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As an explanation of the existence of man, creation is superior to evolution

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eleos1954

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Regardless what you believe the theory of evolution is not a explanation for the origins of life. The ToE starts with the first common ancestor of all life.

yeah .... lots of theories out there about a lot of things.
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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OK, I'd like to use some reasonable criteria for a good explanation to see if we can rank creation as an explanation for the existence of man against evolution as an explanation.

To paraphrase a recent post of mine:

I don't know how you judge a good explanation, but for me (and many scientists & philosophers), a good explanation should:

1. make testable predictions (so you can find out if it's wrong).
2. it should have specificity, so it gives an insight into and understanding of the particular phenomenon it explains.
3. it should preferably have some unifying scope so that the underlying principles from point 2 can give an insight into and understanding of other phenomena.
4. it should be parsimonious so that it introduces no unnecessary entities (Occam's razor).
5. it should not raise more questions than it answers, particularly unanswerable questions.
6. it should preferably be consistent with our existing body of knowledge.
7. an explanation that can explain anything is not really an explanation at all.

Now, not all explanations can satisfy all of those criteria, but the Creation explanation is interesting in that it satisfies none of them.

Evolution:
Has satisfied criterion 1 - its testable predictions of man's origins have been verified in a number of independent ways (as have a vast number of other predictions it makes).
Has satisfied criterion 2 - it provides a simple and elegant natural process that explains numerous human traits, features, including otherwise puzzling oddities.
Has satisfied criterion 3 - the underlying principles apply to all life on Earth and have been extremely useful in the biological & medical sciences, and in computational problem solving and industrial design.
Has satisfied criterion 4 - it requires no additional entities beyond living things in nature.
Has satisfied criterion 5 - the questions it raises are about specific details, not how it works in general; I don't know of any thought to be unanswerable in principle.
Has satisfied criterion 6 - it is entirely consistent with our current body of knowledge.
Has satisfied criterion 7 - it only explains the development and diversity of life on Earth.

If you can make a reasonable argument for why the criteria above are not good ways to judge an explanation, or show how the Creation explanation satisfies those criteria, or show how the Creation explanation is a better explanation than the evolution explanation by those criteria, or simply show how it's a better explanation than the 'It's Magic!' explanation (which also fails on all criteria), then we can discuss the merits of the Creation explanation.

From where I sit, it's a slam dunk for evolution as an explanation, but I'm interested to see what counterarguments you can present - in the previous paragraph I've given four reasonable approaches you can take.

Go for it!
 
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Frank Robert

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? What is it that you think is the difference in what I posted and your citations from the catechism?

The Catholic Catechism refers to the "human mind." Perhaps you can add something more from the Catechism on how the human mind evolved.
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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Prior to DNA, evolution theory relied primarily on the historiographical sciences of geology, paleontology and archaeology to support its claims.
Er, no. Little of that featured in Darwin or Wallace's foundational work on evolution. Prior to molecular biology, there was also evidence from embryology, comparative anatomy, comparative physiology, and comparative biochemistry, biogeography, direct observation of natural selection and speciation, and so-on. As paleontology developed, it provided increasing support for the patterns that had become apparent in those other independent lines of evidence.
 
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pitabread

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So now we're throwing physics and geology into the mix of unreliable science in your view?

Actually, that's how they do work.

What specifically do you think supports your claim that, "Their conclusions are less derived and more contrived (at times, from outright falsified evidence) to support the evolution hypothesis that the grant money which underwrote their endeavor expects."

Really? I think not.

The context of this is not scientists forging fossils; rather, the context is a forgery for the purpose of selling the fossil. It was immediately exposed as such by scientists. If you think this is supporting your conspiracy theories, it doesn't.


I'm not sure what the phrase, "other than the novel DNA science already allowed as highly more reliable than the evidence from the historiographical work" is supposed to mean here?

Generally the applications of evolution that I do often cite are related to genetics/genomics (specifically related to comparative genomics and applied phylogenetics).

Do you already accept those as valid applications of the theory of evolution?
 
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Bradskii

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That would be creation as opposed to a natural process? Then there's no overlap. We can check. Let's look at a creation event.

Nyx laid a golden egg. Eros was hatched from this and he called the sky Uranus and the earth Gaia.

Nope. Nothing there that we can associate with science. We can't reference any of that to any scientific process. It's just a story. OK, it's the Greek creation story but yours is no different in that respect (unless you have some information that we can verify).

