Re: Propping up the theory of Evolution



On Jul 2, 7:27 pm, rick_so...@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
On Jul 3, 3:16 am, Mark VandeWettering <wetter...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:





On 2008-07-03, rick_so...@xxxxxxxxxxx <rick_so...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On Jul 3, 2:11 am, "Dan Luke" <t1...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
<rick_so...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

[snip]

The marathon started yesterday and you don't even have your running shoes on
yet.

Well lets back back to basics then, so I can get my running shoes on.
Just give me a short list of examples in nature, in any species, where
lets say 30% of the population within that species, has a different
organ or gland than the others in that species, and a brief on how the
physiology design differs within that group.
As a starting point for discussion.

Can you think of an organ that you don't share with a dolphin?

        Mark

I'm not that knowledgeable to know the differences but why do they all
look alike, and why are they all from the design mold?

Because they are all descended from a common ancestor.

Who is it, that one point decides ok, this is the mold for a dolphin,
and all dolphins will follow this mold?

There is no decision involved. All dolphins are descended from a
common ancestor.

- Bob T.

- Show quoted text -


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