Re: Alternative Mechanisms of Evolution?
- From: "Zachriel" <"http://www.zachriel.com/mutagenation/contact.asp"@giganews.com>
- Date: Sun, 28 Aug 2005 09:10:07 -0400
<andrevan808@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1125227297.439850.110610@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Hi Benton.
>
> "Not that I doubt natural selection - it
> is obviously a source of evolution."
>
> Firstly, natural selection is not confined to the evolution hypothesis
> only. Natural selection is not proof of evolution. Natural selection
> does not add any new information to the genetic code of the organism.
>
> Secondly, evolution requires massive amounts of new information for the
> organism to 'evolve' to a more complex organism (ie: to evolve from a
> 'simple' molecule to a complex human being).
>
> "An organism that produced genetics that were most likely to survive
> with changing conditions would be adaptable at a far greater rate than
> one that relied on the slow, random process of mutation and natural
> selection."
>
> Natural selection is the re-arrangement and/or loss of existing
> information due to external influences of the environment. Also in
> every instance, a mutation never adds any new information to an
> organism. It either alters the existing information or there is a loss
> of information.
Stop right there! Please provide a rigorous definition of information.
If you have a clonal population of bacteria and one mutates, did the
population have more information before or after? In other words, does a
diverse population have more or less information than an uniform one?
--
Zachriel, angel that rules over memory, presides over the planet Jupiter.
>
> Some animals have adapted very quickly to changing environmental
> conditions, stunning some 'scientists' in the process, because
> evolution requires long ages.
> I'm NOT referring to the so-called 'peppered moth proof', that was a
> huge fraud by evolutionists, (Nature 396). A possible example can be
> found on the Galapagos Islands.
>
> "In Africa, I've seen... <snip>...to migration. But
> it also seems possible that tribalism could lead to a form of social
> and reproductive isolation that could result in speciation."
>
> Interbreeding within isolated people groups would have resulted in
> tribes gaining certain unique features, due to a recycling of existing
> genes in the 'gene pool'. The originally created genetic information
> is either reshuffled, sorted or has degenerated, and in no way has it
> been added to.
>
> This may be of some help to you.
> André.
>
>
.
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