In the beginning was the steam engine. It evolved into existence by itself through gradual, unaided, self-development into the higher fully-functional form we have today. Enjoy this short film.
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2 Comments on “Steam In The Beginning…”
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Nice engine! Your views on evolution are a bit confused, though. The
biological record tells us that complex things don’t spring into existence,
rather that lots of tiny little things that do work eventually, over long
periods, combine into something complex. Imagine a bunch of monkeys
hammering away on typewriters. None of them individually will write a
Shakespeare play, however, over time if you keep the letters that do
correctly match and then combine their efforts you will get the play. The
biological record shows this clearly very clearly – the bone structure in
your limbs came directly from fish (one bone at the socket, two bones, then
many bones at the end). Your eyes came from fish as well (and haven’t yet
perfectly adapted to being out of water). The yolk sack on a developing
fetus comes from our reptile ancestors. You owe your complex hands to apes.
That our backs don’t work well upright (still in transition) is another
legacy of evolution.
You are equating life to inorganic matter? How does that make sense to you?
Can steam engine parts reproduce with errors? Also according to the theory
of evolution by natural selection our very brains were molded to see the
world as beautiful, using it as an argument against evolution is
nonsensical. Just another creationist…