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  • May 15, 2008, 01:52 AM
    templelane
    Hi, michealb the difference between species is that they cannot interbreed to produce viable offspring.

    When two populations diverge their genomes can also diverge because of genetic drift or the founding animals not containing all the population genetic diversity possible add into that environmental pressures (to have long tails or something) and the two populations gradually change. This is the basics of speciation, eventually if you tried to mate two individuals from these populations you won't be able too, or you can but produce a sterile hybrid- this means they have become different species.

    Apparently there is some contention about the definition of a species (real scientific controversy) but the breeding thing is the most generally accepted I have found.

    I hope this helps michealb :)

    And Inthebox stop using things that cannot reproduce to prove the fallacy if evolution- it makes you look like you don't know what you are talking about.

    I have to thank you for that very interesting blog summarizing a recent scientific breakthrough- very exciting! I have no idea how it abets your argument but it is an absolute gem. Such elegant research.
  • May 15, 2008, 08:17 AM
    michealb
    Templelane,

    Thanks, I guess I should be more clear. The point I was trying to make was where is the clear dividing line between species that makes it impossible to for one of them to vary to the point that they would be considered two difference species because for creationism or ID to be correct there would have to be a barrier that prevent small gradual changes from making a new species. The other point was that humans and animals are closer than most people realize and while a human and a mouse might seem to be far apart they share 97% of the same gene coding.
  • May 15, 2008, 09:46 PM
    inthebox
    Templelane:


    This is from the link I provided:


    "Well, it had to overcome something in human cells. There was something about human cells that were different from chimpanzee cells that HIV-1 needed to EVOLVE around. Whats that something? Um... something. BUT THATS WHAT HAPPENED! Thats why Vpu forms a viroporin!


    Notice the WORDING.


    It betrays evolutionary ASSUMPTIONS. This is not scientific.


    Now say, like the Reverend Wright, I assumed the US government created HIV, the wording would be:


    "Well, the US government had to overcome something in human cells. There was something about human cells that were different from chimpanzee cells that HIV-1 needed to adapt to. What's that something? Um... something. But that's what happened! That's why the US government developed Vpu which forms a viroporin!



    Now if this were a scientific experiment with results where is the methods sections?
    Where are the lab results? Where is the statistical analysis and discussion of potential weaknesses, and confounding factors of this scientific experiment.


    Have they isolated an HIV from people, say in the 1800s, in which this HIV does not have VPU? And now they have a 1990s version of HIV that has VPU?


    All the article did was compare SIV VPU to HIV VPU. They even say the are genetically and biochemically distinct. Yet they pass it off as "evolution."
  • May 15, 2008, 09:53 PM
    inthebox
    Michaelb:


    What's The Difference Between A Human And A Fruit Fly?


    "Professor Stumpf adds: "Understanding the human genome definitely does not go far enough to explain what makes us different from more simple creatures. Our study indicates that protein interactions could hold one of the keys to unraveling how one organism is differentiated from another."


    Amazing isn't it. Where DNA and genetic information comes from, scientists don't know. Now they are discovering ERVs in the once called "junk Dna." Add to the complexity, the protein interactions.
  • May 16, 2008, 05:33 PM
    Galveston1
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by jillianleab
    It's not about considering all the facts, it's about what is considered science and what isn't. There is nothing scientific about saying "god said let there be light, and there was light" or "designer did it". Those statements don't fit in with the scientific method at all. Beyond that, the people pushing for ID are unable to separate ID from creationism - even you can't do it on a silly board on the intertubes. You can't teach creationism in schools - it's religion, plain and simple.

    Plus, ID/Creationism can't ever be proven, unless the designer decides to make a personal appearance on the 5:00 news and say, "Hey! Check me out, and check out what I can do!". The scientific theories and laws taught in school are provable - god/designer isn't provable.

    I keep saying it, and you keep ignoring it, or keep thinking it's an insult - ID isn't science, it doesn't belong in a science class, no matter what. Honestly, it's not an insult. ID doesn't fit the very definition, the very basic criteria to be science. Right or wrong, it still isn't science. Creationism is religion, it doesn't belong in a public school (when taught as fact).

    Belief in the theory of evolution is a religion. And just to show how much hypocrisy is involved in dedicated evolutionists (no personal reference to you) when they have posted in these threads that they have no problem if creation is taught in some class other than science, consider this. In Texas, some schools will offer Bible studies as literature and history, as an ELECTIVE, and already some are screaming about it. The last time I looked, study of evolution was NOT an elective.
  • May 16, 2008, 07:19 PM
    ordinaryguy
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    Belief in the theory of evolution is a religion.

