“A non-flying kind has the capability to someday fly."
My own answer: outright impossible.
Why? Because common sense rules this out as well.
First off, common sense is overrated. It was only after we abandoned common sense that the scientific revolution really took off and led to today's technology and understanding of the world that enabled it.
Second, natural selection, it seems to me, is entirely consistent with common sense. None of steps of evolutionary change seem particularly radical or far out. I hate to sound condescending, but it really does seem to be true that creationists don't really understand the process they're objecting to.
What steps in the evolution to flight, seem impossible to you?
We probably agree that there was once a time before flight, and I think we can agree that there are currently numerous and various modes of flight. Biology accounts for this by positing a series of small alterations in existing structures, driven by selective pressure. Religion accounts for it by, well... magic.
Not being cute, but should I just accept the tenets of evolution without visualizing it occurring?
An animal which does not fly.... eventually producing an animal which does fly. How that actually happened is where I need help.
Anyone, please comment. This is what I want to hear more about. Thanks!
But biology has described and provided examples, as well as theoretical and empirical support for these steps, in practically every textbook and research paper for the past century or more.
Flight is not a particularly remarkable achievement; no more so than sight or bipedalism.
Not to be critical, again, but how is it that creationists can graduate high school and still seriously make the uninformed arguments they so consistently do?
Crossboard, biology is a vast discipline. Could you narrow down your query with some specific questions we could begin with?