Barbarian
Member
- Jun 5, 2003
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I'm sorry Barb, I haven't been reading along but this is so interesting and can't go back and read all.
Please just answer this:
Are you just saying that there is mutation within a species
OR
Are you saying that, because of continuing mutation, one species could change into another?
That's an observed fact. Even many creationists now admit that much. They now say that the evolution of a new species isn't really "evolution." That's some higher taxa, (usually at the order level, according to most YE creationists). The argument is that yes, new species and genera and families evolved, but that's it. Everything higher is forbidden by some unobserved law that prevents it.
Incidentally, this is not inconsistent with Darwin's theory; he didn't know whether all living things had a common ancestor or there were a few separate common ancestors. However, evidence from genetics indicates a single common ancestor. It makes sense, since the most primitive known life is able to swap genes around by plasmids, so that horizontal gene transfer is extremely common.
I'm not sure that's worded right, but I think you'll understand what I mean.
Yes. I get it. I've spent a good deal of time, discussing this with various leaders of the creationist movement, and it seems that they generally draw the line at families evolving. There are some technical problems with that; I believe that Kurt Wise and William Coffin have addressed them.
I spent a lot of time arguing with Thomas Woodward about that point (and others). His book Doubts about Darwin, reflects some of our conversations regarding questions we discussed.. He was kind enough to send me an autographed copy, he's a gentleman and his book is worth reading, if you want to see a rational approach to creationism.
Like, could a fish become a monkey given enough time and mutations?
A fish wouldn't. Organisms don't evolve. Populations do. So yes,populations can indeed evolve into new things, with new genes and functions. There is no detectable limit to variation, although specific organisms are constrained by the fact that evolution can only do changes that arise in a step-by-step fashion. So wings for us are not a realistic possibility, but undreamed of things certainly are.
(I don't believe so).
Comes down to evidence. And the evidence says that common ancestry is a fact. And so far, no barrier to such changes has been found.