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Darwin's evolution theory?

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invisible trousers

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pjw said:
how do i keep lying??? that was only my second post in this thread!!!

it's pretty simple; you've managed to continue to lie in your posts since then.

your first post:
and the only reason it originated was as a way to get rid of God

lie; evolution makes no religious claims.

when there is almost no fossil evidence or anything of the kind to support it

lie; http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/ shows many examples of human evolution.

evolution is not science,

please see http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/list.html categories ca200 and ca300.

note creationism isn't remotely science and doesn't belong in a science classroom.

the whole purpose of which is to tear down the authority and power of
God.

lie; once again, evolution makes no religious claims.

second post...

his isn't the darwinian theory of evolution, however, which states that everything formed from nothing with a big bang.

lie; evolution does not address the big bang nor the origin of life.

the Bible plainly tells us that catastrophic events have greatly altered the world and its geography and geology, and the scientific evidence supports this.

lie; there is no physical evidence which matches those events.

the Bible specifically condemns the modern scientific theory of uniformitarianism, which states that all things continue in the same way and at the same rate as they always have

lying about the definition of uniformitarianism: http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CD/CD200.html

however, the Bible plainly tells us that catastrophic events have greatly altered the world and its geography and geology, and the scientific evidence supports this.

lie; there is no physical evidence which matches those events

please justify why a christian should lie like this :)

pjw said:
well, they are only primates with highly advanced behavioural responses and advanced communication skills. they don't have a reasonable soul or a rational mind, and can't make decisions and choices about what they do and say. this is what evolution eventually leads to if logically thought through. if we believe in evolution, humans are another kind of animal, and should do what all the other animals do, steal from one another, kill one another, do whatever's necessary for the fittest to survive. why not kill off people when they get old and sick? the whole of hitler's regime and all his crimes are fully justifiable using evolution. think it through.

sorry godwin was invoked the 7th post of this thread :doh:

and you're pretty clever.

linssue55 said:
Don't worry about it, they are thinking with their ape brains.......LOL

you're pretty clever too.
 
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Donkeytron said:
I read the whole damn thing, I just can't be bothered to refute the same claims ad nauseum. That's why I keep asking for one piece of what creationists consider damning evidence at a time. And if you think that humans and dinosaurs coexisted, chances are that you are a terrible scientist. You can't "prove" any scientific theory, by the way-only disprove them. This is why creationism is not a legitimate scientific theory-it has long since been falsified by multiple lines of evidence.

who damned it? who does the evidence damn?
 
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Donkeytron said:
I read the whole damn thing, I just can't be bothered to refute the same claims ad nauseum. That's why I keep asking for one piece of what creationists consider damning evidence at a time. And if you think that humans and dinosaurs coexisted, chances are that you are a terrible scientist. You can't "prove" any scientific theory, by the way-only disprove them. This is why creationism is not a legitimate scientific theory-it has long since been falsified by multiple lines of evidence.

I am not a scientist at all and never claimed to be. I am a creationist but not a scientist. I also happen to believe that both evolutionists and creationists can be credible scientists. And both evolutionists and creationists can be terrible scientists. It is important to look at the evidence that they present and their methods to determine the validity of their arguments, rather than simply writing off one or the other because you are predisposed to disagree with them.

Scientific evidence does exist that would tend to disprove evolution, and, on the other hand, scientific evidence exists that would tend to disprove creation. It's up to you which you decide to give credence to. Personally, I find the arguments against evolution more convincing.
 
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invisible trousers said:
lie; there is no physical evidence which matches those events. . . .

lie; there is no physical evidence which matches those events. . . .

There is physical evidence of catastrophism in the fossil record and in the geologic column. I would recommend going to the site I linked to earlier (http://www.amazingdiscoveries.org/beginning_main.htm) and reading the explanations in the "Geology" subtopic. They are just brief overviews really, and he goes more in-depth in his video presentations and books. If anyone is interested in reading further, you could get Professor Veith's book Genesis Conflict, available on the same site, which discusses many of the issues that are being debated on this thread. Dr. Veith is a scientist from South Africa, who used to be an atheistic evolutionist but is now a creationist. Of course, for that very reason I know that I wll be informed that he is not a legitimate scientist.
 