    No, it is not, and scientists don't "believe in" it any more than they "believe in" the theory of general relativity or quantum mechanics. Scientific theories are always being used and tested and extended and revised and applied in new ways. When experimental results or measurements and observations of phenomena are repeatedly found to be inconsistent with some aspect of existing theory, it is revised and new experiments and measurements are devised to test whether the new formulation provides a more consistent and comprehensive explanation than the old one did. This process of testing and revision is ongoing and never-ending. It is an entirely different sort of endeavor than religious belief. Your insistence that they are the same demonstrates how little you understand about how science is actually done, and what the role and function of theory is in scientific practice. Such arguments may be convincing to your fellow religionists, but to working scientists, they are simply absurd.
  • May 17, 2008, 09:17 AM
    michealb
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by inthebox
    Amazing isn't it. Where DNA and genetic information comes from, scientists don't know. Now they are discovering ERVs in the once called "junk Dna." Add to the complexity, the protein interactions.

    Complexity doesn't prove design though. Snowflakes are extremely complex looking but snowflakes forming doesn't clash with a particular religious faith. If evolution didn't clash with faith there would be no issue with it. Which is why ID is religion not science.

    We could make the same argument that your making about evolution about our theories of gravity. I mean we don't know where the first cell comes from and we don't know where gravity comes from. We don't have all of the middle fossils and planes fly despite gravity. So using this logic evolution and gravity must be faulty theories.
  • May 17, 2008, 05:55 PM
    Galveston1
    [
    Plus, ID/Creationism can't ever be proven, unless the designer decides to make a personal appearance on the 5:00 news and say, "Hey! Check me out, and check out what I can do!". The scientific theories and laws taught in school are provable - god/designer isn't provable.

    We are pretty far from my original point, BUT:
    What you just said, He did in the person of Jesus of Nazareth. Eyewitnesses left a record for succeeding generations. You just refuse to accept the record.

    You cannot prove that man is the product of evolution. It is a, shall we say, quantum leap from showing mutation of microscopic cells to production of man or any other animal.
    You keep talking about laborotories. Take some raw materials and make us a man! Too hard? Okay, make us an earthworm.

    Talk about circular reasoning. When pressed to answer difficult questions about how something came to be, the answer comes back, "we don't have to explain it, it's evolution".

    If evolution is not a religion, then the BELIEF in it as an answer to ourselves and everything around us IS a religion. See how zealously it is defended, and what great faith is expressed that evolution will one day provide the answers that we seek? And like any other religion it refuses to admit that any other religion has any merit.
  • May 17, 2008, 06:56 PM
    inthebox
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by michealb
    Complexity doesn't prove design though. Snowflakes are extremely complex looking but snowflakes forming doesn't clash with a particular religious faith. If evolution didn't clash with faith there would be no issue with it. Which is why ID is religion not science.

    We could make the same argument that your making about evolution about our theories of gravity. I mean we don't know where the first cell comes from and we don't know where gravity comes from. We don't have all of the middle fossils and planes fly despite gravity. So using this logic evolution and gravity must be faulty theories.




    Complexity orders of magnitude more than Darwin could ever think possible makes evolution less likely. Francis Crick of DNA double helix fame, an atheist, can't explain DNA - He, like Dawkins, try to explain it in the even more unprovable theory of panspermia. How did ETI get their "intelligence" then becomes the question.




    Planes fly because of acceleration and lift. It is reproducible - lift that is. All you have to do is while driving down the road at say more than 40 mph stick your arm out, bend your elbow out 90 degrees, wrist straight and point your fingers in the direction of travel.
    To get lift bend your wrist back/ fingers pointing higher.

    Every invention, technological advance, in humanity is by intelligence and design.

    The internet was not formed by the chance happening of crossed cable wires. An automobile is not a random collection of metal, plastics, rubber, and composites. Today's cellphone with camera, video, email, mp3, address book etc. is designed on purpose. It was not the spontaneous melding of rotary phone, TV, radio etc...

    I'm showing my age: :)


    Remember when you had to open cartons of OJ or milk. Spread the end of one side then press inward and hope that a spout opens up? Someone got tired of prying the spout open raggedly and decided to put a hole with a screw cap on the top instead. Intelligence and by design.

    Remember taping pieces of paper notes up on a wall or on the fridge, someone got the bright idea to put glue on one side of that paper and that became "post it notes" / 3M - again intelligence and design.

    It is even more complex in nature. Dolphin sonar, bat echolation. Evolution cannot reproduce the development of a single eye let alone 2 to provide depth perception. Then when you cosider a "primitive" fly's compound eye compared to ours...

    These are the obvious visible examples we can see and relate to, but try taking graduate level neurophysiology, or biochemistry and you will be even more amazed. :D
  • May 17, 2008, 08:15 PM
    ordinaryguy
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    When pressed to answer difficult questions about how something came to be, the answer comes back, "we don't have to explain it, it's evolution".

    On the contrary, it's the creationist who refuses to provide an explanation. "God made it that way" is not an explanation, it's a statement of religious faith.

