They are also not closely related.Originally posted by UTEOTW:
"Well, I have seen numerous comments saying that birds are most closely related to crocodiles according to similarity in genes.
They don't look very similar to me. "
They do not look very similar to you. That is why I love the example.
Your opening comment proposes that birds are "more" closely related to crocs than other animals.
Also, while they do not look the same, there are similarities like their form of reproduction and claws. So, speaking from a "design" perspective, if two creatures share more in common (though that may not be much) than either share with a third creature then "yes" intelligent design would "predict" that they would share more commonalities genetically.
Or we could take the marsupial wolf... that looks like the fox and wolf and with one mammoth problem for evolutionists... marsupials and placental reproducers were supposed to have diverged well before any of these species appeared.If I take a fox and a wolf and show them to be closely related genetically, then you will just say that they have very similar bodies and lifestyles and therefore they were commonly designed with similar building blocks.
Sooo, the most parsimonious answer is that they diverged recently... but that is a pretty important and complex system to have diverged many times (there are other animals with both marsupial and placental forms). At the same time, believing that convergent evolution could have resulted in all the other similarities is well beyond ridiculous.
OTOH, the real "most parsimonious" answer is that canines were among several kinds that were created with the ability to adapt in either direction.
"Convergent" evolution is another case where evolution can accommodate both "A" and "not A".
Not at all. Like I said, they do have recognizable commonalities. In fact, it would be reasonable to suspect that their genetic similarity would be approximate to the physical similarity... just as if they were designed that way.It would be impossible for you to build a convincing case that birds and crocs are so similar in build and lifestyle that you would expect them to have been more closely designed to each other than to anything else.
You don't believe in common descent. You believe in common ascent... that they share an ancestor that was more simple than either of them and that through mutation and natural selection both genetic information and biological complexity were added in two different directions.Yet I can, and have, easily build a convincing case of them being closely related through common descent.
Of course you offer no realistic mechanism for such an acquistion of genetic information nor a means for the development of complex biological systems.
The problem as pointed out in a book I am reading called "Darwin's God" is that you claim the evidence no matter what.I then point out the genetic similarites and show that they support the evidence from other areas and is to be expected.
You claim both "similar" and "not similar" as "evidence" for creation.
All you are doing is accommodating the evidence. You are saying: "Evolution is true". "The evidence can be explained by the truth of evolution". "Therefore evolution is true".
You are playing that hand a little further than warranted. They aren't "close". They are "more similar".The next step is to challenge the YEers to account for this specific result in their paradigm. Just why such a close relationship between these two specific groups should be expected, why and how to test that idea.
God used similar designs on the original kinds that the croc descended from and birds. That is a response that accounts for the facts. I am sure you won't be satisfied with it since it defies a naturalistic process. However it is no more metaphysical than your assumptions that there must be a naturalistic process for everything in nature and also that "a Divine Designer wouldn't have done it that way".You'll notice a distinct lack of a response.
Evolution cannot be falsified. Evolution can always be made to accept "A", "not-A", or "both". Evolution accommodates the data. However, you cannot use the theory to accommodate the data then use the data as support for the theory.But if we do like to pick and choose then you should have no trouble falsifying evolution by providing real data that contradicts evolution.
For instance, parsimony rules when evolutionists attempt to construct homologies except for when accepting the most parsimonious result in a sub-part prevents an evolutionary explanation. Then, the analogous becomes the preferred path since it supports evolution.
It's OK that evolution can accommodate both. It is not OK then to turn around and say that both homologies and analogies support evolution.
Why would you assume that God wouldn't have created the world basically as we see it albeit in a more pristine form? One of the repetitive forms of argument presented by your side here is that God wouldn't have made it look this way if evolution weren't true."If God had created man from a common ancestor to apes he would have said so."
Why would you make such an assumption?
So your answer is the same as your own logic... we have made metaphysical assumptions about what God has done. Ours are based on the Bible. Yours are based on the assumption of naturalism and its limitations upon what God can do without being "dishonest".
Except that it is mentioned and reaffirmed elsewhere. God directly created man and made him different from all other creatures.It does not seem important to the purpose of the Bibleand therefore does not need to be mentioned.
Oranges and apples. QC doesn't directly contradict direct claims of scripture... while ape to man evolution does.Just like there is no mention of quantum chromodynamics. Quantum chromodynamics is pretty important to you and me but not to our salvation and our walk with God. So no Biblical mention.
[ November 11, 2005, 06:07 PM: Message edited by: Scott J ]