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The best evidence for Creationism

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driewerf

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Your long rant is wrong from the very first sentence.

"evolution" is a faith.
Evolution is not a "faith". It hasn't one single feature of a faith

  • it has no "holy book", like the quran, the bible or the torah. It certainly has important books, like "The Origin", but that is not considered holy or infallible or innerrant.
  • It has no ritual of admission: no baptism, no circumcission etc
  • it allows to worhsip god, gods or none. Contrary to other religions, who all have commandements to worship no god but its own (allah for the islam, jahweh for judaism, god for christianity) evolutionists can prefectly accept the ToE and be a christian, muslim, jew, hindu etc
  • It hasn't any rule on sexual morals, you are free to have sex before marriage, or to wait. To engage in straight or gay sex.
  • It hasn't any rules on food: no things like hallal food (like in islam) or koosher (like in judaism)
  • it doesn't offer salvation and/or dalnation in the afterlife. Contrary to christianity, islam and judaism, to be a "herretic" doesn't condemn you to hell, to be faithful isn't rewarded with heaven.

the chances of it happening are impossible. the proof? since the character limit doesn't allow me to copy and paste the whole thing,
wrong again.
Evolution doesn't happen by chance. Natural selection is just the opposite of random chance.

The Universe has a beginning(most scientist agree), it is not infinite thus logically something must of brought it into existence
Exactly. Something.

that has always existed and is uncaused.
Not necesseraly. But I think this is more Wiccan Child's realm.
Wiccan, if you read this: I would be very happy if you enlighten me on this subject. I garantee you a minimal audience of one.


logically that first uncaused cause is, God.
Wrong. You just jumped without any justification from something (undefined) to god (which most people will indicate as some one). If it is "logically" god, then I want to see the logic behind this.

Because again, no random act could've created this earth,
correct.
has to be something intelligent. thus that first uncaused cause is intelligent, thus it is God.
Wrong. You seem to equate non randomnees with intelligence, while there no reason to do this. To give one example: snowflakes are the very opposite of randomness yet their growth is not dictated by any intelligence. It is just the pattern of (partial) electrical charges in the watermolecules that pushes the water molecules in a ordered pattern


Whereas God is logically and substantially possible.
He might be possible, but not everything possible is.

The evidence leads to a creator, God.
Really? Then show that evidence.



That's is enough for now.
 
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Wiccan_Child

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Not necesseraly. But I think this is more Wiccan Child's realm.
Wiccan, if you read this: I would be very happy if you enlighten me on this subject. I garantee you a minimal audience of one.
Hallo!

You're quite right that he's wrong to say a finite universe with a beginning must have an eternal and uncaused cause, let alone identify that cause as God.

Must the being have been eternal? Nope: even if his logic help up, the first uncaused cause needn't be something that persists forever - it could be a one-time thing. A primordial 'spark' would fulfil the role just as easily as an eternal deity. There's no reason why the cause needs to stick around - except, of course, because his religious beliefs require it.
 
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If it is impossible to to be an atheist, why do you have to immediately say you are a Christian, and therefore demonstrate you believe in a God?

If you have to define yourself as something that is not an atheist, it is clearly the case that you admit to yourself that atheism is entirely possible, because you feel the need to justify your own position against a position you claim doesn't exist.

Nope, that is a wrong assumption. since God exist it is to show that I know the True God and not any false gods. "atheism" isn't possible. when I say I am a Christian it is to clarify that I put my Trust, am Saved by, and Know the Correct, The Real, The One and Only True God, which is The Father, The Son, and The Holy Spirit.


Incidentally, why do you need evidence for your faith? If you need evidence, then your faith is weak. Did you not read the story of Thomas?

Another false assumption.
I've been Saved, Trusting, and Knowing God even before I learned the scientific and logical evidence, that's why I wrote personal experience before anything else. I put trust in The True Word Of God before I even learned the rest of the evidence, the evidence just further built my relationship and trust with The Lord.

Also since atheism is simply the lack of belief in a God, how is that impossible? I lack belief in Bigfoot. Is that impossible? It's easy to lack belief in something for which there is no evidence.

