1. There is no "theory" of creation.
(a) there is no explanation of properties or function.
(b) there are no experiments to perform for repeatable results
(c) there are no falsifiable predictions for future observations
(d) there is no process of critical analysis or peer-review to scrutinize these claims objectively.
Creation meets exactly none of the criteria required for any scientific theory.
2. The hierarchy is a structure of descendant groups within parent groups that was originally divised by a creationist, Carl Linn, AKA Carolus Linneaus, "the father of taxonomy".
This was the man who first discovered that humans were in fact apes, and he realized this about 100 years before Darwin was born. Linnean taxonomy initially grouped all cats, including lions and housecats, into a single group, Felis. But further studies of morphology and genetics had revealed that the "cat family" was in fact divided into a half-dozen sub-groups or genus:
Genus Panthera includes tigers, leopards, snow-leopards, jaguars, and lions; Panthera leo. There are currently three surviving species of lion.
Genus Felis contains dozens of species including cougars, ocelots, margay, pampas, flat-headed, fishing, serval, leopard cat, marbled cat, Jaguarundi, and the common house-cat; Felis sylvestris. Within that one species, there are another couple dozen distinct breeds, some without tails, some without hair, in other words, they are a very diverse sub-group.
Genus Acinonyx includes both surviving species of cheetah, cats who lack the retractable claws of all other modern cats.
Genus lynx contains, well, lynx obviously, but both the American and Eurasian varieties which again are different species that do not interbreed to produce viable offspring.
This is to say nothing of Machairodonts, a separate extinct sub-family of felids that consisted of two genera, Homotherium (several species) and Smilodon, the most famous of which was Smilodon fatalis, "the sabre-toothed tiger."
There were other extinct genera that were a transitional branch between modern cats and early viverrids, (civets, meerkats, bearcats, and genets) but we'll ignore thos for the moment. Looking just at the innumerable breeds within the few dozen species within these half-dozen (or so) genera, how many distinctly different "created kinds" do you think we're really talking about here? How many cats did Ubar-Tutu have on board his ark?
No, they haven't. There is no part of the creationist model that is in any way testible, and no scientific tests have ever supported creationism over naturalist explanations. But you're more than welcome to try and back up your claim. In fact, I insist that you do.
That you have seen neither in the "model" (not Theory) of creationism. But you're more than welcome to try and back up your claim. In fact, I insist that you do.
No it hasn't. Not in any way. But you're more than welcome to try and back up your claim. In fact, I insist that you do.
Is atomic Theory a fact?
Is music Theory a fact?
Is calculus Theory a fact?
Is physics Theory a fact?
Is gravity Theory a fact?
These all seem to be facts because they are all studies of facts.
Evolution Theory is the study of repeatably observable, objectively demonstrable facts of evolution. You "point" is refuted.
You don'tunderstand it at all,. which is why it is so funny that you keep pretending to have found errors that none of the best and brightest of the world's most experienced geniuses and Nobel laureates could ever find even after decades of intense study. You creationists certainly are a confident lot. But I assure you that confidence is grossly-misplaced.
We do see reproductive problems with inbreeding. That's why inbreeding isn't a factor of evolution. Viable, reproductive populations branch out into muliple distinct families flowering out of one common ancestral population. There is no inbreeding and no hybridization involved.
Don't. Its dead-wrong. Try these instead:
Biological
evolution is the study of (usually subtle) cumulative changes in the morphology, physiology and genetic composition of reproductive populations over successive generations;
which often results in increased biodiversity when continued variation in genetic isolation leads to a divergence of two or more distinct descendant branches from one ancestral population.
Evolution
Theory is the study of the observed facts of speciation and the ability of various selective pressures to increase biodiversity as described above. There are many known or hypothesized mechanisms and aspects of evolution Theory to examine including punctuated equilibrium and of course natural selection. My favorite is taxonomy: a means of systematic classification of life-forms that reveals distinct relationships of "groups within groups" that link everything alive today with other groups in the fossil record. This includes many transitional species which appear in the geologic column in a chronology that indicates a fluid sucession of subtle variations over many generations, so that everything that has ever lived is evidently related to everything else through a series of succession in common ancestry. Systematic taxonomy has been greatly refined and built upon in the last couple hundred years, and can now be cross-confirmed by DNA sequencing, making it a twin-nested hierarchy that is still one of the most profound proofs of macroevolution.
"Microevolution refers to any evolutionary change below the level of species, and refers to changes in the frequency within a population or a species of its alleles (alternative genes) and their effects on the form, or phenotype, of organisms that make up that population or species.
Macroevolution is used to refer to any evolutionary change at or above the level of species. It means the splitting of a species into two (speciation, or cladogenesis, from the Greek meaning "the origin of a branch") or the change of a species over time into another (anagenesis, not nowadays generally used). Any changes that occur at higher levels, such as the evolution of new families, phyla or genera, is also therefore macroevolution, but the term is not restricted to the origin of those higher taxa."
--
John Wilkins, Talk.Origins
None of these imply hybridization or inbreeding.
Good, because you have absolutely no possibility of doing so.
Well, you've failed that. Theory is the study of facts. Thus there can be no "ToC" because there are no creation facts to study. A fact could be synonemous with evidence. Creation lacks any of this at all, and is limited to faith-based notions instead.
But of course I can't agree with this because you've been dead wrong about everything you've tried to assert so far.
You're right. It is a common misconception that evolutionary studies constitutes some sort of faith-based belief system, but they do not. So of course whatever philosophical or theological questions you could ask about that would be irrelevent. [/i]
My assumptions being that 1. Science does not hold all the answers to the questions in this life.