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What I'm saying is that science "CANNOT" determine to a high degree of accuracy, as it can with the studies of many inanimate materials, if God worked thru life evolving from the first created life form to the various species we can study in the fossil records, or if God created fully formed plant and animal species every step of the way.
We can only study animate life as it exists today, and determine to a high degree of accuracy how plant, animal, and human life works today.
Science cannot determine to a high degree of accuracy how animate life came to be or if it evolved by studying the fossil records.
Do creatures change over time? They certainly do! Just look at how humans have changed since Noah's family. But we are all still humans with a soul and spirit. I don't see any evidence that humans are somehow evolving into a new species, except the "new creation man" created in the Lord Jesus Christ.
So you know for a certainty that God's created life that shown up in the fossil records evolved through various stages,
that God did not create fully formed species every step of the way,
and that science has proven this to you to a high degree of accuracy!!!
I may not be able to see UV light with my naked eye, but that doesn't mean I reject the existence of UV light. Similarly, science may not be able to detect the influence of the supernatural, but it doesn't deny the existence of the supernatural.
Yes, reject as an explanation. That is not the same as rejecting the supernatural per se. It is just to say that science does not/cannot consider supernatural claims.
Anything science deals with has to be from the perspective of 'God did not do it'.
Your problem here is that you're conflating agency and mechanism. Science works from the standpoint of there being no miracles (mechanism) rather than no God (agency). Christians are perfectly happy to accept that God works through both natural and miraculous means, therefore excluding the latter from science does not do away with God.It denies the existence as an explanation. If Bobblelight is some undetectable form of negative energy, science does not say it doesn't exist, but it does say that it can not the explanation for any thing. In other words, science does not say 'God does not exist' (which would require God to be testable to say), it says 'God cannot be an explanation', which is the same as saying 'all our explanations with be from the standpoint of no God'.
How do you think science could falsify this idea? What predictions does this scenario make that we could test empirically?It seems that I am the only Christian at this forum that believes God "instantly created" fully-formed "after their own kind" plant and animal species that show up in the fossil records, that God did this by the power of His word at the appropriate time, that God reveals this manner of creation in His Word, and that science cannot prove otherwise that this is not the manner in which God created all life on earth that has existed since God first began to place life on earth.
Your problem here is that you're conflating agency and mechanism. Science works from the standpoint of there being no miracles (mechanism) rather than no God (agency). Christians are perfectly happy to accept that God works through both natural and miraculous means, therefore excluding the latter from science does not do away with God.
I have a feeling we largely agree and are simply arguing semantics at this point.No, you are confusing rejecting agency and mechanism as an explanation with saying that agency does not exist. God working though natural means, is to science, supernatural, as the being of God is supernatural. In other words, saying "God guided evolution" is not scientific, as that is a supernatural explanation.
Science rejects all supernatural mechanism, and thus by default, rejects all supernatural agencies.
I had that feeling since your second post, but I wasn't entirely sure.I have a feeling we largely agree and are simply arguing semantics at this point.
Science goes "We will assume God (or Buddha, or Visha, or Shiva, or Chutullu, ect.) did not guide evolution." Why? Because any of them guiding evolution is supernatural, and science starts off by assuming no supernatural. The fact I can be a theistic evolutionist is because I go "Nice assumption, and it is required for empherical truths, but I myself am not making such an assumption". Do most other TE's do that or not, I haven't a clue.I agree that "God guided evolution" is not scientific. But the corollary that "God didn't guide evolution" is also not scientific.
Whether or not God exists cannot be examined by science, and therefore any statement about the in/existence of God is a metaphysical statement. Science simply tells us how things happen, not whether anyone is behind those things or whether any meaning should be attached to them.
Science goes "We will assume God (or Buddha, or Visha, or Shiva, or Chutullu, ect.) did not guide evolution." Why? Because any of them guiding evolution is supernatural, and science starts off by assuming no supernatural. The fact I can be a theistic evolutionist is because I go "Nice assumption, and it is required for empherical truths, but I myself am not making such an assumption". Do most other TE's do that or not, I haven't a clue.
I disagree. Science doesn't even have the concepts of natural and supernatural. All science knows about are patterns in physical phenomena, patterns which it attempts to explain by building models. To the extent that "supernatural" means anything, it refers to an event that does not follow the normal patterns that science observes. Theistic evolution, on the other hand, is often not about failure of biology to follow natural patterns; rather, it is an assertion that there is a personal agent behind the patterns. Thus, science does not rejection the assertion of theism; it just has nothing at all to say about it.Science goes "We will assume God (or Buddha, or Visha, or Shiva, or Chutullu, ect.) did not guide evolution." Why? Because any of them guiding evolution is supernatural, and science starts off by assuming no supernatural.
It seems that I am the only Christian at this forum that believes God "instantly created" fully-formed "after their own kind" plant and animal species that show up in the fossil records, that God did this by the power of His word at the appropriate time, that God reveals this manner of creation in His Word, and that science cannot prove otherwise that this is not the manner in which God created all life on earth that has existed since God first began to place life on earth.
It seems all other Christians at this forum believe that God worked thru evolution as He created plant and animal life species, that "science proves" this to a high degree of accuracy that God created all life in this manner, and that humans eventually evolved from primates.
Now I finally get it!!! Thanks for the so-called science lesson. When we stand before our Creator in the resurrection, there will be no question as to God's how.
Blessings
I don't have a problem with those who want to believe that all life and our existance came about thru something called "theistic evolution."It's called "Theistic Evolution." perhaps you should look at the title of the thread?
Glad you learned something... For your next lesson, maybe you'll figure out that when we stand before our Creator in the resurrection, He's not going to give us a pop quiz on science.
No, you are confusing rejecting agency and mechanism as an explanation with saying that agency does not exist. God working though natural means, is to science, supernatural, as the being of God is supernatural. In other words, saying "God guided evolution" is not scientific, as that is a supernatural explanation.
Science rejects all supernatural mechanism, and thus by default, rejects all supernatural agencies.
I don't have a problem with those who want to believe that all life and our existance came about thru something called "theistic evolution."
I do have a problem with a so-called science that says there's scientific proof to a high degree of accuracy that all life and our existance actually came about thru theistic or any other kind of evolution.
I fully recognize that evolutionists will never give an inch on this point, even those who believe in something called "theistic evolution."
You are right, science does not go 'we will assume no guiding intelligence in the case of evolution'. Instead, it goes 'Axiom: All explanations worthy of being considered are natural.' That is to say, it assumes the above in the case of all science.Except it doesn't say that. Evolution goes... 'hrm, let's figure out the mechanisms behind how evolution works.' It doesn't say "we're going to assume some intelligent agency is not guiding the mechanisms", just as it doesn't say "we're going to assume some intelligent agency IS guiding the mechanisms." It says nothing either way. A lack of a position is not a negative position.
Can it say 'and God was the force behind it'? No, it cannot. No empirical evidence can ever lead to that conclusion unless God is empirical.All it says is "here are the mechanisms that make it work and why they work in making it work, and the evidence that supports it."
Because no position is a default position against the existence there of.Why is the utter lack of a position so hard for people to wrap their head around?