Split Rock
Conflation of Blathers
From a creationist point of view, there's no rule except "Goddidit."From a creationist point of view, there's no rule that says a platypus can't lay eggs, if it was meant to lay eggs.
Now you want a living ancestor of the platypus? Why would you expect to see such a species living?However, what I mean by transitional species would be an ancestor of the platypus, not the platypus.
Sure we do! Every species has unique features. If they are living, then we Don't know what if anything they will eventually transition to. How could we?By transitional species, I'm refering to all those species that must have come before the species of whatever that we see today - species that exhibit a type of change that we don't see in any other member of the family they belong to. We don't see them.
Why not? Yes, small changes are normally the rule.Mathclub says species split off and formed branches. Would that be a small change or a big change? I'd say branching would be a type of change we should not see in a family.
Yes, natural selection. Sorry if you don't like it. Yes, birds remain birds, just as primates remain primates and apes remain apes. I feel like we've gone over all this before.Certainly we are now going in a different direction. We're going from improving the breed to a transformation inconsistent with the notion of a small change. What would cause this branching? Don't tell me natural selection. There's nothing natural about it. We don't see this branching in nature. There's no accounting for it. No precedent. Birds remain birds. Moths remain moths. Bacteria remain bacteria.
The fossil record says otherwise. If you went back to the Devonian and found a nice shallow river or stream, you might find some fishapods, like Tiktaalik. If you went back to the Permian, you would find mammal-like reptiles. You would be hard pressed to decide which were "reptiles" and which were "mammals."If you could go back in time to any point in time, you will probably find the same thing. At any point in time in the past, you will not find any living transitional species, especially common ancestors. Yet they should exist in abundance. Of course you will say they went extinct. One million years ago? They went extinct. A hundred million years ago? They went extinct. It's easy to say. But what if they never existed?
Again, from a creationist point of view it doesn't matter what we find. So what?Also from a creationist point of view, there's nothing that says two entirely different creatures can not have wings.
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