COMMENTS:
Yes, the fact that bacteria develop resistances to antibiotics, as well how insects develop resistence to insecticides, does seem indicative of an evolution mechanism, to me.
Although I'll correct you in that it must be a bacterium -- vira are not affected by antibiotics.
you just had to find a flaw didn't you ;-)
im a genius not a biologist
Minor flaw in details; the question is still a good one.
In all seriousness I think I have the superbug right now. Feeling very under the weather.
O yeah of course its a Virus duh! I mean we can't even cure the cold virus...
Think you have a valid hypothesis there, Prep.
Its certainly proof of MUTATION, unless the bacterium has suddenly been released from some unknown source of incubation. It doesnt prove the whole theory of eveolution though, not in itself.
And insects developing resistance to insecticides.Same thing.Insects arent the pests for christs sake!! YOU ARE
Any Gardeners on here? Deal with these 15th century idiots , will you
leftist, but isnt mutation what evolution is?
It had a predisposition for immunity left over from a previous incarnation..or maybe it's an example of spontaneous generation of a new life-form...right B4 our eyes.
leftist, but isnt mutation what evolution is? by Preparation_H on Jan 28, 2005 Mutation creates freaks that are more likely to die without getting a shag.
What about male nipples, the appendix, and the tailbone? Don't those indicate "intelligent design?"
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