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Another Bad Day for Darwinism

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One mutation at a time. No need for simultaneous mutations (since the mathematics verges on impossibility). But, maybe, by gosh, we do need those “simultaneous mutations.”

Here’s the abstract from Nature of an article where MCT (micro-computed tomography) reveals the ‘innards’ of a primary fossil. Just read it, and you’ll get the notion of how modern science is simply eviscerating Darwinism.

Phylogenetic analysis of early tetrapod evolution has resulted in a consensus across diverse data sets in which the tetrapod stem group is a relatively homogenous collection of medium- to large-sized animals showing a progressive loss of ‘fish’ characters as they become increasingly terrestrial, whereas the crown group demonstrates marked morphological diversity and disparity. The oldest fossil attributed to the tetrapod crown group [that is, the very beginnings of this supposed evolutionary divergence] is the highly specialized aïstopod Lethiscus stocki, which shows a small size, extreme axial elongation, loss of limbs, spool-shaped vertebral centra, and a skull with reduced centres of ossification, in common with an otherwise disparate group of small animals known as lepospondyls. Here we use micro-computed tomography of the only known specimen of Lethiscus to provide new information that strongly challenges this consensus. Digital dissection reveals extremely primitive cranial morphology, including a spiracular notch, a large remnant of the notochord within the braincase, an open ventral cranial fissure, an anteriorly restricted parasphenoid element, and Meckelian ossifications. The braincase is elongate and lies atop a dorsally projecting septum of the parasphenoid bone, similar to stem tetrapods such as embolomeres. This morphology is consistent in a second aïstopod, Coloraderpeton, although the details differ. Phylogenetic analysis, including critical new braincase data, places aïstopods deep on the tetrapod stem, whereas another major lepospondyl lineage is displaced into the amniotes. These results show that stem group tetrapods were much more diverse in their body plans than previously thought. Our study requires a change in commonly used calibration dates for molecular analyses, and emphasizes the importance of character sampling for early tetrapod evolutionary relationships.

IOW, we see a kind of “explosion” of body plans, a top-down radiation of species instead of the bottom-up (think of Darwin’s ‘tree’) radiation expected by Darwinism.

Here’s a quote from the PR:

We used to think that the fin-to-limb transition was a slow evolution to becoming gradually less fish like,” [Pardo] said. “But Lethiscus shows immediate, and dramatic, evolutionary experimentation. The lineage shrunk in size, and lost limbs almost immediately after they first evolved. It’s like a snake on the outside but a fish on the inside. . . .

The anatomy didn’t fit with our expectations.” . . .

“Many body structures didn’t make sense in the context of amphibian or reptile anatomy.” But the anatomy did make sense when it was compared to early fish.
“We could see the entirety of the skull. We could see where the brain was, the inner ear cavities. It was all extremely fish-like,” explains Pardo . . .

IOW, a “fish” became a “land animal.” Just like that.

Liberals could solve all the problems of the world if they had enough money. And Darwinists could explain everything about evolution if they had enough time—in the fossil record, that is.

