Originally posted by CyberShy
Well, if there's no designer, it MUST have arosen randomly.
Well, if there's no designer, it MUST have arosen randomly.
I was of the impression you were trying in a tornado in the junkyard argument, saying that a complete prokaryote cell is too complex to arise via random assembly of molecules; this is what IDers and their ilk usually mean when they say cells can't arise "randomly". The point is, that's a strawman; every reasonable theory of abiogenesis involved it evolving gradually, by selection, from something simpler.
Well, a deleted or mutated part must have been added once. At least through duplication.
I can see that. But the new system must fall in place at a certain moment and start working. If it replaces an old part, that part must be removed at the same moment.
Um, no. Take a look at early mammaliforms. The first ones have reptilian jaw articulations. Later forms evolve mammalian ones in addition to the reptilian ones. For a while, critters run around with double sets of working jaw articulations. Then the reptilian ones gradually get lost.
Can't offhand think of an equivalent example at the cellular level, but they exist.
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