First and foremost, thanks.
Thanks for answer the question directly, openly, and honestly. That shows more integrity than we sometimes see on the internet. Before responding, I wanted say that, and to follow up by answering your question to me, as I said I would.
what did you think about this part of the peer reviewed article:
" ..and caution against accepting intuitively appealing accounts of historical molecular adaptation that are based on correlative evidence."
I think it shows quite clearly that their hypothesis of the specific evolutionary pathway was shown to be less likely than a different evolutionary pathway. There are many different genes which could mutate in different ways to give the new ability seen in the flies. They tested one possible mutational route, and found that it wasn't that one. This is no surprise, as other tests on other mutational pathways to new abilities have sometimes found them correct, and sometimes pointed to different mutational routes.
By not, I see that many others have tried to explain that as well, including sfs, who is an expert in this area.
If that answer was not clear, let me know and I'll try again. Now, on to your answers.
If by evolution you meant change over time, no. That is observable, testable and repeatable.I had no intention of casing doubt on that.
If by evolution you meant the variations that happen, are selected for, and produce changes, for example the bacteria enzyme for nylon. Again, no. I have no issues with directed evolution.
Cool. Thanks for clarifying those.
If by evolution you mean purely materialistic mechanisms for change, such as random mutations producing all the genetic differences we see, then yes I absolutely meant cast doubt on that narrative .......
But why try to cast doubt on evolution when it does not require "pure materialism"? It's no different from gravitational theory, which describes gravity without invoking a god, or germ theory, which describes disease without invoking a goddess, or even algebra, which describes equations without invoking a demon.
In any of those, you or I can see God behind it all, as described by Jesus in John 5:17 or in Hebrews 1:3. None of them require you to be "purely materialistic". Why do you see evolution differently than gravity, or germ theory, or, say, obstetrics?
...... and cited a peer reviewed source cautioning against that narriative as well.
But as we saw, the peer reviewed source in no way casts any doubt on evolution, and is no more "materialistic" than chemistry.
In Christ -
Papias