Mekkala said:
You asked what it would do to my knowledge of evolution if it were known that the environment had not changed dramatically. My point is that no dramatic change or pressure is necessary. In fact, even when there is no change at all, there is environmental pressure. Any species that is not utterly invulnerable experiences enviromental pressure -- and if even one hundred-thousandth of a population die before childbearing age, that population is under environmental pressures that will bring about evolution.
There very slight variations here and nothing to indicate either a mechanism for the accumulation of the microevolutionary changes. Keep in mind the genes are either dominant or recessive and these genes have to be altered substantially for speciation to occur. The thing is the parent organism is passing on a blueprint for every aspect the offsprings development. Altering that blueprint is almost allways detremental to the organism and even when it is beneficial the tendancy to revert back to the original condition.
Of course you have no clue why I think it's a strawman argument -- you have no clue because you learned these arguments from creationists who build strawmen for a living. It's not your strawman, but someone else's; and then when you present it, you get attacked for it -- perhaps unfairly, since you honestly believed it to be a good argument, but you can hardly expect to present deceitful information, whatever the source, and not get attacked.
This is simply not true, I did not learn much from creationists, I learned everything I use in these threads from Christian apologetics. The one questions that skeptics never seem to want to contend with is how we know the historicity of an event, the viabilty of our evidence, and what warrants our unwavering confidence. The truth is that natural science has credible tests for demonstrating, quantifying and qualifying data. None of the standard rules of demonstration apply to this one central tenant of evoltution, namely the universal common ancestor. It is not a theory because the substantive reasoning is flawed, its not a hypothesis because there is no way of falsifying it, there is only the wonder and flights of fancy that produce these monstrocites. Evolution is the measurement of changes in genes in a population over time, the universal common ancestor model is a myth.
Thats why species had to be made so nebulas, it was the immutablity of species that was the strawman, and special creation the target. If you make species ambiguise then any change, no matter how slight, is the straw that breaks the creationists back. It an elaborate hoax.
Mark, I think you might be astounded at what you would find if you went to the trouble of reading peer-reviewed scientific papers on the subjects that the creationist arguments you've learned address. Do you know how and why I left the creationist camp for the evolution camp (this was long before I left Christianity, by the way)?
I have seen what you are talking about and the greatest minds in Europe were agreeing with Rome in scientific matters for centuries. They were wrong and everybody was standing around agreeing with one another. I don't think people change that much, party spirit is still a powerfull inducement.
Because I'd noticed that the arguments I used from A Beka and Kent Hovind and Bob Jones weren't getting many results. They generally got debunked pretty easily. I decided to check out all the scientific data in support of these arguments (data that I had no doubt was out there) so that I would truly understand what the arguments were saying and be able to answer objections to those arguments better. To my undying wonder, I discovered in my search that all the data -- even the data used by creationists -- supports evolution and none of it supports creationism. This was by doing my own research into scientific discoveries of the past century, not by reading creationism websites or evolution websites, or by listening to arguments for or against evolution.
I frankly dont find the work of creationists very helpfull either. I would have abandoned the creation/evolution controversy long ago had I not taken the time to actually look at the evidence myself. I find it especially offensive that theology is belittled and ridiculed right at the heart of the emphasis. If we had the truth right here in front of us and it were conclusive I think both camps would be sorely embarassed.
So again, may I suggest that you take the same path that I did? You may not come to the same conclusion that I did (although honestly, I can't for the life of me fathom how you wouldn't, if you looked at all the data that I've seen), but at least you can say that you truly know what you're talking about. At least you can avoid saying things like what I just chewed you out for -- and you can earn or lose respect on your own merits, instead of seeing your credibility cut out from under you through no fault of your own, because you used something you learned from a self-proclaimed "creation scientist" who is out to win souls at all costs -- even if it means lying through their teeth.
Its ironic, I agree with the creation scientist and yet find so much of their work useless for me. I dispise the universal common ancestory and yet I am spending as much time as I can spare to learn as much about it as I can. Why, because thats where most of the science is. I listen to both side with equal interest but at the end of the day you have to think for yourself.
I liked the last part and I really have no problem with that line of thinking, I just take exception to the suggestion that this characterizes my thinking. Saving souls even thought it means lying is a perversion of every aspect of the genuine article of faith. Maintaining a confidence in the Scriptures and giving reasons for faith, even in an empirical context, is a Christian duty. It wrong to accuse someone of lying just because you don't happen to agree with them. I never once in all my debates and discussions resorted to that, I address the facts to the best of my knowledge.
I just wanted to get that off my chest.
Again, you misunderstand.
Say we have Mutation A that appears in a single individual in a population. If A gives that individual a survival advantage of a fraction of a hundredth of a percent over the other individuals in that population, then it is only a matter of time before virtually every individual in the population has the mutation. Do you see what I'm saying? Thus, no catastrophic or major environmental change is necessary for evolution to happen. As long as survival is a needed ability (that is, as long as organisms die before childbearing age), the necessary pressures exist to make evolution happen. This is so even when the environment is completely static and unchanging.
One little problem with this, most of the diverse species are in areas where there is an abundance and conditions are lush. The survival of the fittest, red in tooth and claw mentality has it backwards. Its not competition that is driving evolutionary change, its cooperation.