Right, because nothing you read that you agree with could ever be wrong. :chuckle:I found the original paper.
Nice straw man. :thumb:Nothing about 200 million years with no change.
Right, because nothing you read that you agree with could ever be wrong. :chuckle:I found the original paper.
Nice straw man. :thumb:Nothing about 200 million years with no change.
Right, because nothing you read that you agree with could ever be wrong.
Nice straw man.
Eels Haven't Changed in an Allegedly 200 Million Years
Right, because nothing you read that you agree with could ever be wrong. :chuckle:Nice straw man. :thumb:
No need. I found the original paper. Nothing about 200 million years with no change. Indeed, this species is unknown in the fossil record. The warning remains obvious; read the original paper, if you want to get it right.
No surprise that you're unable to respond with any integrity. There is no reason to take as true what you have read over what someone else has read.Barbarian observes:I found the original paper.If one cites a paper, one is obligated to accurately report what it says. There is nothing in the paper about 200 million years with no change.Well, let's take a look at that...From Jefferson's summary of the paper:Surprise.
Straw men and appeals to authority are the atheist's staple.You suggested reading the "magazine" they cited, Barb did you one better, read the original paper. If it is as he says then Pastor Bob and his buddy Fred lied about the facts.
Straw men and appeals to authority are the atheist's staple.
And let's throw in an appeal to ignorance. If the paper says nothing of change, how is that evidence of great change?
We can now add tu quoque to the list. :chuckle:Ah, and I suppose you do not appeal to the authority of the now written oral tradition of goat herders.
No one is suggesting the paper states great change, just that Pastor Bob and his sidekick Fred use it to suggest stasis but perhaps the paper does not say that. So either Barb is wrong or Pastor Bob. Lets get the cite to the paper and then we can determine.
Can you give us a cite to the original paper, thanks.
Great! So now if only Barbarian could read the article in question or call up the show we might have a rational discussion. :thumb:Here:
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/early/2011/08/16/rspb.2011.1289.full.pdf
BTW, I don't think it's so much a matter of lying as reading a magazine source that perhaps wasn't clear, and jumping to a conclusion. The key is that this species is unknown in the fossil record. Indeed, it has a suite of characters not seen in the fossil record, but cladistic analysis indicates that it is a member of the basal group from which all eels evolved.
It is primitive and a representative of a group assumed to have been long extinct. But it's not in the fossil record. A similar situation is the modern coelacanth, which likewise is primitive in many ways, but is unknown in the fossil record, and very different from fossil coelacanths.
Great!
So now if only Barbarian could read the article in question
or call up the show we might have a rational discussion.
...Phylogenetic analysis and divergence time estimation based on whole mitogenome sequences from various actinopterygians, including representatives of all eel families, demonstrate that this fish represents one of the most basal, independent lineages of the true eels, with a long evolutionary history comparable to that of the entire Anguilliformes (approx. 200 Myr). Such a long, independent evolutionary history dating back to the early Mesozoic and a retention of primitive morphological features (e.g. the presence of a premaxilla, metapterygoid, free symplectic, gill rakers, pseudobranch and distinct caudal fin rays) warrant recognition of this species as a ‘living fossil’ of the true eels, herein described...
Thus,we consider that Protoanguilla represents an ancient anguilliform lineage that dates back to the early Mesozoic (around 200Ma)...
In any case, historically, the Protoanguilla lineage, estimated to have diverged ca 200Ma, must have been much more widely distributed...
Ah, the old I-read-something-so-that-settles-it argument.
Again, my point is not that anyone lied, but that one should be very careful about making claims for something, when one has not read the actual paper.
So when are you going to read the article,
listen to the show
or call up so that your commentary is justified?
Liar.I read the article. It appears Jefferson did not. I wish he would. I left a link for anyone who wants to see what it really says.
Depends on the source. :idunno:Do you think the part he posted is misleading as to his claim? If not, why would I want to read the rest? After all, I'm only commenting on that particular error.
Your link is not the source of the comment. You need to quit with the demand that every game be played upon your court.Anyone who doubts it can go to the link and see what the article actually says.