siti
Well-Known Member
@Deeje - to make this a fair test, old Mr Comfort (is it just me or has he evolved into a real live troll?) should have been able to point to just one example of divine creation - no not one from thousands or millions of years ago - we can't actually observe that...the entire argument of the video is completely fatuous...anyway - here's a few observations you can make on your own body...There is no evidence for macro-evolution in any library.....it doesn't exist. All of the students interviewed said that they strongly believed in evolution, yet none of them could think of one example of macro-evolution, that didn't require faith or belief in what someone else had told them, despite all of them expressing absolute faith in it. That is very telling IMO. I think they call that "brainwashing".
1. Try to wiggle your ears - if you can this is because you have inherited a trio of muscles that allowed our pre-human ancestors - and other mammals today - to rotate their ears in response to sounds in order to determine the direction of potential prey or predators. Studies have shown that these muscles - although incredibly weak in humans - are still activated reflexively in response to sounds - our ears don't actually move, but the mechanism by which they would have done in our evolutionary ancestors has been retained.
2. Stretch out your forearm on the table in front of you palm up, touch your thumb to your little finger and slightly raise your hand. If you see a raised band in the middle of you wrist, this is a tendon that connects to the palmaris longus - a vestigial muscle in our forearms that about 10-15% of humans no longer inherit (i.e. they are born without it) - they don't have it because we no longer need it - it is a muscle that in other mammals is used for locomotion using the forelimbs - we don't, for the most part, walk with our arms, so it is being phased out gradually in our evolution. Some people have it in one arm but not the other.
3. Did you ever get goosebumps when you got cold? That's another futile vestigial response mechanism that we have inherited from hairier ancestors. Most of us have nowhere near enough hair to make us any warmer and the hairs on our forearms standing up certainly don't make us look any more fearsome to a potential adversary.
But I think the clearest evidence is the currently ongoing speciation event that humans are undergoing as creationists and evolutionists diverge into homo stultus and homo sapientiorem - the brain seems to be on the verge of vestigiality for one - I'll let you figure out which.
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