Posted on 05/04/2005 12:32:23 PM PDT by MeanWestTexan
Caught in the act of evolution, the odd-looking, feathered dinosaur was becoming more vegetarian, moving away from its meat-eating ancestors.
It had the built-for-speed legs of meat-eaters, but was developing the bigger belly of plant-eaters. It had already lost the serrated teeth needed for tearing flesh. Those were replaced with the smaller, duller vegetarian variety.
(Excerpt) Read more at lasvegassun.com ...
And to clarify, I realize that the panda is an Ursa, but it is not of the same family as black, brown, sloth, or even polar bears.
Kent really needs to save his nickels, actually. The IRS has a lien against him for unpaid taxes, to the tune of $540,957.24 - anyone claiming his bogus "prize" is going to have to get in line with the rest of the unsecured creditors.
I would guess that is what peer-reviewed is all about. But decide for yourself.
Anti-evolution paper met with 'hysteria, name-calling'
However, National Center for Biotechnology Information staff scientist Richard Sternberg told The Scientist the three peer reviewers of Meyer's paper "all hold faculty positions in biological disciplines at prominent universities and research institutions, one at an Ivy League university, one at a major U.S. public university, and another at a major overseas research institute."
All found the paper "meritorious, warranting publication," he said.
Moreover, Sternberg told the journal he and Meyer have falsely been labeled creationists by the scientific community, noting: "It's fascinating how the 'creationist' label is falsely applied to anyone who raises any questions about neo-Darwinian evolutionary theory. The reaction to the paper by some [anti-creationist] extremists suggests that the thought police are alive and well in the scientific community."
Note: This is from the "World Net Daily", not "The Scientist"(to preclude the inevitable red herring attack)
Here are links to the Defense of Richard Sternberg
http://www.rsternberg.net/
http://www.rsternberg.net/Procedures.htm
There have been a number of strange rumors and allegations concerning the procedures for the publication of the Meyer paper. As these allegations come to my attention I will add to this page additional information regarding the truth of the matter.
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Herbivores are primary consumers. No herbivores, the carnivores need a g-tube. Survival would be enhanced by having choppers and grinders. What advantage is gained by losing the choppers in favor of grinders?
I make everything I say up.. I rarely quote from somebodys dogma..
Are you reading from a script or are you makeing up your dialog too.?.
Just noting the factual commonality, LOL!
You know, I think it is a problem with smart people.
While raised Jewish, I felt very called to Christianity from a very early age.
But it seemed every Bible-believing Christian I met was a dour, generally closed-minded, legalistic, unfunny, twit. Often hypocrits, too. Christians like the guy posted above who makes the false offer about evolution --- by falsely twisting what evolution is. The kind of people who got mad at Laura Bush's comedy bit.
I call them Christian pharasees, who think man was made for the Law, not the other way around.
It was not until the Army that I found smart, Bible-believing guys that pointed out that Jesus drank wine and educated me on the fact that so much of the "twittedness" of Christiandom is man-added rules.
It made all the difference.
This is an obscure part of the Bible. It is open to interpretation.
And God speaks unclearly --- on purpose, I suppose, so it only becomes clear when we need to know what He meant. For example, at the end of John (on the shore, right after Jesus reinstated Pete), there is a statement by Jesus that is most easily read as "John will live forever."
Well, it didn't mean that. And John made clear that Jesus did not mean that. But people still interpreted it that way.
I think that difficult-to-read statement was a reminder to keep one's mind open when reading the scriptures to what is going on around you. To again use the example of the 2,000 years ago Pharasee --- they were so confident in their interpretation of the scriptures that they missed what was going on right in front of them.
That is a dangerous mistake. And the close-minded anger at the mere topic of evolution by so many Creationist is very similar.
Nineteen.
"What advantage is gained by losing the choppers in favor of grinders?"
Don't know, but having lived on a ranch, I would suppose it would be to eat grass or grain or something similarly reedy --- cows, et al, initially "pull" the grass up with their front "grinders" --- a hard and painful feat to do with sharp front teeth --- as anyone who has (like me) stupidly stripped insulation off of copper wire with their teeth can attest to.
You do realize that medieval theologans didn't argue that point...but rather that reference was a straw-man made to mock them, right?
What's that "internet" thing?
Ain't that the truth! LOL! Heck, that happened to me already today in this thread.
OK, lets try this one. What advantage is gained by moving on the food chain from predator to prey, your cows not withstanding. :-}
"So, it isn't possible for a cat to have a similar nasal cavity of a fox?"
I have no idea. But that is not the issue.
You would never look at just one isolated point like just sinus cavities, but a whole bunch of key points put together (plus shape of gross structures like hips, joints, front "paws," eye location (font side, distance from each other, distance from nose, depth of socket, etc.) to make a conclusion like that.
"What advantage is gained by moving on the food chain from predator to prey?"
Too many of that type of predator hunting too few prey animals.
This was not a giant dinasaur. They probably ate something the size of rabbits.
Too few rabbits. Lots of grass (or whatever).
Stalin was into Lysenkoism, which repudiated Darwin. Indeed, Darwinian biologists often found themselves purged.
So adaptation rids them of their choppers in favor of all grinders? You buying that? I'm not. The omnivore is much better suited to survival than the herbivore or the carnivore. Sounds like they were selected out.
You can plead ignorance the first 500 times.
"Sounds like they were selected out."
Since they are dead, I would have to agree with you.
But specialization, while dangerous if conditions changes (take the poor Cheetah, for example) has its advantages.
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