Posted on 11/14/2005 8:06:26 AM PST by Exigence
You're mixing my replies. I never said it was evolution... and would appreciate not being misquoted. Let's leave that for the professionals, (ie, the liberal press). Fair enough?
Now, that's better, isn't it? A grown up approach to debate. Or, what passes for grown up debate 'round these parts. *vbg*
I'd be delighted. Please give me the change you'd like me to discuss... one with hard evidence behind it. If there is no prevention, as you allude, you should be able to supply dozens of examples with a clear record of progression from species to species.
Also, looking at the Big Bang model, the entropy of the universe at the moment of the Big Bang was very low (possibly almost zero), giving a universe very consistent with the 2nd Law.
Using the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics to attack evolution and cosmology is just plain silly - it doesn't have any useful application in this arena except for irritating physicists.
This was copied from GarySpFc post #117. How is it you comment that "the Earth is absolutely positively NOT a closed system." as if you are bringing new information that was left out of the post #117?
Ever notice when the sun shines down on cockroaches, they scatter?
Remind you of anyone?
This is the post I was replying to:
"To: The_Reader_David
Origin of life theories are so far from being settled science that any teaching of them without criticisms would be an erosion of science education.
Precisely.
75 posted on 11/14/2005 9:13:52 AM PST by Exigence
The_Reader_David had, in post 73 had said:
>>"To: Exigence
Okay, is that what this row was all about? A clause in science standards mandating criticism of origin-of-life theories? Any of the Kansans are yahoos (in Swift's sense, not subscribers to a certain on-line company) crowd have some missing quotations from the Kansas BOR standards to show otherwise?
Origin of life theories are so far from being settled science that any teaching of them without criticisms would be an erosion of science education."
73 posted on 11/14/2005 9:11:43 AM PST by The_Reader_David<<
And -that- referred to item 7 in the standards which included origin of life as a part of the evolution standards.
Speaking of omissions, when Adam left the Garden, God cursed all his senses --- except smell.
Which is interesting, in that smell has a profound memory-response-triggering ability, unlike any other sense.
Smell certain kind of mildew and you're back in Grandma's garage, getting down the hammock.
The entropic hash equivalence is ¡Ý 0 (¡®dQ¡¯) ¡®dS¡, where ¡®T¡¯ represents heat, ¡®QR¡¯ represents either potatoes or corned beef, and a refrigerator-dripping-water-down-a mountain-peak-onto-a-small-animal-stuck-in-a-tailpipe-without-a-food-source represents a can opener.
How could I have been so blind?
Further inspiration to keep my current tagline for a while.
OK, where is it?
Because the author of the piece forgot to consider that the Earth is not a closed system at the specific point when he argued the water can't get out of the bottom of the valley ever again without Intelligent Design. Unless, that is, you're saying the Sun and all the other stars in the universe can't operate except by continuous intelligent intervention.
People with sun-sensitivity? ;)
You might want to start with one of these, courtesy of PatrickHenry's links. Smooth transitions from species to species. We also see such processes in progress today, among ring species, et.al.
The inevitable rebuttal is that these are "only microevolutionary changes", which is untrue, because there is clearly an emergence of a different related species in the cited cases. If you wish to push back the envelope further, and demand interfamily transitions, interorder transitions, etc., there are examples also, but due to the length of time and paucity of the fossil record, and the "branching" of peripheral species, the wider the relation, the more "gaps" there will be in the fossil record. However, there are numerous examples of clear transitions between these wider groupings as well. Fortunately, also, there are other lines of inquiry to confirm broader relations in addition to the fossil record, including biogeographical and genetic/morphological evidence.
I wouldn't even know what to debate. The excerpt you quoted doesn't make any comment about the validity of thermodynamics as it relates to evolution at all. It is just an obvious attempt to obfuscate the issue. Could you point where, specifically, in that long rambling, where it is proven that thermodynamics makes evolution impossible? I didn't see it, and I don't think anyone else did either. It would certainly be news to the worldwide scientific community if this was indeed the case.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.