". I have said abiogenesis is on a continuum with evolution, it isn't a separate event.OK, I am a wimp. I cannot defend evolution by extending it to claim that inanimate matter is undergoing mutation and selection in the same way as life. Or for that matter that we have evidence that it has happened.
I understand there is a legit position for addressing abiogenesis as a separate process from evolution in evolution theory. We would agree if you weren't insisting something other than abiogenesis could account for that first replicating molecule.I am claiming that evolution is valid from start to finish! What I am not claiming is that evolution is even applicable before the start!
Nothing in the way of evidence is going to convince a lot of people that all gods are mythical beings. Scientific evidence is not basis of many people's beliefs.As for the research in abiogenesis, I strongly doubt that this research will provide evidence for how it happened. I have only heard about research in how it could have happened. This will be evidence against those who claim that a god is necessary for life to start, but not against those who merely claim that their god did it.
Got any gap god hypotheses that have ever turned out to be the correct hypothesis?My position is that of using Occam's Razor to cut away superfluous gods from physics, and I have confidence that there are no gaps that a god must fill out, leaving the believers with the weaker position of filling the gaps with theirs because they could be there.
This is a straw man. The processes you describe would need to lead to life forms. Processes affecting non-life which don't result in life evolving are not on a continuum with evolution.If I had claimed that evolution was applicable for non-life, I would in effect be claiming that non-life replicated and mutated, after which selection pressure eventually led to life. This is not what I think happened, and I believe that using the same theory to cover how non-life became life and how life developed into the biological world we know today is stretching the theory beyond the breaking point.
Again, this is a bit of a straw man with some truth in it. The goal is not to oppose theism. The goal is to quit allowing theism to influence the science.Your argument that we must do this in order to oppose theism seems to me to be irrelevant.
I think my above answers address this point. I have no more to add.Or perhaps we are not talking about the same theory of evolution? I tend to think of "evolution" as being the specific theory that is describing the development of life, but it is possible that you are talking about about some other evolution that covers both, because it is not specifically using both mutation and selection.
Originally Posted by steenkh
When I was taught religion as a child, one priest described evolution as being guided by God, and we can think of this god as doing it by either exerting a magical selection pressure, or nudging mutation by tiny in a way that he preferred, for instance by sending a cosmic ray at the right moment, or causing an interesting replication failure.
It depends: If someone were to use the existence and diversity of life as evidence for deities, the theory of evolution (and the vast/conclusive body of supporting evidence) would certainly contradict any claim that deities were needed to explain life.You can simply not use evolution as a weapon against religion, except against dogmatic, biblical beliefs.
It seems that I am right in thinking that when you are talking abiut "evolution" you are not talking about the "theory of evolution" but of general evolution.So you don't think construction of the first self replicating molecule can be described as having evolved from it's components given certain conditions (aka selection pressures)? Do you see the problem with your concept of evolution? Because I do.
The obvious answer is that it started evolving from the point where it was able to replicate. Again, this is not in the sense of "change", but in the sense of the ToE, that it was replicating, and some of the replicas were different from other replicas.If a replicating molecule, say RNA, can evolve once it is complete, when did it start evolving? When the RNA strand contained one nucleic acid? When it contained 2? Not until it had a chain of [X] number of nucleic acids? Or did it begin to evolve as the molecule was initially assembled?
No, evolution would do fine, just like cars can be said to evolve. But it would not have any relevance to the ToE.Here's the chemical structure of RNA for reference. Did the first one of these molecules only begin evolving once it was constructed? What would you label then, the first stages of molecule formation? Something other than evolution?
Perhaps you did not get the point because you thought it was an analogy.Regardless of the point you sought to make, you used a bad analogy to try to make that point. The analogy did not make your case because it was a bad analogy.
We agree here. I also use both arguments.Where theism is distorting the science is when the abiogenesis knowledge gap is cited as refuting evolution theory or as supporting irreducible complexity. One reply is to support the position that the knowledge gap does not invite a gap god explanation. But another response is to say, we don't need to include that part of the continuum in evolution theory.
