For shits and giggles I decided to take out some of the stuff.
TaylorSandbek wrote:testing of the brain has proven that if we learned something new every second, it would take more then three million years to exhaust our brain's capacity. How, if evolution only evolves to what we need, did it make our brains capable of this?
Proof?
World population growth rate in recent times is about 2% per year. Practicable application of growth rate throughout human history would be about half that number. Wars, disease, famine, etc. have wiped out approximately one third of the population on average every 82 years. Starting with eight people, and applying these growth rates since the Flood of Noah's day (about 4500 years ago) would give a total human population at just under six billion people. However, application on an evolutionary time scale runs into major difficulties. Starting with one "couple" just 41,000 years ago would give us a total population of 2 x 1089. 9The universe does not have space to hold so many bodies
Not one couple.
Also, your math is wrong. I'll leave it to anyone with a fondness for math and the sense to question your numbers to explain it.
(By the law of diffusion, oxygen HAS ALWAYS been in the atmosphere, or it would not be today
?
You must have some weird sciencebooks, because there is no reason that oxygen should always have been in the atmosphere. Oxygen is a waste-product of plants, who don't actually need it, so I'm going to call you a huge idiot for claiming oxygen has always been there.
Also, have you ever studied the structure of a DNA molecule? Adenine, Thymine, Guanine, and Cytosine are the four base molecules needed to create a DNA strand, along with the end-molecules of deoxyribose. Each molecule boasts a number of atoms of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen. Yes OXYGEN. so, the Miller experiment failed to create life because oxygen was not administered, and it would have failed because oxygen cannot simple be "added" to a chemicle and expected to create life.
Shit?!
Did you just claim the gass oxygen is the same as the molecule oxygen?
Have you ever had chemistry?
Also, there are 20 amino acids on a strand, and since 200 are needed for life,
According to who?
Evolution is statistically impossible. Also, variations within a single kind of animal (kind means they can produce offspring together--cat and dog are not the same kind, but coyote and dog ARE because they are able to produce offspring) anyway, those variations within a single animal kind are not evolution. (If changing around the letters in the word "CHRISTMAS" cannot create "ZEBRA" then why can't the evolutionists figure out that random mutations are LIMITED to within a single animal kind). Nobody has ever seen a dog produce a non-dog. Also, finding a skull that is half-human and half-ape DOES NOT prove evolution (it just proves that there was an animal that had both ape and human characteristics).
HOLY CRAP BATMAN!
They didn't? Okay, that just proved everything.
Besides, if evolution is true, then what did the first cell capable of sexual reproduction reproduce with?
Nothing, it split. Cells with sexual reproduction means don't exist.
There are however bacteria which exchange genetic info with other bacteria, one of the multiple reasons why finding new anti-biotics is important.
Also, if evolution is true, the did the first fish that evolved onto dry land have lungs or did it have gills?
You know frogs? Those things which can live on land as well as in water?
yeah...
The main scientific reason why there is no evidence for evolution in either the present or the past (except in the creative imagination of evolutionary scientists) is because one of the most fundamental laws of nature precludes it. The law of increasing entropyāalso known as the second law of thermodynamicsāstipulates that all systems in the real world tend to go "downhill," as it were, toward disorganization and decreased complexity.
This law of entropy is, by any measure, one of the most universal, best-proved laws of nature. It applies not only in physical and chemical systems, but also in biological and geological systemsāin fact all systems, without exception.
1. The second law of thermodynamics says no such thing. It says that heat will not spontaneously flow from a colder body to a warmer one or, equivalently, that total entropy (a measure of useful energy) in a closed system will not decrease. This does not prevent increasing order because
* the earth is not a closed system; sunlight (with low entropy) shines on it and heat (with higher entropy) radiates off. This flow of energy, and the change in entropy that accompanies it, can and will power local decreases in entropy on earth.
* entropy is not the same as disorder. Sometimes the two correspond, but sometimes order increases as entropy increases. (Aranda-Espinoza et al. 1999; Kestenbaum 1998) Entropy can even be used to produce order, such as in the sorting of molecules by size (Han and Craighead 2000).
* even in a closed system, pockets of lower entropy can form if they are offset by increased entropy elsewhere in the system.
In short, order from disorder happens on earth all the time.
2. The only processes necessary for evolution to occur are reproduction, heritable variation, and selection. All of these are seen to happen all the time, so, obviously, no physical laws are preventing them. In fact, connections between evolution and entropy have been studied in depth, and never to the detriment of evolution (Demetrius 2000).
Several scientists have proposed that evolution and the origin of life is driven by entropy (McShea 1998). Some see the information content of organisms subject to diversification according to the second law (Brooks and Wiley 1988), so organisms diversify to fill empty niches much as a gas expands to fill an empty container. Others propose that highly ordered complex systems emerge and evolve to dissipate energy (and increase overall entropy) more efficiently (Schneider and Kay 1994).