Quote:Tell me how information can be added to organisms?
We have two cats. One of them has six toes on his left hind paw. This is clearly a mutation (cats normally have four toes on each hind paw). Since six toes contains more information than four toes, this is a mutation that has added information to this particular organism - polydactyl cats have more base pairs at the target site (can't recall the code for that site, sorry). Polydactylism is an hereditable characteristic, so DaBooj could pass it onto his offspring (if we hadn't had him nutted, of course).
So, this is an example of a mutation which has increased the information of an organism, and which can be passed down to daughter organism. Evolution is thus proved.
You're welcome.
Boru
‘But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods or no gods. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.’ - Thomas Jefferson