In my view it looks like you are making theism dictate science because you insist on using a well-defined theory on something it is not defined for, expressly because you do not want a gap for theism to creep in.The motives behind giving the second answer are where theism is having an undue influence on how we view biological science. It might be the scientist who wants to placate theists by not challenging their god myths. Or it might be the theist scientist who wants to leave room for his/her own god belief in the story. And these expressions that abiogenesis isn't part of evolution theory then set a trend which other skeptics and scientists adopt and amplify.
If you ever would want to expand on this, I would be very interested to hear it. I am a regular contributor at the Atheistic Forum, and this is one argument we atheists have never found against the theists.This borders on a separate topic. I believe there is evidence that gods don't exist, not merely "no evidence" they do exist.
This argument has been tried, but even though atheists see the obvious logic here, the theists universally reject it as being only applicable to the other godsThe evidence is overwhelming that people invented god myths. Again, what stops many skeptics from concluding that ALL gods are mythical beings is the problem of theism influencing science. We draw conclusions all the time without proof of the negative. But not when it comes to concluding the evidence clearly supports gods are myths people invented.
Indeed.But just taking the gap god hypothesis on its face, how many times do you need to see this hypothesis fail before you quit proposing it.
We agree, but the problem is that no theist want to admit that their own god is a god of the gaps. If he is not, then he is of course vulnerable to other arguments, but that is a different topic.Gap god hypotheses have all failed. You can't just make things up without any evidence and say, I'm going to propose this hypothesis, and you cannot disprove it, therefore it is a valid hypothesis. That is not how the scientific process works. If we used the criteria that any UNSUPPORTED hypothesis is valid, the scientific process would be rendered useless with an overwhelming infusion of nonsense.
Yes, I have concluded that you are not limiting evolution to a specific theory, but using the term in the general sense.This is a bit of a straw man mixed with some truth. I have not claimed, "undergoing mutation and selection in the same way". I have said abiogenesis is on a continuum with evolution, it isn't a separate event.
Exactly. Occam's Razor, and all that.But as for evidence is has happened, look around you. We are here. We don't have evidence life was created in the Big Bang. There are no other options except magic and gap god hypotheses. We don't insert gap gods and magic as plausible hypotheses in other fields of science. Why should we insert them here?
Sorry, where did I say that something other than abiogenesis could account for the first replicating molecule? My whole point has been that abiogenesis, and not the Theory of Evolution accounts for the first replicating molecule.I understand there is a legit position for addressing abiogenesis as a separate process from evolution in evolution theory. We would agree if you weren't insisting something other than abiogenesis could account for that first replicating molecule.
I did not say I had evidence, or that it would be impossible for science to determine the exactly which process was responsible for the abiogenesis event. I merely said that I doubted it.What evidence do you have that science cannot ever determine the process by which the first evolving molecules or evolving life occurred? What other as yet unexplained natural phenomena do you apply this prediction to?
You are right. It was a strawman because at that point I still thought we were talking about the same thing when we use the word "evolution".This is a straw man. The processes you describe would need to lead to life forms. Processes affecting non-life which don't result in life evolving are not on a continuum with evolution.
I can understand your reasoning but it is wrong when it comes to how I view the "theory of evolution".It seems that I am right in thinking that when you are talking abiut "evolution" you are not talking about the "theory of evolution" but of general evolution.
They include "origin" as important to the theory.- (biology) a scientific theory of the origin of species of plants and animals.
I bolded the essence of the definition this author settled on after a preceding discussion. "Natural selection and genetics" does not include 'reproduction', though it is implied. But the focus is on the genome and/or the replicating molecules, not the act of replication.... As the theory of evolution by natural selection and genetics has become nearly universally accepted in the scientific community, it has replaced other explanations....
Most people find the concept that "all species are related" is key to the theory. In other words, common descent.Evolution has several facets. The first is the theory that all living species are the modified descendents of earlier species, and that we all share a common ancestor in the distant past. All species are therefore related via a vast tree of life. The second is that this evolution is driven by a process of natural selection or the - "survival of the fittest".
