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The Creation of Man
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<blockquote data-quote="Dmitri" data-source="post: 15994" data-attributes="member: 397"><p><strong>Re: The Creation of Man</strong></p><p></p><p><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(\"Harte\")</div></p><p><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(\"StarLord\")</div></p><p>Thanks for your points, Harte,</p><p>Thanks for your reflections on quantum mechanics. I am not in physics myself either, just working in biology. Some things seem universal however. </p><p>A single batch could not have worked because more diverse and complex life needed oxygen to be created in the atmosphere by some specific bacteria in billions of years, and then soil had to form for plants and terrestrial animals to exist, and so on. This takes time. Another suggestion, although it may seem weak, is that they may have needed more time developing things themselves, especially if they are not on the carbon basis and have not been modeling themselves. </p><p> </p><p>StarLord,</p><p>I would say they could have. That would be difficult to prove though. Bacteria and viruses jump to mind because we see them everywhere around and inside us and we learn how genomes seem to be rearranged with their incorporation. It should be proved in our time. It is knocking on the door, but Darwinism does not let it in for fear to be kicked out immediately soon to a great discomfort for the majority of the occupants. </p><p>-Dmitri</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dmitri, post: 15994, member: 397"] [b]Re: The Creation of Man[/b] <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(\"Harte\")</div> <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(\"StarLord\")</div> Thanks for your points, Harte, Thanks for your reflections on quantum mechanics. I am not in physics myself either, just working in biology. Some things seem universal however. A single batch could not have worked because more diverse and complex life needed oxygen to be created in the atmosphere by some specific bacteria in billions of years, and then soil had to form for plants and terrestrial animals to exist, and so on. This takes time. Another suggestion, although it may seem weak, is that they may have needed more time developing things themselves, especially if they are not on the carbon basis and have not been modeling themselves. StarLord, I would say they could have. That would be difficult to prove though. Bacteria and viruses jump to mind because we see them everywhere around and inside us and we learn how genomes seem to be rearranged with their incorporation. It should be proved in our time. It is knocking on the door, but Darwinism does not let it in for fear to be kicked out immediately soon to a great discomfort for the majority of the occupants. -Dmitri [/QUOTE]
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