There is evidence for God, it is only that you choose to ignore it. when you choose to ignore the evidence that God exist, it is either you don't want it to be true or you're deluded.

now onto your "lack of belief"

from CARM.org
by Matt Slick

The statement "I lack belief in a god" is a common position of atheists. In discussions with them, they tell me they lack belief in God the way they lack belief in invisible pink unicorns. In other words, they have no position, take no intellectual action, and have no belief or unbelief on the matter concerning God. To them it is a non-issue. Though this may sound sensible to some, the problem is that once you are introduced to an idea, you cannot stay neutral about it. You invariably make a judgment about an idea once it has been introduced to you. You can brush it off as ridiculous, ponder its possibility, accept it, reject it, or do something in between. But you cannot return to a lack of belief position, if lack of belief is defined as a non-intellectual commitment or non-action concerning belief. Though I admit that an atheist can claim he lacks belief even after being exposed to an idea and contemplating its rationality, I still assert that a position of some sort is required.

Let's pick a baby that has no awareness of the concept of invisible pink unicorns. Later in life, when the baby is mature and is introduced to the concept, he either accepts the existence of invisible pink unicorns, rejects them as a ridiculous notion, chuckles about it and dismisses it, becomes unsure about them, holds off judgment until later, etc. Either way, he develops a position on the concept of invisible pink unicorns. He has to do something with the concept once he's been exposed to it. He doesn't continue in a lack-of-belief or lack-of-awareness state of mind because the fact is, some sort of intellectual action must occur regarding it. He cannot become unaffected by the concept.

Nevertheless, some might say that to hold off judgment until later is to be "atheistic" concerning pink unicorns, and therefore support the atheist position of "lack of belief." But as I said earlier, after being exposed to a concept, a decision is made about that concept even if it is to withhold judgment. In other words, a position is taken. This is not the same as going back to a state of unawareness. To suspend belief on a subject is to hold off judgment until more information is acquired. This is agnosticism, not atheism. It is an admission that not all information is acquired, thus logically requiring the possibility of the existence of the thing being considered. This is something atheists do not do by definition; rather, agnostics do this. Agnosticism is the position, in part, that "suspension of belief" is maintained until further information is acquired.

If I said there was an ice cream factory on Jupiter, what would you think? Would you entertain the idea as a serious possibility? Would you quickly dismiss it as an outlandish absurdity? Would you request evidence for it? Or, did you suddenly have a desire to go to Jupiter for some Jupiterian Swirl? Of course, an ice-cream factory on Jupiter is ridiculous, and we automatically know this so we naturally make a judgment on it. Thus, we cannot remain in a state of lack of belief concerning the concept once we've been introduced to it. We assign it to the that-is-ridiculous category.

This is why the "lack of belief" defense we hear from atheists is not logical. It ignores the reality that people categorize concepts anywhere in the range of total acceptance to total rejection. It is our nature to do this. We don't do nothing with information.

Is my cat an atheist?

Animals lack belief in God. Are they atheistic? Should we include atheists, infants, plants, rocks, water, and air in the category of atheism since they too lack belief in God? Of course not.

I had a cat named Punchface (it's a long story). Punchface was a beautiful cat with long white hair and powder blue eyes. He was very smart, even brilliant. He could play tag, fetch, hide and seek, catch mice with Olympian skill, and enjoy an evening watching Star Trek with me. I would completely defend the fact that he had quite a personality. As brilliant as my cat was, he lacked belief in God. I could have sat him down, looked him in the eye and said, "Punch, there is something I have to talk to you about. It's God. You see, God is the being that created the universe and everything in it, including you and me." Of course, after I would say this, Punch would probably say, "meow," and go chase a piece of air-born lint. He had no concept whatsoever of God. Does that mean my dear cat Punchface was an atheist? Of course not. He was only a cat, even if he is a brilliant one.

Nevertheless, the atheist will assert that the position of "lack of belief" relates only to sentient beings. This would be a necessary position given that cats cannot be atheistic; that is, they can't make a choice to accept or deny God's existence. Therefore, the atheist should amend his statement and say something like, "As a person, I lack belief," or "I have decided to lack belief in God," or "Lacking belief in God is a position for sentient beings only." This would negate my cat as being included, since to describe an atheistic position as simply "lacking belief" is too broad.

So what is this position of lack of belief really about?

In my opinion, lack of belief is really an attempt by atheists to avoid facing and defending the problems in their atheistic position. You see, if they say they have no position by saying they lack belief, then their position is not open to attack and examination, and they can quietly remain atheists.

The problem for atheists, however, is that atheism is coming under more serious attack by Christians and others who recognize its problems and are exposing them. Without a doubt, there are far more people in the world who believe in God (or a god) than don't, and more and more Christians are tackling atheism as an untenable position. If the majority believe, that doesn't make it right; but the increase in examination of atheism has made it more difficult for atheists to defend their position. This also explains why atheists, it seems, are becoming more aggressive in their attacks on theism in its different forms. There is an intellectual battle being waged, and both defensive and offensive measures are being taken on both sides. In the end, the truth will be known and atheism will become extinct.
 
