Hearing ID'ers make arguments against evolution, it is often stated that they acknowledge microevolution (described as evolutionary changes within a species), but that 'no one has ever witnessed macroevolution'.
Is Macroevolution even a meaningful term? They acknowledge the numerous changes within a species over long periods of time, yet they deny that any change ever leads to a new species. Isn't it really a question of where you draw the line, so to speak?
Eventually, only after numerous tiny changes do you have something so vastly different that it's a new species, so wouldn't it be impossible to even state that there is such a thing as Macroevolution, since it merely appears to be a term used to corral all of the Microevolution that has taken place?
So really, there ISN'T any 'big leap' in itself that could be considered Macroevolution, thereby making the argument a smokescreen. Further, since these changes are FAR outside the span of a lifetime, then the 'no one has ever witnessed macroevolution' would also be an illogical statement.
Am I on the right track here?
Btodd
Is Macroevolution even a meaningful term? They acknowledge the numerous changes within a species over long periods of time, yet they deny that any change ever leads to a new species. Isn't it really a question of where you draw the line, so to speak?
Eventually, only after numerous tiny changes do you have something so vastly different that it's a new species, so wouldn't it be impossible to even state that there is such a thing as Macroevolution, since it merely appears to be a term used to corral all of the Microevolution that has taken place?
So really, there ISN'T any 'big leap' in itself that could be considered Macroevolution, thereby making the argument a smokescreen. Further, since these changes are FAR outside the span of a lifetime, then the 'no one has ever witnessed macroevolution' would also be an illogical statement.
Am I on the right track here?
Btodd