FM75, on 2013-May-06, 20:09, said:
Because you did not understand the difference between a body and a species, you did not understand the statement at all. A body does not evolve to eat certain kinds of food. A body's genetic content is fixed. It matures from an embryonic state to a fertile state with luck and good environmental conditions. That has nothing to do with evolution. Evolution is what takes place over tens (at a minimum) to hundreds of generations in the population of a species as the genetic content of the population changes.
A body isn't actively evolving, no one has suggested that this was the case, so your clarification only speaks to your inability to comprehend.
This isn't surprising as the apparent misunderstanding can be traced to you using the word 'evolved' rather than 'evolving'
Our bodies are most certainly evolved, they have very clearly evolved over many generations to handle food.
Irrelevant to the discussion but sadly for you the argument isn't to hard to make that our digestive ability does evolve during our life time. Our gut bacteria do go through many thousands of generations and the gut culture is known to change over time which can and has been known to change a persons ability to handle different types of food.
Also evolution happens every generation, not tens our hundreds but every single one. It may be so gradual that you can't see much between individual generations, but there is no minimum amount of change that is required before it is called evolution, so it is utter nonsense to think there is a minimum number of generations required before it occurs.