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- Newsgroups: talk.origins
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- From: ford@hpmcaa.mcm.hp.com.mcm.hp.com (Dan Ford)
- Subject: Re: Duane T. Gish, Ph. D.
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.135114.5431@hpmcaa.mcm.hp.com>
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- Organization: HP Cardiology Business Unit - McMinnville, OR
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- References: <1993Jan25.165508.16938@city.cs>
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 13:51:14 GMT
- Lines: 17
-
- Lionel Tun (lionel@cs.city.ac.uk) wrote:
- : The fossil record for intermediates is sparse or non existent
- : per se. There is a good reason for this.
-
- Quit waffling Lionel, which is it, sparse or non-existent?
-
- If your answer is that it is sparse, how do you explain the sequences that
- we do find sometimes bridging high-level taxanomic groups?
-
- If your answer is that it is non-existent, how do you explain the presence of
- sequences that we do find sometimes bridging high-level taxanomic groups?
-
- But then, I can probably imagine what you answer will be. Those
- "supposed" sequences exist only in the minds of those conspiring EVILutionists
- who are seeking to undermine the morality of the masses. Am I close?
-
- Dan
-