    A biologist would never say "we don't have to explain it". Biological science is all about finding better explanations of how life works. Evolutionary theory has proved to be a very powerful tool for developing and refining those explanations. Still, it is only a tool, not an article of faith, and it has been and continues to be refined, revised, and improved.
  • May 17, 2008, 08:17 PM
    ordinaryguy
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by inthebox
    I'm showing my age: :)

    You're showing far more than that, I'm afraid. By simply repeating your same arguments, even after their fallacies have been pointed out, you're showing an inability or unwillingness to engage in constructive debate and discussion.
  • May 17, 2008, 08:30 PM
    Fr_Chuck
    I am sorry, the issue here is that one that will not accept creation though design ( that was the theme of the question some 14 pages ago) have no real proof or idea how it could have happened. How one cell first even started life, and how that one cell changed the DNA to become trees, animals, fish, birds and all the billions of variations of those.

    Why 1000's of types of grass, and not just one that worked best in one area, way 1000's of types of tress, esp some that have often no useful purpose. Why all the variations of fish at the same depth levels.

    And when that cell first became that first rabbit after a million years, was it a male rabbit or a female and where did the other rabbits come from to make other ones ** OK not rabbits but get the idea.

    The simple fact is that an idea of it all just happened, has to be much more silly than an idea that there is some control factor over it, that developed things in some order.

    Reading the supporting ideas of DNA no, honestly inthebox makes a lot more sense to someone who wants to see it.
  • May 18, 2008, 05:36 AM
    ordinaryguy
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Fr_Chuck
    The simple fact is that an idea of it all just happened, has to be much more silly than an idea that there is some control factor over it, that developed things in some order.

    If you think that evolutionary theory says nothing more than "it all just happened", you need to study it in a lot more depth and detail. Of course things developed "in some order". The interplay between planetary conditions and living organisms is wonderfully complex and ongoing. The changing physical environment is the "control factor" that sets the terms of "success" for living organisms at any point in time.

    Personally, I don't mind if people use god as the "explanation" for everything we don't yet understand. But it does annoy me when they continue to insist on using him for that purpose even after perfectly good scientific explanations are available.

    To me, the real mystery is why living organisms want so desperately to survive. If you want to say that it's god that makes them do it, I'm OK with that.
  • May 18, 2008, 06:56 AM
    jillianleab
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    We are pretty far from my original point, BUT:
    What you just said, He did in the person of Jesus of Nazareth. Eyewitnesses left a record for succeeding generations. You just refuse to accept the record.

    It is far from the original point, but there have been hundreds of people since Jesus who claim to be the son of god, or claim to speak to god and "know things", or even claim to be god. Jesus was not god, so he doesn't fit my example of GOD appearing on the 5:00 news. Any loon at this point in time can make the news and say they are god, or the son of god, or a messenger from god, etc (Jim Jones claimed to be Jesus reincarnated, for example). So it's not that I refuse to accept the record, I refuse to accept the messenger because I don't trust it. But that's another topic! If you want to go further with this, PM me or start a new thread, I don't want this one closed because we get off topic. :)

    Quote:

    You cannot prove that man is the product of evolution. It is a, shall we say, quantum leap from showing mutation of microscopic cells to production of man or any other animal.
    You keep talking about laborotories. Take some raw materials and make us a man! Too hard? Okay, make us an earthworm.
    It is a quantum leap from microscopic cells to man or earthworm. Give me a few billion years and I'll give you a man. That's what you need to understand, it's not an overnight thing.

    Quote:

    Talk about circular reasoning. When pressed to answer difficult questions about how something came to be, the answer comes back, "we don't have to explain it, it's evolution".
    Sorry, but you're wrong here. As OG said, scientists don't say "we don't have to explain it"; they explain it, you refuse to accept the explanation (which is fine). Sometimes science will say "we don't know yet", but that doesn't mean "we aren't working on figuring it out" or "we won't ever know that". And theists use the argument you state all the time; "It's too complex, god did it. We don't understand how this could happen, god did it. Something bad happend, it was god's will. Something good happened, god did it." There's no credit for the individual, no accountability, no thought involved in saying "god did it"

    Quote:

    If evolution is not a religion, then the BELIEF in it as an answer to ourselves and everything around us IS a religion. See how zealously it is defended, and what great faith is expressed that evolution will one day provide the answers that we seek? And like any other religion it refuses to admit that any other religion has any merit.
    I can only speak for myself here, but I'm not defending evolution, I'm defending the scientific method and what belongs in a science class. I don't care if you ever accept evolution as fact, and I don't care if you children and grandchildren and so on never accept it as fact. I just want you and everyone else to recognize what is science and what is not science. If you studied evolution a little more, you might understand it's claims, which might help you understand why it's being taught and why it is, in fact, science. That might also help you understand why ID and Creationism are not science. You might not ever believe it, but that doesn't mean you can't understand it.

