It still does not prove evolution, just variation and adaptation.
Barbarian observes:
That is evolution. What did you think it was?
No those are examples of "micro-evolution", as evolutionists like to call it, adn there is no proof that they lead to macro-evolution. You state this next yourself.
We have directly observed speciation as a result of mutation.
The Barbarian wrote:
Speciation is what is sometimes called "macroevolution." Variation that does not cause the evolution of new species is sometimes called "microevolution."
See here is where we, for the most part, disagree.
There is nothing to disagree about. That's the way the terms are used. If you mean something else, you'll have to use another term.
Speciation is just the widening of genetics between two sets of animals so that they can no longer breed. I think that this is only caused by the loss, or maybe the neutral mutation, of genetic information.
More commonly by adding information, although macroevolution does not have to increase information. Some species are formed by simplifying the genome.
For evolution to have occured there would have been massive gains in information.
Not required, but it sometimes happens.
Something you have not shown me, in my opinion. (I am keeping an open mind and looking into above links.) It is my opinion that variation only ever causes micro-evolution.
We know that macroevolution can also be caused by mutation. The earliest documented case was in 1908, or thereabouts.
Barbarian observes:
Evolution is defined as "A change in allele frequency in a population over time."
That's the formal definition of evolution. If you want to use the terms, you must use them as they are defined. Or you can be continuously misunderstood.
You need more than just a change in the frequency of alleles for evolution.
Nope. That's all there is.
You need a net gain in information for evolution to work.
Or a reduction, or even no net gain or loss. Depends on what's happening to the organism.
A change in allel frequency give you the same amount of info just different info.
Nope. For example, there are often multiple copies of a single gene. Mutation of one will increase the total information, because there will then be two forms of the gene.
Barbarian on the cause of the evolution of a new species of primrose:
Nope. Polyploidy. Darth Rave wrote:
Barbarian observes:
That's what evolution is.
Polyploid=Having extra sets of chromosomes. That is having extra copied info.
Right. And yet we see that the evolution of a new species occured. Macroevolution, in this case, involved no new information, even though a new and quite different plant evolved.
This does not give new information.
Right. Do you see what's wrong with the information argument, now? A new species evolved, yet this macroevolutin required no increase in information.
Barbarian obsrves:
You first have to know what it is. And even in the big picture, humans still evolved from other primates, not bacteria.
And the primate evolved from something
Right. Another primate, not humans.
Some where along the lines evolution says that humans evolved from bacteria.
Nope. It says they evolved from other primates. I think you're trying to get the concept of common descent. Your great, great, great, great grandfather is not your father.
And as i have stated that is a huge information gain that can not be proven.
We now know exactly how this new information evolves.
The Barbarian wrote:
Evolutionary theory does not say how life began. It's indifferent to the way the first organisms began. But no matter what, it does not say that humans evolved from bacteria. Humans evolved from other primates.
Your right ToE does not say how life began this is one of its major stumbling blocks.
Nope. As far as evolutionary theory is concerned, it doesn't matter how the first organisms got here. You might as well claim chemistry is wrong, because chemistry doesn't say how atoms got here.
How can you just ignore how life got here but go on to say that you know how it evolved form that point on.
Evidence.
Darth Rave
According to evolution the first thing out of the goo would have been some kind of bacteria
No. That is not something evolutionary theory addresses.
this would have eventually evolved, through intermediaries, into a human.
Right. Very gradual steps over a long time.
That is a lot of new information.
The Mississippi Delta is a lot of land. But it also became itself grain by grain.
As you see, new information is evolving constantly. Over a few billion years, that's a lot of new information.
Would you like to learn how it happened?
[quote:b3292]So you agree that evolution says that humans evolved from bacteria?
Nope. Evolutionary theory says humans evolved from other primates.
Barbarian observes:
I'll do it, if you promise to stay with me on it.
Not sure what you mean by stay with you on it.
I'll show you some organisms. You decide if the changes in them are microevolution or macroevolution, and what features made you decide.
Fair enough?
Go ahead prove to me that humans evolved from bacteria.
[/quote:b3292]
Sorry. Evolutionary theory doesn't say humans evolved from bacteria.