Ain\'t nature wonderful (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Friday, August 20, 2010, 02:17 (5209 days ago) @ xeno6696


> David--as I've mentioned before I don't see AT ALL how what I'm saying here isn't accepted paradigm! How is epigenetics any different from natural selection, when as I observed previously--the filter that IS natural selection is the ultimate arbiter of what gets to stay??? And I fail to see how a designer explains this any better! Help me out here!-
My theory that is being born out as the research continues to reveal is that the rapid changes of adaptation appear to start in very early organisms, the Archaia. Not waiting for a chance mutation to help, the genome forges forward and then you are correct, the best organism wins under natural selection. Natural selection culls out passively, because it can only cull whatever is presented to it. Yes, it is an active process when it is at work.-If Archaia have these adaptive processes from the beginning, then these rapid adaptation mechanisms drive evolution forward to the more and more complex forms. We weren't there 3.6 mya when life happened, (that's another design issue we haven't settled), but presuming Archaia haven't changed much, epigenetics was there from the beginning. And I believe by design. Life appeared spontaneously by accident and knew from the beginning it needed rapid adaptation? Not likely.


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