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My response is simply stating that the Cambrian explosion was anything but abrupt.
Explosions are abrupt. Don't blame him for the reality of biology.
I'm just saying, the Cambrian explosion spans tens of millions of years. Which is to say that it, biologically, isn't abrupt at all.
The evidence is in your favor.
We have known for some time that complex animals existed in the Precambrian. So not much evidence for a sudden emergence of living things.
Wow.
I'm afraid you lost me. My watch just stopped I think.
In other words, evolution asserts you and I have a common ancestor with chimps, cats, frogs, birds, bananas, cactuses, shrimp, etc... essentially everything. Among the first video links I posted here, Stephen Meyers with the ID movement has already addressed the fact that evolution does a really good job of explaining the variations that occur in life that has already been created (think of variations of rabbits... desert, arctic, dutch, american, etc...), but lacks the explanatory power to create the new information needed for major new, novel, functional features and integrated systems unique to distinct life forms.
They do a lot more than that. IDer Michael Behe acknowledges the common descent of all living things on Earth, as does IDer Michael Denton, who wrote this.
it is important to emphasize at the outset that the argument presented here is entirely consistent with the basic naturalistic assumption of modern science--that the cosmos is a seamless unity which can be comprehended in its entirety by human reason and in which all phenomena, including life and evolution and the origin of man, are ultimately explicable in terms of natural processes. This is an assumption which is entirely opposed to that of the so-called "special creationist school." According to special creationism, living organisms are not natural forms, whose origin and design were built into the laws of nature from the beginning, but rather contingent forms analogous in essence to human artifacts, the result of a series of supernatural acts, involving God's direct intervention in the course of nature, each of which involved the suspension of natural law. Contrary to the creationist position, the whole argument presented here is critically dependent on the presumption of the unbroken continuity of the organic world--that is, on the reality of organic evolution and on the presumption that all living organisms on earth are natural forms in the profoundest sense of the word, no less natural than salt crystals, atoms, waterfalls, or galaxies. In large measure, therefore, the teleological argument presented here and the special creationist worldview are mutually exclusive accounts of the world. In the last analysis, evidence for one is evidence against the other. Put simply, the more convincing is the evidence for believing that the world is prefabricated to the end of life, that the design is built into the laws of nature, the less credible becomes the special creationist worldview.
Michael Denton, Nature's Destiny (my emphasis)
Young Earth creationism is completely incompatible with "intelligent design." They are two competing religious doctrines.
This is actually pretty interesting because, one thing i noticed years ago, is that Michael Behe supported common descent and the idea that say...mammals descended from reptiles and reptiles from amphibians and amphibians from fish etc.
I think it is a wise choice of intelligent design advocates, that they've parted ways with the likes of more fringe and wild creationists like ken ham or the criminal kent hovind.
In other words, evolution asserts you and I have a common ancestor with chimps, cats, frogs, birds, bananas, cactuses, shrimp, etc... essentially everything.
We have known for some time that complex animals existed in the Precambrian. So not much evidence for a sudden emergence of living things.
Thanks for the supporting data.
"Although the Ediacaran biota immediately preceded the rapid appearance and diversification of animals in the Cambrian, where these strange organisms fit within the tree of life remained a mystery. "
Thanks for the supporting data.
"Although the Ediacaran biota immediately preceded the rapid appearance and diversification of animals in the Cambrian, where these strange organisms fit within the tree of life remained a mystery. "
Hey, how about that. Radioactive dating actually provides results that match what we already knew based on uniformitarian geology. Most rocks along the edges of continents on either side of the mid oceanic ridge, date somewhere in that ballpark of 80 to 100 million years, depending on where you measure.
This is backed up by data on the magnetic orientation of iron within the rocks, showing the changes in the Earth's magnetic field over the ages:
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