Pard
Member
OK I don't get some stuff about evolution. I'm just interested in seeing what evolution-minded (see that it's like the PC version of evolutionist, because ya'll get all sorts of ticked off with that word...) folks say about these things. Just going to list some questions.
No need for arguments. Imagine it is a philosophy quiz... everything and anything you can write is still the right answer!
What are the odds that a pool of mud will get struck by lightening at the same time that all the compounds of a cell (and for the benefit of the doubt, let's just pretend the lightening already struck perfectly the last few times in order to make some of the more complex inner workings of a cell...) are in order, and thus create a living organism?
What are the odds that some how that first organism not only managed to be created, but was already good to go with it's own replication system?
How does the first organism (once it does the things above, and a LOT of other things) ever evolve? From my understanding, basic organisms just spawn, there is no "mate". The spawns are clones of the original organism. How does that translate into something that managed to be the ubergrandfather of every living thing in the world?
I actually know the answer to the above question, no need to answer it... So let's carry on with that answer. Basically, if I understand correctly, a single celled organism that replicates itself can still "evolve" (though it's hardly in the spirit of that term...) because the replication system isn't perfect and it leaves room for errors that translate (eventually) into new "traits" (just like how viruses can adapt). So what are the odds that two of these clones, at some point down the line, would not only "mess-up" enough to create compatible reproduction systems, but that they would also be within the same general area and that they would ever find one another in that big old mud pool.
Where do plants and (what do you call the living breathing ani-) animals split off? Was it like one child grew roots and the other grew legs? (That last sentence was a joke)
How did life, which was most likely water-based, manage to find its way onto land? Water and land are not only two different ball-parks they are two different games!
How did plant life develop a reproduction system? Are plants old? I mean for the most part they need insects... did plants come later in the game? What came first: the plant or the bee?
Where does a little whimpy single celled organism turn into a multi-celled organism? Where does that scrawny multi-celled organism turn into a creature with multiple organs all of which are assigned a different job and are required to work in unison to provide life? What came first: the brain or the heart?
I'll get some more once these have been answered... Oh and let's avoid big words and things. I wrote my questions in a way that even my monkey ancestors could understand (hahah, see that is a evolutioni-, evolution-minded joke!!!). So let's give answers in an equally understandable format. It's easy to throw a few big words and some concepts only people with PhDs understand, and it is probably tempting to do, since it will more or less quell any dissenting views... It sure keeps me from responding to posts which I otherwise get nothing about, except that they are wrong!
No need for arguments. Imagine it is a philosophy quiz... everything and anything you can write is still the right answer!
What are the odds that a pool of mud will get struck by lightening at the same time that all the compounds of a cell (and for the benefit of the doubt, let's just pretend the lightening already struck perfectly the last few times in order to make some of the more complex inner workings of a cell...) are in order, and thus create a living organism?
What are the odds that some how that first organism not only managed to be created, but was already good to go with it's own replication system?
How does the first organism (once it does the things above, and a LOT of other things) ever evolve? From my understanding, basic organisms just spawn, there is no "mate". The spawns are clones of the original organism. How does that translate into something that managed to be the ubergrandfather of every living thing in the world?
I actually know the answer to the above question, no need to answer it... So let's carry on with that answer. Basically, if I understand correctly, a single celled organism that replicates itself can still "evolve" (though it's hardly in the spirit of that term...) because the replication system isn't perfect and it leaves room for errors that translate (eventually) into new "traits" (just like how viruses can adapt). So what are the odds that two of these clones, at some point down the line, would not only "mess-up" enough to create compatible reproduction systems, but that they would also be within the same general area and that they would ever find one another in that big old mud pool.
Where do plants and (what do you call the living breathing ani-) animals split off? Was it like one child grew roots and the other grew legs? (That last sentence was a joke)
How did life, which was most likely water-based, manage to find its way onto land? Water and land are not only two different ball-parks they are two different games!
How did plant life develop a reproduction system? Are plants old? I mean for the most part they need insects... did plants come later in the game? What came first: the plant or the bee?
Where does a little whimpy single celled organism turn into a multi-celled organism? Where does that scrawny multi-celled organism turn into a creature with multiple organs all of which are assigned a different job and are required to work in unison to provide life? What came first: the brain or the heart?
I'll get some more once these have been answered... Oh and let's avoid big words and things. I wrote my questions in a way that even my monkey ancestors could understand (hahah, see that is a evolutioni-, evolution-minded joke!!!). So let's give answers in an equally understandable format. It's easy to throw a few big words and some concepts only people with PhDs understand, and it is probably tempting to do, since it will more or less quell any dissenting views... It sure keeps me from responding to posts which I otherwise get nothing about, except that they are wrong!