T
The Bellman
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To begin with, I'm not necessarily arguing with you; I'm arguing with creationism. If creationism is a position you hold, then I'm arguing with you; if it isn't, then I'm not. I don't assume that you are a creationist necessarily.razzelflabben said:As I have already said, I will happily accept the definition of species as science identifies it, provided that both sides understand the fuzziness of the definition. And since I take the bible literally, I would assume you could call me a C since the theory originated in the bible. However, in order for the discussion to continue, you also must do away with the notion that you already know what I believe because you have argued or read about C.
Creationism can't accept the definition of species as science identifies it and take "kind" to mean "species", because by every scientific definition of "species", creationism has been falsified by the fact that cross-species evolution has been observed. That's why creationists are constantly asked to define "kind", because NO accepted definition of "species" fits the bill, in terms of being evolutionarily inviolate.
So using "species" won't help creationism. They postulate a "kind", and it is they who must come up with a definition of such - and no usage of "species" will help them. As stated above, all definitions of species are fuzzy precisely because species themsevles are fuzzy - as evolutionary theory explains. Kinds, however, are definitely NOT fuzzy - that's the whole point. They are strictly defined boundaries over which evoltuion canNOT cross. Yet creationists, despite repeated requests, can never identify those boundaries, or define exactly what a "kind" is.
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