redwolf
Take flying birds for example; suppose you aren't one, and you want to become one. You'll need a baker's dozen highly specialized systems, including wings, flight feathers, a specialized light bone structure, specialized flow-through design heart and lungs, specialized tail, specialized general balance parameters etc.
For starters, every one of these things would be antifunctional until the day on which the whole thing came together, so that the chances of evolving any of these things by any process resembling evolution (mutations plus selection) would amount to an infinitessimal, i.e. one divided by some gigantic number
I have never met anyone with quite this level of non-understanding of a subject.In two paragraphs you have displayed a most remarkable lack of cognizance concerning what evolution is all about.Either you are terribly ill-educated or you are incredibly biased to some philosophical point of view that you struggle to defend.
Take flying birds for example; suppose you aren't one, and you want to become one.???
Could you
please tell me how the bloody blue blazes this is even remotely connected to evolution? Do you seriously think that evolution involves some kind of instantaneous change from one creature into another? Whoever fed you this garbage has their head so far up their ass a Klein bottle would be envious.
Seriously mate you have got to get at least a semester or two in biology under your belt and then come back and bring out some actual arguement that has a decent chance of being taken seriously.
Until then sir I sincerely and with all due respect contend that you are without a clue.
You see a book lying on a table. You know there's a force due to gravity acting on that book. If you take that force (on the book and due to gravity) as the "action," what then is the "reaction" as required by Newton's third law?