It is their definition of kinds that we are talking about, so whether
they exist or not doesn't matter to their definition. They think that
they exist, and they have their own definitions of what kinds are
depending on how they interpret the bible.
>
>>>>>>>>>> It may be bizarre, but there isn't a single definition like
>>>>>>>>>> the one you put up. Yes, kinds are obviously supposed to be
>>>>>>>>>> separately created, but they can still interbreed. They share
>>>>>>>>>> enough to be "recreations" according to reason to believe.
>>>>>>>>>> The recreations obviously are very similar to the kind that
>>>>>>>>>> they are supposed to be recreations of.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Similarity doesn't violate the definition of "kind", and
>>>>>>>>> "recreations" are still kinds under the definition universally
>>>>>>>>> employed by creationists. No problem.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> except that the recreations can interbreed and share ancestry.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Not relevant to the definition.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Then why change the initial definition?
>>>>>
>>>>> Clarification.
>>>>
>>>> Redefinition. How many creationists use the first one?
>>>
>>> Every creationist uses the same one.
>>
>> Except the ones that obviously do not.
>
> So far you have suggested no other definitions.
You changed your definition to try to include the alternative that I put
up, and you still have to deal with the fact that the same kind can be
recreated again, but it would obviously be the same kind. By most
accounts there were at least two of each kind of animal created, and by
your current definition a kind would be the hybridization (shared
ancestry) between two different kinds, so you still have to further
modify the definition in order to account for what they claim happened.
>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> I swear, sometimes you're as bad as the creationists.
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> There isn't a single definition of kind. They might want
>>>>>>>>>>>> there to be one, but they don't have one, and they
>>>>>>>>>>>> definitely do not use just one. Really, kinds can have
>>>>>>>>>>>> shared ancestry with other kinds, and that shared ancestry
>>>>>>>>>>>> can be shared with other kinds by subsequent interbreeding.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Subsequent interbreeding does not violate the definition of
>>>>>>>>>>> "kind", as long as the original groups are separately created
>>>>>>>>>>> and share no original ancestry.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Now it is no original ancestry? How many definitions are
>>>>>>>>>> there? The human kind obviously shares ancestry with several
>>>>>>>>>> other kinds.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> That's a different sense of "shares ancestry" than is used in
>>>>>>>>> the definition. There is one definition.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> What is it about there being multiple definitions of kind?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> What is it?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> You've put up two so far.
>>>>>
>>>>> Not true. The supposed second is merely an alternative statement of
>>>>> the first.
>>>>
>>>> Merely because the first one didn't apply to all examples, and even
>>>> your second one isn't all that is needed.
>>>
>>> I think we've reached the end of this and will just have to disagree.
>>
>> I am not the one that changed their definition.
>
> True. You haven't defined anything.
Sure, just keep believing that. My alternate definitions were examples
that your definition didn't cover. You know that they require a
different definition becuase you had to change yours to try to account
for the Reason to believe notion of kind.
>
>>>>>> My guess is that there are more because you have IDiots like Behe
>>>>>> that have their own reasons for having cat kind be limited to a
>>>>>> family of carnivora, and all he wants to claim is that his
>>>>>> designer diddlefarted around and changed some existing lineage
>>>>>> just enough, far in the distant past, so that it would evolved
>>>>>> into a distinct family from dog family kind. It looks like the
>>>>>> change was pretty subtle at the time, but it was just what was
>>>>>> needed in order for cat kind to evolve into something different
>>>>>> from dog kind. He doesn't deny that dogs and cats had a common
>>>>>> ancestor, but he claims that something that is impossible to
>>>>>> happen naturally occurred in order to make cats and dogs what they
>>>>>> are, and it obviously happened a long time ago.
>>>>>
>>>>> Behe doesn't believe in "kinds". And I don't think he's weighed in
>>>>> on whether Jesus needed to intervene in order to produce either
>>>>> dogs or cats from a common carnivore ancestor.
>>>>>
>>>>> So none of that was relevant.
>>>>
>>>> Except that Behe's notion of kind is different, and depends on a
>>>> very different means of creation. He doesn't know what his designer
>>>> has to do, but he believes that the designer does something to
>>>> create his kinds that can't evolve.
>>>
>>> Behe has no notion of kind.
>>
>> My guess is that you know that this is not true, so why did you make
>> the claim?
>
> My guess is that you didn't actually intend to accuse me of lying.
My guess is that you know that what you wrote is not true, or at least
realize that it isn't true. You have to know that Behe has some concept
of kinds becuase he sells his junk to the creationist rubes. He has his
own notion of how the different families were created by his designer.
