You didn't answer my question. You just asked one of your own. Not fair. Here's my question again. Please answer it.
How is this permitted in the original TOC? I've looked where you told me to look: Genesis 1 and other cross-references to "kinds" in the Bible, and they all say a kind can only breed with its own kind. Where do you get the idea that making new species/kinds is permitted in TOC?
As to breeding two members of the same species, you know the answer to that from your own kids: the offspring have half the genes of each parent!
There are 2 ways a new species occurs. You said you had a passion for the truth, remember. So sit back, get comfortable, because I'm going to lecture.
1. Adaptation to a new environment. The whole species (all the individuals) can face a new environment. In each generation, some individuals will have characteristics that enable them to face the new environment better than those individuals who don't have the characteristics. Since the individuals with the adaptations will do better surviving and having kids than those individuals that don't. So in the course of generations all the members of the population will get the variations. So, after hundreds of generations, the population isn't the same as it started. Also remember, changes
accumulate. It's not just one change, but dozens. They add up. This is what happened to insects with pesticides. Whole species changed because the pesticide use was so widespread. We can't do the breeding experiments because we can't go back in time and get grasshoppers, for instance, from before pesticides were used. But if we could, the changes are so extensive in their biochemistry that they could not breed with present day grasshoppers. One species to one species thru time.
Or a speices can become separated into 2 populations. The populations diverge in their genetic makeup as each accumulates new adaptations to their separate, and different, environments. When brought back into contact, the populations can't interbreed with each other. Two species where there was one.
In each case there is no mixing. The populations changes over generations. You don't mix 2 species together.
2. Hybridization. This is the one in plants. In this case the genome of the hybrid is a
mix of the genomes of the two parent species. Some genes from each are kept and some genes from each are tossed out of the genome. Fertility genes seem to be kept, so that the hybrids can breed with each other.
Where do these populations come from?
Look around you. Where do they come from now? From breeding of individuals. The point is that evolution involves
populations, not 1 or 2 individuals.
Variations have 2 basic sources:
1. Sexual recombination. Remember, most traits are not caused by a single gene. You need several genes, for instance, to get the shape of your nose. Each person has two forms -- alleles -- of each gene. One from your father and one from your mother. When you make sperm or egg, the cells reshuffle those alleles into combinations you don't have in your body cells. Then there is the shuffle from the other sexual partner. So the kids have variations due to this recombination.
2. Mutations. These are errors in copying the DNA. Asexually reproducing organisms have only this method to get variation.
Now, since in TOC kinds can only breed within a kind, how can separated populations of kinds change enough so that they can't breed with one another again? Don't kinds have to remain as they are created?
I don't think you really have that much time! In terms of natural selection being a means to get designs,
1. Breeders have been using natural selection for thousand of years to design plants and animals the way they want.
2. people use natural selection to design
when the design problem is too tough for them. Genetic algorithms are natural selection run by humans where humans set the environment but natural selection does the designing. Natural selecton is even good enough to get patents!
www.genetic-programming.com
In terms of natural selection designing plants and animals, there is SO much proof. Please do a search on Pubmed using "natural selection". In the fly experiment producing new kinds, it was natural selection that designed the flies to the different temps and diets. But an experiment I like was done in the wild. The researchers knew the environment well enough to
predict ahead of time how natural selection would change the animals.
Evaluation of the rate of evolution in natural populations of guppies (Poecilia reticulata). Reznick, DN, Shaw, FH, Rodd, FH, and Shaw, RG. 275:1934-1937, 1997. The lay article is Predatory-free guppies take an evolutionary leap forward, pg 1880.
This is an excellent study of natural selection at work. Guppies are preyed upon by species that specialize in eating either the small, young guppies, or older, mature guppies. Eleven years ago the research team moved guppies from pools below some waterfalls that contained both types of predators to pools above the falls where only the predators that ate the small, young guppies live. Thus the selection pressure was changed. Eleven years later the guppies above the falls were larger, matured earlier, and had fewer young than the ones below the falls. The group then used standard quantitative morphology to quantify the rate of evolution.
So we have a study in the wild, not the lab, of natural selection and its results. In this study natural selection was measured quantitatvely, and even predicted since it was predicted that, in the absence of predators that fed on large guppies but in the presence of ones that fed on young guppies, the guppies would grow larger and mature earlier to avoid the predators. That is exactly what happened.
Yep, of course you are right, facts are rarely wrong. So what is your point exactly? All of this was weighed in my questions that you have failed to understand and answer so as to lecture me. Bravo, good answer to my questions. I am totally satisfied now. Move on.