Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Now, this is a fact, but Mr LiveFreeorDie is an ignoramous who is so insanely desirous of winning an argument for his faith, evolution, that he is perfectly willing to flat out lie, or is so confused as to not realize he contradicts himself in both admitting "transitional" species may actually not have evolved but just went extinct, and then claiming there is proof that these same species did in fact all evolve.
Sometimes the individual specimens are not thought to be directly ancestral to the next-youngest fossils.
The primary significance of Archaeopteryx is not that it establishes the exact relationship between dinosaurs and birds. The significance of Archaeopteryx is that its mere existence proves, unequivocally, that the existence of a creature with morhpology between dinosaurs and birds was possible.
Now, this is a fact, but Mr LiveFreeorDie is an ignoramous who is so insanely desirous of winning an argument for his faith, evolution, that he is perfectly willing to flat out lie, or is so confused as to not realize he contradicts himself in both admitting "transitional" species may actually not have evolved but just went extinct, and then claiming there is proof that these same species did in fact all evolve. It seems to me the evolutionist camp at least those of the Talkorigin type deliberately use the term "transitional" in order to decieve, and that LiveFreeorDie it trying to do that here.
Originally posted by randman
The context of what I wrote was pretty clear, and LiveFree was trying to distort and take my quotes out of context. I do not apologize. I was plainly pointing out that the use of the word transitional to describe a species does not mean that it evolved at all but could have gone extinct.
[ I ] wrote this FAQ as a reference for answering the "there aren't any transitional fossils" statement that pops up on talk.origins several times each year. I've tried to make it an accurate, though highly condensed, summary of known vertebrate fossil history in those lineages that led to familiar modern forms, with the known transitions and with the known major gaps both clearly mentioned....
Usually there are still gaps between each of the groups -- few or none of the speciation events are preserved. Sometimes the individual specimens are not thought to be directly ancestral to the next-youngest fossils (i.e., they may be "cousins" or "uncles" rather than "parents"). However, they are assumed to be closely related to the actual ancestor, since they have intermediate morphology compared to the next-oldest and next-youngest "links". The major point of these general lineages is that animals with intermediate morphology existed at the appropriate times, and thus that the transitions from the proposed ancestors are fully plausible. General lineages are known for almost all modern groups of vertebrates, and make up the bulk of this FAQ.
Originally posted by randman
Jerry, tell me a piece of evidence that as a layman I could understand that would disprove evolution.
Originally posted by randman
I don't s ee how that woukld recent evolutionists from simply revising their time-table for mammals, or that particular species of dinosaurs.
For instance, let's say some mammals are found with a particular dinosaur. Is it not possible that the strata could be considered much younger, and that this is just an example of a species that was thought to have gone extinct, but actually did not?
Fact is I doubt evolutionists would drop their belief no matter what you found.
Originally posted by randman
Jerry, tell me a piece of evidence that as a layman I could understand that would disprove evolution.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?