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Destroying Evolution in less than 5 minutes

Warden_of_the_Storm

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Great, glad we agree that peer-reviewed sources count as evidence. Here are a few to get us started:

1. Fine-tuning of the universe:
-Luke A. Barnes (2012). The Fine-Tuning of the Universe for Intelligent Life. Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia, 29(4), 529–564.
This paper reviews the precise values of physical constants necessary for life and the improbability of them arising by chance.

2. Information in DNA:
-George F. R. Ellis (2016). How Can Physics Underlie the Mind? Top-Down Causation in the Human Context. Springer.
While broader than just DNA, Ellis (a highly respected physicist) discusses how biological information functions and interacts in ways not reducible to mere physics.
-Leroy Hood & David Galas (2003). The digital code of DNA. Nature, 421, 444–448.
This article refers to DNA explicitly as a digital information system—clearly supporting the analogy to code and specified information.

3. Abrupt appearance in the fossil record:
-Douglas H. Erwin et al. (2011). The Cambrian Conundrum: Early Divergence and Later Ecological Success in the Early History of Animals. Science, 334(6059), 1091–1097.
This paper outlines how many major animal body plans appear suddenly in the Cambrian with no clear gradual precursors. (As little as 3-4 million years)

These are not fringe claims. They are serious discussions in scientific literature. Now that we’re past the “just claims” objection, the ball’s in your court: engage with the material, or admit that maybe your dismissal was premature.

I will come clean; I did come at this from a deception, in a loose sense of the word. I am already familiar with the arguments made by groups who have claimed them, and even though there are scientists or people who claim to be scientists or even scientists who talk about disciplines they aren't learned in nor even knowledgeable about, I have not seen any good reasons to accept what they say. And, being on this site which allows me access, readily and easily to commentary from actual scientists on both sides of the pond and both sides of CvE debate, I have been able to see that such claims are never really anything new, nor are they anything really groundbreaking, that really what I wanted to see was if you were able to bring anything new to the table that I had not seen before, that would be really something actual worth holding out for.

I will say that I was not impressed.

The parameters for the fine-tuning argument are so mutli-faceted and unknowable that to put a spin onto any of them that "If X were 50% less/more, then life would be impossible" is just... impossible to know. The idea of a fine-tuned universe is such a strong example of confirmation bias, 'the puddle fits the hole' to use Douglas Adams' words, that it's really impossible to fully know how to properly calculate such a thing without actually creating our own universe from scratch and study that.

Information in DNA is... I'm not interested in the words of a physicist about DNA since DNA is something biological, which is as I said 'even scientists who talk about disciplines they aren't learned in nor even knowledgeable about'. But the attempt at describing the DNA as code, something with in many ways is objective and binary, ignores that DNA is a complex, complicated and reactive thing. To call it information, which in thoroughly laymen's terms, is oversimplifying what DNA is and ignores that DNA is, like the biological beings it helps live, thrive and survive, is a thoroughly reactive thing that cannot be confined solely to a static. To call the information from DNA's proteins and molecules and amino acids a 'code' is a useful analogy (as demonstrated very well by Mr. DNA from the 1993 blockbuster Jurassic Park), but that's all it is: a useful analogy, which like so many others ignores and glosses over the minutia and minute details of what DNA is.

I'm questioning what the third point, the 'abrupt appearance' of Cambrian fossils, which is not really a poorly understood thing since many things do not fossilize, especially soft-tissue organisms which were the precursors to the Cambrian lifeforms, or the very poor claim that 3-4 million years is 'abrupt' when we don't know much about the pre-Cambrian lifeforms, has to do with the fine-tuning argument, DNA is information or evidence of a designer in the universe. All it shows is the fact that the Cambrian explosion, which actually lasted between 13 to 25 million years, which is more than enough of a time frame for new creatures to evolve and reproduce and then have descendants evolve from them is... it's a nothing, especially when it ignores that such an event had happened before, the Avalon Explosion, which occurred 33 million years before the Cambrian explosion.

But if nothing else, at least you know how to provide evidence when asked.
 
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Also, macroevolution has big gaps, like missing transitional fossils and the unexplained origin of new complex information. These holes mean the theory isn’t complete. So, it’s reasonable to consider that there might be another explanation that better fits the evidence. Maybe, just maybe, there is a creator.
No scientific theory is complete nor expected to be complete because there is always the potential for new evidence to emerge that may justify an update or revision. This is not a bug but a feature of the scientific method that makes it more reliable than any non-negotiable dogma.

