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rwald said:Um...didn't you want to reply to hammegk, not just quote him?
Ya think? Slowwwwww line today. Okay, take two....
rwald said:Um...didn't you want to reply to hammegk, not just quote him?
hammegk said:
Not Darwinism as currently stressed. Too many theories & mechanisms -- none demonstrated other than by speculation.
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rwald said:If a fly randomly mutated into a wasp, it would prove that natural selection is not needed to generate species diversity. It would directly counter all extant forms of evolution. I think I'm not being immodest when I say I understand evolution better than you.
BillHoyt said:
For your edification, sir, the word you keep mangling is "drosophila."
hammegk said:
Good one. I was wondering if anyone was going to notice.
What species do you call the cute ones with legs where the eyes should have been?
It's the demonstrable problem. Let's see one of your allele shifts actually do anything that could remotely be considered evolutionary rather than provide some minor interspecies adaptation, or let's mutate something & get a male-female pair.rwald said:What do you mean, "current theories have no demonstrable mechanisms"? We have natural selection and mutation. What do you expect?
And I would expect a creationist like you ...
Theoretically elegant I agree. Demonstrated, no.
"anagenesis" and "cladogenesis"...
BillHoyt said:
Imaginal discs. They have no direct bearing on the topic at hand. Would you like to return to the topic, or are you, by deflecting, already conceding you are out of your depth?
Cheers,
Or looking at the situation from a slightly different angle, the circularity of "look at record" -- "revise theory" -- etcetc is undeniable. Of course the fossil record supports the theory.rwald said:It's called "the fossil record." That's where the evidence lies. We can see species over periods of thousands of years, and we can tell that their changes correspond with those predicted by evolution. We can even make predictions about what fossils we would expect to find in a given place, and then go out and find fossils of that nature. The proof is in the fossil record.
The problem here is I like the concept of "life evolving" as well as if not better than you do.
Oh, and I forgot to ask something which the evolutionist should always ask the creationist in debates such as this: If you don't like evolutionary theory, what theory do you have which better accounts for the evidence? If you know of no theory which better explains all the evidence than evolution, then what complaint do you have?
rwald said:Well, if the only evidence of "macroevolution" you're going to consider is actually seeing it happen in your lifetime, then you'll have to wait a while. A long while. Naturally, your counter-argument to this is "unfalsifiability."
Geologist: An Earth Scientist who couldn't pass calculus.
The short answer to that is that, while you may not consider the fossil evidence to prove anything, most scientists do. Including most geologists.
Ignore, no. Find compelling for the theory du jour of evolution per materialists/atheists, no also. It would also be nice to consider the abiogenesis problem too don't you think?If you're interested, there's a list here at the Talk.Origins Archive discussing 29 falsifiable examples of macroevolution in the fossil record. Though, I'm sure you'll ignore this.
It's a good theory. I like it.
I'm not sure I understand your opinion on evolution. Do you think it happend, but through a mechanism other than natural selection? What do you mean, "The problem here is I like the concept of "life evolving" as well as if not better than you do."?
I see nothing to quibble with there, just want to mention -- again -- there is some circularity in the reasoning.rwald said:OK. I see the short answer was not enough for you. Now, the long answer.
... snippity, snip .....
Actually, I think I have reasonable layman's grasp of the current thinking. BTW, I like strings, too!
And your understanding of the Big Bang is somewhat lacking. All the Big Bang theory says is that the universe is expanding, and that a finite time ago, all the matter and energy in the universe was located in an infinitely dense point (string theory modifies this a bit, but keeps the gist of the theory).
I disagree. It was and is very very very very close to flat, or we wouldn't be doing this.
The question of whether the universe is closed, open, or flat has no direct relation to Big Bang theory.
Do you have an online citation you could furnish, or at least a citation. Thanks.
Actually, a recent study found that the universe cannot be closed, and that there will be no Big Crunch.
Here's a recent thread that covers it.hammegk said:Do you have an online citation you could furnish, or at least a citation. Thanks.![]()
hammegk said:
Thanks. Imaginal discs; that's new info.
However, I won't concede you (and science) offer a real knowledge of "life" until you vivisect a critter, re-animate it, build a mate for that critter from scratch, and see how the offspring do.