BilliardsBall
Veteran Member
You keep saying this but you never actually demonstrate it.
And not only that, but it's based on long-ago debunked creationist claims going back about 50 years or so. Science has obviously come a long way since then. But seriously, these talking points were old back then. I mean seriously, look at you here talking about how it's impossible for the eye to have evolved. What are you going to do next, quote-mine Darwin? Come on.
Apparently you aren't aware either that scientists have pieced together how eyes have evolved (from, but not limited to), examples in species that exist today all over the world that exhibit eyes in various stages of the sequence of eye evolution that they've pieced together.
The Origin of the Vertebrate Eye - Evolution: Education and Outreach
Visualizing the Evolution of Vision and the Eye
Evolution and development of complex eyes: a celebration of diversity
Eye evolution and its functional basis
Light and the evolution of vision | Eye
By the way, irreducible complexity, as a concept, has been dead in the water for years.
I am aware of the typical arguments. These I've not heard addressed:
Since I have an arched foot with 26 bones in it--and an arch structure is irreducibly complex (the arch falls without each component within) and there are no transitory fossils between my arched foot and the flat foot of other apes--what is the statistical likelihood that the arched foot evolved via random processes, most of these processes reducing, rather than adding, information?
Or since the eye is thought to have evolved up to 30 times across different species, what " "?