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Donkeytron said:
I read the whole damn thing, I just can't be bothered to refute the same claims ad nauseum. That's why I keep asking for one piece of what creationists consider damning evidence at a time. And if you think that humans and dinosaurs coexisted, chances are that you are a terrible scientist. You can't "prove" any scientific theory, by the way-only disprove them. This is why creationism is not a legitimate scientific theory-it has long since been falsified by multiple lines of evidence.

So you have time to post at least 15 times that we didn't descend from apes, but you can't address the things that you asked fore yourself? You said give evidence. I did. So address it. And it is hardly the same old, as pretty much all of those are new in this coversation.
 
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lmnop9876

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i have not deliberately written anything wrong with the purpose of deceiving others, therefore, i have not lied. if i have written anything that can be proven wrong, it was a mistake, and i apologize for it.
lie; evolution makes no religious claims.
the whole reason Charles Darwin invented his theory of evolution was because he was disenfranchised with religion.
lie; http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/ shows many examples of human evolution
what about all the evolutionary 'scientists' who have falsified evidence, lied to millions of school children about the evolution of horses, &c. &c. &c. this is how desperate they are to find 'missing links' which don't exist.
please see http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/list.html categories ca200 and ca300.

note creationism isn't remotely science and doesn't belong in a science classroom.
evolution isn't science. all things are looked at with the assumption that evolution is true. charles darwin invented the theory of evolution to suit his own beliefs about the origins of the universe. successive generations of scientists saw that it was nearly impossible to prove evolution, so they modified and remodified the theory, the age of the world, the original force behind evolution, &c. &c. &c.
lie; once again, evolution makes no religious claims.
please, see this: http://www.christiananswers.net/q-aig/darwin.html
lie; evolution does not address the big bang nor the origin of life.
what i said was an oversimplification. i never said evolution addressed the big bang or the origin of life, i said the Darwinian theory of evolution .
lying about the definition of uniformitarianism: http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CD/CD200.html
i'm sorry, but this ain't no lie!!!
This is from my highly reputed university geography textbook:
Christopherson said:
A fundamental principle of Earth science is uniformitarianism. Uniformitarianism assumes that the same physical processes active in the environment today have been operating throughout geological time. For example, if streams carve valleys now, they must have done so 500 million years ago. The phrase "the present is the key to the past" describes this principle.
Source: Christopherson, R. W. (2000). Geosystems. p. 309, New Jersey: Prentice Hall
lie; there is no physical evidence which matches those events

please justify why a christian should lie like this :)
as i said, i haven't lied. i may have misexpressed myself occasionally, but i have deliberately deceived no-one. as i said, if i have made a mistake, i apologize.
 
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invisible trousers

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you obviously don't understand evolution, the scientific method, or even science itself. you're still making false statements about the creation of evolution, and are still lying about the claims evolution makes. once again, evolution, or "darwin's theory of evolution" makes absolutely zero claims on the origin of life.

i have no interest in continuing in a discussion where one side (a christian, no less!) repeats continuous deliberate lies and distortions, so i'll leave you with two things:

hominids2.jpg

and
http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/list.html

everything lie, distortion, and dishonesty you're going to repeat given to you by "christian" organizations has been addressed and debunked in that page above. you should consider glancing over it to see what smarter people have to say about your arguments.
 
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pjw said:
the whole reason Charles Darwin invented his theory of evolution was because he was disenfranchised with religion.

One thing I would like to point out, even though I do not agree with Darwin's views, is that Darwin did not invent the theory of evolution. It was something that had itself evolved over time. Naturalistic models of the development of organisms from the simple to the complex were around long before Darwin. Even Greek philosophers like Aristotle had naturalistic ideas about the development of organisms, which influenced western thought. Charles Darwin's grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, also wrote some scientific works that are widely considered as foreshadowing the theory of evolution. In addition, Darwin acknowledged naturalist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck as the first person to gain much attention for publishing his views on evolution although those views differed from Darwin's own as far as how natural selection and adaptation worked. However, Darwin was the first person whose published views on evolution through natural selection eventually became socially and scientifically accepted.
 
