Re: What happens after we die.
Please find me an example of huge disagreement amongst those who understand the evolutionary process. Give me an example of such a "hole" you describe.
Preemptive answer: There really isn't a whole lot of disagreement among those that understand the process. Many creationists, from what I've seen empirically, try to point out that there are disagreements among scientists where there aren't any. The only real disagreements come to life about finer details WITHIN the process itself (did this animal originate here? How might these species be linked? How might the timelines have progressed for these forms? How may the environment of this area contributed to the formation of this type of lifeform?). THESE types of questions are what generate "disagreements," but the process of evolution itself is not something that scientists disagree on given they understand what it entails.
In short: Evolutionary scientists may disagree on HOW evolution occurs in specific cases -- not WHETHER or not it occurs. Very important distinction that people tend to confuse.
Again, please back up your claims. Give me an example that shows scientists who study evolution largely don't believe it, because that sure is news to me. What isn't news to me is the fact that many people like to say evolution has holes and disagreements where it doesn't.
As for mutation... of course we're made from our parents. I am a business/math major and not a biologist, so my understanding of the intricacies of mutation are limited, but all living creatures have DNA which carry the instructions for how an organism looks/behaves/operates/etc. DNA needs to be arranged in a certain order/sequence so instructions are carried out correctly when read by the cells. But sometimes the DNA is arranged incorrectly in certain areas or may be read incorrectly by the cells, leading to genetic mutation and variation. On a larger level, two parents that create a child is giving that child a mix of traits. Natural selection may or may not favor specific combinations of traits, and over time, the weaker traits are filtered out depending on how the environment pushes back against them.
Sexual reproduction and the genetic process is not perfect, but this is what generates the variation. Without the variance, we're very much looking at an all-or-nothing type outcome. Either none make it or they all do. The imperfection of the process is what helps contribute to the mutations that allow for the genetic variety necessary to allow stronger straits to show up and propagate.
Please find me an example of huge disagreement amongst those who understand the evolutionary process. Give me an example of such a "hole" you describe.
Preemptive answer: There really isn't a whole lot of disagreement among those that understand the process. Many creationists, from what I've seen empirically, try to point out that there are disagreements among scientists where there aren't any. The only real disagreements come to life about finer details WITHIN the process itself (did this animal originate here? How might these species be linked? How might the timelines have progressed for these forms? How may the environment of this area contributed to the formation of this type of lifeform?). THESE types of questions are what generate "disagreements," but the process of evolution itself is not something that scientists disagree on given they understand what it entails.
In short: Evolutionary scientists may disagree on HOW evolution occurs in specific cases -- not WHETHER or not it occurs. Very important distinction that people tend to confuse.
Again, please back up your claims. Give me an example that shows scientists who study evolution largely don't believe it, because that sure is news to me. What isn't news to me is the fact that many people like to say evolution has holes and disagreements where it doesn't.
As for mutation... of course we're made from our parents. I am a business/math major and not a biologist, so my understanding of the intricacies of mutation are limited, but all living creatures have DNA which carry the instructions for how an organism looks/behaves/operates/etc. DNA needs to be arranged in a certain order/sequence so instructions are carried out correctly when read by the cells. But sometimes the DNA is arranged incorrectly in certain areas or may be read incorrectly by the cells, leading to genetic mutation and variation. On a larger level, two parents that create a child is giving that child a mix of traits. Natural selection may or may not favor specific combinations of traits, and over time, the weaker traits are filtered out depending on how the environment pushes back against them.
Sexual reproduction and the genetic process is not perfect, but this is what generates the variation. Without the variance, we're very much looking at an all-or-nothing type outcome. Either none make it or they all do. The imperfection of the process is what helps contribute to the mutations that allow for the genetic variety necessary to allow stronger straits to show up and propagate.


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