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Is the BBC obsessed with evolution ?


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No, but they do have a department of Greek and Latin.

 

http://www.ucl.ac.uk/GrandLat/

 

Your point being?

 

My point being that Astronomy and Physics are infinitely more closely related disciplines than Tony's assertion stating that they are as related as haute cuisine and neurosurgery.

 

Many academic astronomers hold degrees in physics I suspect that few chefs are fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons.

 

Your valiant attempt at trying to muddy the waters with Greek and Latin fails abysmally given that Classicists generally have both Latin and Greek and often Aramaic or Hebrew. :hihi:

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"Evolution" mixes two things together, one real, one imaginary. Variation (microevolution) is the real part. The types of bird beaks, the colors of moths, leg sizes, etc. are variation. Each type and length of beak a finch can have is already in the gene pool for finches. Creationists have always agreed that there is variation within species. What evolutionists do not want you to know is that there are strict limits to variation that are never crossed, something every breeder of animals or plants is aware of. Whenever variation is pushed to extremes by selective breeding (to get the most milk from cows, sugar from beets, bristles on fruit flies, or any other characteristic), the line becomes sterile and dies out. And as one characteristic increases, others diminish. But evolutionists want you to believe that changes continue, merging gradually into new kinds of creatures. This is where the imaginary part of the theory of evolution comes in. It says that new information is added to the gene pool by mutation and natural selection to create frogs from fish, reptiles from frogs, and mammals from reptiles, to name a few.

 

copy and pasted from some one else

 

*Throws a Platypus at truthlogic*

 

EXPLAIN THAT !!!

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