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1) There is no evidence the universe had a beginning. If you disagree, cite your evidence.

Cause and effect, Universe isn't infinite, thus it had a beginning.

2) There is no evidence the universe is not infinite. If you disagree, cite your evidence.

Hilbert's Hotel, this universe isn't infinite, thus it had a start.

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.

Yes, because again, something caused it to exist. it didn't just exist to exist, there's a reason it started existing.

4) Even if something brought it into existence, that doesn't mean that something had to be either a) eternal, or b) uncaused.

Yes it does, otherwise we'd just keep going until we get that first uncaused cause, and since it is the first cause, it isn't caused, thus always existed, eternal, uncaused.

5) Even if there was something eternal and uncaused which created the universe, that doesn't mean it was a deity.


by Timothy McCabe:

There is no other logical possibility.

Either some things are caused, or nothing is.

If nothing is caused, then I never wrote this. But I did write this, so at least some things are caused.

If some things are caused, either their causing is the result of a previous cause, or it isn't. In other words, either something caused it to cause, or nothing caused it to cause.

If every cause is the result of a previous cause, or, if everything is caused by something else, then we have an "infinite regress" of causes.

An infinite regress of causes is logically incoherent. To suggest that there have been an infinite regress of past causes is to suggest that we have come to the end of an infinite series. An infinite series, however, is by definition a series with no end. So this would mean that we have come to the end of a series with no end, which is logically incoherent.

Infinite regress would mean that we have iterated, one-by-one, through every single item of an infinite series. But an infinite series always has more items than those that have been iterated through. We would have iterated through something that cannot be iterated through, which is logically incoherent.

If we were to go backwards through each previous cause, and there were an infinite number of past causes, there would necessarily be some cause in the set of previous causes that we would never, ever get to. If that were not the case, it would not be infinite. If there is some supposed prior cause in the set of previous causes that we could never get to while iterating backwards through all previous causes, then, iterating forward from that cause to the present state, we would never arrive at the present state for the same reason that going backwards we could never arrive at the previous state -- namely, the infinite (or unending) number of causes in between the two.

Infinite regress would mean that we have completed something that cannot be completed. We have traversed something that cannot be traversed. We have itemized what cannot be itemized, counted what cannot be counted, spanned what cannot be spanned.

Infinite regress is logically incoherent. Therefore, not everything is caused by a previous cause.

This means, necessarily, that EVERY series of causes has its own first cause, and since this first cause is a FIRST cause, it is uncaused.

What we also see is that since this first cause is never the result of a prior cause, since it is in fact a FIRST cause, it does not cause involuntarily. In other words, nothing made it cause: it did it voluntarily -- on its own. The first cause, in every series of causes, is therefore necessarily volitional: it is willful; it has personhood.

Every uncaused first cause, since it is uncaused, either began to exist without cause, or else it did not begin to exist, and is therefore self-existent.

If it began to exist without cause, then having nothing, adding nothing to it, something results. Or, in other words:

0 + 0 > 0.

This is the same as claiming that zero is not zero, which is logically contradictory. I like to call this "Atheist Math".

Therefore, since nothing can be caused by nothing, every uncaused first cause is self-existent. It is eternal, permanent, and not subject to change over time. It simply... is.

When anyone talks about some kind of uncaused, self-existent, willful, eternal, personal entity that is the first cause of things, the label generally applied to such an entity is "God".

By Timothy McCabe:

By Due to character restraints and the nature of the comments section, I am trying to be brief. Sometimes brevity makes my arguments unclear.

Below, x is the *being* of the First Cause (God or the quantum whatzits); y is the *doing* of the First Cause (the creation event or the Big Bang); z is temporal progression, or vectoral movement through time (the process of one moment following the next).

If I'm not mistaken, the position you are presenting goes as follows:

If x, then necessarily y.

If y, then necessarily z.

This means that if x, then necessarily z.

The Christian position, due to the willful nature of x, goes as follows:

If x, then optionally y.

If y, then necessarily z.

So, under the position you are presenting, the existence of the First Cause is bound necessarily to the passage of time. If x is, then so is z. If z had a beginning, so did x, which is to say that 0 + 0 > 0. If x did not have a beginning, then neither did z, which is to endorse infinite regress. So this position is incoherent, unless I misunderstood your question.

