New information is when a creature has traits not displayed in other members of its genus. Adaptations such as a fish with lights on it.steen said:How do you tell when "new" information has arisen? How do you measure it?
And what do you then mean that speciation has a decrease in "information"? How do you tell, and are you saying that some mutations, the ones that lead to new species, have a loss of information?
This all seems rather bogus, as if it is all made-up. Could you provide some scientific evidence for any of this?
The loss of information is when some dominant traits are lost and recessive traits become evident, but these traits aren't new because their ancestors had them.
Hmm. My info sounds like I made it up hmmm? Well just think about it. If a small group of fish swam from the ocean through a river into a lake, but then the river dries up and the fish a stuck in the lake, some might mate with close relatives because of the shortage of fish and no new traits would be gained because they are mating in their own gene pool. They certainly won't gain new traits if they mated inside their own gene pool. They would then gain recessive traits in some and others will lose the recessive all together. This is basic. I also got this information from Dr.Percival Davis, Dr.Dean H. Kenyon, Dr.Charles B. Thaxton, Dr.Mark D. Hartwig, and Dr.Stephen C. Meyer.
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