And if I need to check with you if you accept a statement or claim that something has been around for a few million years then that ain't goading. That's simply checking what you believe as it relates to the discussion. I'm sure there'll be a fair amount of that. For example...

If you really want to tie in Creation with science then we need to check how it aligns. Where that overlap occurs. Let's see if it ties in with the evidence. So when was this creation event? How long ago did God create the planet?
 
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o_mlly

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See the fallacy of the argument from consensus. Would atheists accept the fallacious argument that since most humans believe in God that God therefore exists?

Do you believe that humanity is fully explained as having evolved from eukaryotes? If not then do you think science constrained to only material causes will ever provide the complete explanation of man's existence? There is no monumental blunder; only "a bridge too far". If God directly and immediately creates every human soul then such knowledge is beyond the grasp of science. Therefore, only another mode of human knowledge can reach that reality.
 
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Hans Blaster

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See the fallacy of the argument from consensus. Would atheists accept the fallacious argument that since most humans believe in God that God therefore exists?

Which god? There is no god worshiped by a majority of humans. In fact you can tell anyone on Earth that a majority of humans disagree with their god.
 
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VirOptimus

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See the fallacy of the argument from consensus. Would atheists accept the fallacious argument that since most humans believe in God that God therefore exists?

-snip-

Science does not work the same way as faith.
 
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o_mlly

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So now we're throwing physics and geology into the mix of unreliable science in your view?
All science is provisional. No more, no less.
Apparently, you are behind in your reading.
The evolution of the genetic code: impasses and challenges
https://core.ac.uk › download › pd

by Á Kun · Cited by 28 — 2 MTA-ELTE Theoretical Biology and Evolutionary Ecology Research Group
To be honest, we are stuck. The existing theories each capture some aspect of the origin of
the genetic code, but they still contain a lot of assumptions that could be cleared by experiments. New theories are either slight variation of old theories (science mostly advance incrementally) or theories that make little impact on the literature (which is unfortunate, there could be a lot of good idea out there to be discovered). So there is an impasse. Most papers onthe origin of the genetic code are reviews (like this) and not original research. It seems thatthe field has been stalled. We strongly urge empiricist to conduct the experiments we proposed here in order to overcome this impasse and go on with the challenging task of solving the “notoriously difficult problem” of the origin of the genetic code and translation.
 
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o_mlly

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Search "Theory Laden Observations" for articles supporting my position.
 
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o_mlly

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So your contention is that the spiritual soul is a material effect of the mind? This seems to me to be in contradiction with current Catholic teaching.
No. If you wish to put words in my mouth then we are at an impasse. The forum has a quote feature to cite others posts. Please use it in future.
 
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Bradskii

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See the fallacy of the argument from consensus. Would atheists accept the fallacious argument that since most humans believe in God that God therefore exists?

If everyone believed in the same God and all agreed on what He was and what He wanted, then yes, I'd have serious doubts about my lack of belief. But as you know, not even Catholics can seem to agree. Even disagreeing with each other on matters of basic science.
 
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o_mlly

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If you're only concerned about the evolution or origin of humans, then why in the OP do you put an concern to the origin of life?
The most fundamental property of a human being is that they are a living creatures. A comprehensive explanation of human beings, therefore, requires an explanation of how human beings came to life. Creation provides the explanation. Evolution does not.
 
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AV1611VET

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Indeed.

Man is a gestalt: we are greater than the sum of our physical parts.

Where did our vitality come from, if not from God?
 
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o_mlly

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Oh, you're just going to ignore everything I said. Since I was replying directly to what you wrote, I'll assume everything you wrote in the OP was off topic too. So I'll forget about replying to the rest of the OP then.
? Pls re-post what you think i missed.
You've confused "truth" with church doctrine in the last phrase.
No. Science is always and only provisional. Like all worldviews, scientific materialism is also founded on a faith statement.
 
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Bungle_Bear

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Let's try again and see if you understand this time: Creation is the claim, it is not an explanation.

Evolution doesn't attempt to address origin of life.
 
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o_mlly

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This statement makes it clear you've never had a research grant as this is not how grant programs work. Your earlier claim of being a scientist seems more dubious with each post.
Citations that support your counter claim? How naive to think that scientists are saints. With each of your posts, your claim to hold any advanced degree looks dubious.
 
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