DeitySlayer
President of Chindia
Newhope, if you take two random humans and use them to recreate an entire population, it will be shot through with genetic deficiencies and mental/physical disabilities.
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From here:Newhope, if you take two random humans and use them to recreate an entire population, it will be shot through with genetic deficiencies and mental/physical disabilities.
ooh, oooh I know the answer to this one.Newhope, if you take two random humans and use them to recreate an entire population, it will be shot through with genetic deficiencies and mental/physical disabilities.
Perhaps the long life was associated with the parents eating from the Tree of Life and it had lingering and diminishing effects on the offspring.ooh, oooh I know the answer to this one.
That's just a massive straw man.The people were genetically pure but after sin they gained genetic defects that's why people used to live 900 years and now only live to the 90s.
(I never found this argument convincing it's just making crap up)
maybe but then how would Christians account for the genetic defects.Perhaps the long life was associated with the parents eating from the Tree of Life and it had lingering and diminishing effects on the offspring.
So what happens to the lineage when the offspring are unable to reproduce? It's the end of the line. The whole purpose of the creationist use of "kind" is to sidestep the the problem of interspecies infertility. Only in rare cases can different species successfully interbreed (produce offspring that can interbreed with each other and perpetuate the new lineage). This limiting factor forced creationists to explain how Noah could have assembled, fed, and cared for the millions of species we now have. So they glommed onto the notion of "kind"---a term they have yet to define in any meaningful way--- which doesn't really resolve the problem because they are still left the problem explaining how all their kinds gave rise to all the species we have today. If, as you say, kinds can reproduce then they are essentially no different than what science calls species, which brings the problem right back to square one.Pegg said:they can reproduce though...which is exactly what a genesis Kind is able to do. It doesnt matter if the offspring are infertile, its the fact that two creatures CAN produce offspring which identifies them as being of the same 'kind'
Is that right! So what if you asked me to define "fruit" and I gave the examples of eggplants, tomatoes, string beans, okra, acorns, and olives, would that clarify what a fruit is? I'm guessing you'd probably say no, yet these are all fruits.but examples leave no guesswork in knowing exactly what is being conveyed.
No they don't. Carnivores comprise 12 families.Biologists put all carnivores into one family....thats their perogative,
Okay.but it has no bearing on a 'genesis kind' nor does that type of categorization differentiate between those carnivores who are closely related hence why my objection to likening a 'genesis kind' with a current 'biological family'
Newhope, if you take two random humans and use them to recreate an entire population, it will be shot through with genetic deficiencies and mental/physical disabilities.
naw.Is anyone else here confused about newhope's position?
Because being "full of genetic diversity" isn't possible. Genetic diversity is measured across populations. Asking what the diversity of an individual is like asking what the standard deviation of a constant is.Well DeitySlayer, if Two humans were created full of genetic diverstity why not?
So what happens to the lineage when the offspring are unable to reproduce? It's the end of the line. The whole purpose of the creationist use of "kind" is to sidestep the the problem of interspecies infertility. Only in rare cases can different species successfully interbreed (produce offspring that can interbreed with each other and perpetuate the new lineage). This limiting factor forced creationists to explain how Noah could have assembled, fed, and cared for the millions of species we now have. So they glommed onto the notion of "kind"---a term they have yet to define in any meaningful way--- which doesn't really resolve the problem because they are still left the problem explaining how all their kinds gave rise to all the species we have today. If, as you say, kinds can reproduce then they are essentially no different than what science calls species, which brings the problem right back to square one.
Is that right! So what if you asked me to define "fruit" and I gave the examples of eggplants, tomatoes, string beans, okra, acorns, and olives, would that clarify what a fruit is? I'm guessing you'd probably say no, yet these are all fruits.
No they don't. Carnivores comprise 12 families.
Okay.
You think so do you. The rank of family was created by the German biologist Ernst Haeckel long before creationism reared its silly head. He also created the rank of phylum. Why not read up on issues you think about instead of just thinking about them? (Rhetorical question. Please do not reply.)newhope101 said:I think researchers invented everything above 'family' to evade the creationist argument.
Hey I thought Linnaeus made family and phylum.
Kingdom, class and order are above family, gasp!The way he wrote it, it went "kingdom, class, order, genera, species". Domain, phylum, and family came later. I'm not sure from where.
Linnaeus was a creationist, btw.
Initially Linnaeus classified life in three ranks, kingdom, genus, and species. Later on, realizing the classification of life needed to be more finely tuned, he added class and order, to which Haeckle inserted the ranks of phylum and family. Botanists and bacteriologists, while recognizing the rank of phylum, will often use "division" as an alternative label. Domain, a much more recent rank, and one not yet recognized by everyone in the life sciences, was created in the early 1990s. Those not using it but still wishing to group kingdoms into a higher rank often call that rank Superkingdom or empire.Hey I thought Linnaeus made family and phylum.
So Herring Gulls are the same 'kind' as North American Herring Gulls, because they can interbreed. North American Herring Gulls are the same 'kind' as the East Siberian Herring Gull, because they are interfertile. Some East Siberian Herring Gulls can breed with Heuglin's Gull, making them the same kind. Heuglin's Gull, in turn, can produce offspring with the Lesser Black-Backed Gull. However, many of these species, while able to interbreed with proximal species or subspecies, are unable to interbreed with more distal ones. For example the Herring Gull is completely unable to breed with the Lesser Black-Backed Gull.
To put it into more clear terms,
A is able to breed with B, B can breed with C, but A and C cannot breed. How can A and B be the same kind, and B and C be the same kind, but not A and C?
What about the new genus Raphanobrassica?