It is insufficient for an explanation to merely fit the evidence better than some other hypothesis. If the explanation is unfalsifiable, it may appear to fit the evidence better but retain an equal probability of being false regardless and with no possible way to ever discover if it is false. So, what would be the justification for granting equal or greater weight to an unfalsifiable explanation that can never be proved or disproved by any quantity or quality of evidence? Furthermore, where multiple unfalsifiable claims may exist as the possible explanation, how would anyone begin to compare them when no quantity or quality of evidence will ever function to prove or disprove any of them?
 
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Inference from evidence is how science works. We observe fine-tuning, origin, and information, those are the evidence. Design is an inference drawn from that evidence, just like naturalism is your inference. You don’t get to dismiss one while pretending the other is neutral.
This is at least the second time that I'm aware of where you have misrepresented how science functions. I'll repeat this for you again in case you missed it the first time around:

Science functions by testing falsifiable hypotheses because unfalsifiable hypothesis are completely useless given the inability for any quantity or quality of evidence to prove or disprove them.
 
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BCP1928

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I’m aware that some Christians believe in evolution, but when they attribute the design and wonder of creation to blind, natural processes, they still redirect glory away from the Creator. That’s not a minor issue. I make no apology if that offends. What does offend me is when people give credit to chance and animals for what God clearly deserves praise for.
Perhaps athiests do, but when you accuse Christians of doing it you are way out of line.
If there's no guiding mind, no intended outcome, and no foresight, then calling it "purposeless" is entirely fair. Word games don’t change the core idea. If everything is the result of undirected processes, then design and purpose are illusions. That’s the point.
The point is that we will not discover God's mind and his purpose by examining the material causes of evolution. Divine Providence does not leave its greasy fingerprints on the works.
LOL. The pope has issues
Be careful, your political agenda is becoming too obvious.
 
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sjastro

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I’m aware that some Christians believe in evolution, but when they attribute the design and wonder of creation to blind, natural processes, they still redirect glory away from the Creator. That’s not a minor issue. I make no apology if that offends. What does offend me is when people give credit to chance and animals for what God clearly deserves praise for.
I’m sure there are those who find your comments to be strawman attacks while scientists in general and of any persuasion would find them to be incomprehensible.
Evidently you are not aware science uses model based realities which not only excludes God but the very intuitive definition of reality to address real world situations. In my own line of work I have had to develop models or artificial environments to understand automotive failures in the real world.

The point about model based realities is they make predictions of what occurs in the real world which can tested through experiment and observation which is the falsifiability aspect of science.
The theory of evolution is no exception, it uses model based realities although not as extensive as in physics for simple reasons like scientists don’t have time machines or the process of macroevolution is too slow to be observed during a human lifetime.

Model based realities in evolution have led to successful predictions which goes beyond the notion that science is simply a matter of interpretations.

Model-Based RealityPredictionsTests & Supporting EvidenceMathematical / Simulation Basis
Population Genetics Models (Hardy–Weinberg, Fisher–Haldane–Wright)- Allele frequencies remain constant without evolutionary forces- Fixation rate depends on selection coefficient & population size- Different patterns under drift vs. selection- Drosophila & yeast lab populations showed predicted allele shifts- Drift patterns matched in small isolated populations- Human genomic surveys match drift/selection signaturesHardy–Weinberg equilibrium equations; differential equations for allele frequency change; Wright–Fisher & Moran stochastic models
Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution (Kimura)- Molecular evolution rate ≈ neutral mutation rate- Molecular clock operates for many genes- Synonymous substitutions outnumber nonsynonymous ones in neutral regions- Protein & DNA comparisons show constant substitution rates- Synonymous > nonsynonymous substitutions observed- Molecular clock dates matched fossil evidencePoisson process models of substitution; diffusion approximations for drift; statistical tests of dN/dS ratios
Adaptive Landscape Models (Wright)- Populations can be stuck on local fitness peaks- Small subdivided populations can cross valleys more easily- E. coli long-term experiments show fitness plateaus then jumps- Viral populations in different environments evolve toward distinct peaksMultidimensional fitness surfaces; stochastic simulations of population movement; NK landscape models
Coalescent Theory- Coalescence times depend on effective population size & migration- Bottlenecks leave genetic signatures- Human DNA variation consistent with African origin ~200k years ago- Cheetah & elephant seal genetics match bottleneck predictionsKingman’s coalescent equations; genealogical tree simulations; likelihood methods for demographic inference
Sexual Selection Models- Female choice & male traits co-evolve- Traits persist despite survival costs if they improve reproduction- Guppy experiments: bright males preferred despite predation risk- Stalk-eyed flies evolved predicted trait correlationsQuantitative genetic models (Lande–Kirkpatrick equations); game theory for mate choice strategies; simulation of trait-preference feedback loops
Host–Parasite Coevolution Models (Red Queen Hypothesis)- Allele frequencies in host & parasite cycle over time- Sexual reproduction maintained by parasite pressure- Snail–trematode allele cycles match model predictions- C. elegans under parasite pressure maintained higher sexual reproduction ratesCoupled differential equations for host–parasite gene dynamics; stochastic simulations; epidemiological SIR-type coevolution models
 
