"evolution" is a faith. the chances of it happening are impossible. the proof? since the character limit doesn't allow me to copy and paste the whole thing,
on mathematics of evolution .com on chapter 15 and icr.org article entitled, The Mathematical Impossibility Of Evolution
The mathematical argument used there boils down to "the odds of genes being formed are the same as the works of Shakespeare being formed by a random letter generator - virtually impossible". The premise of the argument is false, so the conclusion is unsound.
The Universe has a beginning(most scientist agree), it is not infinite thus logically something must of brought it into existence that has always existed and is uncaused. logically that first uncaused cause is, God.
1) There is no evidence the universe had a beginning. If you disagree, cite your evidence.
2) There is no evidence the universe is not infinite. If you disagree, cite your evidence.
3) Even if the universe had a beginning and isn't infinite, that doesn't mean that, logically, something must have brought it into existence.
4) Even if something brought it into existence, that doesn't mean that something had to be either a) eternal, or b) uncaused.
5) Even if there was something eternal and uncaused which created the universe, that doesn't mean it was a deity.
6) Even if the universe had such a cause, and that cause was a deity, that doesn't mean if was the God of Christianity - it could be any of the other thousands of deities humanity has invented, or it could be a deity that has had no interaction with humans.
Those are your six core assumptions, none of which are supported by a shred of evidence. If you disagree, please, by all means, cite your evidence.
Because again, no random act could've created this earth, has to be something intelligent. thus that first uncaused cause is intelligent, thus it is God.
I don't think you know what 'thus' means. Anyway, you've yet to demonstrate that the Earth could not have formed by natural processes. There is a strong body of evidence that demonstrates beyond all reasonable doubt that the Earth formed by the accretion of an interstellar dust cloud, the remnant of a star that had gone supernova. This is evident in, for example, the abundance and distribution of elements in the Earth and the solar system.
Because again, no random act could've created this earth, has to be something intelligent. thus that first uncaused cause is intelligent, thus it is God. saying that it would happen randomly and accidentally for the sake of it would reply on faith not fact. it is a fact that this earth has intelligent design, and since it has that, logically it must have an intelligent designer, God. to say otherwise would rely on mere faith, that's why "atheism" is nothing but a faith. when it is logically and mathematically impossible for "evolution" to have occurred, and you say otherwise, then that is just relying on faith and not fact.
First, you've yet to provide any substance to your continual claim that evolution is mathematically impossible - even the article you cite doesn't say it's mathematically
impossible, only
improbable.
Second, even if both the cosmological
and teleological arguments worked (hint: they don't), there's nothing to suggest that the first cause and the designer are, in fact, a single deity. It could be, for instance, that any intelligent design on Earth is from an alien intelligence that developed, by wholly natural processes, elsewhere in the universe. That is as plausible as your "Goddidit" scenario.
Third, the teleological argument
doesn't work. You might have been suckered in by televangelists talking about fine tuning, how if the Earth were a gnat's hair closer to or further from the Sun we'd boil or freeze, etc. Not only are they simply not true, the Anthropic Principle easily rebuts any notion that the Earth, with its particular properties, was designed by God. Unless you can find a manufacturer's logo on the bottom of Thailand, the fact that, say, the specificity of oxygen is 'just right' for life means squat.
So you admit God's existence is possible.
Of course I do, I'd be a fool if I didn't. But let's not go into the tired old argument of, "Oh, you're an atheist, therefore you say there is no God! That's faith".
face it, only one and one way only that all those logically and mathematically impossibilities(as explained above) would have occurred is if God made it happen, that is the only way "evolution" can be logical. So again, either God made the earth the way he did in the bible(which is the most logical and possible) or he guided the evolution.(the only logical way evolution happened is with God)
That is why I am a Young Earth Creationist, God creating the earth the way he says in The Bible makes the most logical, possible and scientific sense.
Fantastic, on top of your previous six core falsehoods, you've now made a seventh:
7) Even if the universe had a cause, and that cause was a god, and that god is the Christian God, that doesn't mean the Bible is literally true.
No, irreducible complexity shows all or nothing. an accident statistically cannot make something so complex and this is common sense.
"evolution" is like saying a pencil can magically scribble itself on a paper until it forms a proper sentence, that would never happen.
No, it isn't. If you think it is, then you don't understand what evolution is. It would be more accurate to say that evolution is like a pencil writing 43 random letters on a line, then repeating that series of letters onto the next line, with some minor mistakes. Any letters that happen to be in the right place for "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog", those letters are 'locked'. After only a few 'generations', this system of reproduction and imperfect inheritance with an external selection process, will create, from randomly generated letters, a coherent sentence.
