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I can't predict how far. Just that such changes are what is expected.
If you can't specify the supposed "changes", then it is meaningless as a prediction.
For the simple reason that IF our current understanding of how old any given species is changes... then it can ONLY go in the direction of "older".
Because if you have a fossil of 5 million years old, then it means that the species in question is "at least" 5 million years old.
If a new fossil pushes that back another million years, then that new reality is accepted. Finding a fossil of the same species of 4 million years old, then the new reality is not that the species is just 4 million years old.... it's still at least 5 million years old.
So again here, we have only a very vague "prediction".
If you can't say which animals exactly are older and for what reason, and how much older, then what is your prediction about, really?
As a non-creationist evolution acceptor, I fully expect that certain dates will change in the future as more data comes in. So that does not give any special credence to creationism. At all.
So you're going to have to be more specific.
So, which groups of organisms were created "at the same time"? And how much time would there have to be "between creation waves"?
And does your model predict that we should find humans alongside dino's?
If not, then can you give me another example of 2 species that existed at the same time according the creationism, wich only could have existed at the same if creationism is true (or at least that it is very unlikely that they did if creationism is false)?
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