On Thursday, December 4, 2025 at 8:21:03 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:

Lately, I've watching videos about the animal kingdom, and I am beginning 
to question Darwin's claim of evolution by natural selection. I wonder; how 
does this explain the appearance of defensive horns on some animals, like 
the Rhinoceros, and not on others, such as the Zebra? AG 


Does Natural Selection mean that random changes in an animal's body, such 
as a very small horn on a Rhonoceros initially, gives it some minor 
competitive advantage, and that horn grows bigger over time, again 
randomly, until it gets large as we see today? And yet on other specie of 
plant eaters, like Zebra, no such process occurred?  The process IMO looks 
teleological, that is, intentional in relation to interactions with the 
environment, not random. AG

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