J
John Larkin
Guest
On Mon, 23 Oct 2006 12:11:09 -0500, unsettled <unsettled@nonsense.com>
wrote:
Simple cases, like bacterial drug or temperature resistance, are
somewhat predictable and can be verified by experiment. But how about
macro things, like the creation of new genera and orders? Are past
creations at this level "predictable" after the fact?
I wonder if any really new life forms are evolving now, right under
our eyes.
John
wrote:
Does the science of evolution provide any accurately predictive tools?Lloyd Parker wrote:
In article <184nj2pmmiu4gtl0vga9s0c4lvonj89lhi@4ax.com>,
John Larkin <jjlarkin@highNOTlandTHIStechnologyPART.com> wrote:
On Sat, 21 Oct 2006 18:55:27 GMT, <lucasea@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
If you're going to label evolution as "just a belief", then you had better
be prepared to apply that appellation to *all* of the observational
sciences, since evolution is one of the best supported ideas in the history
of science.
It is not.
Yes it is. It the cornerstone for biology, in the way atoms are for
chemistry.
The observational evidence for big evolutionary jumps, and
especially for the creation of life, is spotty or non-existant.
OK, lie #1
There
is no demonstrably accurate mathematical model for evolution.
Lie #2
Nobody
actually understands how DNA works.
We don't understand quantum theory either, but the sun shines and your
computer works.
Evolution, and especially its
mechanisms, is nowhere near being good science; it may be some day,
but not yet.
You are lying.
If you use "best supported" to mean "popular", then I guess you're
right.
John
Idiot.
Whether or not models are correct is not important to us.
What is important that they provide accurately predictive
tools for us to use.
Simple cases, like bacterial drug or temperature resistance, are
somewhat predictable and can be verified by experiment. But how about
macro things, like the creation of new genera and orders? Are past
creations at this level "predictable" after the fact?
I wonder if any really new life forms are evolving now, right under
our eyes.
John