lucaspa
Legend
1st April 2003 at 09:17 PM JohnR7 said this in Post #34
I did not say a mammal was a basic kind. It is one of the basic groups, there are many kinds within that group.
Try and pay attention.
You didn't say that. This is what you said:
"kind: Groups of living organisms belong in the same created "kind" if they have descended from the same ancestral gene pool.
By this definition a new species is not a new "kind" but a further partitioning of an existing "kind".
There are about 4 basic groups in the water, 4 on land and the birds. mammal, reptile, cattle & insects."
A kind is a group, and there 4 basic groups on land. It's clear that those land groups are each a kind, by what you said.
Now, of course, you are backing off because I showed the problem with this.
Now, if kinds come from the "same ancestral gene pool" how is this different from evolution? You are also saying common ancestry. Evolution says all organisms came from the "same ancestral gene pool" -- common ancestry.
It would appear that you are saying that there are several different ancestral gene pools. But that gets us back to Lady Shea's problem: how do you identifiy, from looking at the organisms, where the separate gene pools are?
After all, cats and dogs could be from the same ancestral mammalian gene pool. How do you know they aren't?
Upvote
0