razzelflabben said:
I do not even understand what you want me to answer. Can you clarify your pupose for these questions?
I already did. We're trying to establish several things here, most importantly, what exactly a Biblical "kind" is. It is the most critical thing we need to determine in order to settle this debate.
If evolution from common ancestry is
not true, and some flavor of special creation of different (as yet unidentified "kinds")
is true, then there would be some surface level(s) in a cladogram where you would accept an actual evolutionary ancestry, if you only accept some definition of "micro" evolution. But there must also be subsequent levels in that twin-nested hierarchy where life-forms would no longer be the same "kind", and wouldn't be biologically related anymore. At that point, they would be magically created separate "kinds" from those listed around it, and the categories we've put them in would be invalid.
Two things are apparent in this post.
1. You fail to understand the fuzziness of the definitions that we have been discussing.
You are mistaken. Our definitions of that aren't relevant here.
2. You fail to understand that at this point in our scientific research, there is no fact when relating to our origins. Both are possible.
Obviously the perceptive failure is yours. Creationism has been disproved. So it is no longer a possibility. There are millions of facts available for the origins of our species, our genus, our order, etc. But all of them point to evolutionary processes exclusively with no available space to squeeze any pre-human myths of Eden into.
Why do the people here, read my posts claiming that both, especially since they overlap so, are possible and then go off trying to prove that E is the only viable theory because I am trying to prove that C is fact?
To be quite blunt, evolution is the only available Theory of our origins. There has never been a Theory of creationism, and I doubt very much that there ever will be one. In science, a Theory is the study, and explanation of facts. For example atomic Theory is the study of the function and properties of atoms. Creation theory must therefore be the study of that which can't be studied, (because it is believed only on faith) and it would therefore be an explanation for the unexplainable, which currently can only described as magic.
"A theory is a good theory if it satisfies two requirements: It must accurately describe a large class of observations on the basis of a model that contains only a few arbitrary elements, and it must make definite predictions about the results of future observations."
--Stephen Hawking; A Brief History of Time
So, by proposing a theory of creationism, it is incumbent on you to explain the processes of creation, and to explain what facts you do have better, and more plausibly than any competing concept. Plus you are required to establish testible predictions by which we might potentially falsify this theory. If you can't do either one, then creation simply doesn't qualify as a
theory, leaving evolution as the only viable one.
What I have said many times over, is that there are many many unanswered questions which equals no conclusive proof as to which theory is truth. This statement is met with the same passion that a mama bear protects her young and yet you claim that the TOE is not a belief system.
Wrong again, as I will gladly demonstrate with another quote from Hawking's book:
"Any physical theory is always provisional, in the sense that it is only a hypothesis; you can never prove it. No matter how many times the results of experiments agree with some theory, you can never be sure that the next time the result will not contradict the theory. On the other hand, you can disprove a theory by finding even a single observation that disagrees with the predictions of the theory."
I have yet to meet this type of behavior that was not directly related to a belief system. When I came here, I had hoped to find otherwise, but unfortunately, you people have done more to push me toward C than I ever thought was possible. When will you understand, that it is about all the unanswered questions? All the gray areas?
Exactly! That is why I am asking these questions! Here is the only place you're ever going to find the reality of this situation. By insisting on some micro vs macroevolutionary division, the creationist reduces the evolutionary tree of life to a series of small shrubs that do not share any common root. This series of queries is meant to help determine whether this model is accurate or not.
None the less, I will try to answer these questions but please understand, it is off topic and I don't really understand what you are asking.
You have never encountered any question more critical than these. Everything
else you argue for is off-topic. Throw away any ideas you have about the importance of any other argument you might be thinking about.