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Hans Blaster

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2. Information in DNA:
-George F. R. Ellis (2016). How Can Physics Underlie the Mind? Top-Down Causation in the Human Context. Springer.
While broader than just DNA, Ellis (a highly respected physicist) discusses how biological information functions and interacts in ways not reducible to mere physics.
From looking at Springer's page for this book and it's chapters (but not reading the chapters, it is pretty clear that this book is about *mind* (consciousness, mental causation, etc.), not "DNA information". I saw no reference in what I reviewed referring to information in DNA. (And I should also add, Ellis is a cosmologists. Why should we accept the word of a cosmologist on neuroscience?)
 
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NxNW

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The fine-tuning of physical constants, the origin of the universe, and the information in DNA are all areas where design is a reasonable inference.
Creationists tell us that the speed of light is variable, as "proof" that the Big Bang is wrong. Creationists also tell us that the Weak Nuclear Force is variable, as "proof" that radiometric dating is wrong.

When your own side can't decide what's fine-tuned and what's not, you don't have much of an argument.
Thank you. This proves my point.
If explanations that involve God are excluded from the start, then of course only naturalistic theories seem “credible.” But that’s not following the evidence wherever it leads; that’s limiting the options by philosophical bias.
How can you evaluate an untestable hypothesis?
Even if some scientists now downplay it, fine-tuning is still a widely acknowledged issue in physics. It’s not just rhetoric, it’s a real question about why constants fall within such narrow life-permitting ranges. Dismissing it doesn’t make the puzzle disappear.
Questions are not evidence. Not all mysteries are miracles.
explaining the origin of novel, information-rich systems from scratch is the real challenge, and that’s what design theorists are pointing to.
There are exactly Zero design theorists in the world, because there is no design theory.
Microevolution, small changes within a species, is observable. But macroevolution, like a fish eventually becoming a monkey, hasn’t been directly observed.
Nobody claims a fish evolved into a monkey. You're taking nonsense here.
Also, macroevolution has big gaps, like missing transitional fossils and the unexplained origin of new complex information. These holes mean the theory isn’t complete.
The only things being argued about are the details. There are enough transitional fossils to make the case.
So, it’s reasonable to consider that there might be another explanation that better fits the evidence. Maybe, just maybe, there is a creator.
"Maybe" is speculation. What you need is evidence.
 
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AV1611VET

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When your own side can't decide what's fine-tuned and what's not, you don't have much of an argument.

Does that include your "own side," which has some seven theories as to how we got our moon?
 
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1Tonne

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Chemistry? I don't believe God has to guide every chemical reaction in the universe. Do you?
I’m not talking about ordinary chemistry, I’m talking about the leap from non-living chemicals to a self-replicating, information-bearing system like DNA. That’s not just mixing the right ingredients; it’s about the origin of functionally specified information, something we’ve only ever seen come from intelligence.
So you don't stay up on the current science and you have a bizarre view that only things that are directly observable are scientifically valid. I'll have to tell marine biologists that a lot of their work is invalid, eh? After all, they don't directly observe a lot of the things they study (such as bluefin tuna migrations).
No, I’m not saying only directly observable things count as science, that’s a weak caricature of what I actually said. Inference is part of science, of course, but not all inferences are equally strong. Inferring tuna migrations based on tagged data is one thing, it’s based on repeatable, testable input. Inferring unguided large-scale transformations over millions of years with fragmentary, unrepeatable data is another thing entirely. If you can’t see the difference, maybe it’s not me who’s confused about how science works.
It doesn't look like it to me. You've made some very basic errors, and have some odd views about how science is conducted and how scientists reach conclusions.

