How does a species gain something new from evolution?
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How does a species gain something new from evolution?

[From: ] [author: ] [Date: 17-04-14] [Hit: ]
But they said the fish went extinct over 70 million years ago. And when it was found it had absolutely no legs & no lungs! This shocked evolutionists! And the Tetrapods are still swimming in the Indian Ocean with absolutely no lungs or legs either!-CRR say: It depends what you mean by something new and evolution. We have no direct evidence of evolution producing new genes or organs.......

Then after we supposedly came out of the sea, we would have to find a mate. But if we were the only organism, then how could this be possible?

The Coelacanth that evolutionists once believed walked out of the sea on its way to becoming modern man was found on December 23rd, 1938 in Madagascar. But they said the fish went extinct over 70 million years ago. And when it was found it had absolutely no legs & no lungs! This shocked evolutionists! And the Tetrapods are still swimming in the Indian Ocean with absolutely no lungs or legs either!
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CRR say: It depends what you mean by "something new" and "evolution".
We have no direct evidence of evolution producing new genes or organs.

For instance microbial antibiotic resistance is new but does not involve any new organ or function; in fact it is selection for a defect or loss of something.
We get a new flu virus each year but that is just change within existing parameters so again it requires no new genetic information.
Lenski's Cit+ bacteria was a shuffling of existing genes and no new genes.

We have not seen any instances of a new organ developing in recorded history but that is so small in evolutionary terms that we would not expect to. In fact it used to be claimed that the human body contained nearly 200 vestigial organs which would, at best, have been evidence of loss of something.
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Riley say: That's not how evolution works. Evolution is a change in allele frequency due to genetic mutation and natural selection. A organ doesn't just form. Gradual changes occur leading to new phenotypes (physical characteristics). A species doesn't gain something new, something old changes gradually over time due natural selection.
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? say: Gradually, one small step at a time. Nature often takes one system and morphs it, one small step at a time, into a new system. For example, the bones in your ears, started out as part of the gills and jaw of fish. We have fossils that show the small progression of fish gills and lower jaw into the ear. Irreducible Complexity is a failed argument.
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