They include common ancestor as key.Biological evolution, simply put, is descent with modification..... The central idea of biological evolution is that all life on Earth shares a common ancestor...
I got the point, but you are wrong. And you might want to look up the meaning of analogy, but I digress....Perhaps you did not get the point because you thought it was an analogy.
...In my view it looks like you are making theism dictate science because you insist on using a well-defined theory on something it is not defined for, expressly because you do not want a gap for theism to creep in.
The situation is analogous (and this time I really use an analogy) to insisting of treating flight in the same way, whether it is at 10 km above the Earth, or 80 km above the Earth. They are both termed flight, but one is governed by aerodynamics, and the other solely by the laws of gravity.
This analogy is as disconnected as your other. See what I said above regarding the scope of theories. I view the theory of evolution as broader in scope than others are defining it here.Yes, I am trying to shift this paradigm....If you ever would want to expand on this, I would be very interested to hear it. I am a regular contributor at the Atheistic Forum, and this is one argument we atheists have never found against the theists.
I'm not trying an argument. You make it sound as if because it fails to convince theists they believe in a mythical god my position has no merit. My position has merit because the evidence is overwhelming supporting the conclusion and utterly absent refuting the conclusion. It is also a testable hypothesis that has been confirmed with observation in recent history with the development of the Cargo Cults....This argument has been tried, but even though atheists see the obvious logic here, the theists universally reject it as being only applicable to the other gods![]()
It takes these discussions sometimes for my thoughts to better gel. It boils down to defining the scope of the theory of evolution. I view the theory as having a broader scope than people who exclude the origin of life from the the theory and claim it only encompasses the mechanism of diversity....My whole point has been that abiogenesis, and not the Theory of Evolution accounts for the first replicating molecule.
What exactly is it you doubt? That we are close to solving the question or that we can answer the question?..I did not say I had evidence, or that it would be impossible for science to determine the exactly which process was responsible for the abiogenesis event. I merely said that I doubted it.
You see the theory of evolution as narrow in scope and I see it as including origin and change with modification...You are right. It was a strawman because at that point I still thought we were talking about the same thing when we use the word "evolution".
Scientists are often distressed when theists prefer to refer to "evolution" as "darwinism", but sometimes I wonder if it would not have been a term that was less likely to result in misunderstandings.
I am not sure if "origin" is a clear reference to abiogenesis, or to the first instance of life.The Free Dictionary and Dictionary.com define the theory of evolution asThey include "origin" as important to the theory.
The WordIQ has a bit longer discussion of the definition of the theory of evolution:I bolded the essence of the definition this author settled on after a preceding discussion. "Natural selection and genetics" does not include 'reproduction', though it is implied. But the focus is on the genome and/or the replicating molecules, not the act of replication.
I might add that a biologist once scolded me for treating Common Descent as being part of the Theory of Evolution. There is no pleasing everyone!Modern synthesis theory has three major aspects:
The common descent of all organisms from a single ancestor.
The origin of novel traits in a lineage.
The mechanisms that cause some traits to persist while others perish.
Yes, I agree with the caveat that some biologists think that Common Descent is related, but not part of Evolution, just like abiogenesis. Like you, I tend to treat Common Descent as an aspect of evolution, but I now try to expressly state when I mean Common Descent. The distinction makes sense, because just like evolution would still work just as before if there was no abiogenesis event, evolution will also work as specified if there was more then one separate abiogenesis event (if this was the case, natural selection seems to have killed off the other events on Earth, but if Earth was seeded from outside, it is possible that we might one day find life that was based on other abiogenesis events, and they would still be subject to evolution)Trying to sift out the essence in these definitions of the theory of evolution we have: 1) origin, 2) common descent, and, 3) modification.
I think we will just have to disagree here. I do understand why you think as you do, I just think that the narrow definition is more practical, because we then have only one set of rules for each theory.The argument here is one side saying life originated and evolution theory then addresses what happened after. My argument is that the theory of evolution includes the origin of life. Abiogenesis is part of the process of evolution just as change over time is part of it.