Also you must have missed this: What do you mean by "from scratch"?

Also, I have a difficult time believing God guides evolution because that would mean God has guided bacteria to evolve resistance to antibiotics, pests to evolve resistance to treatments, and things like that. Is that what you believe?
Ah yes, the classic fallback, “You just don’t understand science.” That’s usually code for “I don’t want to address the actual point.” As for your question: “from scratch” means from non-living matter, no DNA, no proteins, no cellular machinery, just basic chemicals. You know, the very thing abiogenesis is trying (and failing) to explain.

And regarding God guiding evolution, if you think resistance to antibiotics somehow disproves design, you might want to consider that adaptation within limits is not the same as explaining the origin of entirely new systems. Your logic assumes that because we see minor tweaks, that explains the whole show. That’s not science, that’s storytelling.
I will come clean; I did come at this from a deception, in a loose sense of the word. I am already familiar with the arguments made by groups who have claimed them, and even though there are scientists or people who claim to be scientists or even scientists who talk about disciplines they aren't learned in nor even knowledgeable about, I have not seen any good reasons to accept what they say. And, being on this site which allows me access, readily and easily to commentary from actual scientists on both sides of the pond and both sides of CvE debate, I have been able to see that such claims are never really anything new, nor are they anything really groundbreaking, that really what I wanted to see was if you were able to bring anything new to the table that I had not seen before, that would be really something actual worth holding out for.

I will say that I was not impressed.

The parameters for the fine-tuning argument are so mutli-faceted and unknowable that to put a spin onto any of them that "If X were 50% less/more, then life would be impossible" is just... impossible to know. The idea of a fine-tuned universe is such a strong example of confirmation bias, 'the puddle fits the hole' to use Douglas Adams' words, that it's really impossible to fully know how to properly calculate such a thing without actually creating our own universe from scratch and study that.

Information in DNA is... I'm not interested in the words of a physicist about DNA since DNA is something biological, which is as I said 'even scientists who talk about disciplines they aren't learned in nor even knowledgeable about'. But the attempt at describing the DNA as code, something with in many ways is objective and binary, ignores that DNA is a complex, complicated and reactive thing. To call it information, which in thoroughly laymen's terms, is oversimplifying what DNA is and ignores that DNA is, like the biological beings it helps live, thrive and survive, is a thoroughly reactive thing that cannot be confined solely to a static. To call the information from DNA's proteins and molecules and amino acids a 'code' is a useful analogy (as demonstrated very well by Mr. DNA from the 1993 blockbuster Jurassic Park), but that's all it is: a useful analogy, which like so many others ignores and glosses over the minutia and minute details of what DNA is.

I'm questioning what the third point, the 'abrupt appearance' of Cambrian fossils, which is not really a poorly understood thing since many things do not fossilize, especially soft-tissue organisms which were the precursors to the Cambrian lifeforms, or the very poor claim that 3-4 million years is 'abrupt' when we don't know much about the pre-Cambrian lifeforms, has to do with the fine-tuning argument, DNA is information or evidence of a designer in the universe. All it shows is the fact that the Cambrian explosion, which actually lasted between 13 to 25 million years, which is more than enough of a time frame for new creatures to evolve and reproduce and then have descendants evolve from them is... it's a nothing, especially when it ignores that such an event had happened before, the Avalon Explosion, which occurred 33 million years before the Cambrian explosion.

But if nothing else, at least you know how to provide evidence when asked.
I appreciate you taking the time to engage seriously rather than just dismiss.

On fine-tuning: yes, the full picture is complex and ongoing research continues. But that doesn’t erase the fact that many key constants fall within narrow ranges essential for life as we know it. It’s not a closed case, but it’s a significant scientific observation that raises important questions.

On DNA as information: calling it a “code” is indeed an analogy, but a very precise and useful one. The digital, specified nature of genetic sequences is well established and critical to how biology functions. It’s not meant to reduce biology to simple code, but to highlight that the sequences carry complex, functional instructions, something fundamentally different from random chemicals.

On the Cambrian explosion: yes, fossilisation bias exists, and the timing debates continue. But the relatively rapid emergence of diverse animal body plans without clear gradual precursors is still a key puzzle in evolutionary biology. Whether 3-4 million or 13-25 million years, it’s short geologically and raises questions about the mechanisms involved.

