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Creationists often argue that there is a biological limit to evolutionary changes. The argument is usually made with respect to trying to refute the idea of common ancestry. It generally is as follows:
1) There is a biological limit to evolutionary changes in life forms;
2) Therefore, organisms can't share common ancestry beyond a certain point;
3) Therefore, individual organisms had to have been created and there is no universal common ancestry.
The inverse of this argument, however, doesn't follow. For example:
1) Individual organisms were created and there is no universal common ancestry;
2) Therefore, there are biological limits to evolutionary changes in life forms.
The problem is that #2 doesn't logically follow from #1. There is no reason to necessitate that evolutionary changes should be limited if organisms were spontaneously created.
As an example, consider terrestrial mammal to aquatic mammal transitions. Creationist generally believe that terrestrial mammals and aquatic mammals were created separately. But even if that were true, why couldn't populations of created terrestrial mammals still undergo evolutionary changes over time; going from terrestrial to semi-aquatic to fully aquatic.
In looking at this argument this way, I feel the attempts to argue for biological barriers in created life seem a bit backwards. Arguing that created life cannot evolve past certain biological points is not the same argument as arguing that individual life forms were created in the first place.
1) There is a biological limit to evolutionary changes in life forms;
2) Therefore, organisms can't share common ancestry beyond a certain point;
3) Therefore, individual organisms had to have been created and there is no universal common ancestry.
The inverse of this argument, however, doesn't follow. For example:
1) Individual organisms were created and there is no universal common ancestry;
2) Therefore, there are biological limits to evolutionary changes in life forms.
The problem is that #2 doesn't logically follow from #1. There is no reason to necessitate that evolutionary changes should be limited if organisms were spontaneously created.
As an example, consider terrestrial mammal to aquatic mammal transitions. Creationist generally believe that terrestrial mammals and aquatic mammals were created separately. But even if that were true, why couldn't populations of created terrestrial mammals still undergo evolutionary changes over time; going from terrestrial to semi-aquatic to fully aquatic.
In looking at this argument this way, I feel the attempts to argue for biological barriers in created life seem a bit backwards. Arguing that created life cannot evolve past certain biological points is not the same argument as arguing that individual life forms were created in the first place.