Hallmarks of Design

Dr Stuart Burgess  |  Features
Date posted:  1 May 2000
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Evolution is based on a key assumption that all the mechanisms within organisms can evolve incrementally so all intermediate mechanisms have some useful function.

A mechanism that can evolve one characteristic at a time while always having a useful function can be termed an reducible mechanism.

A mechanism that cannot evolve one characteristic at a time while always having a useful function can be called an irreducible mechanism. Irreducible mechanisms point to a Designer, and represent one of the most powerful arguments against evolution, because evolutionists fully admit that the process of evolution cannot produce an irreducible mechanism.

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