Bugeyedcreepy
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- Jun 7, 2016
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This is so wrong as to render all of your commentary in this arena moot.Why would you believe they were identical? Half the chromosomes were removed from Adam and placed into Eve. Their combined genomes held every racial attribute.
Why wouldn't a God see that happening down the track?The problem with a literal and inerrant interpretation of Genesis, is that most, if not all of us do not speak Hebrew as our native tongue, the language the Bible was given to mankind in. That the English and other languages have errors is IMO a certainty.
You can’t even translate a novel from Spanish to English or another language without taking liscence in interpretations and using words that may not have the exact same meaning as they do in the native tongue to someone that speaks only it and understands all the nuances.
Please show me where I ever claimed a mutation could not change skin color. As a matter of fact I stated that clearly. But the point you then ignored is for that mutation to fix in the population, all the population must be descended from the one with the mutation....
But for the entire population to posses the same mutation that the mutant father had, they must all be descendants of that father.
Yours is a common problem among evolutionists. You ignore continually that for a specific random mutation to be fixed in the entire population, the entire population must be descended from the one originally carrying that random mutation.
Which isn't that hard to achieve really... It can theoretically be possible in just a few short generations. Take you for example. You have two parents. Your parents have two parents each. Their parents have two parents each, so on. Let's count it out from you:I know, amazing isn’t it. They talk of bottlenecks if from two, but then ignore that for every new mutation fixed in the population, they have to start with one....
Generation 1 - 1 <== You
Generation 2 - 2 <== Your mummy and daddy
Generation 3 - 4 <== Your grandmummies and granddaddies
Generation 4 - 8 <== Your great grandmummies and great granddaddies
Generation 5 - 16 <== etc.
Generation 6 - 32
Generation 7 - 64
Generation 8 - 128
Generation 9 - 256
Generation 10 - 512
Generation 11 - 1,024
Generation 12 - 2,048
Generation 13 - 4,096
Generation 14 - 8,192
Generation 15 - 16,384
Generation 16 - 32,768
Generation 17 - 65,536
Generation 18 - 131,072
Generation 19 - 262,144
Generation 20 - 524,288
Generation 21 - 1,048,576
Generation 22 - 2,097,152
Generation 23 - 4,194,304
Generation 24 - 8,388,608
Generation 25 - 16,777,216
Generation 26 - 33,554,432
Generation 27 - 67,108,864
Generation 28 - 134,217,728
Generation 29 - 268,435,456
Generation 30 - 536,870,912
Generation 31 - 1,073,741,824
Generation 32 - 2,147,483,648
Generation 33 - 4,294,967,296
Generation 34 - 8,589,934,592
So, by going back only 34 generations, you would very possibly have every mutation from every generation prior to this in your genome at todays population - now That's fixation, and that's also only around 680 years ago if you take average age of family life to begin around 20 years. Obviously this is overly simplistic and doesn't properly model the actual rate of fixation since it isn't possible to have around 16 billion unique ancestors in your lineage, but this certainly is indicative of how soon and how easily beneficial mutations can fixate in a population, even ours at 7.5 billion people.
Well, creationists are wrong, don't need to see an imaginary event like that to know it...that even if we will see a cat evolving into a dog- evolutionists will claim that the fact its happened prove creationists are wrong.
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