Naturally this is not perfectly analogous to evolution, but it's better than yours, and better than "tornado through a junk yard", or any of the others that Creationists have come up with.
The core principle Creationists don't seem to grasp is that of natural selection: random variation becomes a powerful tool for creative change when there is a selection process preferentially picking beneficial traits over detrimental ones.
Me sacrificing myself for a loved one, for love doesn't have anything at all to do with survival of fittest. that would actually be the complete opposite, in no way would that keep us surviving. to deny that we all have obligated objective morals and love that we live by and to say that they evolved from "survival of the fittest" when they in no way help us survive is illogical and relies wholly on faith.
*sigh* How about this: instead of leaping to the conclusion, you just ask a question. Makes for a better discussion; you come off as a frantic terrier.
Anyway, ignoring the hysteria, the core question of this paragraph is, "How can altruism evolve, if it actively encourages individuals to kill themselves?" And that's a good question. The answer is that the difficulty lies in an overly literal idea of "survival of the fittest", and how evolution works. Evolution works by the propagation of
genes. Ensuring the host's survival will improve its odds of reproducing, which of course ensure the propagation of the host's genes.
However, reproduction is not the only way genes can survive into the next generation. To a large extent, your genes also exist in your siblings - unique mutations that arose in your parents survive in
all siblings. Thus, one sibling who sacrifices himself to ensure the survival of his brothers, sisters, nieces, and nephews, is
indirectly ensuring the survival of
his genes - because his genes also exist in his close kin.
Now, what does this have to do with the evolution of altruism? Well, your objection is that such a trait would go against evolution, but as you can see evolution works through the propagation of
genes, which doesn't always need the direct reproduction of the host.
In general, altruism evolves through a process called
kin selection, which is a form of selection whereby traits are selected that benefit a social species, a species where organisms are living close together and their neighbours are their kin - so saving a random baby will most likely have a close relation to you, thus helping your own genome.
This manifests in a general, instinctive urge that it is 'right' that we help our fellow man, even if it harms or even kills us. It's a trait that evolved because it made our ancestors better at living together in a society, and it evolved because our neighbours are genetically similar to us.
see this is where you rely on faith to imply that the reason rape is wrong is because it "destroys parent bond" , that is not why it is wrong and you know it. I assume you have morals, so i ask you, do you feel rape is wrong? and if you do(hopefully you do because it is wrong) why is it wrong to you? if you think morals aren't objective and that nothing matters, what prevents you from not breaking morals?
What prevents me from breaking my morals? Simple:
my morals. That's what they are. Everyone has their own instinctive senses of these nebulous concepts of what's 'right' and what's 'wrong', and these can be tempered or exaggerated through culture.
As I said, the core reason we feel rape is wrong is because we have an evolved instinct. The cause of that instinct I've already explained.
If you say you think rape is wrong because of "evolution" and "destroys parent bonds" then I would be really shocked. I'm sure you know better than that, I'm sure you know rape is wrong because it's sickening, abuse, traumatizing, and just pure evil.
Naturally, and I would agree with you, but why do you think you feel it's sickening, abusive, traumatising, and pure evil? The answer is that we have evolved that way.
If someone were to rape a loved one, I would get sad because the person I love was violated, hurt, abused, and I wouldn't want to see anyone suffer that. not because it "decreases parent bond" or because society says so but because plain and simple, it is sick. no way anyone can defend rape and murder unless they are twisted.
And no one's trying to defend rape. I'll thank you not to accuse me of something so wicked.
How? that's actually true. as explained, "evolution" doesn't explain morals. the facts are morals go beyond us, we don't control them. if I felt regret for doing something wrong, "evolution" would not, and could not explain it. the fact would be, I feel bad for doing something wrong because I knew it was wrong, you rely on faith, that takes all logic out the window, that "evolution" would explain morals when it simple cannot.
Your only objection to an evolutionary explanation for our sense of morals is that you 'feel' it's wrong, you just 'knew' it was wrong. In other words, you have an instinctive reaction.
Sorry but "evolution" doesn't have any logical explanation on morality, none. doesn't explain where morals come from, doesn't explain why there are objective morals. they only assume that morals aren't objective or created for survival (which they are not as I explained)
You've yet to explain why morals are objective - your only objection is that... well, you don't like the alternative.