    The reason we say evolution will provide the answers we seek in time is because that's what science does. I'm not saying ID doesn't have merit, I'm saying it's not science, so it doesn't belong in a science class. I'm also saying those of you who push for ID being taught are disguising creationism which you know is religion and you know doesn't belong in a public school. And if you don't know that, you need to spend more time in a government class.

    Quote:

    Belief in the theory of evolution is a religion. And just to show how much hypocrisy is involved in dedicated evolutionists (no personal reference to you) when they have posted in these threads that they have no problem if creation is taught in some class other than science, consider this. In Texas, some schools will offer Bible studies as literature and history, as an ELECTIVE, and already some are screaming about it. The last time I looked, study of evolution was NOT an elective.
    I have no problem with teaching the bible as an elective in schools depending on how it's done. I imagine most of the people you say are screaming about it probably object to the method of how it's being taught (granted, some will scream about it just because it's the bible). If the bible is studied in school as a historical document and the impact of it on modern and past societies is discussed, I have no problem with that. If, however, it's taught as fact (like church bible study) and no other religious texts are allowed to be taught, we have a problem. And no, evolution isn't an elective because it's not a class. Are you saying you want science or biology to be an elective now? Sorry kids, you don't get to learn about the human digestive system, because this class also mentions evolution. Come on...
  • May 18, 2008, 07:05 AM
    jillianleab
    inthebox the problem with your examples is you are talking about material things. Of course milk cartons with screw caps are intelligence by design, a milk carton is a thing, and it's not a biological or organic thing. Your examples prove nothing for or against evolution or ID.
  • May 18, 2008, 07:14 AM
    excon
    Hello:

    Ever since the beginning of time, there's what the priests/shaman/witch doctors/believers say, and there's what science said...

    Somewhere between then and now, the believers accepted some science as fact. Clearly, you don't believe the sun is God, and you don't believe the earth is the center of the universe. Do you?

    If you don't, why not?? It WAS heresy to claim the earth revolved around the sun... Just as I think you're saying evolution is heresy... How long is it going to take you to get it this time? Or is THIS where you make your last stand?

    excon
  • May 18, 2008, 09:28 AM
    ordinaryguy
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by jillianleab
    I can only speak for myself here, but I'm not defending evolution, I'm defending the scientific method and what belongs in a science class. I don't care if you ever accept evolution as fact, and I don't care if you children and grandchildren and so on never accept it as fact. I just want you and everyone else to recognize what is science and what is not science.

    This is a vitally important point, and one that I wholeheartedly second. The really important question is not about particular historical facts, i.e. "How did life begin on this planet, and how has it changed over time?"

    The real issue is how do you decide whether your explanation for something you observe about the physical world is "good enough", or whether it needs improving. IF you decide it needs improving, the scientific method is the right tool for the job. If not, you don't need it yet. Science education at its best teaches the method, not just the current state of knowledge, which changes daily. For people who are completely satisfied with all their explanations, a career in science is probably not the best choice.
  • May 18, 2008, 01:49 PM
    Galveston1
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by ordinaryguy
    This is a vitally important point, and one that I wholeheartedly second. The really important question is not about particular historical facts, i.e., "How did life begin on this planet, and how has it changed over time?"

    The real issue is how do you decide whether your explanation for something you observe about the physical world is "good enough", or whether it needs improving. IF you decide it needs improving, the scientific method is the right tool for the job. If not, you don't need it yet. Science education at its best teaches the method, not just the current state of knowledge, which changes daily. For people who are completely satisfied with all their explanations, a career in science is probably not the best choice.

    Good! You emphasize "method" and that's fine. Unfortunately, that is NOT what is happening in science classes across this country. Theory is being taught as FACT and is granted priority to the exclusion of anything else.
  • May 18, 2008, 01:56 PM
    Galveston1
    My original point is that intelligent design/creationism is no more religion than is evolution theory.

    As I read the various posts favoring evolution, I see that much is made of the idea that evolution can be proved by scientific research, but the only thing that can be truthfully said is that scientists have been able to modify/alter certain cells. We now have the knowledge to meddle with genomes, but that is only dealing with what is already in existence. Creationism is criticized because it cannot be duplicated in the laboratory, but the fact remains that most of what is believed about evolution cannot be duplicated either.

    Science is observing what is. Scientific theory can be whatever man's mind chooses to believe about the facts observed, and varies from scientist to scientist, and from time to time.