>
>> Behe has the same notion of kind as the creationist rubes that he
>> sells his books too. Behe only lies about it being about the
>> science. You know why Behe is an IDiot, so why make the claim that
>> you just did. Behe's cut off at the family level was totally
>> arbitrary. The only reason he did it was so that the creationists that
>> buy his junk arguments need to fit them on the ark, and think that
>> their notion of kinds means anything. Like Glenn they don't care that
>> Behe is telling them that evolution is a fact of nature, they are only
>> in it for the denial and justification of what they want to believe.
>> Scientifically it would have been better for Behe to put the limit at
>> the phylum level, in terms of not ever being demonstrated to be wrong,
>> but he didn't do that. The reason being that he needs to sell books,
>> and what creationist would buy the book if everything within a phylum
>> shared a common ancestor?
>
> Behe accepts universal common descent. How can you not know this?
He accepts common descent, but I didn't say universal because he hasn't
said that, but he admitted to his critics at the turn of the century
that he understood biological evolution to be a fact of nature, and that
he had no issues with humans and apes sharing a common ancestor. He
claimed that this negated the claims that IC was anti-evolution. This
has all been put up on TO decades ago, and I have had to put it up,
repeatedly, since then because of the denial of Nyikos and Glenn.
A male and female of each animal kind had to be created. They are the
same kind according to the creationists even though by your definition
all the animal kinds created in this way are the hybrids of two
different kinds. You have to modify your definition again. The same
kind can obviously be recreated, and would still be the same kind in
spite of your current definition. The Reason to Believe creationists
are just hedging this obvious fact by claiming their kinds were
recreated to be different enough to be different kinds even if they can
interbreed. So interbreeding and sharing ancestry isn't the important
part of their definition. Just imagine what this means in terms of
extant kinds being related to other kinds of times past. The Reason to
Believe creationists claim that their designer has been recreating kinds
to be a little different from existing kinds for billions of years.
There has obviously been interbreeding among the animal kinds like the
human kind, and this interbreeding stretches back to the existence of
Homo erectus, and likely further back because the interbreeding was
likely occurring before that. There could be a chain of shared ancestry
going back to the common ancestor of apes and humans that Behe
understands to have existed in his creationist beliefs.
>
>>>>>> It turns out that the reason to believe guys claim that things
>>>>>> can be created so that they can interbreed and develop ancestral
>>>>>> linkages. Modern humans are linked to, probably, Homo erectus
>>>>>> ancestry through our interbreeding with Denisovans who interbred
>>>>>> with the Homo that they met in Asia. The modern human lineage
>>>>>> interbred with Neanderthals around half a million years ago so
>>>>>> that Neanderthals are more closely related to modern humans than
>>>>>> Denisovans, and the Neanderthals and Denisovans were interbreeding
>>>>>> from time to time when they existed on the same continent. When
>>>>>> we interbred most recently with the Neanderthals they already had
>>>>>> a lot of shared ancestry with us and other Homo.
>>>>>
>>>>> Your point?
>>>>
>>>> It is why you had to change your first definition.
>>>
>>> Again, you're conflating two different meanings of "shared ancestry".
>>
>> Change is change, and how many creationists use that first definition?
>> How many don't?
>
> There's only one definition, though it may be differently stated.
Of course keep repeating that every time it has to be differently defined.
How do you know? Some Catholics don't believe that evolution happened
and that the kinds of the Bible are real. They obviously have to have
some definition. Catholics go all the way to YEC, geocentric bibilical
literalist creationists. Pagano isn't the only geocentric,
anti-evolution Catholic creationist in existence. Even Behe has his own
beliefs about what the kinds in the Bible are, and he claims that they
were created by descent with modification, with tweeking/creation events
to get the families started.
https://groups.google.com/g/talk.origins/c/BFev0TB1zNM/m/tveh7uvTAAAJ
Except that it isn't what your first definition was, and your second
definition doesn't include the fact that the same kind can be recreated,
and that doesn't make it a different kind. The Reason to Believe claims
pretty much rely on the same kind being recreated, it is their new
"different" kinds that have to be altered enough in some way so that
they are called different kinds even if they can interbreed with
previously created kinds. Their new kinds can exist at the subspecies
level. They don't even have to be classified as different species (Homo
sapiens neanderthalensis). The Reason to believe article notes that
Neanderthals are classed as a subspecies of Homo sapiens, but they claim
that they are a different kind that lacks some attributes that modern
humans have. Humans were obviously created to be pretty closely related
to other Homo kinds. Just think about it. We've had creationists that
posted on TO that claimed that there were other creation events to
produce the wives and husbands for Adam and Eve's kids. It wasn't the
accepted view that they interbred with their sibs, but they didn't like
the thought of incest. Where did Cain and Abel's wives come from has
been a common creationist taunt in society and on TO, and creation in
the next county has been one of the options. It isn't mentioned in the
Bible, but that doesn't stop creationists from believing much of anything.
Ron Okimoto
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