(May 9, 2014 at 10:17 am)alpha male Wrote: And again, when smart people disagree on something, it's not a given.
Hence the seven pages of supporting arguments. Why do you keep attempting to characterize this as though I just flat out asserted something was a certain way, and then stopped talking?
Quote:Unless you're claiming that each new generation is a new species, such change does not necessarily indicate speciation. Further, the definition of macroevolution floated earlier specified change above the species level.
I agree with your definition, I'm just saying that part of how we determine what is and isn't a different species is genetic makeup and physiological markers. Would you not agree that if we can start with organism A and then trace its lineage down to organism B X number of generations later, and B is sufficiently genetically, physiologically and reproductively different from an example of organism A, then it would be a different species?
Or are you using some definition of the term species that doesn't take into account what an organism looks like and what its genes are like?
Quote:That's it - we haven't observed such change. You simply look at two populations which are similar but not exact duplicates and assume that one changed into the other.
That's an offensive oversimplification; there's much more to it than that, and such support is even mentioned in the skink articles I linked. More importantly, in the case of the wall lizards, we have a record of what the initial breeding population was, and what the descendants are like, and shock horror, there are rather radical differences not only from what their ancestors were, but also when compared to another population that was placed in a different environment. Aside from their marked physiological change, an entirely new valve system had appeared in one set of the lizards owing to the new diet they had had to adapt to in this new environment, putting the lie to your claim that nothing new develops through mutations.
Now, these are changes to the physiology and internal structures of an organism, an introduced species for which we know exactly what the predecessor species was like, that took place over just twenty years, in a definite singular direction. Imagine what could happen over millions of years.
Quote:That's an interesting point that I'll get into if anyone takes up the 29+ banner and we make it all the way to alleged fossil evidence. If all dogs are one species, then shouldn't we require that fossils with less difference than that known in dogs to be classified as the same species?
The evolutionary changes present in any single organism are bound to be small, which is the point; this is a gradual process that occurs in populations. I also note the clear goalpost moving: if an organism isn't different enough then you say it's the same species, and if it's notably different you just chastise us for "assuming" that it was linked to its predecessor.
How the fuck does one falsify your position if you just keep oscillating between one of two claims, clearly without understanding how evolution works when it suits you?
Quote:We never agreed that speciation was equivalent to macroevolution, and in fact have had a definition of macroevolution that specified change above the species level.
Speciation is change above the species level.

Quote:Uh, Sparky, we got that idea from your analogy: "the logical view is that small, demonstrable changes will build up, just as it's logical to consider that if I walk solidly in one direction without interruption, I will eventually have walked a mile."
Do you understand the difference between the statements "this is possible" and "this is definite in every case"? Do you know what the word "some" denotes in a sentence?
Quote:No.
Then you are being dishonest.
Quote:Addressed above. It's a matter of extent.
And yet you sit here, refusing to provide evidence for your position, or defining what you'd need to see to falsify your position...

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