In Christianity this is not the case due to the optional (willful) relationship between x and y.

God bless.

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.

(continued)
In fact, Christianity is the only worldview that is logically coherent. All other worldviews fall victim to inherent logical contradictions within their most basic presuppositions, particularly wherever they diverge from Christianity.

For example, due to the lack of divine sacrificial substitutionary atonement in Islam, when Allah, who is always just, forgives, He is not just.

Due to the prophecies of the Messiah in the Hebrew Bible, Jewish prophecy is rejected by the Jews.

Due to the multiplicity of disagreeing gods in polytheism, wherever there is divine disagreement, things are and are not at the same time and in the same way.

The Christian God never contradicts Himself (2 Timothy 2:13); He fulfills the prophecies of the Jews (Acts 3:18); and the sacrifice of Christ makes it possible for the Christian God to be both just and forgiving at the same time (Hebrews 2:17).

Ultimately, only the Christian worldview provides a coherent understanding of reality and is not inherently contradictory.

God bless.

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.

Mathematically impossible, biologically impossible, logically impossible. nothing comes from nothing. intelligence doesn't come from nothing, chances of it happening even if miraculously biologically and logically possible, still no chance of happening.

"evolution" = impossible

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.

Natural(space, time, matter) it isn't infinite, refer back to previous paragraphs. either way, we are lead to the first uncaused cause, God, which no greater can be conceived.


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.

from AllAboutPhilosophy org, Teleological Argument – Overwhelming Evidence for Design
It is instructive to note that one of the developers of the “Anthropic Principle” concept, Dr. Frank Tipler, has become a Christian since that time, due in large part to reflections on the overwhelming evidence for a Designer from nature.

One question that is often raised subsequent to hearing of the fine-tuning of the universe is “if the parameters were different, why couldn’t life have evolved within the different parameters?” The answer to that is that life cannot evolve even under the most ideal of conditions—the irreducible and specified complexity of life has disproven Darwinian evolution (we’ll discuss that in more detail later). Although micro-evolution (small changes within a species or “kind”) has been observed and does occur in nature, it always results in a loss or lateral drift in information. It never results in an increase in information. The media and many philosophically driven scientists ascribe tremendous flexibility to the idea of micro-evolution, many claiming or assuming that macro-evolution is simply a result of large quantities of micro-evolution, but this has been shown to be impossible under every kind of testing. Darwinian, or macro-evolution, has not been reproducible under even the most artificially ideal conditions in the laboratory. Moreover, changes in most of the aforementioned parameters of fine-tuning would result in no planetary habitat forming that could support life, which eliminates the possibility of life before we even get to the insurmountable problem of biological assembly.


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".

So you admit you aren't an "atheist".

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.

No random coincidences by accidents from nothing can create such Complex Intelligence, this earth is intelligent because it was logically created by... Intelligence.
 
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*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.

Still doesn't explain why I would want to help someone. you just say we do it just to do it for the sake of survival and genes with no evidence, you give no reason why the genes would want to do it, there would have to be some form of intelligence that makes it do it. and again random accidents do not create complex intelligence. add that to the fact that altruism has nothing to do with chemicals or genes and that we simply do it because it is right.

I would be courteous/helpful to elder or a disabled person and it won't help me survive at all. that's not helping anyone survive, that's not passing our genes, we don't help anyone to ensure a reproduction of genes, that's absurd, we do it because it is right. our conscience tells us to do it, because it is right.

Love thy neighbor as thyself, it's the right thing to do, we do it because it is obligated to us (by God) and it is simply right. we are made in God's image. God is Holy, Just, and Righteous.

Again, back to the rape example, rape can help pass our genes, but is it right? under no circumstances. it is wrong plain and simple. it is disrespectful, sickening, twisted, perverted, and traumatizing. if "evolution" happened, there would be no right or wrong and anything would go, but that's not the case.

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.

Nope, again you give no explanation why the rape is wrong. you think when someone gets raped do you really think they wonder about having a bond with the rapist? or think about having a family? no. they think about the abuse, they are traumatized. it is wrong.


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.


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.

