Astrophile
Active Member
So, on what basis are these creatures grouped in a line of relatedness....."on the basis of shared characteristics".
So its basically saying that similarity is enough to assume relatedness. Sorry, that is weak grounds for an assumption....but no one seems to notice how weak it is unless you use the power of suggestion.
If your first premise is wrong, then everything you build on it will be false. That is how I see evolution.
No, similarity and shared characteristics are not the same thing. When you understand what shared characteristics are and why they are evidence for common ancestry, you will begin to understand why evolution is valid?
Look....here is a diagram from your link....these are members of the "lizard" family. Is the fact that all lizards share characteristics mean that all these are descended in a line of evolution? Why can't they just be various species of lizards?....created by a Being who loves his art...to explore new possibilities.....variations on a theme? God is not a magician.....so who said that these creatures must have evolved from one another?
The closest science can get without lying to to say they "might have" or "could have".....some then conclude they "must have"....sorry, but I am not buying it.
You know the thing that made me smile.....is the pigeon at the end.....he is so obviously a lizard.....
This is completely wrong. Archosauriformes 'is a clade of diapsid reptiles that developed from archosauromorph ancestors'; lizards and snakes (order Squamata) and tuataras are included in the subclass (not a family) Lepidosauria, not in the Archosauriformes. More to the point, how do you think that birds, dinosaurs, pseudosuchia, Proterosuchidae and Archosauriformes came to share characteristics if not by inheriting them from a common ancestor?
The rest of the argument is no better than saying 'why can't there be angels who push the planets round their orbits?' or 'why can't mental illness be due to possession by demons?'