I'm not saying evolution does not exist. I'm saying the evidence backing it up is weak. Bear with me.
1. Second Law of Thermodynamics.
Layman terms: Given time systems left to there on devices will degrade. Disorder can never produce order through any kind of random process.
Evolutionist point of view:
Evolutionists claim that a system would have to be an open system to be excluded. Life is an open system it has the required program (DNA) and a mechanism (photosynthesis & metabolism). The idea is the sun does not increase entropy as living organisms direct the energy of the sun effectively and use it to develop. Yet people and plants die but lets just ignore this fact for a second.
Creationist point of view:
I'll put aside the statement made by John Ross of Harvard University stating that there are no known systems open or closed that violate this rule (because it was made in the 1980's and apparently this is frowned upon). The 'primordial broth' did not have a program nor did it have a mechanism. This in turn means that the sun would actually increase the entropy because all that energy would not be directed into the development of life making the creation of life impossible. Now Evolutionists bring up crystals as a form of order formed from disorder, but the complexity of even the simplest cells (prokaryotic) is greater than that of a snow flake or salt. This is conveniently ignored.
>>It is nature that knock's off the random mutations that do not match the environment. It is God who actually defies the second law of thermo dynamics.<<
You base this on what? God doesn't defy the second law. God provides the program and a mechanism required. Simply put.. The suns energy needs to be directed in some way to decrease entropy. The primordial broth lacked that direction.
2. Fossils
You mock me for using old quotes but this doesn't change the fact that transitional fossils don't exist, even today. Gene mapping and computers has not changed this fact.
3. Evolution in Labs
Speaking strictly of observations such as the ones relating to the moths in England and the Galapagos birds, science can't prove whether those traits existed in the gene pool before hand or if they were in fact mutations. Surely you will not attempt to deny that. As for your example, worms adapting to bacteria does NOT signify macro-evolution. It signifies that micro-evolution can hone an existing species. It would take a huge leap of faith to believe that experiments such as this one mean that new species can come about from micro-evolution. It's nothing more than circumstantial evidence.
You ask me if I can show you the limit... Can you show me there isn't one or are you just assuming? Have there been any successful experiments relating to the creation of DNA from an artificial primordial broth? Have there been any new species created in a lab through a series of mutations shit I'll settle for an organ? Hold on before you answer that last one, have there been any experiments that successfully show a prokaryotic cell evolving into a eukaryotic cell? Finally, do evolutionists have any proof that the 'primordial broth' existed in the first place?
You so arrogantly mock fundamentalists yet you're proverbial god has not even been proven yet.
Conclusion
>>No thanks because you do not seem to know what the second law of thermodynamics when applied to organic chemistry. I also think you have ignored some extremely compeling evidence such as why all sexually reproducing plants and animals share the same gene sequences ( It is because we share a common ancestor)<<
I think it's fair to say that I've got a good grasp of the Second Law of Thermodynamics. I fear that it is you who doesn't. To answer the second part I choose to take a fundamentalist stance. Please I would like you to humor me with a sensible scientific reply as to why it is impossible. God being all knowing allowed for everything to have this specific sequence because he knew that it would be the best sequence to have on earth.
Fact of the matter is the best evolution can do (and it can't even prove it all that well) is explain why there are so many different species on earth. What it cannot do is explain how life began.
I'm not a fundamentalist or the least bit religious for that matter. I'm looking at this objectively shit I haven't been able to grasp the concept of God creating everything then scattering it all about even as a child. Evolution fits my beliefs but I recognize how limited it is at this point. I've done this because I don't understand this haughty attitude evolutionists have towards creationists. Notice how I said creationists and not fundamentalists. There are fundamentalists in both camps. Fact of the matter is neither can be proved. They are both based on assumptions and any proof gathered is affected by presuppositions. You probably won't agree with what I've stated. I wouldn't be surprised. Truth is scientifically speaking both should be acknowledged as being possible theories until a theory can be backed up by solid evidence.

