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So, I was reading a post by nolidad in a place I can't post.
Incredible - a single cell
(By the way, if you haven't seen the video at the beginning of that thread, take a look, it's amazing.)
Okay! I haven't looked at Acts and Facts before. This could be fun.
This Month's Issue | The Institute for Creation Research
Oooh, look, a tardigrade article. I like tardigrades. Lemme check that out. Read read read.
Engineered Adaptability: Engineered Features Determine Design Success or Failure
Huh. I don't think I need the scientific method for this one.
"1. It is an entity’s traits—not its exposures—that determine its design success or failure."
"2. Engineered solutions to problems must precede the problem. The existence of a solution is not “due to” the problem."
This is apparently meant to show that things don't happen the way evolution theories say they do. You hit tardigrades with all kinds of nastiness, and they shrug it off. Like they were designed that way.
Well, here's the thing. The quotes are exactly right! But that actually supports evolution. I'm not sure how the author got confused about that. Evolution doesn't say an entity changes because of the problem. It says the population changes.
An entity's traits determine its success or failure. A problem comes along. The critters with the traits that allow them to survive the problem tend to survive. The critters with the traits that don't survive so good tend to die. The problem, whatever it is, changes the population as a whole. The more survivable traits win out.
Why are the tardigrades so tough? The ones that weren't tough enough died out. One wonders what kind of environmental pressures they faced. Must have been nasty. Am I wrong about this?
I'm going to have to check out more of these articles.
Incredible - a single cell
(By the way, if you haven't seen the video at the beginning of that thread, take a look, it's amazing.)
I challenge you to take one article from a recent acts and facts from ICR and disprove it using the scientific method! I won't hold my breath.
Okay! I haven't looked at Acts and Facts before. This could be fun.
This Month's Issue | The Institute for Creation Research
Oooh, look, a tardigrade article. I like tardigrades. Lemme check that out. Read read read.
Engineered Adaptability: Engineered Features Determine Design Success or Failure
Huh. I don't think I need the scientific method for this one.
"1. It is an entity’s traits—not its exposures—that determine its design success or failure."
"2. Engineered solutions to problems must precede the problem. The existence of a solution is not “due to” the problem."
This is apparently meant to show that things don't happen the way evolution theories say they do. You hit tardigrades with all kinds of nastiness, and they shrug it off. Like they were designed that way.
Well, here's the thing. The quotes are exactly right! But that actually supports evolution. I'm not sure how the author got confused about that. Evolution doesn't say an entity changes because of the problem. It says the population changes.
An entity's traits determine its success or failure. A problem comes along. The critters with the traits that allow them to survive the problem tend to survive. The critters with the traits that don't survive so good tend to die. The problem, whatever it is, changes the population as a whole. The more survivable traits win out.
Why are the tardigrades so tough? The ones that weren't tough enough died out. One wonders what kind of environmental pressures they faced. Must have been nasty. Am I wrong about this?
I'm going to have to check out more of these articles.