Not So Fast
Continued from my last entry . .
Other issues
However, there are a couple more things to keep in mind here. One of these, is that it would take an outside agency to provide all of the genetic information for something as complex as the simplest appendage.
Why? In order for the limb to fully develop and function, all of the required information would have to be present at the same time. A partial instruction set would only produce a partial, non-functioning appendage. Based on one of the core tenets of evolution, the partial information would be discarded by random selection in the next generations - because it failed to yield any useful purpose.
Secondly, based on the testing that has already been completed, the mathematical probability of any real “spontaneous information generation” actually occurring is so astronomically small that it may well be outside the realm of probability. In my next entry I will talk about “information” a little more thoroughly. The very existence of information actually produces some profound problems for those who still hold to macro evolution.
In summary
Our new understanding of genetics reveals that if the spontaneous production of new genetic information never occurs, which clearly appears to be the case, then biological evolution is absolutely impossible.

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