• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

A Disproof of Evolution Disprovers

Heyo

Veteran Member
I'm posting this only because I absolutely love how the narrator makes clear just how dumb creationists can really be when confronted with real scientific questions. I know it's (only) 14 minutes long and a lot of members don't like watching anything so interminable (unless it's got cartoon Scotsmen, @Revoltingest), but really, I think it deserves a watch.

It discusses (from both sides of the argument) how kangaroos (and so many other marsupials) got from Mount Ararat to Australia after the flood. And the creationists are absolutely pricesless when they try to make their case.

The obvious answer is, of course, magic. The Noah story is full of magic anyway, so trying to explain something rationally just raises the question "why not explain that with magic also"?
 

darkskies

Active Member
Well, almost all fossils. Fossilization is a rare event. But if there is a major extinction event where a line is wiped out along with anything close to it a fossil from the time of that extinction may not be transitional.
Is it not transitional since it had potential? A transition could have occured.
 

darkskies

Active Member
So I think you are saying that science has not seen a non-kangaroo kangaroo style animal. They just assume they existed because their theories do not work without them.
They actually have (look up Palaeopotorous) but it comes down to what you can define as a "kangaroo-style animal". It's usually dealt with in groups and not individual animals because that's how it works. There is no assumption apart from what is most likely regarding the data collected.
 

darkskies

Active Member
Sounds like a lot of "could have, should have, would have" guess work. Science is supposed to deal in facts. Where are the facts in "could have"?
No, there is no doubt that a transition could occur in the animals that were part of an extinction event. My question was whether you can classify their fossils as "transitional" even when a transition did not occur (but could have).
 

lostwanderingsoul

Well-Known Member
They actually have (look up Palaeopotorous) but it comes down to what you can define as a "kangaroo-style animal". It's usually dealt with in groups and not individual animals because that's how it works. There is no assumption apart from what is most likely regarding the data collected.
So the "group" could be kangaroo style animals but the individual animals are not kangaroo style animals. This is starting to sound more like a comedy class than a science class. Let me see, a farmer has a herd of cows but the individual animals are not cows. Yeah, that's good for a few laughs.
 

lostwanderingsoul

Well-Known Member
No, there is no doubt that a transition could occur in the animals that were part of an extinction event. My question was whether you can classify their fossils as "transitional" even when a transition did not occur (but could have).
Can I say my dog had puppies because she "could have" got pregnant but did not.
 

darkskies

Active Member
So the "group" could be kangaroo style animals but the individual animals are not kangaroo style animals. This is starting to sound more like a comedy class than a science class. Let me see, a farmer has a herd of cows but the individual animals are not cows. Yeah, that's good for a few laughs.
I did not say that at all. I talked about groups because "kangaroo-style" cannot be defined properly.
This is how it is:
iu

Where black is an older macropod and white is a kangaroo.
 

lostwanderingsoul

Well-Known Member
I did not say that at all. I talked about groups because "kangaroo-style" cannot be defined properly.
This is how it is:
iu

Where black is an older macropod and white is a kangaroo.
OK very good. Now I see it very clearly. Science is based on things that "cannot be defined properly". Maybe it is time to stop before you fall in the hole you are digging.
 

lostwanderingsoul

Well-Known Member
No but fossilised after millenia she would still be a transitional fossil.
So if my dog could be a transitional fossil it seems like anything could be a transitional fossil so it loses its meaning. My dog is not transitional between anything, she is a dog.
 

lewisnotmiller

Grand Hat
Staff member
Premium Member
They actually have (look up Palaeopotorous) but it comes down to what you can define as a "kangaroo-style animal". It's usually dealt with in groups and not individual animals because that's how it works. There is no assumption apart from what is most likely regarding the data collected.

Procoptodon goliah is an example from fossil records.
 
Top