You again confuse your beliefs and your intetpretations as science.
You're
still not making the slightest bit of sense. What exactly are you referring to as "my beliefs", and earlier as my "religion"?
My comment above was in response to your belief that common ancestry beliefs have contributed to science. The opposite is true. Evolutionism has harmed people and hindered scientific progress.
This is both hilarious and bizarre. Remember,
you posted a Livescience article describing how scientists made some new discoveries about the appendix, as a direct result of evolutionary common ancestry between humans and other taxa. The article even included this very clear statement from the researchers, "
we're using his [Darwin's]
ideas on evolution to do this work".
Yet somehow, you're actually trying to take that and use it as an example of evolutionary common descent not contributing to science. IOW, scientists are saying "We made this discovery under the framework of evolution", you take that and say "See everyone? That shows evolution doesn't contribute to science!"
Absolutely....positively.....
bizarre.
Evolutionist and anticreationist, Larru*Witham wrote
Now you're accepting statements from scientists? So you approach statements from scientists the same way you approach science. When they say something you like, you accept it, but when they say something you don't like, you dismiss it.
Confirmation bias
Tweak??? More like chop down.
In 2009, the cover of New Scientist says "Darwin was Wrong...cutting down the tree of life"
And do you remember what that issue was about?
Psuedogenes joins the long list of vanishing proofs and disappointments for evolutionists.
Again you're behaving in such a bizarre manner, it's fascinating to watch. Just like with the appendix example, you're trying to take a discovery made
using the framework of evolutionary common ancestry, and use it to make the argument that evolutionary common ancestry doesn't contribute to science.
I mean, let's look at
the paper you cited from the journal RNA.
Notice anything right after the introduction section? That's right...there's an entire section entitled "Evolution and the conservation of pseudogenes". The very first paragraph in that section directly states that it is only via evolution that these discoveries are made! I mean...did you even read the paper? Did you see this part...
Pseudogenes gradually accumulate mutations, and the number of mutations can give us an estimate of their age. Fascinatingly, the appearance of Alu elements in Old World primates coincided with the peak of processed pseudogene generation and subsequent radiation of primates ~40 million years ago (Ohshima et al. 2003; Zhang et al. 2003). Conservation of pseudogenes across different species has also been observed. Analysis of the rhesus macaque major histocompatibility complex (MHC) extended class II region revealed two pseudogenes that were found to be homologous to the human HIV TAT-specific factor-1-like and zinc finger-like pseudogenes, which was suggestive of evolutionary conservation (Sudbrak et al. 2003). Investigations by Podlaha and colleagues (Podlaha and Zhang 2004) demonstrated that the Makorin1-p1 pseudogene is conserved across Mus musculus and Mus pahari strains. This prompted a genome-wide survey for pseudogenes conserved between humans and mice in which human pseudogenes, along with their parent genes, were compared with the corresponding mouse orthologues and their pseudogenes (Svensson et al. 2006). Interestingly, many of the pseudogenes examined were found to have very few mutations within the regulatory regions they shared with their parent genes, which might suggest that these regulatory regions are of importance to the pseudogene and that the pseudogene may be functional.
Do you even understand how that's just a long way of saying "Only through the understanding of evolutionary common ancestry were these discoveries made"?
Do you understand how utterly bizarre it is to see you try and cite this as an example of evolution
not contributing to science?
At this point I have to ask, do you just not understand this material, or do you understand it and are trying to argue that it actually means the opposite of what it says?
Oh my.... yet another failed prediction.
Um....no. First, you've already ignored a bunch of questions just from my last post. Second, I said "eventually you will drop out". Let's see how this goes.
opcorn:
And trust me, this is one prediction I'd love to be wrong on.