No it is, wrong, that's why it's objective. we know it's wrong is because it causes mental suffering. no one would want to be touched in the places that are extremely private without consent. no one just decided "you know what, I deserve respect, I don't want to be touched that way". it is just wrong, we naturally know it is wrong and it is obligated that it's wrong. who obligated right and wrong? God. without God, there would be no objective right and wrong. right is something that is done in God's image(Justice, Love, Compassion, etc) and is commanded by him(Obedience) and wrong(sin) is something that is against(disobedience to) God and something not done in God's image. anything against God and what He intends would be wrong, living in God's image and by His commands is right, doing something against God's image and against his commands is wrong.

if you take God out the picture and you get this excuse that somehow the thing that dominates every second of our lives(Morality) just decided to come about from nothing. again "evolution" has no logical explanations.

which brings me back to my point, Intelligence doesn't come from nothing, intelligence comes from something more Intelligent. The earth and us humans are made with Intelligent design that shows us it has an Intelligent designer.

God explains morality, "evolution" simply doesn't.
 
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SkyWriting

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The point was that laws do not denote absolute certainty, and they do not denote a level of certainty above theory. Though I can see why you would be confused and think I was talking about 'above absolute certainty'.


Looking at the definitions for 'theory' and 'law', there is no effective difference, except an emphasis that laws can be expressed in concise mathematical one-liners and are particularly tenacious.

Laws remain such until they are shown to be incorrect. Theories are always sludge plies of information till laws are derived from them.

Evolution has no laws to fall back on. Well, maybe....I didn't check out those three yet.
 
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if "evolution" happened, there would be no right or wrong and anything would go, but that's not the case.
I've always thought that is about the most stupid, infantile and just plain crazy argument I ever hear against a biological theory. Can any intelligent adult really believe this is a sound argument? It's embarrassingly stupid.
 
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There is an intellectual battle being waged, and both defensive and offensive measures are being taken on both sides. In the end, the truth will be known and atheism will become extinct.
Why is it that which you claim is 'truth' appears only to be "religion"?
 
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This thread is so frustrating! People, one cannot use the bible as evidence for something when the person asking the question doesn't hold the bible to be an accurate historical account!

It's like saying the evidence for Middle Earth exists because it says so in The Hobbit. You might believe it's fact, but I believe that it was a fiction story written by J.R.R. Tolkein.

I'm not saying the bible isn't historically accurate, because I believe (roughly) that it is. I just wanted to put that out there because it's something I hear a lot and it bothers me. It defies logic and immediately disqualifies anything you say. I hear people try and evangelize all the time like this and it gets them nowhere in a hurry. Face-palm.

I personally believe that the bible does not conflict with science all that much. If you read Genesis carefully, it could be describing evolution-minus the complicated details. The Earth was a dark, bare rock..then came water and light..then plants and fish, etc., then larger lifeforms, then God created man from the earth. Darwin and other evolutionists describe a process of change and a theory of origin, but it's not the "end all be all." Just because evolution exists does not mean that God does not exist. I believe the problem lies with biblical literalists. There's a logic of, "It says right here plain and simple, God wouldn't have us read between the lines." Maybe not, but I believe that science is the language of God, and science will lead us closer to God. But what do I even know.
 
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This thread is so frustrating! People, one cannot use the bible as evidence for something when the person asking the question doesn't hold the bible to be an accurate historical account!

It's like saying the evidence for Middle Earth exists because it says so in The Hobbit. You might believe it's fact, but I believe that it was a fiction story written by J.R.R. Tolkein.

I'm not saying the bible isn't historically accurate, because I believe (roughly) that it is. I just wanted to put that out there because it's something I hear a lot and it bothers me. It defies logic and immediately disqualifies anything you say. I hear people try and evangelize all the time like this and it gets them nowhere in a hurry. Face-palm.

You should totally post this in every non Christian-only thread :thumbsup:
 
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Radagast

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SavedByChrist94 said:
if "evolution" happened, there would be no right or wrong and anything would go, but that's not the case.
I've always thought that is about the most stupid, infantile and just plain crazy argument I ever hear against a biological theory. Can any intelligent adult really believe this is a sound argument? It's embarrassingly stupid.

This is of course an argument against atheism, not against evolution. Since people on both sides use the terms as if they are synonymous, it's no wonder people get confused.
 
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Wiccan_Child

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Cause and effect, Universe isn't infinite, thus it had a beginning.

Hilbert's Hotel, this universe isn't infinite, thus it had a start.
Causality: Causality is an empirical observation that doesn't hold true in all scenarios - quantum mechanics is replete with uncaused events, like radioactive decay. There's no evidence that the universe had a beginning, let alone that that beginning must have had a cause.

Hilbert's Hotel: Err, relevance?

The universe isn't infinite: There is no evidence whether it is or it isn't, in any capacity - temporally infinite, specially infinite, energetically infinite, etc.

