There's a long way to go between walking ten feet and walking fifty miles, but I can tell you from experience, it's the same thing. It just takes longer.[\quote]
is horribly flawed. You assume, with no good reason, that the fitness peaks occur along nice smooth gradations. There is no compelling reason for this to be true. Especially considering the fact that any number of biological structures that exist are irreducibly complex (Please oh please do not refer me to Kenneth Miller. He pulls the same WRONG line every time.
I have already read his essays.) I think there is very good cause to believe the curves involve a good deal of flat space, alot of verticals and alot of drop offs due to irreducibly complex structures. Another fundamental problem is that of inventiveness. Evolution only works to maximize an existing hyperspace of probabilities. For example, in Dawkins biomorphs program evolution can produce amazing variation withing the hyperspace of, say, branching length or depth. However it will not evolve a gene for color. There is a very good paper on this problem at:
http://www.iscid.org/boards/ubb-get_top ... 00003.html
Let me know if you cannot get into it. (I'm a member of ISCID, but I don't know if its a members only thing to get into the Archive.)
Regardless of what we call it, I see evolution below these types of roadblocks as fully observable, and fully proved. Macroevolution will involve the totality of changes between eukaryotes and say, birds. I do not think that the kind of evolution we have observed does any credit to explaining how eukaryotes could gradually evolve into birds, or even prokaryotes. It does no good to disparage my supposed incredulity. I'm of the opinion that my incredulity is well deserved based on the evidence. Under any other circumstance my incredulity would be considered healthy skepticism. In physics this kind of incredulity is allowed all the time. For the past 10 years one of my professors has been searching for cracks in the standard model. Right now he is doing so with the Belle experiment in Japan. The standard model has been proven time and time again, and yet there he is, searching for the cracks in the standard model. Why? Skepticism (and maybe boredom). Not incredulity, which is merely a red herring. Which leads me to one of the bluffs you continuously make on these forums. You insist that there is no religious dogmatism surrounding Darwinism, which is perfectly absurd. I have never seen a more religiously vehement group of nonreligous people as Darwinists (you should have read an editiorial in
Physics Today on the textbook controversy in Texas. If they could have spit nails at the Discovery Institute I've no doubt they would.)
At any rate, I can simply return the compliment, for I find your credulity to be equally damaging to your arguments. It is really easy to believe something when you are that credulous. This brings me to your point about evidence. I think it is more fair to say "It depends on how you feel about the evidence
for evolution." Because yes, it certainly does. You paint an unfair (and untrue) picture of the situation by implying that the evidence is simply nothing but evidence for evolution. If that were the case not be swayed by the evidence would, by default, mean you are simply stupid or irrational. Let us be honest, those are not exactly good initial terms for starting a debate. If you're right, I've already lost. People can have legitimate problems with the theory of evolution based solely on the empirical evidence. To imply otherwise is the kind of bluster I am talking about.
Regards,
Garret
P.S. Unfortunately my forrays into these discussions always prove more costly time-wise than I would like. So you will have the divine pleasure of the last word

.