The title of this thread uses the term "nonrandom DNA changes" instead of mutations, because the term "mutations" is a loaded word.
The changes being observed in experiments that show lifeforms adapting rapidly to a changed environment happen too repeatedly and too rapidly to be due to errors coming in a random manner. It is far more likely that these adaptations are the result of designed mechanisms not yet discovered.
Here are several cases that point in this direction. I will first discuss the experiment reported by Barry Hall in 1982, reported in Evolutionary Biology, vol 15, pp 85-150, "Evolution In A Petri Dish: The evolved Bgalactosidase system etc."
(This experimental effect was called "evolution" even though it violated the NeoDarwinism assumption of random mutations, i.e. it happened much too rapidly and was repeatable)
If someone has a rebuttal ("just-so story" no doubt) please tell us about it. In the meantime I will search myself to see how this apparent falsification of neoDarwinism was explained away by evolutionists.
The changes being observed in experiments that show lifeforms adapting rapidly to a changed environment happen too repeatedly and too rapidly to be due to errors coming in a random manner. It is far more likely that these adaptations are the result of designed mechanisms not yet discovered.
Here are several cases that point in this direction. I will first discuss the experiment reported by Barry Hall in 1982, reported in Evolutionary Biology, vol 15, pp 85-150, "Evolution In A Petri Dish: The evolved Bgalactosidase system etc."
(This experimental effect was called "evolution" even though it violated the NeoDarwinism assumption of random mutations, i.e. it happened much too rapidly and was repeatable)
If someone has a rebuttal ("just-so story" no doubt) please tell us about it. In the meantime I will search myself to see how this apparent falsification of neoDarwinism was explained away by evolutionists.