Razzelflaben:
So far, I have only responded to the posts you have addressed to me, but the conversation between you and Jet Black deserves some comment.
JB asked you about a number of species in the fossil record and their placement in the fossil record.
You responded:
Right now, I won't even try to address the questions you are asking because they totally evade the point I was making, thus getting off topic again.
But it is not off-topic at all. You have made the point time and time again that we should treat all the theories as theories. And that is just what JB is doing.
The point of a theory is to explain observed evidence. He gave you a list of observed evidence for which evolution offers a coherent explanation. I have never seen a coherent explanation of the same observations from the perspective of TOC or ID.
Now why should we treat the theories as equally satisfactory if 2 out of 3 of them cannot explain the observations while the third does? Are not the two which fail to explain the observations failing to do precisely what a theory is supposed to do?
The point I was making is that the shear amount of fossil evidence, or lack thereof, makes the observations inconclusive. For example, what percent of fossil evidence has been uncovered and studied?
It does not matter. It may matter someday if a fossil is uncovered which the TOE cannot explain. But the point of a theory is to explain what HAS BEEN observed, not to speculate about what difficulties may be posed to the theory by future observations. JB's list was of observations that
have already been observed.
Now if TOC cannot explain observations already made, why should we have any confidence that TOC will be able to explain evidence not observed yet?
OTOH, TOE
does explain the observed evidence, so we can expect that it has at least an even chance of being able to explain future observations as well. In fact, because TOE can explain current evidence, it is able to predict what observations will be made in the future. It predicted that evidence linking dinosaurs to birds would be found nearly a century before the discovery of feathered dinosaurs.
Can you name one single prediction the TOC has made about what to expect in the way of future observations in biology? Can you name any correct prediction based on TOC?
Well, I don't know in each case, and that would be another discussion all together, but we like to talk alot about the fraudulant data observed, I have heard reports that in some of the bones uncovered, where rptillian and mammalian jaws coiside, it is because they are bones of two distinctly different animals.
Is this the best you can do? That maybe we are dealing with fraud?
Are you not aware that these fossils are available to numbers of people doing research on them? People who have no interest in sustaining a fraud. Are you not aware that when the discoverers reported their findings, and when the first researchers studied the fossils and wrote up their conclusions, they had to face peer review from people whose job it is to question their research from all angles?
Why do you think it is that the only frauds ever named in creationist literature are over 90 years old? (Peking man, Haekel's drawings of embryos).
If the bones were indeed from two different animals, you can be sure that fact would have been trumpeted through all the scientific journals and major newspapers by now, just as the Piltdown man fraud was, when it was discovered.
Raising the spectre of fraud with absolutely no evidence to make the case, simply re-inforces the fact that TOC simply does not measure up to TOE as a coherent explanation of observed evidence.
According to the biblical record, it is highly possible for kind to mean species and is a workable theory. So why are you then asserting that C require an additional definition for species.
Most creationists do make the point that "kind" is not "species". And we have already seen why. If "kind" = "species" then creationism is falsified on the basis of its assertion that one kind does not evolve into another. For we have observed one species evolving into another.
So, to keep their theory, creationists asserted that "kind" is not equivalent to "species". This means they can assert that even though one species can evolve into another, one "kind" does not evolve into another "kind." But since they do not define a "kind"--except negatively, by saying it is not a species--there is no way to test that assertion.
Now, if you disagree with standard creationist dogma, please take it up with ICR or AIG, not with us.
If you want to personally disassociate yourself from this aspect of TOC, and say that "kind" is "species", then you have to deal with the observed fact that species do evolve into different species. (Even according to our "fuzzy" definition.)
Again Jet Black asked you:
can a mesonyx vary so much it becomes a dog or a cat? can a theropod vary so much it becomes a bird. can a land bound animal vary so much that it becomes a seal, can a seal vary so much that it becomes totally water born? none of these limits are ever defined in the creationist model, however they are still claimed to be there.
You responded:
Do each of these instances produce a new and different species? [snip] So let me ask you, are they then new species?
Well, does a seal inter-breed with land-based mammals? or with dolphins? Have you seen models of a mesonyx or a therapod? If these are not new species, you would have to define species in a way not used in the last four centuries (which includes a couple of centuries before Darwin).
The problem with your point as I have already discussed, is that the neotenic is not a new species, but rather a neonate form of an already existing species. Just as a catapillar is not a new species of a butterfly, a neonate is not a different species of a salamander.
Remember, our biological definition says that if it is not inter-fertile with the ordinary form of salamander, it IS a new species. It doesn't matter that it became a new species through neotony.
Humans are in many ways a neotonous form of chimpanzee. But we are certainly a different species.
Why can't it be fuzzy? Who set this rule?
Creationists did, by asserting that kinds are separate creations with no relationship possible between one kind and another. Where no such relationship is possible, the dividing line between kinds cannot be fuzzy. Just as JB said:
because this is the claim that the creationist makes against evolution i.e. life cannot have a common ancestor because all kinds were created independently.
Jet Black also said:
you continually make this statement of inconclusivity without ever adressing any of the evidence.
I have found this habit frustrating as well. You continually say the evidence is inconclusive, but never say why you come to that conclusion. What questions are outstanding that makes them inconclusive?
Or is this just a way of avoiding the evidence because your commitment to TOC is threatened when you examine it?
And by the way, it's not just you. Some creationists are forthright in their adherence to their peculiar interpretation of scripture as the reason for rejecting TOE. I don't agree with them, either scientifically or theologically. But at least I and they know where they stand and why no amount of evidence will ever convince them.
But those who claim to be taking a "scientific" or "even-handed" approach, always end up in a morass of vagueness, neither able to say what is wrong with the TOE, nor able to offer any TOC-based alternative to the TOE. They are just personally unconvinced for no discernable reason.
If you wish to show that you are the exception, give us reasons for saying the evidence is inconclusive. What other conclusion could it support? How?