Arising_uk wrote:Greylorn Ell wrote:... It is the only mechanism that Darwinists (proponents of a particularly incompetent and non-scientific explanation for the evidence of evolution) have invented to explain the fossil evidence which shows that life forms have developed from simple to complex over several billion years. ...
Er! Hello? Darwin based his theory upon his observations of living creatures both natural and domestic.
Have you actually read his book?
Darwin wrote many books. I confess to studying only two of the three that are related to questions about the origins and evolution of biological life forms: "On the Origin of Species..." and "The Descent of Man..." I did not read further because C.D. had told and repeated his story
ad nauseum in those two major books. He is a superb writer, and in those books he did a fine job of addressing members of the biological and general science community, enough to discredit religionist nonsense about spontaneous 6-day creation.
That was Darwin's Big Contribution. He loosened the stranglehold that religionists had applied to ideas about the beginnings of life, in a nice follow-up to Copernicus' discovery that the earth is not the center of the universe. Together a nice, brain-rattling "one-two," punch. (The timing on intellectual-level punches is necessarily much slower than the timing on punches in a street fight, because intellectual punches involve a more slowly-reacting collective mind.)
IMO back when I studied him, Darwin failed to explain species differentiation. He used finches on different islands who had developed variations in beak size/structure (for example) as if they were different species, where in fact they were merely different varieties of finch. Marginally different at that. His theory nicely explains the natural development of varieties, and I've acknowledged that in my treatment of Beon Theory, which has the advantage of also explaining true species change.
BTW, I recently came across an essay that pertains to this subject, written for the intelligent non-scientist and the intelligent scientists as well (wish I could do that trick!). Here's a link:
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2010 ... enes-wrong
The essay is brief, but requires an honest read. I don't know that there are even five people on this forum capable of giving anything an "honest read," but those are the participants I cherish. None of this material and none of my theories are engineered to be acceptable to the well-programmed masses.
And if the first notion that appears in your brain is that you are
not one of those programmed masses-- you are.
Greylorn