I didn't answer that question in another thread? I wouldn't have answered for other reasons, but not because it "pinched".
Walt is wrong because the ice age after the flood is much more likely.
My apologies, in the “
Origin of Limestone” thread I mentioned your parting with Walt on the Mammoth issue. I thought you had already posted in that thread, and would be watching it. I see you had not. Gomen nasai.
But it's just a fantastic story until you can answer some basic questions.
I really don’t understand the pathological resistance you guys have to a simple admission that if evolution progressed from simpler forms up to us, that a sequence of hearts in various levels of complexity is commensurate with that. It doesn’t prove evolution. It doesn’t even make the claim that the stages of heart complexity shown are the ones that our ancestors went through. It only shows that simple hearts are found in nature, slightly more complex hearts are found, and so on. At least morphologically, it presents a candidate set of stages our hearts might have evolved through, and that hearts can be simple, or a bit more complex, and still more complex.
And the more radical the nucleotide differences are, the less chance they evolved from a common ancestor. So until you have data on the differences, don't claim they are from a common ancestor.
Sound like the only measurement that will satisfy you is DNA analysis. If that is true, then since the vast majority of creatures that are known only from the fossil record are sans DNA, then you think we are impotent at making judgments about how they fit in a tree of life. I think you are being silly by demanding data that in many cases, no longer exists.
Until you have the DNA comparison, you've got nothing.
Yup, then you think we have to allow that trilobites and pterodactyls and brontosaurus might all literally be first cousins.
We can use the DNA of the ancestors to begin with.
And for any person not demanding an unreasonable level of proof, morphology can be used to suggest paths of development.
You make the mistake of imparting "flying monkey stupid" to people where I only issued it to the idea. There are a lot of smart people that accept a stupid idea here and there. In fact I'd bet every smart person believes at least one stupid idea.
The “idea” you disparage with that label is one of the core ideas accepted by the vast majority of those in the scientific community that have taken the time to look into it. It is no different than me labeling all religions as repositories of lies designed to salve the moral cowardice of people afraid of death. I haven’t disparaged Christians, only that opiate-dealing organization they go to on Sundays.
Take Walt Brown for example.
I agree with you, but now you are on Stripe’s black list.
I don't know what you mean by saying I said something about "non-selectable" nucleotides. Here's my statement again and we'll see if you can take another go at it "Demonstrate non-selectable nucleotide changes spreading in a population; and at the same time avoiding mutational load; to the point where a complex organ required for survival is created."
What do you mean by “non-selectable” in the context you use it?
Yeah, we know. But it does have to create (initially) something that is selectable.
Are you using the term “selectable” as meaning something natural selection can act on?
Fine. But as Alate will tell you, most nucleotide changes will not create something that is even a marginal improvement.
Agreed. Most are neutral. Of those that are not neutral, most are deleterious. Occasionally one is beneficial. Like brown fur giving way to white.
It's an arbitrary level of change that precludes programmed variation.
For example. One can get vast differences in bugs with an exoskeleton, but that could be caused by programming already present in DNA. To prove the point, you have to get outside the possibility of programmed variation and demonstrate something like changing the exoskeleton to an endoskeleton.
So what you are asking for is novelty – introducing something not already found in the parent genome. How perfectly does your DNA duplicate that of your parents?
Could be. I would tend to doubt it though.
I am basing my statement on the claim that only a few percent of the DNA is encoding. Like someone said, at the DNA level, most of us are much closer to being bananas than our outward appearance would suggest.
Yeah, but I need to get the info from you (or another evolutionist you trust) for you to believe it.
I haven’t figured out what “it” is that you think geology data will help us to believe.