News7 mins ago
Atheism, Agnosticism, Belief.
260 Answers
Nine and a half minutes. Very interesting.
Presented by Dinesh D'Souza, featuring Neo de Grasses Tyson.
https:/ /youtu. be/jYi7 yHeKBEI
Presented by Dinesh D'Souza, featuring Neo de Grasses Tyson.
https:/
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Theland. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think this is it.
Note how there is no progress in cross speciation.The bibles, ''kinds,'' remains unassailable.
This is real rationality.
https:/ /www.qu antamag azine.o rg/scie ntists- seek-to -update -evolut ion-201 61122/
Note how there is no progress in cross speciation.The bibles, ''kinds,'' remains unassailable.
This is real rationality.
https:/
Pixie - yes of course.
Any organism, animal or vegetable, can undergo micro evolution.
Selective breeding in farm animals domestic animals are examples.
When the food supply, or environment changes, organisms can change to suit the new circumstances.
Darwin's finches - as the food supply changed, so finches underwent changes to their beaks, shorter and stronger, or longer and more adapted to probing food.
But they began and ended as finches.
Never a new species, which is macro evolution, which is impossible, and exists only in the minds of its adherents.
Any organism, animal or vegetable, can undergo micro evolution.
Selective breeding in farm animals domestic animals are examples.
When the food supply, or environment changes, organisms can change to suit the new circumstances.
Darwin's finches - as the food supply changed, so finches underwent changes to their beaks, shorter and stronger, or longer and more adapted to probing food.
But they began and ended as finches.
Never a new species, which is macro evolution, which is impossible, and exists only in the minds of its adherents.
Thanks, theland. There are two parts that confuse me... (well, at least!)
You say "never a new species". But it was humans who decided what "species" should mean. Basically, one kind of animal who couldn't interbreed with another. So, that can't be a surprise, that they don't, when it is our actual categorisation of it? Maybe we have just labelled things wrongly?
Also, with human evolution, neanderthals are classed as a different species from us, even though we did breed with them and continue their genes, until they died out. That has gone from one species to another.
Say it was possible for a cat to evolve into a dog, then we would have called them the same "species" in the first place. So that is technically right, by definition, but only because it's our definition.
You say "never a new species". But it was humans who decided what "species" should mean. Basically, one kind of animal who couldn't interbreed with another. So, that can't be a surprise, that they don't, when it is our actual categorisation of it? Maybe we have just labelled things wrongly?
Also, with human evolution, neanderthals are classed as a different species from us, even though we did breed with them and continue their genes, until they died out. That has gone from one species to another.
Say it was possible for a cat to evolve into a dog, then we would have called them the same "species" in the first place. So that is technically right, by definition, but only because it's our definition.