razzelflabben said:
NO
Yes
But it is enough to question the validity of the TOE
No, it would only be enough to question the validity of TOE if it was
a general rule that new species would have inbreeding difficulties. It is not a general rule. So it is not a problem.
especially when one considers that all living organisms can from one living organism.
No, from one living
population of organisms. The population probably numbered in the millions, and so did the new species. No inbreeding problems.
This would mean that the TOE has some big problems if inbreeding results in reproductive problems. In contrast, the TOC predicts that inbreeding will cause problems. A further study of the bible shows us that this interbreeding was limited in time, not carried down for millions of years, thus, the TOC totally explains this phenomina, antistipates the problem of interbreeding and the creator addressed the issue. Thus, the TOC predicts and explains what we observe.
Now you are mixing up "inbreeding" and "interbreeding" here. Which are you really speaking of---or are you using them synonymously?
I'll repeat how I understand the relevant words. If you disagree with these definitions, please let me know.
breeding---an individual mates with another individual of the
same species. This is what we normally see in a new species. No reproductive problems are anticipated.
interbreeding--an individual mates with another individual of a
different species (possibly the parent species, or --as with horse and donkey--a sibling species). Here we do anticipate reproductive problems because the species are not the same.
inbreeding--an individual mates with another individual of the
same species who is also a
very close relative e.g. a parent, child, sibling, aunt, uncle or first cousin. Here we also anticipate reproductive problems, but for a different reason. Because very close relatives not only share the same genes, but very often the same gene alleles, offspring of such matings often inherit a harmful gene allele from both parents. If the parents were not so closely related, the effect of the harmful gene inherited from one parent would be masked by the normal equivalent inherited from the other parent.
In a very small population (and it makes no difference if the species is "old" or "new") inbreeding may be unavoidable, and that is not good for the species.
The main point to make here is that what we
normally see in a new species is neither inter-breeding nor in-breeding, but just ordinary breeding.
So, if ordinary breeding is the normal situation, where is the problem?