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On 20-Feb-2005, Scott Weiser wrote:
Quite right, because the question is unanswerable. If you can't identify any valid theory of evolution then what exactly is it that your are claiming is wrong? Setting up a fake theory and then blaming the scientific community for it is not particularly useful. - in fact you haven't identified what any version of evolution is and you haven't demonstrated that _your_ version of "evolution" even exists in the scientific community. I disagree. You're contradicting yourself. But they are all still sharks. They are not the aquatic version of human beings. Why should they be? That's _your_ fantasy about evolution, not any theory that exists in the scientific community. There is _nothing_ in the scientific realm that insists on a monotonic, continuous variation in species evolution. If nothing else, the average height of humans has increased substantially in recorded history. There you go inventing your own version of morphology. Stick with the facts - height variation occurs _within_ morphological similarity. If DNA shifts cause gradual morphological changes And if it doesn't cause gradual changes? You are the one that insists on change being gradual, not the scientific community. Some paleontologists posit that Neanderthal and Sapien may have co-existed, but the overlap is speculative at this point. Nothing speculative at all. They are known to have co-existed. The timeframes of overlap are in tens of thousands of years. Tools from both species are found in the same sites in the same timeframe. But one would expect to find some evidence of these unfavorable changes. If the change is in soft tissue, how is that to be found? Morphology isn't evolution and it isn't biology nor genetics. It is one aspect of biology. Which constitutes ADAPTATION, not evolution. Your assumption. You don't know whether the change required an evolutionary change in, say, brain function, that would allow for an iguana to swim and feed underwater. For marine iguanas, the development of gills would be an entirely useful evolution that would produce a favorable result. In the case of sharks, the development of a sophisticated intellect and communications capability that permits sharks to communicate sophisticated concepts to one another (along the lines of YOur fantasies. The scientific community does not dictate what constitutes a minimal requirement for the real world in order to consider it to be evolution. Even if the theory of evolution is true, Which theory of evolution? You claimed you can't identify it. Thus, evolution, even if true, does not disprove the existence of God. Rejecting the possibility of God's existence merely because one believes in the theory of evolution is shallow thinking indeed. And who, in this discussion, has suggested that? As long as you are fighting against your fantasies, you'll have problems. Mike |
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