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Has there ever been an account of an observed instance of a change of kind?
originally posted by: Noinden
a reply to: cooperton
(a) What level of education do you have in the sciences?
(b) Why are you citing old “experiments” which have been discredited as “proof” of something?
(c) Why are you citing the bible, which is not peer reviewed as a source of scientific fact?
Many of you have bashed the validity of the Crosse experiment, yet I think the person who replicated the experiment had proper aseptic technique. But hey, let's throw that experiment out the window because it seems to make a lot of you furious because it has not been replicated this century (barring those ambiguous oriental artists/scientists???).
originally posted by: TzarChasm
a reply to: cooperton
... the solution is relatively simple: recreate the experiment yourself according to the standards and protocols of modern scientific investigation. that should give us a reason to take the experiment seriously, provided the experiment is successful.
Many of you have bashed the validity of the Crosse experiment, yet I think the person who replicated the experiment had proper aseptic technique. But hey, let's throw that experiment out the window because it seems to make a lot of you furious because it has not been replicated this century (barring those ambiguous oriental artists/scientists???).
originally posted by: cooperton
originally posted by: TzarChasm
a reply to: cooperton
... the solution is relatively simple: recreate the experiment yourself according to the standards and protocols of modern scientific investigation. that should give us a reason to take the experiment seriously, provided the experiment is successful.
I agree. Consider the experiment pending.
You may be referring to my usage of the word "kind", but I'm just trying to simplify taxonomical terms.
originally posted by: Phantom423
a reply to: cooperton
"Many of you have bashed the validity of the Crosse experiment, yet I think the person who replicated the experiment had proper aseptic technique."
Really?? And how do you know that?
originally posted by: iterationzero
a reply to: cooperton
You may be referring to my usage of the word "kind", but I'm just trying to simplify taxonomical terms.
If you want to simplify things, try defining (in a clear and objective way) what you mean by "kind". No offense, but defining it by example -- "a bird is a kind, an insect is a kind" -- is only useful if you want to move the goalposts later on.
originally posted by: Barcs
a reply to: cooperton
Each time you use the word "kind", you use it to mean a different classification. Try using real scientific terminology if you wish to discuss science. Please pick a classification instead of using one that can mean any of them. You claim to have a neuroscience degree, wouldn't it annoy you if folks kept attacking neuroscience, calling it faith based and using blatantly wrong terminology to describe it?
originally posted by: Barcs
a reply to: cooperton
Each time you use the word "kind", you use it to mean a different classification. Try using real scientific terminology if you wish to discuss science. Please pick a classification instead of using one that can mean any of them. You claim to have a neuroscience degree, wouldn't it annoy you if folks kept attacking neuroscience, calling it faith based and using blatantly wrong terminology to describe it?
I think the person who replicated the experiment had proper aseptic technique. But hey, let's throw that experiment out the window because it seems to make a lot of you furious because it has not been replicated this century.
originally posted by: Ghost147
I'll repeat myself... again: We know that organisms reproduce with variation. We know that genetic drift leads to speciation (and have observed this). We have biological historical records from species to species where we can trace a direct lineage (which also happen to be dated in the exact way we would expect these organisms to have been alive). We have biological traits which are dormant in living specimens that coincide with this lineage to a common ancestor.
We have mounds and mounds of evidence that all points to one single conclusion. We have 0 evidence that suggests it doesn't do what this conclusion describes. So what exactly is the purpose of having to "be there to see it first hand" that is so important and further conclusive?
originally posted by: Phantom423
a reply to: cooperton
Can you please show me any biology textbook that says that monkeys turned into turtles, an ape turned into a man, a dog turned into a cat? Creationists use those examples over and over again and never acknowledge that evolution is about common ancestry - I think I said that before in this thread - but as usual, it gets ignored. So please provide a list of biology books that specifically say that one phyla turned into another. While you're at it, look up "common ancestry" and see if you can figure out what evolution really says.
originally posted by: GetHyped
Hey OP, I've already posted this for you many times before in another thread and each time you just go "but... but..." and start repeating yourself without ever addressing any of my points. Well, here they are again. Fancy taking a crack?
1) It's not a peer-reviewed paper. It's basically a "letters to the editor".
2) It's in the proceedings for a conference that has NOTHING to do with biology.
3) The author even stated he didn't think it was spontaneous creation but contaminated samples.
4) This incredibly simple experiment was described nearly ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO in some obscure electrical conference proceedings. It's never been followed up since. Funny, that.
5) Clinging to this laughably flimsy "evidence" whilst ignoring the overwhelming amount of evidence supporting evolution means (IMO) you are self-deluded to the point of living in your own la-la reality bubble.
originally posted by: Barcs
It's pretty much a given that anybody who uses the term "kinds" knows nothing about evolution or biology. The OP used the word to mean completely different things when he said plants will be plants and frogs will be frogs. In the first he referred to kingdom, in the second he referred to genus or family. It's pretty LOLworthy at this point, and it's blatantly obvious he got his arguments straight from Kent Hovind.
originally posted by: Barcs
Now you are misusing the term "observe". In science it doesn't just mean to watch something in real time. Observations can be made with experiments, by studying fossils, and by utilizing radiometric dating methods. By observing the fossils of intermediary species, we can see the common traits and observe the change in the family classification. I gave an example of the whale on the previous page which is based on scientific observations and still holds true. So that should settle this thread then, since we provided exactly what you asked for.
We have given you an example of creature changing its family backed by scientific observation. I'm not sure what else you want here.
These aren't complicated subjects. Why are you just ignoring them?
originally posted by: Phantom423
a reply to: Ghost147
These aren't complicated subjects. Why are you just ignoring them?
That's SOP (standard operating procedure) for Creationists. They tend to disappear into the aether very fast when they're confronted with the facts.
No response is simply an admission of ignorance. So says the court of common sense.