dartagnan wrote:So the mutation that caused fish to become birds had nothing to do with natural selection or adaptation? It was just a result of "random" mutation?
Start from the beginning. You're making illogical leaps based on some simple misunderstandings. Mutation is the first step. Random mutations occur during DNA replication all the time. Sometimes those mutations affect phenotype, sometimes they don't (silent mutations). Sometimes a single mutation will cause a drastic change in phenotype or alter a chemical pathway in a significant way. Sometimes it takes many mutations to do this. Sickle-cell anemia, for example, is a drastic change in phenotype caused by a single nucleotide change in DNA. That single change causes a single amino-acid change in the polypeptide chain, yielding a malformed protein that is not efficient at transporting oxygen. One simple, random mutation can cause a change in phenotype. Now look at it from a population perspective. Natural selection acts on populations, not on individuals. Mutations that cause changes in phenotype may be beneficial or detrimental at the population level depending on environmental pressures. Now account for systems of mating, gene flow/genetic drift, isolation events, natural selection, and millions of years.
dartagnan wrote:What I don't understand is how a sea creature can develop wings without some kind of intelligence at play. You can't expect to find that intelligence in genes, so where does it come from? There are laws of aerodynamics that must be met before flight is possible. How does a sea creature stand a better chance of survival in a completely different environment like that? It seems to me that if a fish randomly grew feathers instead of fins, it would serve no benefit whatsoever to the fish inthe water, so the feathers would eventually go away via natural selection. They would get eaten by the bigger fish because they would no longer be able to escape.
You're compressing time and the sequence of events as described by the fossil record. Birds didn't evolve directly from fish.
Amphibians and fish share a common ancestor. That ancestor had fins that were adapted for life on land. Take a look at the lobe-finned fishes and lung fish, fish with adaptations better suited for life on land than in the water. We're not talking about one fish mutating into one amphibian here. Look at things from the population level. Next, move from amphibians to reptiles, a branch of reptiles to birds, etc. Follow the process.
dartagnan wrote:I don't see how intelligence cannot have something to do with it. Would flying creatures, conceivably be able to mutate to the point that they could leave our atmosphere, and adapt to our orbit? Maybe develop a respiratory system like whales, where they could dive into our atmosphere for a deepth breath of air and go back up and munch on cosmic debris?
Constraints exist in our world. Those constraints play a significant role in natural selection. The most diverse group of vertebrates is the bony fishes. Look at all the different forms they take, the myriad adaptations. Why? Examine the constraints put on them by their aquatic environment. Some are better suited for fast swimming (tuna, mackerel) while others are better suited for bottom-feeding (cat fish).
dartagnan wrote:Wouldn't you suspect there was some intelligence behind that acheivement as well?
No.
dartagnan wrote:We are talking about a creature accomplishing flight as a way of life. If you clip a few feathers at the ends of the wings of most birds, they can no longer fly.
See Kenneth Miller's response to Michael Behe's
irreducible complexity argument.
dartagnan wrote:So theoretically, for millions of years, as they were becoming less dependant on water and their respiratory systems developed lungs, and for another million or so years, as they were "mutating" into fully feathered creatures capable of flight, they must have been something akin to dodo birds or chickens. Assuming this is true, there just seems to be have been some intelligent means at work, trying to get to a specific end: getting these creatures in the air.
The organisms weren't "mutating" with a goal in sight, as you suggest. For the same reason that bacteria don't mutate to become resistant to antibiotics. The mutation occurs and is either accepted or rejected due to natural selection. Those bacteria that have a mutation that yields resistance are more likely to survivie in an antibiotic environment and pass that beneficial trait on to their offspring, yielding more resistance. They don't intelligently decide to mutate.
dartagnan wrote:You're saying this is just an act of random mutation that, by sheer chance, ended up developing creatures that had the exact requirements for flight?
It's more complex than that, but yes, an organisms ability to fly initially started with random mutation.
dartagnan wrote:Maybe is there was only one flying creature onthe planet, but there are thousands. This suggests a means to an end.
Why? I see it as an advantage that some organisms have inherited through natural selection. Flying organisms can fill a niche that very few other organisms can inhabit. A great example of the power of natural selection.
dartagnan wrote:I mean if one tiny thing is off, the bird doesn't fly. It must have extremely strong chest muscles, it must be designed a specific way, it must have high powered vision, etc. All of this is just random mutation?
Again, see Kenneth Miller's response to Michael Behe's
irreducible complexity argument.
dartagnan wrote:Actually they kinda glide.
Semantics. Flying Squirrels glide as well.
dartagnan wrote:And there is a huge gap between tiny rubberish fins and an eagle's ten foot wingspan of feathers. I am trying to figure out some kind of plausible scenario that could explain how birds came from the sea. Random mutation you say?
Yes, there is a huge gap. There is also a huge gap between birds and sharks in evolutionary history. Birds didn't come directly from the sea. See my explanation at the top of this post.
Edited for spelling errors.