silvanricky wrote:I don't know who you are really King Doctor but you sound a lot like Woodruff.
I have no idea who Woodruff is, but based upon your description of him I can only assume that he is a thoroughly awesome dude.
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silvanricky wrote:I don't know who you are really King Doctor but you sound a lot like Woodruff.
jay_a2j wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote: To you, I keep saying "look at the evidence before you criticize evolution".
Where is it? Point me to a species of animal that is in the process of evolution.
jay_a2j wrote:
The missing link.
jay_a2j wrote:
If an animal evolved from fish to some land creature where are the fossils?
well, the Ceolocanth swims. Being a fish biologist, I am most familiar with that one. As for others? Basically whether they are living or fossils is irrelevant. Some species gave rise to descendents that were very, very different from them and some did not. Some gave rise to multiple other species.jay_a2j wrote: The fossils of the "in between" animals. Where are the "in between" animals walking the earth today?
jay_a2j wrote: If evolution allows animal x to become animal y where is animal xy? Yeah I know "a long process", but there would still be something visibly concrete that we could look at.
jay_a2j wrote:
Maybe a rat with no hair, then a rat with feathers, then a rat with wings, something!
jay_a2j wrote:
But these things do not exist. You can spout all the gobbledygook you want about the process of evolution. But when real life examples of it happening are concerned, nada. And don't get carried away with the rat, it was an example. ANY animal in the process of becoming something else, where are they?
john9blue wrote:Hey Lionz, you know you're winning when ignorant morons start criticizing your speech patterns instead of the actual issues.
jay_a2j wrote:I love this:
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STAY OFF YOUR PHONE WHILE DRIVING!!!!!
King Doctor wrote:silvanricky wrote:I don't know who you are really King Doctor but you sound a lot like Woodruff.
I have no idea who Woodruff is, but based upon your description of him I can only assume that he is a thoroughly awesome dude.
Lootifer wrote:I earn well above average income for my area, i'm educated and I support left wing politics.
jbrettlip wrote:You live in New Zealand. We will call you when we need to make another Hobbit movie.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
silvanricky wrote:I don't know who you are really King Doctor but you sound a lot like Woodruff.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
jay_a2j wrote:He is far too polite to be Woodruff.
Lootifer wrote:I earn well above average income for my area, i'm educated and I support left wing politics.
jbrettlip wrote:You live in New Zealand. We will call you when we need to make another Hobbit movie.
jay_a2j wrote:King Doctor wrote: taller and less hairy than they were in the dark ages.
Obviously you've never met my Uncle. Or Robin Williams. Not buying it. Anyone can point to subtle thing and say "See! That's evolution!" the problem is, if humans evolved from a specific animal then why do we not see it today? What did man evolve from? Player insists it was not the ape, although that is widely accepted.
Seems you did not read my comments on those pictures you posted.jay_a2j wrote:But she never states what animal we evolved from.
The fossil, nicknamed "Ardi," is the earliest skeleton known from the human branch of the primate family tree. The branch includes Homosapiens as well as species closer to humans than to chimpanzees and bonobos. The discoveries provide new insights about how hominids -- the family of "great apes" comprising humans, chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans -- may have emerged from an ancestral ape.
Until the discovery of Ardi, the earliest well-known stage of human evolution was Australopithecus, the small-brained, fully bipedal "ape man" that lived between four million and one million years ago. The most famous Australopithecus fossil is the 3.2-million-year-old "Lucy," which was named after the Beatles song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds." Lucy was found in 1974 about45 miles north of where Ardi would later be discovered. Ardi's skeleton and associated Ardipithecus ramidus remains are older and more primitive than Australopithecus.
After Lucy's discovery, there was some expectation that when earlier hominid remains were found, they would converge to a chimpanzee-like anatomy, based on the genetic similarity of humans and chimps. The Ardipithecus ramidus fossils do not, however, corroborate this expectation.
Ardi's skeleton contains enough of the skull, teeth, pelvis, legs, feet, arms, and hands to estimate her body weight and height; that she walked on two legs on the ground, but climbed trees and spent time in them as well; and that she probably was omnivorous. What may come as a surprise is that Ardi and her companions did not have limb proportions like chimps or gorillas, but rather like those of extinct apes or even monkeys, and that her hands are also not chimpanzee- or gorilla-like, but more closely related to earlier extinct apes.
[color=#4080FF]Scientists said the findings suggest that hominids and African apes have each followed different evolutionary paths, and that we can no longer consider chimps as "proxies" for our last common ancestor.
