Science, Creation & Evolutionhumans run to scavange???You're asking for a lot. Multicelled organisms are incredibly complex things, and mutation is by nature random. Most, if not all mutations either serve no purpose in the current enviroment and result in no competetive advantage, or cause a disadvantage and are either eliminated or marginalized. The very rare mutations which do serve a purpose and have a competetive advantage would probably be completely unnoticable on the scale of a human lifespan. This due to their visibility and size (it could be something microscopic, or difficult to identify, or a change of something we were unaware of in it's orginial state), effect on population, and time it takes to be passed to enough offspring to become a factor in selection. It's the same old Macro-evolution straw man thrown up in every creationism vs evolution argument. It's pretty hard to trace back the thousands (if not millions) of minor evolutionary steps that would be involved in almost any evolutionary leap. It would also be pure luck to be present when something like this could be identified and documented (if it even happened on a scale we can grok). |
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