Darwinian Evolution's poster child Richard Dawkins throws around 'design' like he's some kind of preacher.
He's an atheist, you can't be a full scientist and an Athiest.
You don't see design? You don't see bats designed to hunt using sonar. You don't see teeth designed for sheering, holding and grinding? You can switch out the word if you like but you'd still be saying that animals and plants are built to perform certain actions or functions.
I see animals that have features which help them do what they do... I don't see them being designed, nor do I see them adapting.. I just see them as they are now, with those features. Then the question is how they came to possess those beneficial features: Evolution; Design; ..
I think it lacks speciative capabilities because we don't find true intermediaries and large groups of fossils simply show up and disappear without the in betweens.
What is a 'true intermediary'? The more intermediaries that are found, the more gaps there are to fill... There are many fossils which show gradual change, good examples are:
The horse lineage from the small three-toed forest dweller up to modern-day horses;
Human evolution over the last 7-8 million years;
The bird-like reptiles evolving into true birds;
The evolution of whales from the early semi-aquatic forms (most closely related to hippos) right through to the modern forms.
Besides that... There are 1.4 million described species, estimated 10s of millions of species total
currently in existence, but only a few hundred-thousand different fossilised species discovered for the entire history of our planet...
Why should there be any change? Are you serious? Thit is your theory, not mine. The T-rex if I'm not mistaken went 20 million years without much, if any visible change, at least according to the fossils. I'm not even asking for improvement, just ANY kind of significant change. I don't think DEv. says a comfortable creature isn't going to change. It says that natural selection is going to select beneficial mutations if they provide a competitive advantage and select against unfavorable ones right? Well something should happen in that amount of time shouldn't it?
No... If the species is comfortable at the top of the food-chain, there is no reason it would change...
And then the last quote you listed I see you credited to me, though it was another user that posted it, so I'll chime in. Scientists don't believe anything? The same scientists that tell you eating raw food will kill you.....and really believe it? Or the same scientists who tell you sunscreen is good for you, as if titanium dioxin was not a carcinogen, not to mention all the other nasties in most sunscreens? Or did you mean the scientists that are still hunting for a cure for cancer even though you and I both know what it takes to repair it when repair is possible? I think either it may help for you to elaborate on that statement or it is self evident that it's baseless.
Sorry about that, it was meant to be quoted to Pioneer. That's why I put the line to separate, but I forgot to change the name.
Scientists are meant to not believe in things. They're just meant to follow data, seek out any new data which would lead in any direction and factor it in to their overall understanding. They can continue to pursue a theory, but they should not believe it.
There are researchers who create data, but who are not Scientists. Scientists are the ones who collect the data and use it, whether or not they were the ones who created it.
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Example:
My father the scientist was so well schooled that he could never think outside of the scientific box. He though I was insane to eat raw shell fish because he learned from other scientist and even saw for his self the parasites that infest clams, while he was a student. He saw the parasites and then heard the professional say that they were harmful pathogens, and so as a Good scientist he believed the evidence.
He was right to think that eating raw shell fish would be harmful based on the data he had collected, but not to believe it.. A good scientist would be open to any new data which might come about that might be contrary to his previously collected data, and factor it in to his over-all understanding of the matter.