Yes, because again, something caused it to exist. it didn't just exist to exist, there's a reason it started existing.
So you allege, but you haven't explained why this must be the case. It is absolutely possible that the universe spontaneously sprang into existence, uncaused.

Yes it does, otherwise we'd just keep going until we get that first uncaused cause, and since it is the first cause, it isn't caused, thus always existed, eternal, uncaused.
First, there's no reason that that cause has to be eternal - who's to say it still exists?

Second, who's to say that this cause must be something intelligent? Two m-branes in hyperdimensional space collide, and the two subsequent 4D ripples along their 'surface' are, from our perspective, the universe. The Big Bang is the expansion of these ripples, the cause of the universe was simply the collision of these two m-branes. This real, hyperdimensional space could well be eternal and uncaused, and isn't an intelligent deity.

That is a perfectly valid scenario, disrupting your 'proof' that it must be God.

by Timothy McCabe:

There is no other logical possibility.

Either some things are caused, or nothing is.

If nothing is caused, then I never wrote this. But I did write this, so at least some things are caused.

If some things are caused, either their causing is the result of a previous cause, or it isn't. In other words, either something caused it to cause, or nothing caused it to cause.

If every cause is the result of a previous cause, or, if everything is caused by something else, then we have an "infinite regress" of causes.

An infinite regress of causes is logically incoherent. To suggest that there have been an infinite regress of past causes is to suggest that we have come to the end of an infinite series. An infinite series, however, is by definition a series with no end. So this would mean that we have come to the end of a series with no end, which is logically incoherent.

Infinite regress would mean that we have iterated, one-by-one, through every single item of an infinite series. But an infinite series always has more items than those that have been iterated through. We would have iterated through something that cannot be iterated through, which is logically incoherent.

If we were to go backwards through each previous cause, and there were an infinite number of past causes, there would necessarily be some cause in the set of previous causes that we would never, ever get to. If that were not the case, it would not be infinite. If there is some supposed prior cause in the set of previous causes that we could never get to while iterating backwards through all previous causes, then, iterating forward from that cause to the present state, we would never arrive at the present state for the same reason that going backwards we could never arrive at the previous state -- namely, the infinite (or unending) number of causes in between the two.

Infinite regress would mean that we have completed something that cannot be completed. We have traversed something that cannot be traversed. We have itemized what cannot be itemized, counted what cannot be counted, spanned what cannot be spanned.
McCabe's understanding of infinity is naive. Simply put, an infinity can be traverse, itemised, counted, and spanned. You need either a finite number of infinitely large steps, or an infinity of finite steps - an eternity fits the latter. Moreover, the "we could never get to the present" argument fails at the first hurdle, as it fundamentally works under the auspices of a universe with a 'first moment' - that is, the argument only works if you try to treat the eternal universe as if it were a finite one, which by definition it's not.

Infinite regress is logically incoherent. Therefore, not everything is caused by a previous cause.

This means, necessarily, that EVERY series of causes has its own first cause, and since this first cause is a FIRST cause, it is uncaused.

What we also see is that since this first cause is never the result of a prior cause, since it is in fact a FIRST cause, it does not cause involuntarily. In other words, nothing made it cause: it did it voluntarily -- on its own. The first cause, in every series of causes, is therefore necessarily volitional: it is willful; it has personhood.
Err, no. The exact nature of the first cause could be anything - it just has to fit the definition of a 'cause'. An unintelligent cause that works on some sort of internal 'timer' (perhaps a universe developing over time, and once it forms black holes, those black holes can create new universes). Here, the fallacy here is in assuming the first cause is God, and then working backwards.

Every uncaused first cause, since it is uncaused, either began to exist without cause, or else it did not begin to exist, and is therefore self-existent.

If it began to exist without cause, then having nothing, adding nothing to it, something results. Or, in other words:

0 + 0 > 0.

This is the same as claiming that zero is not zero, which is logically contradictory. I like to call this "Atheist Math".
^_^^_^^_^ Even you can see the fallacy here, right?

Therefore, since nothing can be caused by nothing, every uncaused first cause is self-existent. It is eternal, permanent, and not subject to change over time. It simply... is.
None of these traits are either justified, or even attempted to be justified.

In fact, Christianity is the only worldview that is logically coherent. All other worldviews fall victim to inherent logical contradictions within their most basic presuppositions, particularly wherever they diverge from Christianity.

For example, due to the lack of divine sacrificial substitutionary atonement in Islam, when Allah, who is always just, forgives, He is not just.

