| Subject: |
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Try Reading More Carefully |
| Name: |
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John |
| Date Posted: |
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Jan 24, 08 - 7:58 AM |
| IP Address: |
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67.164.106.140 |
| Email: |
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Click here to Email |
| Message: |
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Brian:
You are being tedious. Did you happen to notice that I used the phrase "as it were?" The equivalent would be the alliterative "so to speak."
Everyone knows that what we are referring to are the supposed ancestors to apes and humans, and that apes don't have tails while monkeys do.
Please be observant enough to discern between the figurative and the literal.
As to your question about if it is possible for transposons, (and I will add in ten thousand lifetimes), to insert themselves into a DNA sequence and come out with an actual intelligent, working addition to that sequence, I find that proposition to be ridiculous. First, most of the time the gene is usually disabled by the assault, and repair is usually not possible. But even if it were somehow successful, it would take thousands if not tens of thousands of perfect new genes all working in harmony to make a more advanced brain, and that is simply impossible without some kind of intelligent intervention, which Darwinism flatly denies.
"The caveat [in human brain evolution] is that there are many such genes. It takes thousands, if not tens of thousands, for the brain to develop properly."
-Bruce Lahn, University of Chicago.
Just because something COULD happen in ten thousand lifetimes, does not mean that it DID. And that would be for just ONE sequence.
You should be ashamed as an intelligent adult to waste good time on such nonsense. It is gibberish.--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Replying to: John, the only people who suggest that monkeys turn into men are you and Julie.
You still didn't answer my question, though. You've told me that transposons wreak havoc MOST of the time, but I'm not interested in what happens MOST of the time, I want to know what happens the rest of the time. So...what happens the rest of the time? |
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