None of these points alone “prove” design, but they represent meaningful scientific observations that challenge purely undirected explanations.
No scientific theory is complete nor expected to be complete because there is always the potential for new evidence to emerge that may justify an update or revision. This is not a bug but a feature of the scientific method that makes it more reliable than any non-negotiable dogma.

It is insufficient for an explanation to merely fit the evidence better than some other hypothesis. If the explanation is unfalsifiable, it may appear to fit the evidence better but retain an equal probability of being false regardless and with no possible way to ever discover if it is false. So, what would be the justification for granting equal or greater weight to an unfalsifiable explanation that can never be proved or disproved by any quantity or quality of evidence? Furthermore, where multiple unfalsifiable claims may exist as the possible explanation, how would anyone begin to compare them when no quantity or quality of evidence will ever function to prove or disprove any of them?
You’re right that science welcomes revision and updates. Its strength is in testing and refining ideas. But when a theory has significant unexplained gaps, like the origin of complex information, it’s fair to consider alternative explanations, even if they aren’t fully testable by current methods.
Science deals best with the natural world, but that doesn’t mean non-natural causes can be dismissed outright if they explain what naturalism struggles with. Sometimes, recognising the limits of a method points to the need for broader perspectives, not just strict falsifiability.
Acknowledging a creator isn’t about abandoning reason but about exploring all reasonable explanations, especially where evidence is incomplete.
Perhaps athiests do, but when you accuse Christians of doing it you are way out of line.
It's called correcting and loving my brother.
The point is that we will not discover God's mind and his purpose by examining the material causes of evolution. Divine Providence does not leave its greasy fingerprints on the works.
God has left His fingerprint everywhere. So, on the day of judgement, no one will have an excuse. Romans 1:20 says "For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse"
I’m sure there are those who find your comments to be strawman attacks while scientists in general and of any persuasion would find them to be incomprehensible.
Evidently you are not aware science uses model based realities which not only excludes God but the very intuitive definition of reality to address real world situations. In my own line of work I have had to develop models or artificial environments to understand automotive failures in the real world.

The point about model based realities is they make predictions of what occurs in the real world which can tested through experiment and observation which is the falsifiability aspect of science.
The theory of evolution is no exception, it uses model based realities although not as extensive as in physics for simple reasons like scientists don’t have time machines or the process of macroevolution is too slow to be observed during a human lifetime.

Model based realities in evolution have led to successful predictions which goes beyond the notion that science is simply a matter of interpretations.
Thanks for the overview. Still, I think these models don’t fully address the origin of complex, specified information or the deeper philosophical questions about purpose and design.
From looking at Springer's page for this book and it's chapters (but not reading the chapters, it is pretty clear that this book is about *mind* (consciousness, mental causation, etc.), not "DNA information". I saw no reference in what I reviewed referring to information in DNA. (And I should also add, Ellis is a cosmologists. Why should we accept the word of a cosmologist on neuroscience?)
The book’s primary focus is mind and consciousness, not DNA. I cited Ellis to show how respected scientists argue that information, even in biology, involves top-down causation, not just bottom-up physics. While he may not focus on DNA directly, the broader point still stands: some phenomena in biology resist reduction to physics alone.
Creationists tell us that the speed of light is variable, as "proof" that the Big Bang is wrong. Creationists also tell us that the Weak Nuclear Force is variable, as "proof" that radiometric dating is wrong.

When your own side can't decide what's fine-tuned and what's not, you don't have much of an argument.
Oh, so disagreement within a group discredits the entire argument? Strange standard. Evolutionary biology is full of competing models, debates, and revisions, neutral theory vs. selection, gradualism vs. punctuated equilibrium, gene-centric views vs. evo-devo, and so on. Going off of your standard, you have just shown how evolutionists do not have much of an argument. LOL. Good one.
Let’s not pretend your side is a monolith of truth while mine is disqualified by debate. Scientific progress thrives on discussion, unless, apparently, it threatens your worldview.
Nobody claims a fish evolved into a monkey. You're taking nonsense here.
If you believe in common descent, then yes, by your own framework, mammals (including monkeys) ultimately trace their ancestry back to fish-like creatures. That’s not "nonsense," that’s standard evolutionary teaching. Try looking up lobe-finned fish, tiktaalik, or the vertebrate phylogenetic tree. If you're embarrassed by what your own theory implies, maybe it's time to re-examine it.
The only things being argued about are the details. There are enough transitional fossils to make the case.
If the case were truly airtight, there wouldn’t still be so many disagreements about the case itself. The fact that even evolutionists argue over which fossils count as transitional, how to interpret them, and what the tree of life even looks like just proves my point, it’s far from settled. "The details" are actually the foundation.
 