    In a previous post I challenged anyone to make an earthworm. Let's take that to a more basic level. In spite of the billions of dollars and the lifetimes of research, man has never made even a single cell (plant or animal) that can reproduce. What is missing is that factor called life. We all know what it is, and yet we cannot explain or duplicate it. We see life all around us, so it is a scientific observation that life exists. What experiment can science do to duplicate it or even verify it, for that matter? It simply is. Science has absolutely no answer or explanation for it, and yet it would be un-scientific to deny it. It is belief to say that life accidentally happened. Belief is an integral component of religion
  • May 18, 2008, 02:25 PM
    michealb
    Evolution theory is sound and based on fact. Why you can't see that or refuse to accept it, I can't tell you. I do know that regardless of how many times something has been explained the only people that don't understand it are the people with extreme religious bias. That right there has to tell you something. I challenge you to find one person without a religious agenda to say that evolution isn't a sound theory. This is the earth is the center of the universe argument of the 21th centaury. The church will eventually say that evolution is god's plan and everyone will be happy again but until then we have some dark ages to go through hopefully it won't be to long though.

    On your remark about making an earthworm. We aren't there yet, we are still working on making bacteria (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/24/sc...nd-genome.html) but just because we can't do something yet doesn't mean it's impossible.
  • May 18, 2008, 03:25 PM
    jillianleab
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    Theory is being taught as FACT and is granted priority to the exclusion of anything else.

    Oh for cryin' out loud... for the millionth time:

    "As used in science, a theory is an explanation or model based on observation, experimentation, and reasoning, especially one that has been tested and confirmed as a general principle helping to explain and predict natural phenomena.

    Any scientific theory must be based on a careful and rational examination of the facts. A clear distinction needs to be made between facts (things which can be observed and/or measured) and theories (explanations which correlate and interpret the facts.)"

    Definition of Scientific Theory

    There's a cartoon at the top of the page. Maybe it will help you understand.
  • May 19, 2008, 12:55 AM
    templelane
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by michealb
    The church will eventually say that evolution is god's plan and everyone will be happy again


    Funny you should say that but the current Pope and the Vatican already accepts evolution.

    I also understand that most creationists are protestant not Catholic so this information has no bearing.
  • May 19, 2008, 06:35 AM
    inthebox
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by jillianleab
    inthebox the problem with your examples is you are talking about material things. Of course milk cartons with screw caps are intelligence by design, a milk carton is a thing, and it's not a biological or organic thing. Your examples prove nothing for or against evolution or ID.


    Isn't it the purpose of those who deny a creator, to reduce everything to a concrete, provable experiment.

    If that is the case, then using those same material arguments to prove INTELLIGENCE in everything humans DESIGN from pyramids to computer chips is a valid argument.

    It is the purpose of materialism and evolution to prove everything in concrete, provable terms, otherwise they don't believe it. Well look all around and the evidence favors ID.

    And it is science that also provides evidence of a Creator.
    It is science that questions the validity of evolution.

    The secular propaganda that belief and God and scientific endeavor and achievement are mutually exclusive is bovine manure. There is the parable of the talents, God wants us to use our God given abilities, and that does include math, physics, enineering, biology etc.

    From the link:


    "It is a FACT is that fossil skulls have been found that are INTERMEDIATE IN APPEARANCE between humans and modern apes. It is a FACT that fossils have been found that are clearly INTERMEDIATE IN APPEARANCE between dinosaurs and birds.

    Facts MAY be interpreted in DIFFERENT ways by different individuals, but that doesn't change the facts themselves. "

    Does the phrase "intermediate in appearance" PROVE evolution? Is that a scientific method? Do evolutionists allow for a difference of interpretation of the facts? Or are they the only ones claiming that the fossil record, what little there is of it, only proves evolution and are unwilling to acknowledge that those same facts may be interpreted as evidence of a creator who created different things?
  • May 19, 2008, 06:54 AM
    sassyT
    Intelligent design a is more reasonable alternative to the hoax that a big explosion from "no where" magically created birds, trees, flowers, humans etc.
  • May 19, 2008, 07:10 AM
    michealb
    Quote:

    Does the phrase "intermediate in appearance" PROVE evolution? Is that a scientific method? Do evolutionists allow for a difference of interpretation of the facts?
    No, yes, and if they are within reason yes.

    If the only evidence for evolution was the fossil record then you would be on to something but when you combine the fossil records with all of the other evidence you only get one reasonable outcome, evolution.

    Sassyt,

    We are talking about intelligent design and evolution. The big bang theory is a completely different topic and is not taught even in a biology class. I really suggest you speak with your biology professor about these things I'm sure he can set you straight in an afternoon.
  • May 19, 2008, 07:13 AM
    excon
    Hello again, sassy:

    In the olden days, you'd burn people for doing their "magic". I guess some things NEVER change...

    I did, however, think the dark ages were over.

    excon
  • May 19, 2008, 07:37 AM
    sassyT
    [QUOTE]
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by michealb
    No, yes, and if they are within reason yes.

    If the only evidence for evolution was the fossil record then you would be on to something but when you combine the fossil records with all of the other evidence you only get one reasonable outcome, evolution.

