River Jordan
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- Dec 26, 2024
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Because it's true. I find it hard to believe you're not aware that mechanisms like mutation, various modes of selection, recombination, migration, neutral drift, and others have been observed, documented, and studied extensively.Why would you say that, knowing that science is a study which is ongoing, and it could hardly be concluded that we know everything there is to know where scientific research is concerned.
The debate there, as the title says, is about the relative importance of different mechanisms. Old school evolutionary biologists favored selection as the primary mechanism, whereas advocates of the EES want more focus put on things listed in the article (epigenetics, evo-devo).
And PE is primarily about different types of speciation, but it still occurs via the same mechanisms as traditional Darwinian gradualism.
Don't assume your ignorance is shared by everyone else. Evolutionary scientists have figured out many different ways evolutionary mechanisms produce complex features, up to and including watching it happen in real time. That's where your ignorance of the field of experimental evolution is hurting you.We must not be looking at the same article, because big issues, are not simple, and not knowing how evolution produce new and complex features as one of those big issues, is not as simple as "some, but not all, things".
So you really are ignorant of the importance of field studies in researching and testing how populations evolve.So the theory of evolution is field studies now?
You aren't aware that scientific theories have multiple components to them? Wow.Wow. Various aspect of the theory, is the theory?
Not only can it, it has been. I showed you one example of how running genetic sequences through a framework of universal common ancestry produces very consistent and accurate results, which is an obvious verification of UCA. You ignored it.The theory cannot be verified, since the theory is not "some aspects" of the theory.
No, not even close. You really don't understand how establishing paternity and ancestry via genetic testing shows how we don't need to directly observe an event before we can conclude it happened and draw other conclusions about it? Wow.What you are here saying, is similar to pigs can fly, because we found the gene for flight in its DNA code.
Actually, yes (although not in the childish terms you put it in).Because one can trace a lineage of human, does that mean interpreting genes leads you to an ape... to a fish?
I'm familiar with some of those cases and the ID creationists aren't depicting them accurately. If you'd like, we can go over them one at a time.Scientists who express skepticism about Darwinian evolution may face professional repercussions, including job loss or demotion, due to their views. For instance, David Coppedge, a senior computer systems administrator for the Cassini Mission at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab, was demoted and eventually discharged after offering colleagues DVDs about intelligent design, even though no one had complained about his actions beforehand.
May Non-Scientists Question Darwinism? | Evolution News and Science Today
Similarly, Roger DeHart, a high school biology teacher in Washington State, faced harassment from pro-Darwin activists and was ultimately removed from teaching biology despite complying with his district’s gag order. These cases highlight the potential risks scientists and educators face when they publicly question Darwinian evolution.
You're dodging the question again, and I'll take that as a concession that you can't name another process, besides evolution, that produces new traits.See above.
When you want to discuss the subject and answer questions related to it, you can ask me any question, and I would be willing to answer.
I just did discuss it by pointing you to a verification of UCA. If you don't know enough about the subject to understand and comment on the material I posted, that's understandable.The core idea "All life on Earth - including humanity - shares a last universal common ancestor (LUCA), which lived approximately 3.5–3.8 billion years ago".
Since you don't want to discuss that, I don't think there is anything else we have to discuss.
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