Shhh, your logic might scare away the deniers. God put those fossils here to test our faith!
Not sure how an extict species of man first discovered in the Neander valley should be relevent to a persons faith .
Shhh, your logic might scare away the deniers. God put those fossils here to test our faith!
Not sure how an extict species of man first discovered in the Neander valley should be relevent to a persons faith .
Actually, all of the physicians at my church reject evolution and embrace creationism. According to them, evolution is useless in their specialized fields of medicine. So they don't need to "consult a textbook" on evolution to be successful physicians.
Like most people, you fail to understand how both creationism and evolution are religious or philosophical ways of interpreting natural data. The controversy is not "Evolution vs. Religion"; it is "Religion (Evolution) vs. Religion (Creationism)." When you say, "Don't bring your fundamentalist crap into the classroom," you've obviously forgotten that "fundamentalist crap" is being taught in the classrooms already, whether it's secular or sacred in nature. The fact that you're a scientist but fail to comprehend such realities is very sad indeed.
I was poking fun. Creationists like to say that god put things here that prove evolution because he is testing us.
Evolution, by definition, is not religion.
You fail once again.
Neither is Creationism.
Edit:
I should go on to say.... Evolutionism is a belief system held primarily by the Secular Humanist fundamentalist, while Creationism is a belief system held primarily by the Christian fundamentalist.
Evolutionism?
Grasping at straws here... science isn't a "belief". Be definition. If you disagree with dictionaries, that's fine. But please be aware of your mistakes. Creationism and Evolution are not opposing sides of one issue with equally valid points; creationism is myth and fable, and evolution is fact.
And evolution has nothing to do with the creation of life. Nothing.
What about all the skeletons of Neanderthals, Homo Habilis, Homo Erectus, Austrilopithecus, etc?
You are not grasping the order of magnitude - the odds of winning the Powerball twice is 1 in 21,316,000,000,000,000 or already in the quadrillions. Never mind the odds of once every 10 years for 500 years.
Neither is Creationism.
Edit:
I should go on to say.... Evolutionism is a belief system held primarily by the Secular Humanist fundamentalist, while Creationism is a belief system held primarily by the Christian fundamentalist.
I agree with Ron Paul on the idea that religion and evolution do not have to be mutually exclusive.
As per the debate between evolution and creationism, however... evolution is backed by both empirical and apriori evidence.... creationism itself is not backed by neither any empirical nor apriori evidence.
Of course, as with *all* science (including physics, etc), it is never *proven* to be fact. Through empirical study, this is impossible. With science, empirical evidence, and the scientific method - thigns can only be *disproven*, never actually *proven*. That being said, when you're left between two mutually exclusive choices - such as creationism vs evolution... you choose which one makes the most *logical* and/ore *empirical* sense.
Hint: Creationism is neither. creationism is *pure* dogma.
And dogma is not only intellectually lazy, but also DANGEROUS.
You can argue that both are belief systems, but that’s not really the point. The point is which belief system is more valid.
I will admit, that in the practical sense, evolution is not as useful as a lot of other things. However it is CRITICAL in areas of science such as:
1. study and cure of viruses and bacteria.
2. computer programming
3. management of endangered species and wildlife preservation.
I agree with Ron Paul on the idea that religion and evolution do not have to be mutually exclusive.
Never forget that what a person considers to be valid will be a reflection of his own worldview
I would add that creationism makes more sense because, as rational human beings, we reason that when we observe a complex entity in the world, like a computer motherboard or a skyscraper, that it had to have come from a more complex entity.
Originally Posted by sofia
......I have yet to see any evidence of an amoeba turning into a fish...turning into an ape...turning into a human. Evolution theory has as many holes in it as Global Warming
You would only have to win the life lottery once, because life by its nature reproduces. Lotteries sadly don't reproduce. It doesn't have to be sexual reproduction. A simple division would suffice.
That's not all of what he said on evolution.
YouTube - Ron Paul: Revolution minus Evolution is Just R(etarded)
Further here:
With regard to evolution, I mean… I just don’t spend a whole lot of time on this, especially in politics. “Do you believe in evolution or don’t you believe in evolution? Yes or no? And then we’ll decide whether you should be President or not.”
You know it is a theory, nobody has concrete proof of any of this. But quite frankly I think it’s sort of irrelevant, that because we don’t know the exact details and we don’t have geologic support for evolutionary forms, it is a theory, even though it’s a pretty logical theory. But my concept of understanding of a creator is not related one bit to whether or not I or anybody has to believe in evolution or not believe in evolution.
The idea that if you don’t [?] believe in evolution means that you don’t believe in a creator is total nonsense. So I think this once again is overly played and we spend too much time on it. And besides, if you’re in politics it shouldn’t be a bother. This is something maybe not dealing with science as much with your own spiritual life, your personal beliefs. The important thing is that you have a political system where you can debate this and make a decision and government rule shouldn’t be based on this. If you have governments basing their rules on this, then it becomes very important. But in a libertarian society these beliefs aren’t nearly as critical.
That's where I am. I see gaping holes in evolution as a theory. If others want to accept it, fine. I don't see why it should be a big deal. I totally agree with microevolution (the kind that's actually observable) and it fits in with my idea of a creator smart enough to make things with the ability to adapt.
Missed the point of the explanation - the the total odds are the order of magnitude I described. In every generation of humans, there are millions of DNA mutations from one generation to the next. This is the basis of the accuracy of DNA testing - that no two individuals can have the same DNA (not even "identical" twins). In almost all cases, these millions of mutations have no impact on the health of the individual, but some mutations and combination of mutations do. Thus, the individuals, develop certain medical conditions, which limit the ability to reproduce.
There are some combinations of mutations that prevent reproduction (which is an evolutionary imperative. Therefore, the number and order of mutations matter, as evolution requires the ability to reproduce.
DNA based reasoning leads to some interesting conclusions - for instance at observed rate of change in humans, it would take 40 to 50 million years to change out 2% of our DNA - yet evolution theory is based on human evolution starting some 5 million years ago - otherwise, you don't have a common ancestor, upon which evolution theory is based.