None of them compare to this. If creationism is true of anything more than a single ancestor of all living things, or if the concept of common ancestry is fundamentally mistaken, then there
MUST be a point in the tree where taxonomy falls apart, where what we see as related to everything is really unrelated to anything else. And unless you're a Scientologist or a Raelian, that criteria must apply to other animals besides ourselves. So my challenge to you is this, open up Google.com and investigate any cladograms you can find, (I suggest the Tree of Life pages as they are peer-reviewed) and find for me where that mystic division is in any or all of these sets of questions.
What definition of species are we going by in this discussion?
It doesn't matter. The question is do you think (A) is biologically related to (B) through some acceptibly minimal evolutionary means? Or do you think (A) was specially-created by a god entirely unrelated to (B) and therefore an entirely different Biblical "kind" from it? You don't need any biological clade definitions to determine that.
Some of these creatures, I do not know what they are, I am not an animal buff. But without knowing what definition we are going with, I cannot answer. I already answered a similar line of questions on another post but had a definition to work with.
I research everything I respond to. Don't you? Feel free to look each of these up if you must. Then answer the question, yes or no, as best you can. Then we can look at each of these more in-depth. I suspect only then will you begin to realize why scientists consider the evidence of evolution so "overwhelming" and the evidence of creation so utterly absent.
Again, what definition do we want to work with. The beginning of this quote concerns me, both theories are supported by scientific evidence, both theories leave unanswered questions about our environment. Why must we label one as truth and the other as false? Theory would allow for either to be truth. Isn't that the point of theory? A direction for finding answers, truth?
That's why I asked you to explain, which are created and which are related. You see, I wholly disagree that there is any evidence of creationism whatsoever. All science-based concepts readily attempt to explain even complex data in detail. But creationists all too often want to avoid all the most critical data altogether, dismissing it all as "irrelevent". But only by really attempting to delve into these will you ever be able to hone in on the truth.
There's that which is truth idea again.
I don't think that's quite an accurate assumption. I'm allowing that you probably accept some degree of evolution, which you probably refer to as microevolution. Whether you define that properly or not, my queries still allow that both concepts might be partially true at the same time. But of course, my suspicion at this point is that only one of them is really true at any level at all. Can you change my mind about that?
Now I am sure you or someone else will accuse me of evading the issue but I really don't understand what you are wanting me to answer. We have been talking about species, now you are asking about long ancestorial lines? And the thread is not about either!
This thread is about challenging evolution. You can't begin to do that if you refuse to deal with the single most powerful evidence of macroevolutionary common ancestry, the twin-nested heirarchy of systematic taxonomy. If you insist on limiting your argument only to species, you'll never present any challenge at all, and will never discover the truth either.
Are you asking me what is possible in the TOC or are you asking for my personal belief, or what the traditional C answers are, or just exactly what are you asking me and how does it relate to the theme of the thread?
I'm asking you if you think Parentie monitors evolved from a common ancestor with any other variety of monitor lizards? Or were the perentie, and all other monitors magically created, and only look like they're related? I know what is possible in the "theory" of magic: miracles. Anything is possible when you don't have to explain it. But in the Theory of evolution, there are very specific rules, and there should be at least an attempt to seek the best explanation for everything. So that's what I'm asking you for. These really aren't such a tough questions. They're all pretty straight-forward really. So I don't see why you're so hesitent to propose an answer for them.
Aron-Ra said:
How does you alleged theory of creation help you explain the derived synapomorphies, (inherited similarities) evident in these apparent relationships?
Well, first what I will tell you is that there are still more questions about our world than there are answer, for both theories.
There is only one theory, as there is only one that provides
any answers of any verifiable, demonstrable, testible, measurable, or applicable nature.
Secondly, possibleexplainations would include different species, incomplete data, and the possibility for some interspecies (sub species) synapomorphies. Is that what you were looking for in this big long post?
Not at all. When I ask a series of yes or no questions, I generally expect a concordant series of yes or no answers. Are all known species of tiger related to each other and all other panthers? Yes or no? Give me your best guess, and some reasoning behind it, if you would please. Then I can use that to better understand your position, and help you better understand mine.