drfeelgood said:This isn't cartoon evolution. This is reality, and the biggest stumbling block to evolutionists. You claim we came from apes.
No. You don't understand evolution at all.
Evolution does NOT claim that humans came from apes. Creationists do. It's a silly, ignorant, straw-man argument.
I did not come from my cousin, nor did I come from my cousin's parents. But, I AM related to my cousin, via my uncles parents ie, my grandparents.
Likewise, we did not "come from" apes. Rather, we are cousins to apes
It's not that hard.
drfeelgood said:The proof is in the pudding.
Unquestionably.
drfeelgood said:Science is all about facts you say. Ok. Where are they?
The fact that virtually all life shares DNA as the recipie for protien production is a smoking gun if there ever was one. Fossil's are another clue. Actually witnessing evoution in a lab is another way.
drfeelgood said:No theory, and I mean NO theory, is allowed to be presented today without reproducible results. You try posting a theory in the Medical Journal without being able to produce tangible, consistently reproducible results. You can't. You get laughed out of the profession.
What makes you immune?
Nothing. What you ask of evolution has already been done.
http://bex.nsstc.uah.edu/RbS/CLONE/VGS/spetner_evol1.html
In 1982 Barry Hall reported on an experiment in which he prepared a strain of E. coli bacteria lacking the beta-galactosidase gene lacZ, which normally hydrolyzes lactose. When these bacteria grew and multiplied on another nutrient, but in the presence of lactose, they gained the ability to metabolize lactose, an ability that proved to be heritable. The gained ability was found to be due to the presence of a new gene. The new gene encodes a new enzyme that can perform the function of the beta-galactosidase, enabling the mutant bacteria to metabolize lactose.
Essentially, bacteria had been modified so that the gene which normally metabolizes (eats) lactose was physically removed. It wasn't simply turned off, it was removed.
So, one would think that this new bacteria wouldn't be able to eat lactose, and or the most part, one would be correct.
But some bacteria were able to metabolize lactose!
How? Evolution.
drfeelgood said:Human intervention won't work.
You're wrong, it will, and it does.
drfeelgood said:What makes you think Natural Selection will?
Because we've seen it happen first hand. The experiment is completely reproduceable.
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