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Where did it start?The talk here is just crazy talk.
At the OP or after that?
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Where did it start?The talk here is just crazy talk.
QV please:Yes.
Rabbits are mammals. From the perspective of the philosophy of science, it is doubtful whether the genuine discovery of mammalian fossils in Precambrian rocks would overthrow the theory of evolution instantly, although, if authentic, such a discovery would indicate serious errors in modern understanding about the evolutionary process.
They might even adjust the Precambrian timeline accordingly.I think that evolutionists would come up with some convoluted explanation as to how that specific rabbit wound up in that strata and became fossilized to the degree that it did. Most likely they would say they are working on the solution to the problem. A significant number would begin to question whether it is rabbit at all. Accusations of quackery would begin to be levelled and maybe even character defamation of the discovers would ensue if no viable explanation can be found. Look at the controversy over the dinosaurs soft-tissue discovery.
Anything to avoid the impending totally unnacceptable horror of having their precious evolution idea proven bogus. Some might even have an epileptic seizure as a consequence from the mental strain of coming up with an acceptable explanation.They might even adjust the Precambrian timeline accordingly.
Anything to avoid the impending totally unnacceptable horror of having their precious evolution idea proven bogus. Some might even have an epileptic seizure as a consequence from the mental strain of coming up with an acceptable explanation.
I am an atheist perhaps that's why I think it's crazy talk.Perhaps if it were totally atheistic it would seem more sane to you?
Look at the controversy over the dinosaurs soft-tissue discovery.
Anything to avoid the impending totally unnacceptable horror of having their precious evolution idea proven bogus. Some might even have an epileptic seizure as a consequence from the mental strain of coming up with an acceptable explanation.
Huh? What tenets underlying evolution? I think scientists who blindly assume certain evolutionary mechanisms are responsible for some phenomenon should be more skeptical. I think any biologist who doesn't accept common descent should find another line of work.So you agree there should be more skepticism of the tenets underlying evolution?
The tenets behind evolution, that underpin it. Should there be more skepticism of it? That's what the Birch, Ehrlich paper is calling for.Huh? What tenets underlying evolution? I think scientists who blindly assume certain evolutionary mechanisms are responsible for some phenomenon. should be more skeptical. I think any biologist who doesn't accept common descent should find another line of work.
A statement which is true about every explanation for every event ever, in every field of science and beyond science. Your response comes down to, "We can't know anything for certain." No kidding. But we still know lots of things with a high degree of certainty, and one of those things is that common descent is true.There being no better explanation does not necessarily mean the only available one is true.
You didn't answer the question: what tenets behind evolution?The tenets behind evolution, that underpin it.
No, that's not what they're calling for. You read the paper? Where do they say that we should be questioning common descent?Should there be more skepticism of it? That's what the Birch, Ehrlich paper is calling for.
<more waffle>
They identify that there is a problem with evolutionary theory being treated as dogma, and do in their conclusion call for more skepticism of many of the tenets behind evolution. While their focus is on population biology, they do make a wider point about the theory of evolution as a whole becoming dogmatic and a lack of skepticism prevalent.You didn't answer the question: what tenets behind evolution?
No, that's not what they're calling for. You read the paper? Where do they say that we should be questioning common descent?
It would not be a horror: it would be amazing to find ToE was wrong.Anything to avoid the impending totally unnacceptable horror of having their precious evolution idea proven bogus. Some might even have an epileptic seizure as a consequence from the mental strain of coming up with an acceptable explanation.
What's to prove?Creationists should be trying to prove creationism not debunk evolution, how does that serve their cause?
As I already explained to you, nobody is ruling out the possibility that abiogenesis occurred more than one or even that it is still occurring. However, there is a sound evidence that if life did indeed begin from multiple abiogenesis events our present ancestral line emerged so soon after as to make no difference to the concept of "common descent." There is no basis at all for concluding that the possibility of multiple events of abiogenesis give any support to your notion that different species stem from different abiogenesis events. The evidence is all against it.And the moment you accept the flaw in your reasoning over common descent, that by the very assumption that a first cell is possible by random chance, you have absolutely no logical basis for ruling out multiple starts that life had indepenent start points, so many species are the result of different origins. Common descent is therefore unprovable as well as unlikely.
If you are dispassionate, why do you waste your time spewing out such nastiness in a way that includes not only atheists, but Christians and other theists on this board?Considering you dont have the first clue how a first cell came to be either, and abiogenesis is just a long word you use for a gaping whole in your atheist faith in life as a random accident, I suggest you are far less dogmatic about what is there and how it came to be.
I am dispassionate on this.
If we're studying supernovae, we still have to observe spectra from individual instances, time curves, etc and make deductions based on connecting the dots. Do you really think you can take a set of observations about a supernova and deduce the correct model of supernova development from the data?You're comparing mutation rates and recombination rates to the speed of light constant and assumptions we make in physical models... right. Even with these mutation rates, we still have to look at fossils and make deductions based on connecting dots etc. This is not the same as observing and making logical deductions.
You kind of didn't answer the question: how much research have you done in either field?Oh I'm much more a physics man admittedly. Probably wasn't hard to tell. (Or maybe it was hard to tell, and I just appear generally scientifically ignorant in all aspects. That's okay, I'll take it on the chin)
Y'know, useful science.![]()
That's one opinion I've earned the right to hold. Ever heard the saying, "Physics: the smartest people studying the simplest problems"?"easier subject matter to study" How dare you![]()
Not at the moment, I'm afraid -- I'm very pressed for time. Look up "endogeneous retroviruses" if you want to learn about the subject."Long terminal repeats are the result of unique retroviral insertions"
Could you explain this one?
We also don't know whether the supernova actually happened, because we weren't there for that either. All we can do is conclude that our observations conform to what we would expect if a supernova did occur X million years ago, or that our observations conform to what we would expect if common descent were true."empirical evidence that genetic differences between species are the result of accumulated mutations"
But we do not know how these differences actually occurred, because we weren't there in the distant past. Even if it suggests mutations, we don't actually know if there was a time they were one common ancestor, or they started with these apparent mutations.
What's to prove?
The Bible says it, that settles it ... case closed.
I think when Jesus comes back, one of the things He could do is take evolutionists back to the year 4004 BC and let them see for themselves what transpired during the Creation week.