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Originally posted by Zaphod58
Who says evolution takes a long time? The Nene Goose here in Hawaii was a Canadian Goose just a couple hundred years ago. Then they found their way here and they're now a completely different subspecies. Have been for a long time. Going from monkey to human might take a long time, but from one species to a different one like the Nene won't take long. Yeah, they're still geese, but it's still evolution. They evolved into geese that don't swim, and walk on lava rocks, so they have very little webbing, and very tough leathery feet.
Originally posted by spearhead
Evolution is merely the ability to adapt to the conditions a species is subjected to:
for instance:- a house cats ability to malt its fur when the whether changes from cold to hot.
Certain organisms develop immunities to their surrundings These become more dominant and are imprinted into the genes so the next generation carries them.
B)There does not exist at least one organism of a defferent species in the same evolutionary tree that can call Alpha its ancestor
Originally posted by spearhead
what other evolution could there be other than bioloical evolution on a realistic scale?
Originally posted by MCory1
The primary problem I see with your reasoning--and I might be misunderstanding your explanation--is that there's no set "speed" of evolution. There's no way to determine how quickly it covers a given set of frequency changes.
If you use the same logic, I'll never move my fingers on this keyboard--we have a definite starting point and finishing point, but there's an infinite number of fractional positions in between. It'll therefore take an infinitely long time for my finger to traverse that fraction of an inch between rest state and the key.
It takes me a while to type sometimes, but not that long
Originally posted by spearhead
So for evolution in your mind it must not follow a pattern. If it does then its not evolving but gaining knowledge on how to change?
Originally posted by spearhead
If evolution could be graphed, and a pattern in the evolutionary change between alpha and beta becomes visible, is it evolution?
If a pattern can be discovered, then evolution can become a mathamatical equation. Since evolution appears to be random and distant between changes it seems improbable a pattern will be found.
The fault lies in the assumption that the process of moving from point 0 to 8 can take place in infintesimally small steps. Using the same logic I can 'prove' that you will never die, or that the hour hand on my watch will never ever reach 5pm today.
Originally posted by radardog
Yet, you do not show the proof to be unsound. The paradox still exists.