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What is that supposed to mean? The original question was:
I understood him quite well. Question. If dinosaurs became extinct how is it their traits are passed on in creatures today?
Reminds me of a planet I once knew --far be it for me to actually agree with AV, but in this case I do. To a degree.
I think it is more correct to say that while every species of dinosaur that lived back then is extinct, one group of dinosaurs has evolved into the birds we see today.
As to whether it is completely accurate to call them dinosaurs is open to discussion. Yes, birds and dinosaurs are very closely related. But one could also make the argument that reptiles are amphibians as reptiles evolved from them.
Just because a group evolved from another group doesn't neccessarily mean that they should automatically be classes in that original group.
still, i can see a good argument supporting the claim that birds are dinosaurs.
I suppose it would be most accurate to say that birds are dinosaur descendants.
Reminds me of a planet I once knew --![]()
No, they haven't. Komodo dragon, turtles, other various lizards.
Once you identify a number of distinctive features then you can call it a bird. There are various kinds of birds. Again they are identified by features, behaviours, things that set them apart. So a species could also be called a kind. However a species or kind of bird would necessarily belong to a larger kind having the features that distinguish it from every other kind and it would possess the distinctive features of a bird. I say necessarily so because I believe speciation accounts for the number of species we can identify, including the species that are extinct. The idea of speciation is that you can isolate a population of individuals from the main population and after a while they all begin to look alike. So theoretically the number of species you can get from a population is unlimited.
The point is, is that you will never be able to define kind. It's nebulous and vague, and fits whatever argument the creationist using it wants it to be.
It is defined by the immediate context.So the term "kind" is actually meaningless as far as we Humans are concerned, yes?
Genesis 1:21 said:And God created great whales, and every living creature that moveth, which the waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged fowl after his kind: and God saw that it was good.
I'd also like to hear that, AV. In the context of Genesis 1:21, what does "Kind" mean?
Here's the passage for those who don't know it by heart.
It has no use outside of its context.In short, you claim that in the context of Genesis, the term "kind" is meaningless to humans.
You and Tiberius are trying to inject the term "meaningless" into the definition, and I disagree.That's not what you said in your linked posts.
So the term "kind" is actually meaningless as far as we Humans are concerned, yes?
In short, you claim that in the context of Genesis, the term "kind" is meaningless to humans.