    If you are talking about DNA , the question is what does dna say for evolution? Nothing.
    If anything it makes a strong case for an intelligent designer who created a marvelously complex, efficient ‘information system’ for encoding life. Because evolutionist have seen that fossil record does nothing for their theory, they are desperate to find other ways to resuscitate their dying theory.
    Similarly in DNA just shows a common creator. If God created animals,humans and plants that are going to inhabit the same environment, is it not logical that he would create them with similar matter?
    It is not enough to explain how DNA might have gathered into strands by random chance; you must also explain the machinery to interpret DNA. In other words, it’s not enough to explain how random letters could eventually fall into the order S-E-E-T-H-E-D-O-G-B-A-R-K. These letters still don’t mean anything unless you have a pre-existing language system for interpreting those letters! ‘See the dog BARK’ has meaning, but only to a modern English-speaker.

    Quote:

    Sassyt,

    We are talking about intelligent design and evolution. The big bang theory is a completely different topic and is not taught even in a biology class. I really suggest you speak with your biology professor about these things I'm sure he can set you straight in an afternoon
    lol... Evolutionists want to start with a "warm little soup pond" someplace on Earth but before we stand on the bank of a mythical little pond to discuss man's origins, i insist on knowing where you suppose that soup came from. Most evolutionists believe the big bang is what started it all. Where the big bang came from, they don't know. Mmm... Science? :rolleyes:
  • May 19, 2008, 07:38 AM
    sassyT
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by excon
    Hello again, sassy:

    In the olden days, you'd burn people for doing their "magic". I guess some things NEVER change.....

    I did, however, think the dark ages were over.

    excon

    What are you talking about here?
  • May 19, 2008, 07:55 AM
    excon
    Hello again, sassy:

    You use terms like "magic" and "myth" to explain your understanding of science. At one time in history, called the dark ages, Christians burned people who did "magic" (science).
    I hate to tell you this, but those beliefs are out of date - waaaaaay out of date.

    However, given your understanding of science and history, I'm not surprised you turn to the bible.

    excon
  • May 19, 2008, 08:11 AM
    sassyT
    [QUOTE]
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by excon
    Hello again, sassy:

    You use terms like "magic" and "myth" to explain your understanding of science. At one time in history, called the dark ages, Christians burned people who did "magic" (science).

    Hello excon, I hate to be the one to break this to you but the Universe coming into being through a magical explosion that came from "no where" and subsequently created a mythical (vegie) soup where a one cell creature crawled out of it and magically morphed into every living thing we see today, is not science.
  • May 19, 2008, 09:40 AM
    michealb
    Sassy, I suggest you then ignore all of the scientific theories on gravity then because we don't know where gravity come from. In fact ignore all science since we don't have a 100% exact model of how everything came into being and live as people did when the bible was written. No electricity because while we know how electricity is formed we don't know exactly where the original energy for it came from. See how silly that is.

    Also hypothesizes and theories are part of science. The problems that you all seem to be having is understanding what is required for something to be a scientific theory and what that means.

    Sassy are you getting your bio degree at a religious college or a main stream college?
  • May 19, 2008, 10:25 AM
    jillianleab
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by inthebox
    Isn't it the purpose of those who deny a creator, to reduce everything to a concrete, provable experiment.

    I suppose... but shouldn't the experiment be relavent? A milk carton has no will to live, it's a lousy example.

    Quote:

    If that is the case, then using those same material arguments to prove INTELLIGENCE in everything humans DESIGN from pyramids to computer chips is a valid argument.
    I see... so... "Everything we use was created by man. Man is intelligent. Man was created by intelligence" Too bad you're talking about things which aren't alive. So, no, not a valid argument.

    Quote:

    It is the purpose of materialism and evolution to prove everything in concrete, provable terms, otherwise they don't believe it. Well look all around and the evidence favors ID.
    Except your argument doesn't prove anything. I say look around and the evidence favors evolution.

    Quote:

    And it is science that also provides evidence of a Creator.
    It is science that questions the validity of evolution.
    I don't know where science provides evidence of a creator; since science doesn't say, "Woah! This is complex! It must be created by some supernatural, unprovable being!"

    And of course science questions the validity of evolution - it's the job of science to ask questions.

    Quote:

    The secular propaganda that belief and God and scientific endeavor and achievement are mutually exclusive is bovine manure. There is the parable of the talents, God wants us to use our God given abilities, and that does include math, physics, enineering, biology etc.
    I don't know where you get the idea belief in science and belief in god are mutally exclusive... bovine manure indeed. Evolution, the Big Bang Theory, gravity, photosynthesis, etc make no claim for or againat god whatsoever. You can have it both ways.

    Quote:

    From the link:


    "It is a FACT is that fossil skulls have been found that are INTERMEDIATE IN APPEARANCE between humans and modern apes. It is a FACT that fossils have been found that are clearly INTERMEDIATE IN APPEARANCE between dinosaurs and birds.

