The absence of transitional fossils is not just a YEC argument.
Touche.
In 2004, the paleontological community—and the world—was presented with what many evolutionists considered to be a dyed-in-the-wool missing link between fish and land animals (tetrapods). Evolutionary biologist Neil Shubin and evolutionary paleontologists Edward Daeschler and Farish Jenkins...
www.icr.org
So do I prefer God's word. And, yes, it's up to the unnatural (not supernatural) faith of the theistic evolutionist to choose what they want to believe.
? Still deceptively editing your citations? Here's Dr. Wise's sentences immediately before your quote:
Of Darwinism’s four stratomorphic intermediate expectations, that of the commonness of inter-specific stratomorphic intermediates has been the most disappointing for classical Darwinists. The current lack of any certain inter-specific stratomorphic intermediates has, of course, led to the development and increased acceptance of punctuated equilibrium theory.
The math problem resides is in just how many
steps would be necessary? You'll need more time, lots more time.
- Combinatorial Inflation: Meyer points out that for a short protein of 150 amino acids, the ratio of functional to non-functional sequences is roughly 1 to 10 to the 77 power. He argues that the estimated 4 billion years of Earth's history and the 10 to the 40 power organisms that have existed are insufficient to explore such a vast space of possibilities, making it highly improbable for random, functional sequences to emerge.
The rest of your post regurgitates evo claims already debunked.