Thank-you, atheists...wholphin, liger, and zorse.
Thank-you, atheists...wholphin, liger, and zorse.
I want to thank the atheists/agnostics on this site for helping me to come to a greater understanding of God and His word. I don't know if you guys already fully understood this, but I did not. Many questions from the atheists sent me on a search and I found this:
Ligers, Wholphins, and Zorses
Ligers, Wholphins, and Zorses
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Re: Thank-you, atheists...wholphin, liger, and zorse.
So all cats came from one place and migrated to the rest of the world?Mystical wrote:I want to thank the atheists/agnostics on this site for helping me to come to a greater understanding of God and His word. I don't know if you guys already fully understood this, but I did not. Many questions from the atheists sent me on a search and I found this:
Ligers, Wholphins, and Zorses
So why do snow leopards have a white coat?
And why do tigers have stripes and leopards have spots?
It is not length of life, but depth of life. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
I don't know about the migration process, but, yeah, they all came from one place. Of course we don't know how many different kinds there were initially. That's still a good question, though! I wonder now, how big was the Garden of Eden, and how many animals in it before the fall? Anyone on here know if there are thoughts about this by experts?So all cats came from one place and migrated to the rest of the world?
My guess is microevolution.So why do snow leopards have a white coat?
Why do tigers have stripes and leopards have spots?
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It wouldn't matter because they had to spread again after the flood.Mystical wrote:I don't know about the migration process, but, yeah, they all came from one place. Of course we don't know how many different kinds there were initially. That's still a good question, though! I wonder now, how big was the Garden of Eden, and how many animals in it before the fall? Anyone on here know if there are thoughts about this by experts?So all cats came from one place and migrated to the rest of the world?
But isn't coat color new information?Mystical wrote:My guess is microevolution.So why do snow leopards have a white coat?
Why do tigers have stripes and leopards have spots?
It is not length of life, but depth of life. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Non sequitor.But isn't coat color new information?
"My actions prove that God takes care of idiots."
He occasionally stumbled over the truth, but hastily picked himself up and hurried on as if nothing had happened.
- On Stanley Baldwin
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An atheist can't find God for the same reason a criminal can't find a police officer.
You need to start asking out girls so that you can get used to the rejections.
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He occasionally stumbled over the truth, but hastily picked himself up and hurried on as if nothing had happened.
- On Stanley Baldwin
-Winston Churchill
An atheist can't find God for the same reason a criminal can't find a police officer.
You need to start asking out girls so that you can get used to the rejections.
-Anonymous
You're the one who asked.It wouldn't matter...
Is it? If they all started off from one or two kinds of cats, is it impossible for there to have been enough information available to create variety? Remember, no one knows the number of different kinds at the start.But isn't coat color new information?
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I asked to provoke thought and to see what your response would be.Mystical wrote:You're the one who asked.It wouldn't matter...
But the article you linked to proposed that Lions and Tigers were at one time the same kind, because they can hybridize.Mystical wrote:Is it? If they all started off from one or two kinds of cats, is it impossible for there to have been enough information available to create variety? Remember, no one knows the number of different kinds at the start.But isn't coat color new information?
Did the tiger lose its mane?
Also camels and llamas. What did the original Camel-llama look like?
It is not length of life, but depth of life. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
BGood:
I was already thinking.I asked to provoke thought...
Do I have to repeat myself?But the article you linked to proposed that Lions and Tigers were at one time the same kind...
I don't know exactly how it all happened. I know you definately don't know. All we can do is play with the ideas. I have modified my thoughts on the beginning. Maybe God created one or two big cats and not exactly all the ones we have now. Maybe to start off they didn't look much like they do now.Did the tiger lose its mane?
Probably like Rama. That's not a very prompting questionWhat did the original Camel-llama look like?
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Sorry didn't mean to imply that you weren'tMystical wrote:BGood:I was already thinking.I asked to provoke thought...
=(
So how does one explain all the new forms and colors and features.Mystical wrote:Do I have to repeat myself?But the article you linked to proposed that Lions and Tigers were at one time the same kind...I don't know exactly how it all happened. I know you definately don't know. All we can do is play with the ideas. I have modified my thoughts on the beginning. Maybe God created one or two big cats and not exactly all the ones we have now. Maybe to start off they didn't look much like they do now.Did the tiger lose its mane?
Well camels and llamas are very different. The original form must of had a hump, according to the idea proposed in the paper, right?Mystical wrote:Probably like Rama. That's not a very prompting questionWhat did the original Camel-llama look like?
It is not length of life, but depth of life. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
BGood:
I'm okay.Didn't mean to imply that you weren't.
I really don't understand what you're confused about.So how does one explain all the new forms and colors and features.
I have an idea. Why don't we google Rama and see what it looks like!Welll camels and llamas are very different. The original form must of had a hump, according to the idea proposed in the paper, right?
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The reason I bring this up is because Camel and Llamas are different.
LLamas 1st premolar is a different shape than in a camel.
No dorsal hump.
A llamas feet have toes each with their own pad, while a camel has a single pad.
Different blood chemistry, llama's seem more adapted for high altitudes.
Diminutive size.
No ridges on a llama skull.
Changes in digestion (gastrointestinal motility).
Is there a limit to the changes?
What changes are allowed and which are not?
So far Bone size, Dental structure, Dental arrangement, Hemoglobin, Foot Pad morphology, Skull ridges, Body size, Gastrointestinal Motility seem to be ok as changes under the theory that kinds came from a single pair.
If you want we can examine ligers, zorses, wolphins, Genae, Bos, Pumapard, Jaglions, each in turn.
It is not length of life, but depth of life. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
I noticed that.Camel and llamas are different.
I don't know, I'm not God. But I've wondered that.Is there a limit to the changes? What changes are allowed and which are not?
What will you examine them for? What do you think you'll find when you examine them? I found a cool site with all of them listed...I was thinking of you! Tomorrow I'll try to put it on for you and try to say something intelligent to go along with it.If you want we can examine..., each in turn.
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Just because it better to examine then pretend to know.Mystical wrote:I noticed that.Camel and llamas are different.I don't know, I'm not God. But I've wondered that.Is there a limit to the changes? What changes are allowed and which are not?What will you examine them for?If you want we can examine..., each in turn.
=)Mystical wrote:What do you think you'll find when you examine them? I found a cool site with all of them listed...I was thinking of you! Tomorrow I'll try to put it on for you and try to say something intelligent to go along with it.
Thanks.
When I first saw your name I knew you were a good mushroom.
It is not length of life, but depth of life. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson