Originally posted by Lincoln
"Instead of being a problem, this lack of fossils of transitional lifeforms supports the theory of evolution."
Sorry that there is not enough "non evidence" to support the latest version of Darwinism. Maybe you all can figure out what exactly it is that you all are looking for. Darwin said that transitions would support his theory, you and other punctuated equilibrium types say that you don't need the transitions (now that you haven't found them). So which is it? Are you looking for less evidence or more? Would absolutely no evidence prove your case?
In other words the theory is a joke. It is based on a lack of evidence because none was found.
"Instead of being a problem, this lack of fossils of transitional lifeforms supports the theory of evolution."
Sorry that there is not enough "non evidence" to support the latest version of Darwinism. Maybe you all can figure out what exactly it is that you all are looking for. Darwin said that transitions would support his theory, you and other punctuated equilibrium types say that you don't need the transitions (now that you haven't found them). So which is it? Are you looking for less evidence or more? Would absolutely no evidence prove your case?
In other words the theory is a joke. It is based on a lack of evidence because none was found.
The big picture is one of gradually increasing complexity, along with a few of obvious bumps due to an occassional catastrophe. A closer look reveals that evolution is not perfectly gradual, but takes many small discrete steps. There may also be periods of revolutionary experimentation, once a critical technological threshold has been reached.
, and we don't need the genes to be the same either (that is where the operator== from the gene structure comes in handy). In choosing a parent, we generate a random number, then call the GetIndex function. GetIndex uses the idea of the cumulative likelihoods and merely iterates through the genes until it find the gene that contains that number:
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