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Hans Blaster

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The book’s primary focus is mind and consciousness, not DNA.
Not only do I know that the book is on mind and consciousness, but there was no indication it discussed DNA at all.
I cited Ellis to show how respected scientists argue that information, even in biology, involves top-down causation, not just bottom-up physics.
Ellis is a cosmologist. Why should we care what a cosmologist says about "information", biology, or consciousness? What expertise has he demonstrated in that area? Where is his research on it?
While he may not focus on DNA directly, the broader point still stands: some phenomena in biology resist reduction to physics alone.
How do you know what the book says? Did you read it?
 
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Larniavc

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Whether 3-4 million or 13-25 million years, it’s short geologically and raises questions about the mechanisms involved.
Which questions specifically.
 
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1Tonne

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Which questions specifically.
If you’re genuinely informed on the topic, you already know the questions, such as the rate of morphological change, origin of novel traits, and the genetic mechanisms required. If not, I’m not here to spoon-feed you. So, don't act dumb. It just looks bad for you.
 
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Larniavc

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If you’re genuinely informed on the topic, you already know the questions, such as the rate of morphological change, origin of novel traits, and the genetic mechanisms required. If not, I’m not here to spoon-feed you. So, don't act dumb. It just looks bad for you.
Let’s start with the rate of morphological change. What about it’s rate is question posing for TOE? Is it too fast, too slow?
 
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1Tonne

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Let’s start with the rate of morphological change. What about it’s rate is question posing for TOE? Is it too fast, too slow?
To be honest, I can't be bothered engaging with you. You have struggled to put sentences together, and because of this, I cannot be bothered engaging with you. But if another person asks on your behalf, I will answer. But as of now, your questions will remain unanswered. Have fun
 
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Warden_of_the_Storm

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On fine-tuning: yes, the full picture is complex and ongoing research continues. But that doesn’t erase the fact that many key constants fall within narrow ranges essential for life as we know it. It’s not a closed case, but it’s a significant scientific observation that raises important questions.

Fall into narrow ranges they may, but that does not automatically mean that anything is fine tuned, and to say they're fine tuned specifically for us is very self-centered and is just the puddle saying the hole it's in is designed for it. Especially since it begs the question of WHO designed it, which just falls into philosophical and religious debates.

On DNA as information: calling it a “code” is indeed an analogy, but a very precise and useful one. The digital, specified nature of genetic sequences is well established and critical to how biology functions. It’s not meant to reduce biology to simple code, but to highlight that the sequences carry complex, functional instructions, something fundamentally different from random chemicals.

Highlighting things is fine, but again, all this does is bring up special pleading and begging the question.

On the Cambrian explosion: yes, fossilisation bias exists, and the timing debates continue. But the relatively rapid emergence of diverse animal body plans without clear gradual precursors is still a key puzzle in evolutionary biology. Whether 3-4 million or 13-25 million years, it’s short geologically and raises questions about the mechanisms involved.
To be honest, I can't be bothered engaging with you. You have struggled to put sentences together, and because of this, I cannot be bothered engaging with you. But if another person asks on your behalf, I will answer. But as of now, your questions will remain unanswered. Have fun

Since you had to be unnecessarily rude to larniavc for asking a very pertinent and important question about your claims about the Cambrian Explosion: even at its lowest end of 3,000,000 years, that's still a massive time frame and more than long enough for live to evolve in, so why is it a problem for the Theory of Evolution?

None of these points alone “prove” design, but they represent meaningful scientific observations that challenge purely undirected explanations.

You're very right that they don't prove design in the slightest... so why are you treating them like they do? Because if you want to prove design, you need actual evidence, not inference and claims and analogies. Science deals in evidence, you've presented nothing of the sort.
 
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jasperr

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It is my perception that some (many?) theists are very uncomfortable with the thought that they have to decide on the purpose of life. They would prefer that responsibility lay elsewhere. That seems odd to me: if there were a God,then giving products of its creation the opportunity to determine their own purpose would surely be a magnificent gift.
A bit of a White Elephant? A Pandora's Box? Moral Hazard?
 
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