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ORIGIN OF BIRDS AND MAMMALS
Started Hamady · Date: Sep 20, 2008 05:25 ·
3 post(s) |
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE THEORY
Started Hamady · Date: Sep 15, 2008 04:43 ·
2 post(s) |
Re: Souped Up Velikosky
Started mimus · Date: Aug 18, 2008 10:12 ·
175 post(s) |
Palabras de una Pluma,por Matthew Vanhorn
Started Suzudo · Date: Aug 8, 2008 15:55 ·
1 post(s) |
El «equilibrio puntuado» y la controversia macro-micromutacionista
Started Suzudo · Date: Aug 7, 2008 07:50 ·
3 post(s) |
Las plumas del Archaeopteryx — de volador potente
Started Suzudo · Date: Aug 7, 2008 16:30 ·
3 post(s) |
Re: Montauk Monster
Started Alan Kellogg · Date: Aug 7, 2008 08:27 ·
1 post(s) |
¿ES CIENTÍFICA,LA TEORÍA DE LA EVOLUCIÓN? El evolucionismo no es una cie ncia reconocida
Started Suzudo · Date: Aug 3, 2008 17:43 ·
3 post(s) |
¿ES CIENTÍFICA,LA TEORÍA DE LA EVOLUCIÓN? ¿Cual es el problema?
Started Suzudo · Date: Aug 3, 2008 17:40 ·
2 post(s) |
Niedoróbki człowieka dowodzą ewolucji
Started sajmon1973 · Date: Aug 1, 2008 12:56 ·
31 post(s) |
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ORIGIN OF BIRDS AND MAMMALS
Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for zoology in alt.philosophy
Author: Hamady
Date: Sep 20, 2008 05:25
...K. N. Whetstone, The Auk, Vol 98, 1980, p. 86. 49 Ibid, p. 86; L. D. Martin "Origins of Higher Groups of Tetrapods", Ithaca, New York: Comstock Publising Association, 1991, pp. 485, 540. 50 S. Tarsitano, M. K. Hecht, Zoological Journal of the Linnaean Society, Vol 69, 1985, p. 178; A. D. Walker, Geological Magazine, Vol 177, 1980, p. 595. 51 Pat Shipman, "Birds do it... Did Dinosaurs?", New Scientist, February 1, 1997, p. 31. 52"Old Bird...
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Re: A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE THEORY
Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for zoology in alt.philosophy
Author: Langevinger66
Date: Sep 15, 2008 04:53
... to discover the universe God has created and to perceive His laws and the details in His creation. Astronomers such as Copernicus, Keppler, and Galileo; the father of paleontology, Cuvier; the pioneer of botany and zoology, Linnaeus; and Isaac Newton, who is referred to as the "greatest scientist who ever lived", all studied science believing not only in the existence of God but also that the whole universe came into being as a...
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A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE THEORY
Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for zoology in alt.philosophy
Author: Hamady
Date: Sep 15, 2008 04:43
... sought to discover the universe God has created and to perceive His laws and the details in His creation. Astronomers such as Copernicus, Keppler, and Galileo; the father of paleontology, Cuvier; the pioneer of botany and zoology, Linnaeus; and Isaac Newton, who is referred to as the "greatest scientist who ever lived", all studied science believing not only in the existence of God but also that the whole universe came into being as a ...
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Re: Souped Up Velikosky
Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for zoology in alt.philosophy
Author: mimus
Date: Aug 21, 2008 18:40
On Thu, 21 Aug 2008 12:49:15 -0500, PV wrote: mimus <tinmimus99@hotmail.com> writes: Thoughts are biological phenomena, the proper matter of the biological subscience zoology's subscience neurology. Thoughts are things that certain biology does, but they are not, except in "how they work" terms, a subject for biology. Well, duh. -- Let there be another leaf. < _Small Gods_
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Re: Souped Up Velikosky
Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for zoology in alt.philosophy
Author: mimus
Date: Aug 20, 2008 11:42
..."knowledge gap" left by the immaturity of neurology, the usual frauds flourish.) Um, Neurology is not epistomology, you goober. Thoughts are biological phenomena, the proper matter of the biological subscience zoology's subscience neurology. Fancy philosophers and various frauds can say whatever they want, and do; what matters are the infrastructure(s) and infrafunction(s) of thought. And Neuroscience is doing quite well, ...
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Re: Souped Up Velikosky
Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for zoology in alt.philosophy
Author: David DeLaney
Date: Aug 20, 2008 10:57
...knowledge gap" left by the immaturity of neurology, the usual frauds flourish.) Um, Neurology is not epistomology, you goober. Thoughts are biological phenomena, the proper matter of the biological subscience zoology's subscience neurology. Mmmm. No. Thoughts are not _material_ phenomena. They are a subset of information; they are not equivalent to the chemical processes that they run on any more than a game of World of ...
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Palabras de una Pluma,por Matthew Vanhorn
Group: es.charla.educacion.ciencia · Group Profile · Search for zoology in es.charla.educacion.ciencia
Author: Suzudo
Date: Aug 8, 2008 15:55
... of Feathers,” Living Bird, 5:77-86. Peterson, Roger Tory (1963), The Birds (New York: Time). Prum, Richard O. (1999) “Development and Evolutionary Origin of Feathers,” Journal of Experimental Zoology (Molecular, Developmental, Evolution), 285:291-306. Regal, Philip (1975), “The Evolutionary Origin of Feathers,” The Quarterly Review of Biology, 50[1]:35-66. Shiliam khemen Siento vergüenza decirlo, pero confirmo y ...
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Falsificado por el comepollos
Group: es.charla.educacion.ciencia · Group Profile · Search for zoology in es.charla.educacion.ciencia
Author: libera
Date: Aug 8, 2008 03:25
...fica. Es sorprendente lo que se puede llegar a encontrar en la actualidad incluso en la literatura supuestamente evolucionista y actualista. Por ejemplo, Stephen Jay Gould, profesor de geología en Harvard, y relacionado con el Museo de Zoología Comparada de allí, ha afirmado en un reciente artículo que la moderna teoría sintética de la evolución ha muerto: Bien recuerdo cómo me hechizó la teoría sintética por su poder ...
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Falsificado por el comepollos
Group: es.charla.educacion.ciencia · Group Profile · Search for zoology in es.charla.educacion.ciencia
Author: libera
Date: Aug 8, 2008 03:23
...lo de un ave a medias, hubiera sido un volador deficiente, incapaz de volar en absoluto. Las bien preservadas plumas fósiles del Archaeopteryx fueron cuidadosamente reexaminadas recientemente por Alan Feduccia, del Departamento de Zoología de la Universidad de Carolina del Norte, y por Harrison B. Tordoff, del Museo Bell de Historia Natural en la Universidad de Minnesota.2 Feduccia y Tordoff señalan primero que las plumas fó...
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Las plumas del Archaeopteryx — de volador potente
Group: es.charla.educacion.ciencia · Group Profile · Search for zoology in es.charla.educacion.ciencia
Author: Suzudo
Date: Aug 7, 2008 16:30
... sólo de un ave a medias, hubiera sido un volador deficiente, incapaz de volar en absoluto. Las bien preservadas plumas fósiles del Archaeopteryx fueron cuidadosamente reexaminadas recientemente por Alan Feduccia, del Departamento de Zoología de la Universidad de Carolina del Norte, y por Harrison B. Tordoff, del Museo Bell de Historia Natural en la Universidad de Minnesota.2 Feduccia y Tordoff señalan primero que las plumas fó...
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