Your approach is wrong, and I don’t know how it went wrong. (I assume the problem is deeper than “bringer change” being unknown to Google.) If you know what “Kolmogorov complexity” means, maybe think about how you would program a simulated world that allows such a change to be “fundamental” and yet produces the evidence that scientists continually find.
On the much less important issue at hand: you seem to have skipped the question of why this God would take legs away from any “snake,” and precisely what that entails. (Should I ask how many Chinese dragons or “seeds” thereof were affected? Or would that distract from the why?)
This is one problems with the absurdity heuristic. Because of deliberately starting at a point with such a long inferential distance, It can be hard to see where the error has taken place.
Your approach is wrong, and I don’t know how it went wrong. (I assume the problem is deeper than “bringer change” being unknown to Google.) If you know what “Kolmogorov complexity” means, maybe think about how you would program a simulated world that allows such a change to be “fundamental” and yet produces the evidence that scientists continually find.
On the much less important issue at hand: you seem to have skipped the question of why this God would take legs away from any “snake,” and precisely what that entails. (Should I ask how many Chinese dragons or “seeds” thereof were affected? Or would that distract from the why?)
This is one problems with the absurdity heuristic. Because of deliberately starting at a point with such a long inferential distance, It can be hard to see where the error has taken place.