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you obviously don't understand evolution, the scientific method, or even science itself. you're still making false statements about the creation of evolution, and are still lying about the claims evolution makes. once again, evolution, or "darwin's theory of evolution" makes absolutely zero claims on the origin of life.

i have no interest in continuing in a discussion where one side (a christian, no less!) repeats continuous deliberate lies and distortions, so i'll leave you with two things:


and
http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/list.html

everything lie, distortion, and dishonesty you're going to repeat given to you by "christian" organizations has been addressed and debunked in that page above. you should consider glancing over it to see what smarter people have to say about your arguments.
i think i know what science is, and i know what the scientific method is. and no, i'm not telling or repeating any lies, if i've misunderstood the teachings of charles darwin or other prominent evolutionary 'scientists', i apologize for misrepresenting them. i've read more scholarly evolutionary writings than i have creationist writings, so there goes you're idea that i'm mere repeating the lies i'm told. plain common-sense tells me the darwinian theory of evolution doesn't make sense.
Sophia7 said:
One thing I would like to point out, even though I do not agree with Darwin's views, is that Darwin did not invent the theory of evolution. It was something that had itself evolved over time. Naturalistic models of the development of organisms from the simple to the complex were around long before Darwin. Even Greek philosophers like Aristotle had naturalistic ideas about the development of organisms, which influenced western thought. Charles Darwin's grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, also wrote some scientific works that are widely considered as foreshadowing the theory of evolution. In addition, Darwin acknowledged naturalist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck as the first person to gain much attention for publishing his views on evolution although those views differed from Darwin's own as far as how natural selection and adaptation worked. However, Darwin was the first person whose published views on evolution through natural selection eventually became socially and scientifically accepted.
Darwin is the one generally credited with developing the theory of evolution to such a point as 'scientists' were willing to accept it. Undoubtedly he relied on earlier sources from other naturalists to formulate his theory. so i was probably wrong in saying he actually invented it, but he did modify it to the point where it became acceptable.
 
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Donkeytron

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Sophia7 said:
Scientific evidence does exist that would tend to disprove evolution, and, on the other hand, scientific evidence exists that would tend to disprove creation. It's up to you which you decide to give credence to. Personally, I find the arguments against evolution more convincing.

No, it doesn't. If it did, life scientists would have been bounding all over eachtoher to publish it first and claim their nobel prize. There are arguments about things we don't yet understand entirely, but there is no evidence that says evolution didn't happen.
 
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I can't beleive I had to dig all the way back in the thread to address this monstrosity, but fine. I think showing one or two points to be complete bunk should be sufficient to show that the rest of the post is of similar quality.

tall73 said:
1. widespread evidence of catastraphism is now acknowledged by both sides in the debate. Gradualism is no longer seen as the sole mechanism for bringing about much of what we see in the strata.

Actually, it is. Try and find a "catastrophism" scientist who isn't also a fundamentalist christian.

tall73 said:
6. There are many deposits of saltwater elements (marine fossils etc.) intermixed with mammals indicating that these areas were once inundated with sea water.

Most surfaces on the earth were covered with water at one time or another. We can see mountains forming today via uplift.

tall73 said:
8. The shape of the grand canyon etc. cuts is suggestive of rapid cutting through probably soft material, not of slow cutting over time through solid rock. When we look at current day mud slides etc. we see similar shapes. Moreover you have channels cut through hills, supposedly by rivers. How would water do that? It would just run down the hill.

All these claims have been repeatedly debunked.

