busterdog
Senior Veteran
in all of these discussions on origins it would be wise to examine the source from which evolution spawned. now i titled this with darwin's name as it will be the starting point as most people refer to him and not any one else as the founder of the evolution 'movement'.
here are a couple quotes from darwin's own words to get this discussion rolling. taken from:
http://www.update.uu.se/~fbendz/library/cd_relig.htm
**note, that this quote contains the words quoted to me by a TE in hopes of confusing the religious origin of evolution. notice that it does not refer to God as being believed but argued against and does not support the contention that Darwin based his theory in God or was led by God to produce this line of thinking.
that should be enough to get started after discussing darwin's beliefs, we can go on to wallace's, lyell's, and others if you are not convinced that evolution is not of God by that time.
One cannot prove Darwin wrong by such methods, at least as far as natural selection is concerned.
But, it obviously is quite relevant that the man completely disses God's design. It means he has missed the ulitmate truth. That being said, it does seem to a number of folks here that some truths are so "ultimate" that they have no relevance to what is done in the laboratory. I understand that pushing the point can indeed prove too much, for some people. The guy fixes my car doesn't need to know God (most of the time). But, it helps.
So, the story goes, that there is enough laboratory evidence that what Darwin thinks is irrelvant.
Then we get to the question of whether there are underlying assumptions in said laboratory about ultimate issues. Extrapolating backwards thousands or billions of years, I say obviously we do and this is the nature of the origins question. That is where we become divided. Darwin tried to answer that question and failed. But, if we do take the YEC view of those underlying assumptions, we ask, isn't it rather important to have comprehension of what THE ultimate issues is, ie, who God is?
If anyone finds this post provocative or interesting enough to respond, I am quite mindful of well traveled ground and the apparent dividing line that I tried to describe. I don't know that we need to reiterate those points and I will avoid doing so.
Mr. Arch, I rather like this knotty question you have put before us.
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