Due to the prophecies of the Messiah in the Hebrew Bible, Jewish prophecy is rejected by the Jews.

Due to the multiplicity of disagreeing gods in polytheism, wherever there is divine disagreement, things are and are not at the same time and in the same way.
Like McCabe's error in treating eternal universes like finite ones, he's now treating polytheistic deities like monotheistic ones. And what an abrasive and offensive oversimplifications of the mind-bogglingly complex theologies of two major world religions.

McCabe's only resort is to uniformly rebut every other religion, thereby making Christianity the only remaining religion by default - what a secure foundation to put your faith into...

Mathematically impossible, biologically impossible, logically impossible. nothing comes from nothing. intelligence doesn't come from nothing, chances of it happening even if miraculously biologically and logically possible, still no chance of happening.

"evolution" = impossible
So you keep saying, but even your own source only makes it improbable, not impossible. If you keep saying it's mathematically, logically impossible, then prove it.

Natural(space, time, matter) it isn't infinite, refer back to previous paragraphs. either way, we are lead to the first uncaused cause, God, which no greater can be conceived.
That doesn't answer my point.

from AllAboutPhilosophy org, Teleological Argument – Overwhelming Evidence for Design
It is instructive to note that one of the developers of the “Anthropic Principle” concept, Dr. Frank Tipler, has become a Christian since that time, due in large part to reflections on the overwhelming evidence for a Designer from nature.
Dr. Tipler developed the 'final anthropic principle', something very different to the more general anthropic principle, which states that "wherever we are, we have to be in a place conducive for human life - if it's not, we wouldn't be here". The rest of the paragraph is a melee of Creationist PRATTS (Points Refuted A Thousand Times)

"[M]any claiming or assuming that macro-evolution is simply a result of large quantities of micro-evolution, but this has been shown to be impossible under every kind of testing" Wrong!

"Although micro-evolution (small changes within a species or “kind”) has been observed and does occur in nature, it always results in a loss or lateral drift in information. It never results in an increase in information" Wrong!

No random coincidences by accidents from nothing can create such Complex Intelligence, this earth is intelligent because it was logically created by... Intelligence.
I disagree. As I said (did you even read my post?) the core concept that Creationists routinely forget is that of natural selection - evolution is not random, as there is a selection process driving it in a non-random direction.

Still doesn't explain why I would want to help someone. you just say we do it just to do it for the sake of survival and genes with no evidence, you give no reason why the genes would want to do it, there would have to be some form of intelligence that makes it do it. and again random accidents do not create complex intelligence. add that to the fact that altruism has nothing to do with chemicals or genes and that we simply do it because it is right.
Err, I just explained how altruism works in evolution - kin selection. You asked how it could evolve, I told you. We evolved an instinctive sense that it is 'right' to help others, even at the expense of ourselves. As I explained, this is not counter to evolution, as it serves an evolutionary purpose.

I would be courteous/helpful to elder or a disabled person and it won't help me survive at all. that's not helping anyone survive, that's not passing our genes, we don't help anyone to ensure a reproduction of genes, that's absurd, we do it because it is right. our conscience tells us to do it, because it is right.
Bingo: your conscience tells you to do it. You evolved a set of instincts that guide your behaviour, and to you this manifests as a nebulous sense of 'this is right' and 'this is wrong', tempered or exaggerated by culture. City-dwelling and globalisation has taken these evolutionarily useful instincts and put them in a situation where, strictly speaking, they no longer provide a genetic advantage, but they exist nonetheless.

Again, back to the rape example, rape can help pass our genes, but is it right? under no circumstances. it is wrong plain and simple. it is disrespectful, sickening, twisted, perverted, and traumatizing.
I agree - so why is it repeatedly condoned, commanded, and even caused by God (Judges 5:30; Judges 21:10-24; Numbers 31:7-18; Deuteronomy 20:10-14; Deuteronomy 21:10-14; Deuteronomy 22:28-29; Deuteronomy 22:23-24; 2 Samuel 12:11-14; Exodus 21:7-11; Zechariah 14:1-2)?

