Actually I do understand it, I'm just apparently having trouble getting my words together to describe it.
Phytotron wrote:But yes, to put an end to this (hopefully), the "egg" to which I've referred is the general egg, not necessarily a chicken egg. But even in the case of the chicken egg specifically, it evolved at least simultaneously with the chicken, and there's still a good chance the chicken egg preceded the speciation of the chicken.
You can't really say there's a good chance, since we don't know.
I think the problem with this debate is there are so many variables that have to be classified very stringently (what do you classify as a chicken, what do you classify as a chicken egg? Is the ability to lay chicken eggs part of what makes a chicken a chicken?).
For example, if you classify the chicken with a set of criteria, and the chicken egg with another set (that describe it exactly as the common chicken egg exists today), but do not include the fact that the chicken has the ability to lay the "chicken egg" in it's criteria, it is feasable that the chicken predated the existance of the chicken egg, with maybe a few structural differences in the chicken egg (ratio of proteins for example) evolving subsequently.
But I guess thats just being nit-picky.
The Halley's comet of Armagetron.
ps I'm not tokoyami