  1. The Grand Canyon contains some major meanders. Upstream of the Grand Canyon, the San Juan River (around Gooseneck State Park, southeast Utah) has some of the most extreme meandering imaginable. The canyon is 1,000 feet high, with the river flowing five miles while progressing one mile as the crow flies (American Southwest n.d.). There is no way a single massive flood could carve this.
  2. Recent flood sediments would be unconsolidated. If the Grand Canyon were carved in unconsolidated sediments, the sides of the canyon would show obvious slumping.
  3. The inner canyon is carved into the strongly metamorphosed sediments of the Vishnu Group, which are separated by an angular unconformity from the overlying sedimentary rocks, and also in the Zoroaster Granite, which intrudes the Vishnu Group. These rocks, by all accounts, would have been quite hard before the Flood began.
http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CH/CH581.html

owned.


tall73 said:
This is in fact precisely the type of situation we would see after a Genesis type flood. You have a very limited population that would spread out over large areas of now competitor free niches. It would lead to a huge amount of seeming diversity, which would really be devolution into various new forms due to lack of competition in new niches. Creatures that could not survive before now could. Certain creatures would be lost in a flood...dinos etc. And certain species would simply die out, perhaps after the flood etc.

This is called ad hoc. A real theory of noahic flood requires you to take all evidence into account, like, say the fact that none of the other civilizations extant noticed this flood, or the fact that there isn't enough water on the planet, or the fact that no ice cores or tree rings from that time period record said flood. As of this moment, a flood theory is impossible, seeing how the evidence disproves said flood.

http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-noahs-ark.html#implications

tall73 said:
In the final analysis it is a choice that we have to make between two competing ways of looking at the data. You may well be convinced that evolutionists explain the data better. Fair enough. I am not. Either way, neither camp has all the answers. They are inferring from the data.

First of all, this jumble you posted focuses on geology, biology, and genetics. I know its fun to lump these things into one big ball of evolution hate, but they are all separate. The only thing creationists can do is look at incredibly narrow (often fraudulent) "data" that fits their theological presuppositions. What does it tell you that it was christians who originally falsified the YEC model some 200 years ago?
 
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A. believer said:
Great idea! And while you're at the library, you should brush up on church history by reading Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code. http://www.the-highway.com/w3timages/icons/rolleyes.gif

I realize that "inherit the Wind" is not an historical examination of the Scopes trial, it is a work of fiction just like The Da Vinci Code. But it is certainly based on the real event. The story does a nice job of illustrating what can happen when ignorance overrules reason.
 
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eh7 said:
Do Christians believe in Darwin's evolution theory? And should Christians believe it? Do christians deny the evolution theory totally?

no

no

and

yes

genesis answers this. father is the creator,
 
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Donkeytron said:
I can't beleive I had to dig all the way back in the thread to address this monstrosity, but fine. I think showing one or two points to be complete bunk should be sufficient to show that the rest of the post is of similar quality.

Actually, it is. Try and find a "catastrophism" scientist who isn't also a fundamentalist christian.

So you are telling me that no scientist who is not a creationist believes in mass extinctions? meteorite impact? I think we both know that is not true.

Most surfaces on the earth were covered with water at one time or another. We can see mountains forming today via uplift.

Indeed, we also see faults, etc. However, what you are unable to account for is how the soft strata slope in places, not breaking, as a result of obvious uplift. Nor did you attempt to explain items being pushed through soft strata without breaking. Moreover, the point is not that there was water. The point is that they find marine and terestial fossils in the same area, in the same strata.

All these claims have been repeatedly debunked.

1. The Grand Canyon contains some major meanders. Upstream of the Grand Canyon, the San Juan River (around Gooseneck State Park, southeast Utah) has some of the most extreme meandering imaginable. The canyon is 1,000 feet high, with the river flowing five miles while progressing one mile as the crow flies (American Southwest n.d.). There is no way a single massive flood could carve this.
2. Recent flood sediments would be unconsolidated. If the Grand Canyon were carved in unconsolidated sediments, the sides of the canyon would show obvious slumping.
3. The inner canyon is carved into the strongly metamorphosed sediments of the Vishnu Group, which are separated by an angular unconformity from the overlying sedimentary rocks, and also in the Zoroaster Granite, which intrudes the Vishnu Group. These rocks, by all accounts, would have been quite hard before the Flood began.

http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CH/CH581.html

owned.

