Ok, for the earth a billion years is a day and so if something takes a billion years it does not happen slowly.
We can quibble the definition of slowly then, or you could try to understand point.
Mutations over generations of population are sequential.
Can we agree on that, or should we debate the meaning of "is" like Clinton?
So since they happen, then more creatures are born or whatever, more happen, and the process repeats itself, that is sequential, and no, nothing else implied, discussed with that. Not saying that all have to steadily accumulate, blah, blah, blah....
Mutations according to evolutionists produce genes and since they happen sequentially and by definition from the vantage point of someone or something, slowly over time, that means genomes don't start out genetically complex but get that way through adaptionist means of evolution.
Then how did the simplest organisms that didn't have so much to adapt to in the sense of novel traits to be selected for, how did they get so genetically complex?
And if novel genes can arise without NeoDarwinism, isn't the whole ND narrative overplayed?
Maybe environmental pressures played a very little role in what forms emerged. Sure, species had to survive. But other than that, maybe the mutations were preset, programmed to evolve into certain forms.
It sure looks that way, assuming common descent in the first place. They were front loaded with all the genes needed for all types of life. They repeat certain forms such as the Marsupials and Placentals. They seem to follow a pattern that has essentially petered out now.
That's front loading. It's evolution of a sort but not NeoDarwinism which makes no sense at all when you look at the fact. Microevolution decreases genetic variability not increases it.
Unfortunately for front loaders, we still have the fossil record. No gradualistic evolution there, nada,.....so it'd have to be very fast macro-jumps like Goldschmidt and others envisioned.
Maybe then the creationists are correct. Just didn't happen.
We can quibble the definition of slowly then, or you could try to understand point.
Mutations over generations of population are sequential.
Can we agree on that, or should we debate the meaning of "is" like Clinton?
So since they happen, then more creatures are born or whatever, more happen, and the process repeats itself, that is sequential, and no, nothing else implied, discussed with that. Not saying that all have to steadily accumulate, blah, blah, blah....
Mutations according to evolutionists produce genes and since they happen sequentially and by definition from the vantage point of someone or something, slowly over time, that means genomes don't start out genetically complex but get that way through adaptionist means of evolution.
Then how did the simplest organisms that didn't have so much to adapt to in the sense of novel traits to be selected for, how did they get so genetically complex?
And if novel genes can arise without NeoDarwinism, isn't the whole ND narrative overplayed?
Maybe environmental pressures played a very little role in what forms emerged. Sure, species had to survive. But other than that, maybe the mutations were preset, programmed to evolve into certain forms.
It sure looks that way, assuming common descent in the first place. They were front loaded with all the genes needed for all types of life. They repeat certain forms such as the Marsupials and Placentals. They seem to follow a pattern that has essentially petered out now.
That's front loading. It's evolution of a sort but not NeoDarwinism which makes no sense at all when you look at the fact. Microevolution decreases genetic variability not increases it.
Unfortunately for front loaders, we still have the fossil record. No gradualistic evolution there, nada,.....so it'd have to be very fast macro-jumps like Goldschmidt and others envisioned.
Maybe then the creationists are correct. Just didn't happen.