Originally posted by Ben Kenobi
There still isn't much evidence in favour of the core of his theory, with respect to macroevolution. All we have is indirect evidence, which seems to suggest that this is what happened, but no direct observations. Darwin makes the leap by saying that mutations and differentiation within a species will produce new species, assuming that the two are governed by the same process.
There still isn't much evidence in favour of the core of his theory, with respect to macroevolution. All we have is indirect evidence, which seems to suggest that this is what happened, but no direct observations. Darwin makes the leap by saying that mutations and differentiation within a species will produce new species, assuming that the two are governed by the same process.
The problem with expanding anything, is that the theory begins to get applied into areas where it was not designed to work. Even the most successful theories fall prey to their own success over time.
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