RE: The Jesus Freaks Will Hate This
March 17, 2015 at 4:48 pm
(This post was last modified: March 17, 2015 at 5:08 pm by Huggy Bear.)
(March 17, 2015 at 3:57 pm)Esquilax Wrote:Actually you're wrong.(March 17, 2015 at 3:25 pm)Huggy74 Wrote: Hold up, are you stating that aeronautics and aerodynamics are the same thing?
I'm stating, as I stated in the very post that you quoted, that aeronautics is a field of study that comprises multiple theories, one of them being aerodynamics. It's an umbrella term fostered by our understanding of numerous theories, and so you're wrong when you say that aeronautics isn't explained by theory. You're actually as wrong as you could possibly be, given the bounds of that statement.
Oh, but that's not the simple yes/no strawman answer you wanted, is it? Sorry to deprive you of another dishonest "aha!" moment.
Aerodynamics falls under the umbrella of physics. Drag (not theoretical) is really the only Thing about aerodynamics aeronautics is concerned about, and that can be moot with enough thrust.
(March 17, 2015 at 3:57 pm)Esquilax Wrote: The Cope's Gray Treefrog exists in the same habitat as the regular kind, and has little in the way of physiological differences to it. That said, genetic study shows that it is a completely different species, featuring a genetic setup not found in the regular Gray Treefrog, that does not interbreed in any way. They did, however, diverge from the Gray Treefrog line in a relatively short period of time, due to a genetic phenomenon called autopolyploidy. Therefore, it is one species, spawning from another, as per the definition of species that you provided; mind you, that's not at all what evolution actually describes- a point you actually excised from my post when you quoted it, presumably to avoid taking responsibility for your own lack of care in the discussion- but the Gray Treefrog is something of a unique case that shows that, even fighting on your own factually inaccurate grounds, you're as wrong as ever.
Quote: As far as is known, no hybrids exist between the two species, intermixing being reduced through heightened species recognition facilitated by call variance.
Not a word about it being impossible for them to intermix, I want to know if you forced them to mate in a lab, would they produce young.
polar bears and brown bears are also considered different species because it was thought that they do not interbreed in the wild, except there are two known cases of a polar/brown bear hybrid in the wild.