    Facts MAY be interpreted in DIFFERENT ways by different individuals, but that doesn't change the facts themselves. "

    Does the phrase "intermediate in appearance" PROVE evolution? Is that a scientific method? Do evolutionists allow for a difference of interpretation of the facts? Or are they the only ones claiming that the fossil record, what little there is of it, only proves evolution and are unwilling to acknowledge that those same facts may be interpreted as evidence of a creator who created different things?
    First of all, the quote you've taken is explaining what a "fact" is, it is not claiming those items alone prove evolution. I don't appreciate you taking something from my link and taking it out of context. It's deceptive and rude.

    "Intermediate in appearance" shows there is supporting evidence for evolution. Again, it makes no claim for or against "god". "God" or "creator" is not provable. Ever. Not in a lab. Science can never 100% disprove god. Even if we found every fossil of every species leading through evolution from a single celled organism all the way to me sitting here at my desk today, "god" or "creator" isn't disproven. The literal translation of the bible is, ID is, but "god" or "creator" isn't.

    And anyone is welcome to interpret the facts however they want, but if they want their ideas to be considered by the scientific community, they need to publish them and allow them to be peer reviewed and subjected to scrutiny. ID-ers don't do this. Maybe it's because they know their argument won't hold up to scientific review (because it isn't science), I don't know, but they leave that step out and then demand their "theory" be taught in science classes. Now that's bovine manure!

    PS: The fossil record isn't small.
  • May 19, 2008, 10:29 AM
    achampio21
    Ooh ooh I just wanted to throw this in because my fiancé and I talke about this all the time!!

    Okay... if the "bible" is a "true" story about where everyone came from and how we were all created isn't it kind of strange that "man" wrote the bible and that each "version" of the bible is written and taught however is pleases each "religion". I have come to think of religion and churches kind of like a government. You know the gov has rules. The bible has rules. The gov wants your money. Churches want your money. The gov can violate all of their own rules. Pastors, preachers etc. can break all of their own rules.

    OH and the king james bible says that we were all created from GOD. And that he made Adam and Eve and then they just I guess had a lot of kids. But how did dinosaurs get here, because the bible never talks about them... but science has proved their existence...

    Anyway... just wanted to get that in there. I have been following this hot topic and I am learning a lot. But will admit I am still a little confused..
  • May 19, 2008, 11:24 AM
    ordinaryguy
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by sassyT
    Hello excon, i hate to be the one to break this to you but the Universe coming into being through a magical explosion that came from "no where" and subsequently created a mythical (vegie) soup where a one cell creature crawled out of it and magically morphed into every living thing we see today, is not science.

    No, it is not science, it's your caricature of what you think evolutionary theory says. It shows that you understand neither the theory of cosmogenesis, nor the theory of evolution, nor the science of physics, nor the science of geology, nor the science of biology, nor the role of theory in every kind of science whatsoever.

    If I thought that your description of what science says was at all accurate, I'd reject it too. Rejecting a wild concoction of misconceptions is a great first step. The next step whould be to get to work on correcting those misconceptions.
  • May 19, 2008, 12:22 PM
    sassyT
    [QUOTE]
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by ordinaryguy
    No, it is not science, it's your caricature of what you think evolutionary theory says.

    Precisely.. :D

    Quote:

    It shows that you understand neither the theory of cosmogenesis, nor the theory of evolution, nor the science of physics, nor the science of geology, nor the science of biology, nor the role of theory in every kind of science whatsoever.
    The big bang theory is not science niether is the theory that all living things evolved from a one cell creature that crawled out of a soup. You don't need to have an education past third grade to know that human and fruit flies sharing a common ancestor is a fairy tale.

    Quote:

    If I thought that your description of what science says was at all accurate, I'd reject it too. Rejecting a wild concoction of misconceptions is a great first step. The next step whould be to get to work on correcting those misconceptions
    Its not science though... lol
  • May 19, 2008, 01:25 PM
    sassyT
    [QUOTE]
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by achampio21

    OH and the king james bible says that we were all created from GOD. And that he made Adam and Eve and then they just I guess had a lot of kids. But how did dinosaurs get here, because the bible never talks about them... but science has proved their existence...

    The bible does talk about Dinosaurs. God created Dinosaurs.

    Job 40:15-24 describes a large animal that resembles what would be a dinosaur like a Brachiosaurus

    Job chapter 41, Psalm 104:25,26 and Isaiah 27:1 all describe a large sea animal that does not resemble any animal we know today. Its description fits that of a dinosaur.
  • May 19, 2008, 04:41 PM
    ordinaryguy
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by sassyT
    The big bang theory is not science niether is the theory that all living things evolved from a one cell creature that crawled out of a soup. you dont need to have an education past third grade to know that human and fruit flies sharing a common ancestor is a fairy tale.

    Its not science though...lol

    You are clearly not qualified to judge what is, and what is not science.
  • May 19, 2008, 05:37 PM
    Galveston1
    Let's see if I can get all of this information straight.

