How does that give practical results of allowing them to distinguish 'horse' from 'non-horse'?They point to the verse about Adam naming the animals in Genesis. Seriously.
How does that give practical results of allowing them to distinguish 'horse' from 'non-horse'?They point to the verse about Adam naming the animals in Genesis. Seriously.
Why do you need criteria when it's so obvious? It's called common sense, Melendwyr. Hammy doesn't need some "scientist" telling him what a horse is. I mean, just look at it. It's so horse-y and, uh, horsefulish.(Incidentally, do any creationists ever attempt to give a practical, working definition of 'kind', even if they can't offer a theoretical one? Surely they have some criteria for identifying a horse.)
How does that give practical results of allowing them to distinguish 'horse' from 'non-horse'?
Guess again...Oh yes.
I admit I missed that. Or perhaps you think canids are not canids?delphi_ote said:Like "a dog is a dog" right? You got taken to the cleaner on this point already.
Do you find looking at the fossils of 20 cm horses arrayed in sequence of age up to equus you find a problem identifying them all as 'horses'?chippy monkey said:Why do you need criteria when it's so obvious? .... I mean, just look at it. It's so horse-y and, uh, horsefulish.
As for point 3, again, the people doing the science are keenly aware of the weaknesses, such as they are, of TOE, and regularly point them out. Many of the "weaknesses" proposed by you and hammegk are simply wrong.
Has a good dna work-up & comparison to canids/felids ever been done on the cheetah?
I must say, I was wondering why you were hung up on horses, hammegk. You brought them up in another thread, and I did not know why then either.Do you find looking at the fossils of 20 cm horses arrayed in sequence of age up to equus you find a problem identifying them all as 'horses'?
(bolding mine) So, "strictly speaking", a horse is not a horse...or at least, it is not as obvious to them as it is to you.But horse evolution was not smooth and gradual. Different traits evolved at different rates, didn't always evolve together, and occasionally reversed "direction." Also, horse species did not always come into being by gradual transformation (anagenesis) of their ancestors; instead, sometimes new species split off from ancestors (cladogenesis) and then coexisted with those ancestors for some time. Some species arose gradually, others suddenly. Overall, the horse family demonstrates the diversity of evolutionary mechanisms. The most modern equids (descendants of Parahippus) are called equines. Strictly speaking, only the very modern genus Equus contains "horses."
Not without some clearer criteria than "horse-y-ness". Is this a horse?:Do you find looking at the fossils of 20 cm horses arrayed in sequence of age up to equus you find a problem identifying them all as 'horses'?
From one skeleton, unknown.Not without some clearer criteria than "horse-y-ness". Is this a horse?:
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Of course not. But do you suppose the fossils were discovered all neatly lined up? No, clearly not. Criteria were developed for "horse-y-ness", and as the fossils were found, they were compared against these criteria and fit the bill. Then they were neatly lined up so that you and I could look at them and say, oh, yes, clearly they are horses.From one skeleton, unknown.
Again, "Do you find looking at the fossils of 20 cm horses arrayed in sequence of age (which was also increasing size, iirc) up to equus you find a problem identifying them all as 'horses'?"
Or, to put it another way: "Given that we know the theory of evolution to be true, don't you agree that the skeleton you posted is a form on the way to modern horses?"From one skeleton, unknown.
Again, "Do you find looking at the fossils of 20 cm horses arrayed in sequence of age (which was also increasing size, iirc) up to equus you find a problem identifying them all as 'horses'?"
When a child is learning the language, looks at a cow and says "BIG doggie!", we understand that "doggie" is the child's concept of pretty much anything with 4 legs and fur. Later, we are more careful to correct even differences between doggies and kitties, or doggies and wolves. If the kid is unfortunate enough to be born into a family of "dog fanciers", then "doggie" will never be good enough; the kid will discriminate among breeds, and eventually among better and worse examples of breeds, the way you or I discriminate "cats is cats" from "dogs is dogs". To this kid, dogs ain't dogs. (and it is not just animals. To me, a car is a car. To my son, the makes of cars are important. To my mechanic, the makes, models, years, and options are important. And so it goes.)Merc's comment -- only Equus are considered 'horses' is noted -- but I'd call it begging the question in the sense, Oh look, a dog -- No, That's a wolf.
Merc's comment -- only Equus are considered 'horses' is noted -- but I'd call it begging the question in the sense, Oh look, a dog -- No, That's a wolf.
http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Equidae.htmlThis family, made up of the horses, asses and zebras, contains one genus with nine species. Domestic equids range worldwide; in the wild equids occur mainly in East Africa and the Near East to Mongolia. They inhabit a variety of habitats from lush grasslands and savanna to sandy and stony deserts.
Equids are generally thick-skulled animals with stocky bodies. They are heavily haired, but the length of hair is variable. Most species have a mane on the neck and a lock of hair on the forepart of the head known as a forelock. Some are swift runners: these have long thin limbs with only one functional digit ( mesaxonic). Equids walk on the tips of their toes ( unguligrade). In the equid foreleg, radius and ulna are united, and the ulna is greatly reduced so that all weight is born on the radius. In the hind leg, the enlarged tibia supports the weight and the fibula is reduced and fused to the tibia. Wild equids are large animals, ranging in body size from around 200 to 500 kg. Their domestic descendants are more variable, varying from less than 140 kg to over 1000 kg.
Equids have 40-42 teeth with a dental formula 3/3, 1/1, 3-4/3, 3/3. The canines are vestigial or absent in females. Their cheek teeth have a complex structure; they are hypsodont with four main columns and various infoldings with much cement. Age of an equid is often estimated by the degree to which surface pattern of cheek teeth is worn, but the abrasive character of food plays too large a role in tooth wear to make this entirely accurate.
Equid skulls are long with the nasal bones long, narrow and freely projecting anteriorly to points. The orbit is far back in the skull, behind the teeth, and the postorbital processes are broad. Tympanic bullae are small.
The fossil record of horses is especially rich. It has provided classic examples that supposedly document gradual change in teeth and limbs. The first horse, Hyracotherium (= Eohippus), is known from the early Eocene and appears to have been derived from a condylarth. It was a small animal with relatively simple quadrate teeth, a modestly enlarged third metacarpal, and digitigrade stance. Through the Oligocene, Miocene, and Pliocene horses increased in size, their lateral digits shrank and lost contact with the ground, their brains enlarged, and their molariform teeth became much more complex. The first true grazer, Merychippus, lived in Miocene times. Its cheek teeth were hypsodont and had strongly developed lophs on their occlusal surfaces. Three of its toes contacted the ground. The first one-toed horse, Pliohippus, lived in the late Miocene. The genus Equus first appeared during the Pliocene. Horses were once widespread, inhabiting temporal grasslands, savannahs, and steppe habitats through North America, Asia, Africa, and Europe. North America has been the center of equid evolution. Equids disappeared completely from that continent around 8000 years ago, not to return until Europeans brought them in their ships a few hundred years ago.
People invented it, people used it, it was not handed down on stone tablets anywhere.
When a child is learning the language, looks at a cow and says "BIG doggie!", we understand that "doggie" is the child's concept of pretty much anything with 4 legs and fur.
Which is why we all got it and laughed when Boo said:When a child is learning the language, looks at a cow and says "BIG doggie!", we understand that "doggie" is the child's concept of pretty much anything with 4 legs and fur. etc.
Did hammegk laugh?![]()
"Kitty!"