Barbarian chuckles:
Yep. The redwood defense ("giant redwoods can't grow from seeds, because no one lives long enough to see it happen") is a common fall-back position for creationists.
If you don't want to hear it, don't use it. The notion that you can't know anything that takes longer than a human lifetime is just an excuse.
I never said human lifetime, but in fossil record and what we have documented in a lot of people's lifetime. Plus empirical evidence in genetics don't show that anything more complex can be added by mutations and NS.
That's wrong, too. For example, Hall's E. coli evolved a new enzyme, but then also evolved a regulator so that the enzyme was produced only in the presence of the substrate, becoming irreducibly complex, since all three components had to be present in order for the system to work. A measurable increase in complexity.
Dawkins also stated no examples would you like to see that again?
Sorry, reality overrules anyone's opinion.
Barbarian suggests:
Mutation and natural selection. But free free to pick any step in the process you think can't have evolved, and we'll take a look for you.
(can't think of one)
Neither can anyone else.
Actually I named a few can you not read?
No, I don't see that. Name one step in the process from a microbe to any organism living today that you think couldn't happen. In fact, why not start a new thread on it, so I'll be sure not to miss it.
Sparticis describes creationists:
For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse: Because that, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened. Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools,
Yep. Creationists are notorious for ignoring God's creation, which as St. Paul says is obvious to all. You have no excuse.
Barbarian, regarding the idea that a "space alien designer" could account for living things:
Sorry, we took a look at that, and found you had confused analogy and homology. Not a viable excuse for you.
Doesn't matter. As you know, "similarities" aren't what show evolution. It's homologies.
Barbarian observes:
But when I challenged you to show me two major groups lacking a transitional, you declined to do it and retreated in a cloud of excuses. So I think we can safely conclude you know that it's evidence.
Instead of two groups, you gave me a number of highly divergent taxa. Since you were unwilling to step up to the challenge, I showed you what the last common ancestor would be like for all of them. It happens that they are all craniates, a subphylum of the chordates. Hagfish are an example of primitive craniates.
I suspect you know what will happen if you step up to my challenge and give me two major groups. So you're dodging the question. If I'm wrong, you can still do it, of course.
Barbarian observes:
Notice that the "living fossils" confirm the same evolutionary lineages first discovered by Linnaeus.
Living fossils show the same thing dead fossils show, same animals not changing into anything else.
Populations evolve, not individuals. But living fossils like platypuses are transitionals. They are a mix of reptilian and mammalian characters. But note that we never see a mammal/bird transitional, or a fish/arthropod transitional. That's even more compelling than the living fossils as evidence for evolution.
(Barbarian notes more confusion over homologies)
Nope that is explained by a creator who created all animals. God can make things with similarities.
You're still having trouble with this. Similarities are analogies. Common structures that are not similar are homologies.
Comes down to evidence. Science has it. You don't.
Same evidence you use works against you. I have the same evidence you do, you just deny God did it how he said.
As you learned, God didn't say how He did it in Genesis. He left evidence for us to find out. You don't approve of the way He did it, for reasons that are hard to understand.
Which considering what I spoke of above with NS and mutations unable to add new complex systems
See above. Surprise.
God explains this in Genesis, he created everything as after their kind.
You'll admit that much, but you won't accept the way He did it.
Show us something that couldn't develop.
Nope. You dodged that one. Just name one structure you think couldn't evolve. Highlight the word in red so everyone knows what it is.
Barbarian observes:
So far, everything is a modification of something that came before. Show me an exception. You keep contradicting your self here.
The first microbe did not any complex systems we see today so it could not modify what it did not have, you really need to get this straightened out because you are denying what happens in evolution.
So, let's take the cell membrane. The simplest one is merely a phospholipid bilayer. Things can diffuse in and out, but suppose one of the proteins in the cell is slightly modified to fit between the phospholipid molecules and protrude through the cell. Now you have an attachment point for other molecules, which if they happen to be useful to the cell, become available in lower concentrations, giving the cell an advantage over other cells. And this can happen again and again, leading to a much more effective and complex cell membrane.
