| 1. As for facts, I am referring to things like the Cambrian explosiom, and the lack of transitional fossils. For example how about Lucy? Lucy was clearly a chimp. You can go read the actual PBS interview with the guys who reconstructed it. They said when they reconstructed it at first, the hip looked just like a chimpanzee hip. Since there wasn't much anything else to make it transitional, they decided there must be something wrong. So they broke the hip up and put in together again in the "right way". This is another fact that people just ignore. I think actually Google had a "Lucy day" when Lucy is clearly a hoax. >The perfect fit was an allusion that made Lucy's hip bones seems to flair out like a chimps. But all was not lost. Lovejoy decided he could restore the pelvis to its natural shape. He didn't want to tamper with the original, so he made a copy in plaster. He cut the damaged pieces out and put them back together the way they were before Lucy died. It was a tricky job, but after taking the kink out of the pelvis, it all fit together perfectly, like a three-dimensional jigsaw puzzle. As a result, the angle of the hip looks nothing like a chimps, but a lot like ours. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/2106hum1.html 2. This has not been thoroughly debunked at all. In fact over and over again the "missing link" turns out to be a fake. Or how about archaeopteryx? It has fully formed wings and feathers. Where is the creature with half wings and partial feathers? Surely feathers couldn't have developed overnight! Yet it simply doesn't exist. 3. It's convincing for "most people". Well it's not convincing for a lot of others. So should the opposing position be censored? I don't think so. 4. Speed of evolution. Observing the mutation rate of Malaria is instructive. It is a eukaryotes, not a prokaryote, so is much more similar to our cell structure. Up to 1 trillion malaria organisms can infect the host. 250 million get malaria per year. That's up to 250 million trillion organisms per year. Which is millions of times the number of generations between monkeys and people. Yet it takes years for malaria to develop a resistance to a single anti malarial drug. There is no way the far more complex transition from monkeys to humans occurred in 1/1millionth of the number of generations. The rate of evolution is simply too slow. To your edit: the Bible is meant to be allegorical in some parts. But as for creation, trying to somehow rectify the Bible + evolution is no good. The Bible says God created them so they would reproduce according to their "kind" https://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/lexicon/lexicon.cfm?t=e... This is exactly what we see in the fossils. When something shows up in the record, it stays the same. Thanks for engaging, not downvoting! Your a cool guy (or girl) |
Elsewhere in the same transcript it says "[Lucy] didn't look like anything we had ever found before." and "Lucy had an ape-like face with a brain just a little larger than a chimps." If Lucy looked "just like a chimp" then what explains these quotes about the differences?
Because it sounds to me like you are cherry picking and distorting quotes, which is a standard creationist practice.
Earlier you wrote that humans separated from monkeys 10,000 years ago. This of course is not true. How old do you think Lucy is?
Lucy is not the only Australopithecus afarensis skeleton found. This includes AL 129-1 found by the same Don Johnson you quoted. Quoting https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AL_129-1 : "It is estimated to be 3.4 million years old.[1] Its characteristics include an elliptical Lateral condyle and an oblique femoral shaft like that found in humans, indicating bipedalism."
Or there's AL 333-160. Quoting https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australopithecus_afarensis : "The foot bone shows that the species had arches in its feet, which confirmed that the species walked upright for the majority of the time.[33] The foot bone is one of 49 new bones discovered, and indicates that A. afarensis is "a lot more human-like than we had ever supposed before", according to the lead scientist on the study.[34]"
Or Selam, "Here we describe a well-preserved 3.3-million-year-old juvenile partial skeleton of Australopithecus afarensis discovered in the Dikika research area of Ethiopia. The skull of the approximately three-year-old presumed female shows that most features diagnostic of the species are evident even at this early stage of development. The find includes many previously unknown skeletal elements from the Pliocene hominin record, including a hyoid bone that has a typical African ape {hominid} morphology. The foot and other evidence from the lower limb provide clear evidence for bipedal locomotion, but the gorilla-like scapula and long and curved manual phalanges raise new questions about the importance of arboreal behaviour in the A. afarensis" (using the quote by Alemseged et. al from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selam_(Australopithecus) .
So even discarding the reconstruction of Lucy's hip, there is other evidence that A. afarensis was bipedal in way that chimps are not.
You write "Where is the creature with half wings and partial feathers?" This is not how evolution works.
To begin with, feathers existed long before wings. Sinosauropteryx is an example of a non-avian dinosaur with feathers. We've found feathers on Epidexipteryx, from 160-170 million years ago, which is 10 million years before Archaeopteryx. Hardly "overnight".
The "half wing" is a standard creationist argument, but essentially meaningless. First, there are many definition of "wing". If I stick my hand out the window of a moving car, I can use it to get upward lift. That makes it a wing.
Under this definition, the body of a Paradise flying snake is a wing, even though it looks nothing like a bird or bat wing. Unlike my hand, but like birds, the wing property of the snake body is the result of adaptive selection.
The evolutionary argument is that "wing" is a continuum of abilities, from very poor wing to a very good wing. All of them are wings. None of them are "half wings".
What a creationist will do is place absurd requirements on what a "wing" is such that any evolutionary reasonable interpretation for "half a wing" is disqualified for not being a wing.
That would be like saying that email didn't exist until the late 1970s because no previous system implemented the 32 distinct components that Ayyadurai says were needed to be "email".
You write "When something shows up in the record, it stays the same". As I pointed out earlier, that's because species labels "are human constructs that have been imposed in hindsight on a continuum of variation", to quote https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transitional_fossil . When things change, we call it a new species. It is not a fundamental reflection of the biology.