J
Jet Black
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you weren't talking about that though, you were talking about mutations occuring, them being passed on to following generations and the environment changing. If you are going to respond to me, please respond to what I said rather than shifting the goalposts.shinbits said:That's because we can observe that that's how the sun appears to rise now. But we have no observations now on which to assume that life came out of the sea and developed legs.
Yes, but they are mostly only small mutations.Aren't mutations infrequent? Because if what you say is the case, then mutations are not infrequent, but happens each and everytime an offspring is made.
then sadly it appears you weren't paying attention when I explained this to you before. Remmber that the breeding population and hence the number of alleles that can make up the offspring in the population is finite. Populations tend to be fairly stable, and this limits the amount of morphological and genetic diversity that can exist in that breeding population at any one time. Lets say we have a village of 100 people. one person has a mutation that causes purple hair, and another that causes green hair and another that causes blue, and another that causes pink hair. your complaint is basically that, if these mutations keep building up, that eventually you will have a hundred different colours of hair. The problem with that is all those alleles have to be passed on. so purple haired people would breed with green haired people and so on. Statistically it would be very unlikely for so many varieties of a particular allele to exist within such a small population, because every now and again, some genes would get wiped out. For example, say a purple haired woman gets together with a brown haired man. Tyey have 2 children. Quite possibly (with the same odds of flipping two heads) both children will have brown hair, so purple hairdness disappears. since she was the only person with purple hair in the population, it's gone. So as you can see, a population will not be able to support the massive variety you are claiming would be a problem for evolution.This being the case, I can go back to my earlier point of there being far too many different types of genes in the gene pool that would be passed on, and differention offspring to the point that they are too different to even be called a population.
not if you understand the facts.It's hard to believe in evolution.
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