"Darwin was very wise on this matter," Tim White from the University of California Berkeley, who helped lead the research team, observed.
"Darwin said we have to be really careful. The only way we're really going to know what this last common ancestor looked like is to go and find it. Well, at 4.4 million years ago we found something pretty close to it. And, just like Darwin appreciated, evolution of the ape lineages and the human lineage has been going on independently since the time those lines split, since that last common ancestor we shared," White said.[/color]
jay_a2j wrote:Where is this mysterious animal that man evolved from and why did they stop evolving?
Why?jay_a2j wrote:If evolution is to be believed we should see humans all around the globe in different stages of evolution.
2dimes wrote:Did video kill neadarthal man?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
bradleybadly wrote:jay_a2j wrote:He is far too polite to be Woodruff.
Just wait
I'm telling you it's a matter of time before his true colors come out. Of course he'll shy away from his use of "reading comprehension" to avoid being caught but he'll substitute other language in its place.
Besides, you've got a bunch of conspiracies you believe in, Jay. Why can't I have at least one?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
jay_a2j wrote:Well, I watched the video. One thing I will point out is that all the theories on evolution are speculation. No one can be sure of any of these claims. They can say that was the "first woman" but they can not prove it, can not prove it's offspring 10,000,000 years later was Adam and Eve, can not substantiate a single thing. It's all hearsay. And takes about as much faith to believe as God creating Adam and Eve from the dust of the earth as totally non-evolved human beings.
jay_a2j wrote:I remain firmly convinced that God did not use evolution to create man. However, I will concede that it is "possible" that He did, because He is God and if He wanted to do it, He could. I simply believe that the chances of it happening in nature leaves far too many questions and seems about as likely as us landing on the sun.
jay_a2j wrote:Well, I watched the video. One thing I will point out is that all the theories on evolution are speculation. No one can be sure of any of these claims. They can say that was the "first woman" but they can not prove it, can not prove it's offspring 10,000,000 years later was Adam and Eve, can not substantiate a single thing. It's all hearsay. And takes about as much faith to believe as God creating Adam and Eve from the dust of the earth as totally non-evolved human beings.
jay_a2j wrote:I remain firmly convinced that God did not use evolution to create man. However, I will concede that it is "possible" that He did, because He is God and if He wanted to do it, He could. I simply believe that the chances of it happening in nature leaves far too many questions and seems about as likely as us landing on the sun.
notyou2 wrote:My avy proves evolution.....the feet alone prove it.
jonesthecurl wrote:Also Jaywalking is a crime, therefore Jaythinking is an abomination.
NG leads readers to believe that Darwin thought the fossil record supported his theory. But actually he admitted more than once in his famous book6 that the fossil record is an embarrassment to his theory of descent from a common ancestor. He knew that if his theory was true, there should be countless numbers of transitional forms (e.g., 100% reptile, 75% reptile-25% bird, 50% reptile-50%bird, 25% reptile-75%bird, 100% bird and many transitional forms between each of those). Darwin attributed the lack of evidence to our ignorance of the fossil record. But today our museums are loaded with fossils and the missing links are still missing.
As the late Harvard evolutionary geologist, Stephen Gould, put it:
The extreme rarity of transitional forms in the fossil record persists as the trade secret of paleontology. The evolutionary trees that adorn our textbooks have data only at the tips and nodes of their branches; the rest is inference, however reasonable, not the evidence of fossils.7
In a 1979 letter responding to the late creationist, Luther Sunderland, Colin Patterson, then Senior Palaeontologist at the British Museum of Natural History in London, concurred:
I fully agree with your comments on the lack of direct illustration of evolutionary transitions in my book. If I knew of any, fossil or living, I would certainly have included them. You suggest that an artist should be used to visualize such transformations, but where would he get the information from? I could not, honestly, provide it, and if I were to leave it to artistic license, would that not mislead the reader? ... You say that I should at least “show a photo of the fossil from which each type of organism was derived.” I will lay it on the line — there is not one such fossil for which one could make a watertight argument.8
Richard Dawkins’ evolutionist disciple at Oxford University, Mark Ridley, is emphatic:
However, the gradual change of fossil species has never been part of the evidence for evolution. In the chapters on the fossil record in the Origin of Species Darwin showed that the record was useless for testing between evolution and special creation because it has great gaps in it. The same argument still applies. ... In any case, no real evolutionist, whether gradualist or punctuationist, uses the fossil record as evidence in favor of the theory of evolution as opposed to special creation.9 [emphasis in the original]
Lionz wrote:2dimes,
You might have been making jokes, but what do you ask of me and want me to answer?
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