To leave out the beginning as something which is not part of the theory is to claim the theory of evolution is only about change over time, and not about the origin of life. When you add in, common descent, you have to pick a place to start that descent. I include abiogenesis as the first stage in the theory of evolution.
No, I do not! We have been through this before: I agree completely that selection occurs all the time, and it happens all the time for inanimate matters even today (you can say that, for instance, pure iron is selected against, because the atmosphere constantly converts it to rust).You describe the theory of evolution as starting at the first replicating molecule. To make evolution theory start at the first replicating molecule, you define selection as not occurring until reproduction.
I agree. However, there is also the problem of evidence, that is rather scanty for the earliest times, and when we get to abiogenesis we - at least currently - rely completely on inference.It makes more sense to me to include the beginning of life, aka the origin, in the theory and to divide the part of the theory which deals with change over time as beginning with the first replicating molecules and the origin as including abiogenesis. To ignore the beginning and only include change might sound good to some people, especially given "evolution" is in the title of the theory. Such a limited view ignores the key element and that is, origin. Perhaps it would be useful to call it, 'the theory of origin and evolution of life', but that is rather cumbersome.
Agreed. But you can also put the same sentence as being "To narrowly define the theory of evolution as including the origin of life on Earth and arbitrarily expand the theory to include the origin of life is a choice, not a mandate."From abiogenesis to change with modification is a continuum. To narrowly define the theory of evolution as excluding the origin of life on Earth and arbitrarily limit the theory only to descent with modification is a choice, not a mandate.
You mean, like this one (from WordIQ): "An analogy is a comparison between two different things, in order to highlight some form of similarity."I got the point, but you are wrong. And you might want to look up the meaning of analogy, but I digress.
Yes, that sounded wrong. Of course your position has merit and your argument was right. What I meant was that some arguments seem to hit theists harder, although I must admit that no argument I know of has ever caused theists to change their mind (the rule that God is always right seems to kick in whenever they are in trouble). The problem is of course that despite what theists might claim, they are emotionally attached to their religion, and not rationally attached.I'm not trying an argument. You make it sound as if because it fails to convince theists they believe in a mythical god my position has no merit.
I understand. I am also glad that we have had this discussion, because it made me understand your position, even if I do not agree with it. Perhaps I will find a way to accommodate both views in my arguments.It takes these discussions sometimes for my thoughts to better gel. It boils down to defining the scope of the theory of evolution. I view the theory as having a broader scope than people who exclude the origin of life from the the theory and claim it only encompasses the mechanism of diversity.
This depends on the question. I feel confident that we will be able to create life from scratch at some point, and I also feel confident that we will be able to do it under circumstances that will resemble those of the early Earth.What exactly is it you doubt? That we are close to solving the question or that we can answer the question?
I think we do, but the cat is already out of the bagPerhaps we need two theories, the theory of life and the theory of how life changes.
I'm pretty sure common descent is key to evolution theory, steenkh. Perhaps others in the thread might weigh in if they are still with us.I might add that a biologist once scolded me for treating Common Descent as being part of the Theory of Evolution.
You are really having a hard time with this one. Wow.You mean, like this one (from WordIQ): "An analogy is a comparison between two different things, in order to highlight some form of similarity."Skeptic Ginger said:I got the point, but you are wrong. And you might want to look up the meaning of analogy, but I digress.
steenkh said:Of course I agree that abiogenesis is a fascinating and necessary theory, but I do not see why it should be part of the theory of evolution, just like I do not think that a book about bicycle development needs to start in the mines.
SG said:Your analogy is akin to saying I'm claiming we should start at the Big Bang, or star formation when considering what is or is not part of evolution theory. It's a poor analogy if you intend it to illustrate why abiogenesis is not part of the evolution process.
steenkh said:The formation of the Solar system is also a necessary precursor for life on Earth, but surely we would not include that in a discussion of evolution?
Once again you use an unrealistic analogy that does not make your case.
You are right, I had forgotten that when you did not react to my original reductio ad absurdum about going back to stellar formation, etc, I tried an analogy about bicycles. Sorry I missed that.Perhaps a review will help"