I may by completely mistaken, but it seems that "Arnifx" didn't actually write those posts. I have to congratulate him if he did (who whoever actually did) because they actually seem to be written by a person who bothers, unlike his previous posts.
I hope everyone who read this (I did) also read the response (I did). End the end it boils down to a dispute between the 2 sides as to what actually happened
What a way to walk around the real issue. Natural Selection is not about increasing the information content of the genome, which the question was about.
Natural selection, as we witness it, is all about changes in the total information in the gene pool of a population, which incidently usually incorporates loss of total information, and never an increase or addition of new information. Evolutionary biologists do not find it an easy question to answer, other than using the assumption that it has happened in the past, and the additions in genome info have been kept by the process of natural selection. But as previously stated, natural selection by itself does not equal evolution. (Gould also makes the mistake of equating the two terms). Evolutionists (as stated previously) fall back on the excuse that we can't expect to see an increase in genome information because it occurs only very occasionly over thousands of years. It is assumed.
Dawkins has since pointed out certain organisms which seem to aquire additional information from other organisms. (No doubt one of you will find a link to the research for a more indepth information). However this does not equate to new DNA: its merely an aquiring of new information which is already in existance. And regardless, how any more complex organism (eg fish, amphibian, reptile etc) is supposed to "exchange" genome info I don't know.
Gish does not state that Gould admits there are no transistional forms, but that his theory indicates that the fossil record does support the conventional theory of evolution, because of the lack of transistional forms between species (which Gould does admit to). ... There is nothing wrong in using material produced by evolutionists to use as evidence against evolution.
I was making a point of using material from evolutionists to refute the lessor informed members on this forum who were making presumptions that more esteemed evolutionists don't make. I fully expect those same evolutionists to produce work conflicting with those of creation scientists!
Perhaps I made the assumption (see, assumptions are not reliable) that he was a creationist because he showed some of Darwins theories regarding genetics to be false.
Regardless, overall you missed my point. The reason why I listed these esteemed scientists (and there are others I didn't remember off the top of my head) was to show that believe in creation does not hinder scientific ability.
Evolutionists have a habit of stating that real scientists all believe in evolution, which is the point I was refuting.
Woodmorappe, if nothing else, makes the valid point that the dating methods are no where near reliable enough to stake ones faith in, for any side, because critical, unverifiable assumptions have to be made.
Extra base pair means extra information.
Saw a flash movie with 'What We Need More of is Science' a while back, should be on Newgrounds somewhere.EDIT : link
Right let me start again on the stars and light speed issue. ...What I can do, if locating the book is to much of an ask, is perhaps, if you ask nicely, pdf a condensed overview of the theory that I have, and provide a link to it.Needless to say, it is a remarkable theory, one which provides the necessary explanations to your questions. It has, of course been vigourously opposed by believers in the big bang, who have claimed to found flaws in it (Conner, SR and Page DN, 1998, Starlight and Time is the Big Bang, CEN Technical Journal 12(2):195-212. However Humphreys has succesfully defended it, and developed it further (Humphreys DR 1998. New vistas of space time rebut the critics. CEN Technical Journal 12920:195-212....
Dinosaur remains found 2200m below ocean floor.
How exactly is this supposed to be at odds to the creationist belief?
If not, a pre-Adamite world could account for the build up.
lol did any one else notice jaykay didn't actually say anything in his post about the light from stars?The whole post rambled on about an unnamed theory. no explanation just 'this theory explains why we see light from stars' and 'it fits with einsteins laws'
Explain?