So I looked at
the AiG article on "kinds" and....well....like most other creationist material, it's downright hilarious.
In modern creationists’ studies, there is a field called baraminology that works to find the boundaries of the created kinds. The field is very much in its infancy
Wait.....what? Infancy? How long has Genesis been around? A couple thousand years or so? And these guys are just now getting around to trying to figure out what a "kind" is? Too funny. :chuckle:
Common ancestry is at the root of the evolutionary model proposed by theologian Charles Darwin in his books The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection for the Preservation of Favored Races in the Struggle for Life and The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex. This view is what dominates classification today.
Um, yeah....not just today, but for the last century and a half. Funny how it didn't take scientists very long to figure out a classification system based on evolutionary common ancestry, but creationists
still can't figure out their own system.
The platypus is an excellent example of utilizing various features that we find on many different types of animals, a common designer made both the platypus as well as the other creatures it resembles. It would be absurd to claim that the duck, duckbill dinosaur, and platypus all came from a common ancestor. However, the similarities make sense when we realize that each had the same Creator.
Oh my goodness...that's one of the funniest things I've read in a while. Is this guy still in 3rd grade or something? :rotfl:
Then in the section about whether reproductive isolation is a criterion for "kinds", he writes...
From Jews like Josephus 2000 years ago to Basil the Great (a leading church father) to various commentaries, it seems that people have recognized that the boundary for a kind implied reproduction.
Leading Hebraist of the time Dr. John Gill, in his famous commentary for Baptists in the 1700s, says..
Wait....I thought he said figuring out what "kinds" are is still in its infancy? Which is it? :idunno:
Then he quotes the Bible and concludes...
These passages give great support to reproduction being the ultimate boundary for a kind.
...but then immediately backs away from that...
Some animals may have lost the ability to reproduce with others of their kinds. Think of a Shih-Tzu and Great Dane, where their size would inhibit any natural breeding. Of course, there are other reasons this can happen as well. For example, mutations could have caused them to lose this ability.
So is reproductive isolation a criterion for "kinds" or not? :idunno:
Thanks for linking to this 6days. It was extremely entertaining! :up: