Malicex
New Member
Mutations can be beneficial, neutral, or harmful for the organism, but mutations do not "try" to supply what the organism "needs." In this respect, mutations are random
Sure, mutations are random. But this still doesn't mean "design changes occurred by pure blind luck". Mutations are inevitable and some of them being beneficial is inevitable. If you roll two dice millions of times, you're going to get a 7. It's not blind luck. And after millions of mutations, having beneficial ones aren't luck either. Winning the lottery is luck, but a lottery being won isn't.
"The record of evolution is still surprisingly jerky and, ironically, we have even fewer examples of evolutionary transitions than we had in Darwin's time"
It's not possible to have fewer, unless he's talking about a ratio and/or the fact that for every transition you find it creates two more gaps in a sense (imagine if you have two coke cans and put another one in the gap, you create two more gaps). But in the end, it doesn't matter, fossilization is rare, and we're talking millions of years, so it's to be expected that a lot are missing. Also, on the geological timeline, the amount of time we've been actively looking for fossils is incredibly small.
but we also see some gaps, jumps, differences between the older and newer that have no intermediates that have been found..
There is always going to be gaps somewhere. We haven't even discovered all the lifeforms living now, let alone a thousand, million or a billion years ago. It's strange to me that people see this as a worthwhile argument, I figured everyone knew it was to be expected after learning about fossilization.
And again, there is no other scientific explanation for faunal succession and all these biospheres with animal forms coming into and out of existence. There is no other explanation for what we know about the whale. It's clear that a land animal evolved to live in the water. And there is definitely no other explanation for why genetics "coincidentally" lined up so well with this view.