No it is, wrong, that's why it's objective. we know it's wrong is because it causes mental suffering. no one would want to be touched in the places that are extremely private without consent. no one just decided "you know what, I deserve respect, I don't want to be touched that way". it is just wrong, we naturally know it is wrong and it is obligated that it's wrong. who obligated right and wrong? God. without God, there would be no objective right and wrong. right is something that is done in God's image(Justice, Love, Compassion, etc) and is commanded by him(Obedience) and wrong(sin) is something that is against(disobedience to) God and something not done in God's image. anything against God and what He intends would be wrong, living in God's image and by His commands is right, doing something against God's image and against his commands is wrong.
Allegedly. You keep saying, "It's just wrong", as if that's proof of anything. It's not. If anything, you're proving my point, that this nebulous feeling of 'right' and 'wrong' is rooted in biology, not rationality.

if you take God out the picture and you get this excuse that somehow the thing that dominates every second of our lives(Morality) just decided to come about from nothing.
Morality is a series of instincts and cultural mores that evolved and developed for real reasons. You may not like a world without God, but that doesn't prove he exists. It may upset you for morality to be subjective, but that doesn't mean it isn't. "I don't like it, therefore it's not true", is a fallacious argument, my friend.

which brings me back to my point, Intelligence doesn't come from nothing, intelligence comes from something more Intelligent. The earth and us humans are made with Intelligent design that shows us it has an Intelligent designer.

God explains morality, "evolution" simply doesn't.
1) You've yet to show any example of intelligent design.
2) You've yet to prove that intelligence can only come from intelligence.
3) You've yet to rebut my demonstration of how our sense of morality evolved.
4) You've yet to explain why your own personal issues with subjective morality has any bearing on the existence of an objective morality.
 
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AV1611VET

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This thread is so frustrating! People, one cannot use the bible as evidence for something when the person asking the question doesn't hold the bible to be an accurate historical account!

It's like saying the evidence for Middle Earth exists because it says so in The Hobbit. You might believe it's fact, but I believe that it was a fiction story written by J.R.R. Tolkein.

I'm not saying the bible isn't historically accurate, because I believe (roughly) that it is. I just wanted to put that out there because it's something I hear a lot and it bothers me. It defies logic and immediately disqualifies anything you say. I hear people try and evangelize all the time like this and it gets them nowhere in a hurry. Face-palm.

I personally believe that the bible does not conflict with science all that much. If you read Genesis carefully, it could be describing evolution-minus the complicated details. The Earth was a dark, bare rock..then came water and light..then plants and fish, etc., then larger lifeforms, then God created man from the earth. Darwin and other evolutionists describe a process of change and a theory of origin, but it's not the "end all be all." Just because evolution exists does not mean that God does not exist. I believe the problem lies with biblical literalists. There's a logic of, "It says right here plain and simple, God wouldn't have us read between the lines." Maybe not, but I believe that science is the language of God, and science will lead us closer to God. But what do I even know.
Victoria, does the Bible describe the Big Bang?
 
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KhaosTheory

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You can believe some people present [not very good] evidence if you want to.

I happen to believe there is no evidence, because none was generated.

Here's my first post in this thread: 10

wait... so now there's no evidence? what happened to radio halos and your beloved word games you used to use to twist things into pseudo-explanations to attempt to prove your points?

You just gonna give up on all that and admit there really is no evidence for it?
Come on... that's disappointing... Now where am I supposed to get my laughs from?

Well, on the other hand, I'm glad to see you finally admit it.
 
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Loudmouth

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Laws remain such until they are shown to be incorrect. Theories are always sludge plies of information till laws are derived from them.

Evolution has no laws to fall back on. Well, maybe....I didn't check out those three yet.

Of course, this is a thread asking creationists to present evidence FOR creationism, not against evolution. Surely you understand the difference?

Why is it that creationists shift the burden of proof so quickly and so obviously? Does the Emporer have no clothes?
 
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DaneaFL

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Too bad that you never stop to ask if there is evidence for the Big Bang in reality. Enjoy your fantasy world, AV.

Why would he care about reality? I think we've already uncovered that these creationists have no concern for whats actually real.

See my signature for evidence of this.
 
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Non sequitur

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Why would he care about reality? I think we've already uncovered that these creationists have no concern for whats actually real.

See my signature for evidence of this.

Whoa. Love this one! :)

"You insist on letting your own natural, depraved mind "think" through the process of determining what is real and what is not."

You know, cuz your mind totally doesn't just deal with interpreting things...
 
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AV1611VET

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Why would he care about reality? I think we've already uncovered that these creationists have no concern for whats actually real.
And you could provide us evidence, if we did wax concerned?

I mean, if I had a change of mind and asked you for evidence, you would provide some for me?

Or, in reality, do you have just as much evidence for creationism as I do?

That is ... none?

That's what you want us to do, isn't it?

Ask you for evidence for creationism, so you can lecture us on how misguided we are?
 
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