It is interesting that I have been looking for the two-celled animal, and never have seen one. Can someone give me and example? Slime mold doesn't count, since the DNA must contain instructions for that metamorphosis from the beginning. I believe the 1000 celled Rotifer is next in line for complexity. I also would like to know how the law of Stasis (stability of kinds) has been circumvented to produce new kinds of animals by mutations. An example of how new information (not duplications or instructional errors)can be produced by mistakes in existing material would be nice. If the duck without webbed feet is real, it is not evolution, but loss of information that says "make webbed feet". The fruit fly proves you can't produce a new kind of animal by mistake. If the lab folks leave the fruit flies alone, in a fairly short time, they start to get healthier, and soon, they are normal again. That's a good case for creative genius.
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