stevevw
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I am not a creationsist to start with and I support natural selection as a force in evolution. I have read the entire articles I post and have been referring to them for years. I could find some more updated papers but have not got time at present. Besides these papers are still referenced in modern papers. I think the point is anyway that some do not see in non-adaptive terms becuase they are too busy thinking in adaptive terms. From what I have seen on this forum many still think in purely adaptive terms and will cite natural selection for just about everything from why we may be nice to each other to how the universe was made. It easy to come up with some adaptive reason why people do what they do.Just out of curiosity - and I think I already know the answer - did you read that article, or just copy-paste the abstract?
Added in edit - I see you copy-pasted and bolded parts of it that you thought support your position, but one has to understand that Koonin's is just one opinion. I note that you had bolded this:
"The vast majority of biologists engaged in evolutionary studies interpret virtually every aspect of biodiversity in adaptive terms. (IE Natural selection emphasis added). "
I note that he provides no citation for that claim. I also note that the article is 9 years old. Of the evolutionary biologists I am familiar with today, I can't name 1 that thinks this way. There certainly is a 'camp' of evolutionary biologists who see adaptation in every feature conceivable, but those views have changed greatly.
Creationists often display a tendency to assert or imply that whomever they are citing is the ultimate authority on whatever point they are trying to make, and this is most often done in cases like this, where a scientist is expressing an opinion, rather than presenting research.
I rarely hear people question adpative evolution and if this is an example then they must be getting their info from somewhere unless as has been pointed out in the articles it is assumed. Yes they are opinions but these scientists are experts in their fields and so it is qualified opinions. They represent a number of scientists from different fields that have expanded our understanding of how life is influenced and can change such as developmental biology, genomics, epigenetics, ecology and social science which is my field of study. These areas are coming up and persisting because adpative evolution has found it hard to explain and account for how life works and changes. The more time that goes by the more support for this is coming to light.
Heres a more recent paper
Does evolutionary theory need a rethink?
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