Ed1wolf said:
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Also, there is not enough time for the beneficial mutations to make major changes in morphology. Mathematicians at Cornell recently determined how hard it is to get a binding site in DNA. They determined that it would take 60,000 years for a mutation to arise, and 6 million years for it to become general in the population to go from an apelike ancestor to humans. And that is just one mutation, if you need two coordinated mutations it would take 216 million years. So that makes it basically impossible to go from australopithecine to human since you need a lot more coordinated mutations than that.
efm: You copied this from here, almost word for word,
Science vs. Darwinism - WORLD
You should at least cite your crappy sources.
Unsurprisingly, I have not found a single reference to this study - if it even
is a study - in any primary scientific material I am aware of, nor in anything popular-level. If it is an actual peer-reviewed study, I suspect, as is always the case, that creationist propagandists have gotten a hold of it and misconstrued for their own purposes, and it doesn't say anything like what is being asserted here. Again, that's assuming it's anything like an actual study at all.
But here's the nice thing about living in 2019 - I can just e-mail the math department at Cornell, with a link to this interview, and ask them if they have any awareness of such a thing, and if it actually says what is claimed. So, I did.
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To whom it may concern,
I came across an article claiming that mathematicians at Cornell had determined that the number and frequency of genetic mutations needed for the evolution of humans from their ape ancestors was problematic for the Theory of Evolution. The article is here,
Science vs. Darwinism - WORLD
Assuming this is referring to an actual academic study in the first place, I am wondering if you are aware of any such study, and where I might read the source material myself (the article has no citations).
Thank you for your time and consideration,
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I have done this sort of thing many times before, when creationists make such citation-free claims as you've made here. In every single case the claim has turned out to be, at the
very best, only partially true, and usually completely false. I am not exactly shaking in my boots that this time, it will somehow turn out that you were correct.