Comments
Dionisio @ 12, I looked at that link. Now I understand completely how optical, auditory and tactile systems emerged mindlessly and accidentally. It was all a matter of previously existing genes that had been deployed in new contexts. I understand that many Darwinists have brain genes that they might deploy someday. ;o)harry
June 22, 2017
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Bob O'H: It's me, and not Denyse, who posted this. The connection between, let us say, "fast", maybe, "superfast", evolution and simultaneous mutations should be rather obvious, no?PaV
June 22, 2017
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harry, "[...] occasional miraculous, divine interventions in the history of life." Well, they have this [kind of vague] argument: genetic co-option. Check this out: http://www.nature.com/scitable/blog/creature-cast/evolution_by_co_option It seems like pseudoscientific hogwash on steroids, but it has many followers. What else is new?Dionisio
June 22, 2017
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If Darwin was correct the fossil record should have eventually been found to be a record of a series of slightly changing fossils -- a record of transitional forms -- that made incremental evolution clearly visible, with a few exceptions where new species seemed to pop out of nowhere. Instead we have the exact opposite. According to Stephen Jay Gould:
The extreme rarity of transitional forms in the fossil record persist as the trade secret of paleontology. The evolutionary trees that adorn our textbooks have data only at the tips and nodes of their branches; the rest is inference, however reasonable, not the evidence of fossils ….We fancy ourselves as the only true students of life's history, yet to preserve our favored account of evolution by natural selection we view our data as so bad that we never see the very process we profess to study.
Gould's theory of Punctuated Equilibria amounts to, even though it wasn't his intention, occasional miraculous, divine interventions in the history of life. The fossil record has new species appearing without discernible predecessors, remaining without change for millions of years, and often then disappearing from the record (although some ancient creatures have remained to this day). After over a century and a half of looking for Darwin's transitional forms, they remain the (often dubious) exception, not the rule that they should have been if Darwin's theory was correct. The insurmountable problem for Darwinian theory is the source of the new digital information required for the construction of new tissue types and body plans. Random mutation just doesn't explain it, anymore than making random changes to your accounting software would ever add new, handy features to it. Any computer programmer who has built very functionally complex systems consisting of many complex, interdependent subsystems knows that even the smallest modifications to such a system can be catastrophic in terms of its overall functionality. This is why the vast majority of mutations do not improve functionality and are very often harmful if not lethal to the organism. Darwinists, where did the required new information come from?harry
June 22, 2017
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T7 @ 9: Of course it is a dogma. Always has been.Truth Will Set You Free
June 22, 2017
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critical rationalist Are you saying that the Theory of Evolution can't be wrong even if the paradigm that previously supported it flips entirely? That would make the theory a dogma which means it can't be science.tribune7
June 22, 2017
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Bob O’H @6:
The paper doesn’t mention mutations, so Denyse’s first paragraph is just blather.”
Denyse’s first paragraph??? Huh???Dionisio
June 22, 2017
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Bob O'H @6: "The paper doesn’t mention mutations, so Denyse’s first paragraph is just blather." Denyse’s first paragraph??? Huh???Dionisio
June 22, 2017
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The paper doesn't mention mutations, so Denyse's first paragraph is just blather. Is limb loss really that difficult, from a developmental perspective? My impression is not, but I'm not a developmental biologist.Bob O'H
June 22, 2017
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They ain’t seen nothin' yet. The most fascinating discoveries are still ahead. The reductionist bottom-up reverse engineering research approach takes the scientists on a long and winding road that leads to ‘surprising’ and ‘unexpected’ discoveries, while the Big Data keeps piling up on the clouds. Biology research is by far the most fascinating field of serious science these days. Because it’s a WYSIWYG deal. Unfortunately some otherwise interesting papers may contain irrelevant text with archaic pseudoscientific hogwash which makes the whole paper look like low grade bovine excreta. The evo-devo folks struggle to find a serious case that may satisfy the conditions described @1090 in the thread “A third way of evolution?” to no avail. Complex complexity. The more we know, the more we have to learnDionisio
June 21, 2017
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The so-called theory of evolution is just a gross extrapolation of the observed variety of biological systems. It's pseudoscientific hogwash or to say it nicer, low grade bovine excreta. Wanna discuss the real stuff? Ready to answer serious questions?Dionisio
June 21, 2017
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You seem to have confused the theory of the history of the theory of life on earth and the theory of evolution. Or are you suggesting there isn't a difference?critical rationalist
June 21, 2017
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IOW, a “fish” became a “land animal.” Just like that. Of course, why not? Things happen, don't they? Remember Cinderella's story? A pumpkin became a carriage, mice turned into horses, a grasshopper got hired as cochero. :)Dionisio
June 21, 2017
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"...modern science is simply eviscerating Darwinism." No question about it, and it's happening on a daily basis.Truth Will Set You Free
June 21, 2017
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