razzelflabben said:Interesting, I bring the debate back to the original assumptions and you pull out very old posts to make claims about what I do and do not understand instead of addressing the issues at hand. Very interesting indeed!
Oh, I am still busy addressing the issues at hand. See my other posts.
But although these quotes are from old posts, you keep repeating these concepts again and again (except the first one).
So I felt it worthwhile to show why these concepts are incorrect.
Btw, I would appreciate a specific reply to this section:
Lack of evidence of human-dinosaur co-existence is only a drop in the bucket. If the TOC claim of simultaneous creation of species is to be taken seriously, we also need evidence of chimp-dino co-existence, of bear-dino co-existence, of eagle-dino co-existence. Further we need evidence of whale-trilobite co-existence, of crocodile-Acanthostega co-existence, of rose-giant club moss co-existence and many many more observations of the ancient existence of modern species alongside that of now extinct species.
Now it is true that we have explored only a small fraction of the earth for fossils. But we have explored fossil sites of various ages all over the world and found thousands upon thousands of fossils. Surely it is a fair assumption that we have explored a representative sample of all potential fossils. (Just as opinion polls don't rely on calling every individual, but on a representative sample of opinion.)
And in this representative sample we have nowhere found even one instance of the sort of overall co-existence of species simultaneous creation calls for. Not one.
So either simultaneous creation did not happen, or the sample we have is not representative. But what could make each and every one of the hundreds of fossil sites explored so different from the norm that not even one of them includes the barest hint of simultaneous creation?
Upvote
0