I've seen this so many times.
A system is composed of several components. The system cannot function if one component is missing. Therefore this system cannot have evolved.
It's the common boilerplate argument for Irreducible Complexity, and it reveals the black-and-white thinking of many creationists. For the creationists, a system either has a component or it doesn't. These components can't change.
So it follows logically from these premises that these so called irreducibly complex system cannot evolved.
Riiiiiight.
So, on to logic and reasoning. Parts can change. Dependancies can develop. Even the use of a system can change.
For example, this arch:
If you remove any chunk of stone, it'll fall.
Yet it still arose from natural processes, namely, erosion.
This argument for IC is absurd: because the removal of any components from the system will result in the failure of the system, the system must have been designed as it is.
A system is composed of several components. The system cannot function if one component is missing. Therefore this system cannot have evolved.
It's the common boilerplate argument for Irreducible Complexity, and it reveals the black-and-white thinking of many creationists. For the creationists, a system either has a component or it doesn't. These components can't change.
So it follows logically from these premises that these so called irreducibly complex system cannot evolved.
Riiiiiight.
So, on to logic and reasoning. Parts can change. Dependancies can develop. Even the use of a system can change.
For example, this arch:

If you remove any chunk of stone, it'll fall.
Yet it still arose from natural processes, namely, erosion.
This argument for IC is absurd: because the removal of any components from the system will result in the failure of the system, the system must have been designed as it is.