- Dec 25, 2003
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What about when the evidence doesn't fit the evolutionist tree when they call co-evolution?
What? This sentence doesn't make sense.
Evolutionist has to be very selective in which genes to used as example or they will come up with the wrong tree.
Interesting claim since we have whole genome comparisons these days.
http://www.nature.com/news/gorilla-joins-the-genome-club-1.10185
"But the genome sequencing has thrown up surprises, too. The standard view of the great-ape family tree is that humans and chimps are more similar to each other than either is to the gorilla — because chimps and humans diverged more recently. But, 15% of human genes look more like the gorilla version than the chimp version."
Oops!
Yeah Smidlee, Oops! indeed. You might want to try and keep up with the science.
http://biologos.org/blog/understanding-evolution-speciation-and-incomplete-lineage-sorting
A problem for common descent?
The fact that gene phylogenies/trees and species phylogenies/trees don’t always match is not something that surprises scientists, since it is a well-known phenomenon and the mechanisms underlying it are understood: species arise from genetically diverse populations and that diversity does not always sort completely down to every descendant species. Discordant phylogenies, however, are commonly used among Christians as a means to cast doubt on to common ancestry and/or evolutionary biology as a whole. One example from the Intelligent Design movement will serve as an illustration. In a blog post discussing discordant trees found when comparing the human genome to that of other primates,
This is from 2011. The Christian scientists at Biologos have been onto C/IDers for their ignorance and dishonestly for four years.
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