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Originally posted by Praxiteles
Criminies! You're suggesting that the kind of diversity we see today took place within a few hundred years!
Originally posted by Praxiteles
OK. It is rather important, though, if we're striving to explain modern diversity and posit a worldwide flood 4 thousand years ago. Don't you think? Daggy-waggy?
Regardless, I don't see how anyone could answer that without having the animals of that time right here to test any hypothesis.
Originally posted by npetreley
No, I wasn't suggesting any such thing. I was speculating (and ONLY speculating) that microevolution became more widespread WITHIN a few hundred years after the flood. All I'm speculating about is that the environment became more conducive to microevolution and perhaps even interbreeding (hybrids). I have no idea how that contributed to the numbers of species we have today because I don't know how species relate to kinds. Nobody does.
Sure it's important. And if I were striving to explain modern diversity, I might care that it's important. But:
1. I'm not striving to explain modern diversity.
2. I don't think anyone could explain it based on the Biblical story of Noah because the story doesn't contain enough detail for that kind of explanation.
The Christian scientists agree with, as do quite a few of the evolution scientists out there, that before Noah's Ark, there was a "canopy" covering the earth. Meaning, there was a type of terrerium effect, hence the flood was probable.
...What arguments are doubtful, hence inadvisable to use?
Canopy theory. This is not a direct teaching of Scripture, so there is no place for dogmatism. Also, no suitable model has been developed that holds sufficient water; but some creationists suggest a partial canopy may have been present. For AiGs current opinion, see Noahs FloodWhere did the water come from? from the Answers Book.
.In the six hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of the month, on the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened.
And it came to pass in the six hundred and first year, in the first month, the first day of the month, the waters were dried up from off the earth; and Noah removed the covering of the ark, and looked, and behold, the face of the ground was dried. And in the second month, on the seven and twentieth day of the month, was the earth dry. And God spoke unto Noah, saying: 'Go forth from the ark, you, and your wife, and your sons, and your sons' wives with you.
And Noah lived after the flood three hundred and fifty years.And all the days of Noah were nine hundred and fifty years; and he died.
The arithmetic of Noah's years (600 before + 350 after = 950) seems not to take into account the year of the Flood. There is a good case to be made for not considering the duration of the Flood in calculations of the chronology of the world. We might look at the Flood as a period of "suspended animation" - laws of nature were not in effect; perhaps time as we know it cannot apply to that interval. The animals in the ark did not function in their normal ways.
Originally posted by Praxiteles
Ok. At some point, though, speculation has to be compared with the evidence. As it stands, there is no evidence that such rapid evolution is even possible, let alone likely.
Originally posted by Praxiteles
Unless, of course, one posits the interference of the supernatural, at which point it ceases to be science. Darn.
Originally posted by Praxiteles
1. Oh? But, but, but... that's what this thread is about. Why, grasshopper, are you posting here if that is not your purpose?
Originally posted by Praxiteles
2. Neither do I. (Perhaps you should alert the good folks at AiG to this). However, even if one assumes that the story of Noah and his zoological barge is close to historical fact, one must still deal with the logistics of getting two representatives of each population of species/kinds/whatever to repopulate the entire earth with the diversity that we currently see.
Originally posted by Praxiteles
If it can't be done without the supernatural, it's not science.
Originally posted by wildernesse
It's magic, Pete!
--tibac
Originally posted by Pete Harcoff
Okay, so far nobody has been able to tackle the problem of inbreeding and trying to create a diverse population based on a single pair of animals.
What about the population of humans, then? How does one go from a mere 8 humans to about 6 billion in the span of about 4000 years? Anyone want to try that one?
Population growth is actually only a problem for evolutionists, not creationists. According to even conservative estimates, the world should have been way overpopulated by now if evolution were true. Evolutionists "solve" it with the speculation that our ancestors were hunter-gatherers for millions of years, and populations did not grow at all until after the advent of agriculture.
"King Zoesser and Imhotep would have had a rough time building his step Pyramid in all that icky flood debris 4800 years ago. Not to mention the Sumerians building their city states and inventing agriculture and beer making and the people in Anatolia and China etc.
BTW the Egyptians have no Noah type Flood myth, I guess they wern't home at the time. Probably summered on Mars. "
Originally posted by npetreley
...Population growth is actually only a problem for evolutionists, not creationists. According to even conservative estimates, the world should have been way overpopulated by now if evolution were true. Evolutionists "solve" it with the speculation that our ancestors were hunter-gatherers for millions of years, and populations did not grow at all until after the advent of agriculture.
Originally posted by excreationist
the Middle East used to be "the fertile crescent" and North Africa used to be good farmland I think - now they are desert due to over-farming.
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