Agreed that YEC's have problems; OEC's less so. Yet, do you contend all statements made by them are false?
That would depend on your level of understanding. Do you see 'intermediate forms" between chihuahuas & great danes? Or would you, if you were looking at their fossils in 30 million years?
Agreed that would be defined as "speciation" by evolutionists. Unfortunately, in the real world many us of inhabit, dogs is dogs.We selected them, but it's a good example of how speciation works. Give it a little longer and I'd bet you good money that they would not be fully cross fertile as little genetic changes make the molecular biology of egg, sperm and uterine immune system etc incompatible.
I'm still waiting.Now could we have something relevant to the question of whether the fossils are intermediate forms?
I'm waiting.
I've done sufficient looking to convince myself your "intermediate forms" dino-bird suffer the usual evolutionist warts -- the could bes, may bes, might bes -- and remain unconvincing to a sceptic. Perhaps the next fossil discovery will be 'the final proof' huh?Dr Adequate said:I'm still waiting.
Oh well done. Very well done. You wouldn't like to tell the rest of us what you find so convincing, would you? Otherwise, I shall prefer the scientific opinion of, let us say, 72 Nobel Prize winners, over that of a guy who refusing to give the reasoning behind a set of opinions which he appears to be making up as he goes along.I've done sufficient looking to convince myself
So, to summarize. First you say you will take a look at the data. Then you say that it is impossible for anyone to look at the data, so you can't. Then you say that not only have you looked at the data but that it proves you right --- but you refuse to discuss it any further except to announce how right you think you are.No amount of effort on my part would ever be enough to convince you.
I hope that non-participants will notice how without once discussing the question of whether the morphology of the fossils I named is, or is not, intermediate, nor pointing out any conceivable relevance of his links to this question, the fundie parrot has fled whimpering from a challenge of his own choosing.I hope that non-participants may look at some of the background I did dredge up, and decide to look at The Theory with a more jaundiced eye than previously.

Cite the "intermediate form" you like best, and we'll take a detailed look at the underlying data and assumptions.
I'd be happy to let you pick, but since you ask, let's do the transition through forms represented by featherless therapods such as Deinychus and Comsognathus, feathered wingless therapods such as Caudipteryx, Sinosauropteryx, Sinornithosaurus, and Protoarchaeopteryx, winged therapods such as Archaeopteyrx, primitive birds such as Sinornis, and modern birds.
The underlying assumption is that "intermediate forms" means exactly what Darwin said it did in the Origin of Species, and the underlying data is the fossils.
A bit of light reading for our hardcore evolutionists on some of Dr.A's favorite "intermediate links".
So your promised "detailed look at the underlying data and assumptions" is in fact a link to YEC crapola? Why am I not surprised? ... How far are you going to backpedal?
hammy challenged me to name the intermediate forms of his choice, and said that he would take a close look at the evidence. He hasn't, has he?
And as we both know, no single individual will ever be able to look at every question in the detail it needs.
Nice backpedalling.
If you "know" that it is impossible to do what you offered to do, then why did you offer to do it?
Or shall we switch to cetacean legs?
You request to be let off the hook is denied.
Dromeosaurs to birds it is.
Now could we have something relevant to the question of whether the fossils are intermediate forms?
I'm waiting.
Perhaps others who are not as brain-washed as you may find at least parts of the articles relevant.
I'm still waiting.
This has been fun. We must do it again sometime with some even more incontrovertable statement.I've done sufficient looking to convince myself... No amount of effort on my part would ever be enough to convince you.
I'm still waiting.
Unfortunately, in the real world many us of inhabit, dogs is dogs.
http://genomebiology.com/2003/4/6/P6Ancient origin and evolution of the Indian wolf: evidence from mitochondrial DNA typing of wolves from Trans-Himalayan region and Pennisular India
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/conte...oken=34f0e85909d3b2df6605d27fe353dda222629f31Mitochondrial DNA control region sequences were analyzed from 162 wolves at 27 localities worldwide and from 140 domestic dogs representing 67 breeds. Sequences from both dogs and wolves showed considerable diversity and supported the hypothesis that wolves were the ancestors of dogs. Most dog sequences belonged to a divergent monophyletic clade sharing no sequences with wolves. The sequence divergence within this clade suggested that dogs originated more than 100,000 years before the present. Associations of dog haplotypes with other wolf lineages indicated episodes of admixture between wolves and dogs. Repeated genetic exchange between dog and wolf populations may have been an important source of variation for artificial selection.
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/abstract/55003333/ABSTRACTComparative analysis of mammalian genomes provides important insight into the structure and function of genes. However, the comparative analysis of gene sequences from individuals of the same and different species also provides insight into the evolution of genes, populations, and species. We exemplify these two uses of genomic information. First, we document the evolutionary relationships of the domestic dog to other carnivores by using a variety of DNA-based information. A phylogenetic comparison of mitochondrial DNA sequences in dogs and gray wolves shows that dogs may have originated from multiple wolf populations at a time much earlier than suggested by the archaeologic record. We discuss previous theories about dog development and evolution in light of the new genetic data. Second, we review recent progress in dog genetic mapping due to the development of hypervariable markers and specific chromosome paints. Extensive genetic homology in gene order and function between humans and dogs has been discovered. The dog promises to be a valuable model for identifying genes that control morphologic differences between mammals as well as understanding genetically based disease.
ETA: By the way, how will we ever know if these were intermediate forms and not merely extinct independant species?
So ... is this guy is genuinely dumb enough to believe that the process of mutation involves a surgical operation, and that a mutation of the lung requires some animal to stop breathing for a while so that the old lungs can be taken out and new lungs put in? Or is this a deliberate attempt to deceive?Let's start with the first point in Hammy's link just for shinz-nit and giggles.
"So how do the millions of years required for evolution mesh with the fact that “air breathers” can survive for only a few moments (at most) if a disruption to their respiratory system occurs? How can you take a “two-way” reptile lung and over a period of minutes evolve it into a fully functional “one-way” bird lung?"
Well, picking up the nearest book on vertebrate evolution that comes to hand, I find that "lung systems with air sacs are also seen in some modern reptiles, which demonstrates their distant kinship with birds."Did the lung need to shift, or is the author feeding us with caca?
We know that they are intermediate forms by their morphology (study of form).ETA: By the way, how will we ever know if these were intermediate forms and not merely extinct independant species?
As you can see, dogs is defintiely dogs. I don't understand why anyone would have trouble with this...
Agreed that would be defined as "speciation" by evolutionists. Unfortunately, in the real world many us of inhabit, dogs is dogs.
Would you be willing to bet good money that dna analysis would show greater divergence between chihuahuas & great danes as it would between a group of either?