It seems this would be a lengthy discussion, and I was trying to avoid a digression. If you're really interested you should start with this video and later we could have a thread on "what is time".
Brian Cox - Do You Know What Time It Is? - YouTube
BBC worldwide is block in Britain. Also I can't be bothered with watching the whole thing when it could probably be explain alot quicker.
You keep raising this charge that I'm not taking science seriously. I disagree. I have a career's worth of experience with science. Evolution is not the only theory I've questioned. I could point you to other threads where my challenges were answered and I acknowledged it.
Shouldn't that show that your concern is generally misplaced?
Before I gave you the example of the 'voice box' nerve. You just waved it away saying design is subjective. A good designer (or any designer) wouldn't create a creature like that.
You may care about science more than most people, but I don't think that excludes bias against it, or bias in favour of something else that disregards the evidence. Science was my best subject at school, but I rejected evolution for about a week because I read a book by a Christian saying it was false. I identified as Christian so I accepted that those doubts must be legitimate. I was lucky enough to still be able to see the evidence when a friend showed me it, and to recognize that science has a stronger foundation than some Christians who likely have bias based on fallible interpretation of a holy book.
To some extent it is about trust, but that trust isn't just opinion. Who you can trust is based on evidence and reason.
It is. In what way does that exclude evidence, reason, and experience? You assume much about how I must read the Bible that isn't true.
Because acceptance of the Bible isn't a basic belief, or at least it shouldn't be for people who care about the truth. You should accept the Bible as true because you have some evidence or reason to choose that book over 'The Cat in the Hat'.
I'm just saying that things like evidence and reason are prior to things like acceptance of the Bible.
This would be another long conversation. How honest are you in being interested? Past experience indicates most people aren't really that interested. KC will jump in here and tell you to prepare for a lot of dissembling and hand waving. If you're really interested, we can start that conversation somewhere outside this thread.
I'm surprised, if you think I'm going to hell, that you seem to be quite against giving me a reason to believe.
I'm interested in what reason you will give, rather than interested because I think it will cause me to believe. As I lost faith I tried to figure out what type of evidence or reason would justify belief. So it's just interesting what people claim as their justifiable foundation for belief.
For the "evidence for evolution" piece, are you saying we have specific evidence for every species in existence? If not, are you saying that if we lack evidence specific to a species, it is possible that species didn't evolve? If no, and you just generally assume all species have evolved - whether specific evidence exists or not, then our new species should be able to make that same assumption here.
It is possible that a species we have no evidence for might not have evolved. Everything is possible. But without reason against evolution it makes sense to assume that all animals evolved. Just like we know that trees grow from seed, so it makes sense to assume that a tree we have never seen before probably grew from a seed. It didn't magically appear.
I'm still not sure what the situation is you are thinking of.
For the "history" piece, our first recorded instance of someone mentioning the idea of one animal coming from another was Anaximander in the 6th century B.C. The idea could go back further, but we don't know. Why? Because beyond that date the historical record starts to get kind of sketchy. So, I'm not sure a sketchy historical record applies here as evidence that they didn't exist earlier. Further, this new species might claim they evolved from humans, in which case their historical record would be ours.
But we do have good history now. Unless they think they were some random tribe in the middle of no where, we would have known about them and written about them.
It also depends what we changed. If we fixed the nerve example I keep giving, that change would seem to be something unlikely to be evolved. I could be wrong.
I'm not sure what point you are trying to make. What does it gain you if I accept (for the sake of argument) that they could assume they were evolved?