Aron-Ra said:
Of course that definition is inadequate for biology, and rather than tell you why, I suppose I should show you
There really is no need. The point I am trying to make is that the scientific classification system is a man made system and therefore arbitrary.
If you didn't duck and dodge every offer to prove otherwise, then you'd know it isn't arbitrary at all. Nor is it even "man-made". There is only one way to do it, and the only way to prove that to you is to get you to try to do it any other way. I suspect you already realize that, and that's why you refuse to try. It would mean having to admit an error, and you'll never do that.
For the purposes of ''study'' you can classify anything you like for any reason you like, it makes no difference to me until you use that classification in an attempt to prove to me (and others) that you are right and I am wrong on a particular point.
So in fact, I can't classify anything the way I "like", but must instead adhere to something I can defend even to those who don't want to believe me.
Take the case of men being apes... Similarity in form and/or function shows that we are similar in form and/or function and nothing more. It is no more evidence of evolution than it is of creation.
Except that evolution is an inescapable fact of all population genetics; we know it works, and we know why it works. Creation is often asserted, but no one knows of a single instance in which anything ever magically poofed out of thin air fully-formed, nor is that even possible.
As a creationist, who believes that Adam and Eve were created in the image of God, why can I not say that I accept, for the purpose of study, the scientific classification system but take exception to the inclusion of man with apes? If I make this one distinction to what degree (if any) would it impact the classification and study of living organisms?
I did ask you to explain how your classification system would work, and to explain how you define "ape". You ignored both of those questions, apparently because your system is obviously arbitrary where my system is not.
I am not arguing against the scientific position I am arguing against your conclusions that you claim are based on it.
Then you are arguing against the scientific position.
And you have neglected to explain to me why, if evolution is true, any of this matters. (paraphrased from
http://foru.ms/t6053243&page=4 post #36)
If God exists, great. I hope its not your version of god, because I've heard of better ones. But even if it is yours, OK. It wouldn't have any impact on our lives at all, and we wouldn't know about it until after we die. Hopefully, the mythology is inaccurate, in which case, I might get to reincarnate a bunch of times, and not have to spend eternity anywhere. But if you're scriptures are right about that, then your god's existence won't effect me at all because I'll still die, both in the flesh and "in the spirit" just as I intended to anyway.
But if creationism were really true, especially your brand of it, then all our lives would still be just as meaningless if not more so, since life itself would lose its value, but so would everything else be meaningless too, because it would mean that reality itself is unreal. Evidence would be is naught but coincidental. Everything we see, know, or are -would be an illusion and we could never really know anything about anything ever. It would be just like Neo waking up to the reality of the matrix and realizing that the real world isn't real after all, and that everything is wrong including the calendar. If your delusion were real, there'd be no reason even to exist anymore, and for some of us, there'd be no way to escape existence either, since we'd be deprived even of the ability to die. How anyone could lovingly embrace such a nightmarish phantasm is beyond me, especially when that demands that you lie to yourself every day to believe it; its madness.
Now delusions aside, I didn't "neglect" to explain why it matters in terms of reality the way it really is. I did explain it, and you deleted, and now act as though you've never seen it. So here it is again:
If evolution from common ancestry is not true, and some flavor of special creation of different (as yet unidentified "kinds") is true, then there would be some surface level(s) in a cladogram where you would accept an actual evolutionary ancestry. But there must also be subsequent levels in that twin-nested hierarchy where life-forms would no longer be the same "kind", and wouldn't be biologically related anymore. At that point, they would be magically created separate "kinds" from those listed around it, and they would only be in those categories "in the mind of man", as seems to be your stance. Throw away any ideas you have about the importance of any other argument you might be thinking about. None of them compare to this. If creationism is true of anything more than a single ancestor of all living things, or if the concept of common ancestry is fundamentally mistaken, then there MUST be a point in the tree where taxonomy falls apart, where what we see as related to everything is really unrelated to anything else. And unless you're a Scientologist or a Raelian, that criteria must apply to other animals besides ourselves.
I also asked you a series of critical questions to prove the point, and you really should take a stab at answering them, if you still want to pretend that you're pursuing this honestly.
Is the short-tailed goanna related to the Perentie and all other Australian goannas?
Are all Australian goannas related to each other and to the other monitor lizards of Indonesia and Africa?
Are today's varanids related to the giant goannas of Australia's past?
Are terrestrial monitors related to the mosasaurs of the Cretaceous?
Are Varanoids related to any other Anguimorphs including snakes?
Are any Anguimorphs also related to scincomorphs and geckos?
Are all Scleroglossa also related to iguanids and other squamates?
Are all of squamata related to each other and all other lepidosaurs?
Are all lepidosaurs related to placodonts and plesiosaurs? Are Lepidosauromorphs related to archosaurs and other diapsids?
Are all diapsids related to anapsids, or synapsid "reptiles" like dimetrodon?
Are all reptiles related to each other and all other amniotes?
Are all amniotes related to each other and to all other tetrapods?
Are all tetrapods related to each other and to all other vertebrates?
........and so on.
Which of these are biologically related?
Which of these were magically created?