Surprise.
To get men out of microbes you had to develop a lot of complex systems and new genomes.
As you learned, we don't have a new genome. Most of the microbe genome is still with us. It's just been repeatedly modified over billions of years.
Barbarian suggests:
Give us an example of some feature that could not have appeared in the sequence from the first cells to some organism today.
(Declines to do so)
Neither can anyone else. Important evidence, don't you think?
I have given you a lot of things systems and etc.... I just gave you the cardiovascular system
I showed you that it evolved from very simple forms that were no more than thickened blood vessels.
You saw the evidence from genetics, embryology, and anatomy that shows lung evolved from the upper digestive system.
The thing is all you can say is how they may have been developed you have no proof or transitional to show these.
I showed you that a very primitive transition for hearts exists in annelids, for example:
Silly misconception there. For example, we see living organisms today with "hearts" that are no more than thickened blood vessels with the same muscles and valves found in other blood vessels. And yet the pump blood and keep the organism alive. You've been misled again.
One of the simplest types of closed circulatory systems is found in annelids such as the earthworm. Earthworms have two main blood vessels -- a dorsal and a ventral vessel -- which carry blood towards the head or the tail, respectively. Blood is moved along the dorsal vessel by waves of contraction in the wall of the vessel. These contractible waves are called 'peristalsis.' In the anterior region of the worm, there are five pairs of vessels, which we loosely term "hearts," that connect the dorsal and the ventral vessels. These connecting vessels function as rudimentary hearts and force the blood into the ventral vessel. Since the outer covering (the epidermis) of the earthworm is so thin and is constantly moist, there is ample opportunity for exchange of gases, making this relatively inefficient system possible.
http://biology.about.com/od/organsys...torysystem.htm
Okay showing animals with these systems whats your point?
Just showing that what you claim is impossible is found in living organisms today. And yes, there are worms lacking these, and there are more advanced forms in organisms descended from annelids:
Notice in some onychophorans, the heart isn't much more complicated than in annelids. But in arthropods, it differentiates into a primitive heart with sinus and a primitive ventrical. Keep in mind all blood vessels have muscles that can contract and release, and one-way valves. In hearts, these become larger and more robust.
Barbarian, regarding mutations:
More often, they don't do much of anything. So most live, a few die, and a very few get improvements that make them more likely to live and leave offspring. This sort of thing accumulates every generation.
Okay but you use this process to show thats how we got new genomes
No. As you learned, we still have most of the microbe genes. We just have a modification of the earlier genome.
and systems out of the first microbe and developed man and all other life.
You just learned how hearts developed from simpler things. Surprise.
Well I may not know everything but I know what the evidence shows
You know some of it now, but it clearly caught you by surprise. There's a lot more that you don't know.
Dawkins and all honest evolutionist agree we have no evidence for new complex systems from mutations and etc... Would you like to see this again?
Sorry, reality trumps anyone's opinions. Find some evidence, or you're pretty much out of luck.
Stamping your foot and insisting won't help you.
Barbarian chuckles:
No, you're trying to slip around natural selection, again. Nice try. But the avian lung was simiply inherited from dinsosaurs, some of which had "avian lungs." It was already there in many of them, before there were birds. Or possibly, it was present in the ancestor of birds and dinosaurs, if Feduccia is right.
http://www.evolutionpages.com/bird_lung.htm
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80...rd-like-lungs/
Pretty easy. See below.
Darwin
If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed, which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down. But I can find out no such case.
I'd be pleased to see your evidence that the flow-through lung couldn't evolve. You see, all vertebrates have that mode of respiration available as a secondary path. It's called "collateral ventilation, and occurs through the Pores of Kohn in the alveoli, in cases of bronchial obstruction. Not very efficient, but it's no coincidence that the bird lung uses the same path.
That is evidence. The fact that the same flow-through process happens in us, and in all vertebrates, is no coincidence with the fact of such a lung in dinosaurs and birds.