Man of Faith
Well-Known Member
Can evolution produce a human, a dog, or a bat? We see bats in the fossil record with no known ancestry and they look just like the bats of today. Could it be that scientists so accept evolution to be true that they dont even test or verify it? There is suspicion that evolution cannot do two things at one time and multiple things would need to be done at the same time to go from fish to amphibian or reptile. Scientists see micro-evolution, such as evolution of anti-biotic resistance and resistance to pesticides, so they infer macro-evolution, such as the larger things, the large leaps, fish to amphibian, reptile to mammal, if you take a lot of small steps you get a long way. However there is no direct evidence for that. To critical thinkers or skeptics of evolution, the jump to macro-evolution from micro-evolution is hard to swallow, because multiple things have to happen before you can produce any useful cellular machines. Richard Lenskis long term e. Coli experiment has produced 50,000 generations and they are still e-coli with no fins or arms, no legs or fingers, no limbs, no eyes, no heart, etc
And what we have seen thus far when the reactions are left unguided as they would be in the natural world is not much. Indeed, the decomposition reactions and competing reactions out distance the synthetic reactions by far. It is only when an intelligent agent (such as a scientist or graduate student) intervenes and "tweaks" the reactions conditions "just right" do we see any progress at all, and even then it is still quite limited and very far from where we need to get. Thus, it is the very chemistry that speaks of a need for something more than just time and chance.
When Charles Darwin published The Origin of Species in 1859, it was already known that existing species can change over time. There is abundant evidence that changes can occur within existing species, both domestic and wild, so microevolution is uncontroversial. Many biologists during and after Darwin's lifetime have questioned whether the natural counterpart of domestic breeding could do what domestic breeding has never done -- namely, produce new species, organs, and body plans. All known beneficial mutations, however, affect only an organism's biochemistry; Darwinian evolution requires large-scale changes in morphology, or anatomy. "Large-scale evolutionary phenomena cannot be understood solely on the basis of extrapolation from processes observed at the level of modern populations and species.
http://www.discovery.org/scripts/viewDB/filesDB-download.php?id=118
http://www.dissentfromdarwin.org/scientists/
http://www.discovery.org/v/341
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._coli_long-term_evolution_experiment
And what we have seen thus far when the reactions are left unguided as they would be in the natural world is not much. Indeed, the decomposition reactions and competing reactions out distance the synthetic reactions by far. It is only when an intelligent agent (such as a scientist or graduate student) intervenes and "tweaks" the reactions conditions "just right" do we see any progress at all, and even then it is still quite limited and very far from where we need to get. Thus, it is the very chemistry that speaks of a need for something more than just time and chance.
When Charles Darwin published The Origin of Species in 1859, it was already known that existing species can change over time. There is abundant evidence that changes can occur within existing species, both domestic and wild, so microevolution is uncontroversial. Many biologists during and after Darwin's lifetime have questioned whether the natural counterpart of domestic breeding could do what domestic breeding has never done -- namely, produce new species, organs, and body plans. All known beneficial mutations, however, affect only an organism's biochemistry; Darwinian evolution requires large-scale changes in morphology, or anatomy. "Large-scale evolutionary phenomena cannot be understood solely on the basis of extrapolation from processes observed at the level of modern populations and species.
http://www.discovery.org/scripts/viewDB/filesDB-download.php?id=118
http://www.dissentfromdarwin.org/scientists/
http://www.discovery.org/v/341
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._coli_long-term_evolution_experiment