“Au contraire, Pierre! It has always been thou that doest the upbraiding for C&P... gander-goose comes to mind...”
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Indeed, point taken and hence the admission that being smacked down for a sentence by a serial offender such as you (and I note your out-of-context quotes in the remainder of your reply are also C&Ps) smarts.
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“No out of sequence fossils... Ha!
“In the fossil record, we are faced with many sequences of change: modifications over time from A to B to C to D can be documented and a plausible Darwinian interpretation can often be made after seeing the sequence. But the predictive (or postdictive) power of theory is almost nil.” David M. Raup, “Evolution and the Fossil Record, Science, Vol. 213, 17 July 1981, p. 289.”
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The full piece is from here:
https://docs.google.c...rticles/raup-1981.pdf
How surprising, and unlike a creationist to get it wrong - in context, Raup isn’t saying what you’ve presented him as saying but is addressing a specific claim that Darwinian evolution is necessary or useful to enable paleotologists to determine the sequence of fossils. Raup’s take is that it is not useful. That says nothing about whether fossils are out of sequence.
You will also note that this person you are citing in defence of your position mentions the exact things I’d said in my previous answer about the geological column predating the theory of evolution. Presumably, since you think him worthy of citation, he’s also credible on that point? He also puts the boot into flood theory for good measure – again, one can only assume that you believe him credible on this point too? No? Weird. I think it’s safe to say Raup does not really advance your cause much.
““Fossil discoveries can muddle our attempts to construct simple evolutionary trees—fossils from key periods are often not intermediates, but rather hodgepodges of defining features of many different groups.” Neil Shubin, “Evolutionary Cut and Paste,” Nature, Vol. 394, 2 July 1998, p. 12.”
This quote, from one of the most celebrated palaeontologists and author of the book “Your Inner Fish” detailing how evolutionary theory makes sense of features that utterly confound the notion of humans having been created perfectly by God, has precisely no relevance to whether there are out of sequence fossils. I’m really unsure how you can read it as suggesting otherwise. In fact, what it does do is support that sentence I’d copied about how phylogenic trees are based on more than just fossil evidence.
TBC.