    Most of you die hard evolutionists have been forced to admit to the possibility of a god. It's just you believe that he used evolution to accomplish the job.

    You don't want him mentioned in the classroom, ANY classroom.

    In spite of your claims of observing facts, you observe the fact of LIFE but refuse to pursue any investigation that might support the claim of a creator. Why is that? Isn't that just a tad intellectually dishonest?

    You obviously believe in evolution, then deny that you have any beliefs, or at least some of you do.

    I offered examples of scientific statements from Genesis, but it did not impress anyone. Why not?

    My conclusion? If you accept the idea that there is a creator, then you must somehow make some effort to know about him, and that scares you. If that were not so, you would not mind teaching id/creationism as a counterpoint theory to evolution. Sure, call it theory. That would be better for the students than censorship of anything that might contradict evolution.
  • May 19, 2008, 07:44 PM
    ordinaryguy
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    Let's see if I can get all of this information straight.

    Nope, not even close.
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    Most of you die hard evolutionists have been forced to admit to the possibility of a god. It's just you believe that he used evolution to accomplish the job.

    Whether there is or isn't a god has no particular bearing on the study of how life works. The evidence that life has existed on this planet for a very long time, and that simple life forms have been here much longer than more complex forms is incontrovertible and overwhelming. Evolutionary theory is a tool that biologists use to develop and improve their explanations of how living things change in response to the changes in their environment. It's not an article of religious faith or a tenet of religious belief. Whether God "used evolution" is a religious and theological question, not a scientific one.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    You don't want him mentioned in the classroom, ANY classroom.

    It's OK in religion or philosophy classrooms, it just isn't science.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    In spite of your claims of observing facts, you observe the fact of LIFE but refuse to pursue any investigation that might support the claim of a creator. Why is that?

    Biologists don't "refuse to pursue" such investigations, they just aren't interested because "the claim of a creator" is a religious question, not a scientific one, and it doesn't lead to any testable hypotheses. If you can design an experiment that uses the scientific method to test the hypothesis that there is a creator, by all means, carry it out and publish the result.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    You obviously believe in evolution, then deny that you have any beliefs, or at least some of you do.

    Again, evolutionary theory is not "something to believe in", it is just a tool scientists use, because it works for the task at hand--figuring out how living things interact and change over time.
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    I offered examples of scientific statements from Genesis, but it did not impress anyone. Why not?

    Because the Bible is a religious book, not a science text. The fact that it contains some statements about the physical world that have been demonstrated scientifically does not turn it into a science book.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    My conclusion? If you accept the idea that there is a creator, then you must somehow make some effort to know about him, and that scares you.

    No, it's not the least bit scary. The effort to know about god is a spiritual quest, not a scientific study.
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    If that were not so, you would not mind teaching id/creationism as a counterpoint theory to evolution.

    As jillianleab has explained many times, the problem is that creationism is religion, not science, and therefore does not belong in a scientific curriculum.
  • May 19, 2008, 07:44 PM
    michealb
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Galveston1
    Let's see if I can get all of this information straight.

    Good idea lets see what you have.
    Quote:

    Most of you die hard evolutionists have been forced to admit to the possibility of a god. It's just you believe that he used evolution to accomplish the job.
    Yes, most athiests admit that there could be a god, we just find that without evidence it's highly unlikely. What has been said in this thread is that evolution doesn't mean you have to be an atheist too. It's not athiests saying we believe that god used evolution to make man.

    Quote:

    You don't want him mentioned in the classroom, ANY classroom.
    We don't want him mentioned in a science class and we think it's a good idea that everyone teach their own religion in their own time. Instead of using government funds to sponsor a state religion.

    Quote:

    In spite of your claims of observing facts, you observe the fact of LIFE but refuse to pursue any investigation that might support the claim of a creator. Why is that? Isn't that just a tad intellectually dishonest?
    Science has been looking for god since the beginning. Science hasn't found him yet. If you have an experiment that proves god get it peer reviewed so we all can do it.

    Quote:

    You obviously believe in evolution, then deny that you have any beliefs, or at least some of you do.
    Regarding something as true because it fits facts and experiments is different than a religious belief because if there was any evidence that disproved evolution it would be abandoned.
    Quote:

    I offered examples of scientific statements from Genesis, but it did not impress anyone. Why not?
    I think Jillian has already said why this isn't impressive.

    Quote:

    My conclusion? If you accept the idea that there is a creator, then you must somehow make some effort to know about him, and that scares you. If that were not so, you would not mind teaching id/creationism as a counterpoint theory to evolution. Sure, call it theory. That would be better for the students than censorship of anything that might contradict evolution.
    You seem to have twisted everything everyone said in this thread to fit your own sense of what it's going on. I suggest you reread what is being said because you completely missed what was said.

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