Razzleflaben said:
gluadys said:
No, this is where your weakness on scientific method is showing up again. Remember that scientific method is a technique used to generate explanations of observations. It is not used to speculate about what has NOT been observed.
Now, science is very much aware that we have not observed everything there is to observe, in the fossil record, or in the rest of nature. That is why scientific theories are held to be provisional.
The aim of a theory is to provide the best possible explanation of what HAS BEEN observed.
In my previous post I have put forth 3 possible answers, what explaination is the best is subjective after certain things are ruled invalid and the whole point of this discussion is that the TOE is not conclusive. So your statements further support my position.
I answered your three answers above. But those answers are not relevant to the point I am trying to make here.
You are suggesting that because there is a great deal of fossil evidence which has not yet been discovered or studied, that TOE & TOC are both inconclusive. That is not the case. Science is based always on evidence which
has already been discovered even when the amount of evidence, vis-a-vis the theoretical total amount of evidence possible, is very small. We do not have to wait two or three millennia or however long it takes to look at all possible fossil evidence before deciding whether TOE or TOC is the better theory.
The better theory is the one which provides the best, most complete, most coherent explanation of the evidence we
do have
today.
On that basis, which is the basis of the scientific method, TOE is miles ahead of TOC as the better theory.
However, a theory which can offer explaination of the data cannot be discarded as disproven.
True. The point is that TOE does offer an explanation of the evidence, and TOC does not.
If you know of an explanation for the evidence provided by TOC, feel free to bring it forward. I'll be ready again to admit I made a mistake.
On the basis of the evidence we CAN observe, there was a time (I'm not sure of the details, but I would guess around 55 to 70 million years ago---maybe more recently) when there were neither cats nor dogs. But there were other mammals, mammals which do not exist today. (Large mammals do not appear until after the extinction of the dinosaurs, but smaller rodent and shrew-like mammals are found earlier.)
There are other viable possible answers for this phenomina
That's news to me. What are the other viable possible answers for these phenomena?
And if cats and dogs have a common ancestor, then their respective original species were in the same family. A species does not produce daughter species in different families.
And what proof do we have that cats and dogs have a common ancestor? I have always said that E was possible.
Did you miss the "if" in my statement?
You are side-stepping the point. You said that
It is possible [for cats and dogs to have a common ancestor], however, I highly doubt this to be the case. Remember when I said that the adaptability of animals to their environment is why I doubt that evidence will ever be found to support the evolution of animals crossing the species lines. In order for them to cross the species lines, it would be necessary for them to first be in the same family.
emphasis added.
And that is the point I am making here.
If we have an original cat species (from whom all modern cats are descended) and an original dog species (from whom all modern dogs are descended) and
if these original cat and dog species have themselves descended from a common ancestor,
then the original cat and dog species were indeed
in the same family.
Now, I am asking you to approach this as theory, not as fact. I am not claiming that this is what actually happened. But I am saying it is a plausible explanation of the evidence that going back far enough, we do not see cats and dogs in the fossil record. (In other words, there is no evidence that cats and dogs existed as separate species from the beginning of creation.) But we do see other mammals which do not exist today. In theory is it possible that one of those mammals could be a common ancestor of both the modern cat and dog families?
Thanks. At least you have now said openly that you think creationism is a more valid theory. However, you have not yet shown why you think this, or why any one else should..
I have already freely told you what theory I hold too and why. This should be nothing new to you.
It is, because you have objected several times, when people have assumed you are disposed to creationism, that they were prematurely labelling you.
Why must one be convinced to believe a theory rather than to simply discuss the data that has been observed? This is my goal. A discussion about what data has been observed and what possibilities it holds.
Discussing the data is what we have been trying to do, and what you have been avoiding. Instead, you want to do the impossible and take into account data that has not been discovered yet.
Now, when you say it is more likely that the species existed as separate species from the beginning of creation, are we still speaking only cats and dogs, or are you saying that all species were separate creations from the beginning of creation?
Also, do you think it more likely that all species were created at once, within a relatively short period of time, or that they were created at different times over the whole history of the earth?
I am not sure how to answer this without clarifing your question first.
1. How do these questions help our understanding of how to discuss the evidence without accusations and stereotypeing?
2. Are you asking me what I believe for what my beliefs lean towards?
We were speaking of cats and dogs and you opined that they were probably separate species from the beginning of creation. I wondered if you thought the same of other species or if you were commenting only on these two.
As for the second part of my question, the simultaneous creation of all species (within a few days) is necessarily part of YEC, but not necessary to OEC, which can accommodate several periods of creation separated by millions (billions?) of years.
You have stated that you have not yet made a decision as to which variety of TOC you consider most likely. So when you spoke of species being "separate creations from the beginning of creation", I felt I needed to clarify what you meant by "beginning of creation".
So, yes, I am asking in what direction you are leaning, because that would help me avoid stereotyping and trying to continue a discussion on the basis of beliefs I incorrectly assumed you held when in fact, you do not.