Now a few questions about your own view, and some interesting evidence for ours:

A. There are several areas where strata are missing from the formations, representing millions upon millions of years. What happened to those ? Sounds a little odd doesn't it? Especially since no erosion occurred in most of the strata, and the contacts are completely flat, which is the same thing that happens in underwater deposition today. Within the Tapeats Sandstone formation there are huge boulders from other formations mixed in. How would gradual carving account for that?

Here is an article dealing with erosion, flat contacts, missing strata, etc.

http://www.grisda.org/origins/15075.htm


B. The river cuts directly through an uplifted area, the Kaibab Upwarp. How would this happen? Rivers don't flow OVER hills. At current erosion rates it would take 71,000 years to wash all of that sediment that is currently there out. That is a short time to account for some theories as to how this happened such as mountainous uplift etc. Some say that the current load was only born a couple of times, but their explanations for this are a bit convoluted.

C. http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/solarsystem/mars_floods_020621.html

lists an instance on Mars of a canyon cut in a very short time. It is incredibly steep and a mile deep. The main difference is the width of the plain at the bottom. But given the difference of materials being cut through that might be expected. In any case, it clearly does not take millions of years for it to happen. Moreover, if you notice their image map, there is some meandering there too. Of course, on Mars no one is all that worried about explaining it to be the result of millions of years.

D. Some of the more recent lava flow on the top layers test to be older than the bottom layers through radiometric dating.

E. A rather detailed look at the possible pre-flood rock formations:
http://www.grisda.org/origins/58007.pdf

F. megabreccia as evidence of catastraphism associated with the Grand Canyon: http://www.grisda.org/origins/05039.htm

This is called ad hoc. A real theory of noahic flood requires you to take all evidence into account, like, say the fact that none of the other civilizations extant noticed this flood, or the fact that there isn't enough water on the planet, or the fact that no ice cores or tree rings from that time period record said flood. As of this moment, a flood theory is impossible, seeing how the evidence disproves said flood.

Modern civilazation is a recent phenomenon, starting at roughly the same time around river basis. Since I don't accept a literal 6,000 year date I am not overly worried about that evidence. The only evidence we have of 6k years are the geneologies which show obvious telescoping etc.

Dendrochronology uses overlapping to establish dates, and again, past a certain point does nothing for you.

Ice core presumptions are also based on uniform levels of glaciation etc. which some examples show are not true. In fact, glaciation itself is now known to occur rapidly. So the concept that current stable glaciers have always been so does not hold up.

As to ice breaking up during the flood

There are indications of temperature differences and irregularities in the two ice cores from the deepest selections of the Greenland ice sheet, indicative of possible cracks due to buoyancy.


First of all, this jumble you posted focuses on geology, biology, and genetics. I know its fun to lump these things into one big ball of evolution hate, but they are all separate. The only thing creationists can do is look at incredibly narrow (often fraudulent) "data" that fits their theological presuppositions. What does it tell you that it was christians who originally falsified the YEC model some 200 years ago?


First you said it was a cut and paste job,assuming I took it from some other source... . Now you say it is a jumble. I think you are dodging the arguments.

Who said anything about hate? Of course I addressed different areas because the question is a large one. Was it not you that said there are 150 years of accumulated evidence? And you want me to look at only one point?

The underlying theory of evolution involves one overarching necessity–long time periods. This is the key to the genetic changes, the key to the strata, the key to the fossils, etc. So it is not unrelated at all. Now if you truly wish to be scientific, stop your arrogant talking and simply give evidence.

And why not take a shot at the rest? You said you wanted the best argument, but you seem to have avoided the best arguments in my article. Why would you do that?


And I notice you still give no thought out comprehensive view of your own. Why not? Afraid I might poke some holes in that too? It is always easier to shoot down someone else's details than give your own.

The least you could do is summarize some talkorigins posts.

And might I mention, you seem overly stressed at all these Creationist sources...you don't consider talkorigins to be a biased site? Do they show evidence of any theory besides evolution? Of course not. They are a clearing house for debaters. That is biased by definition.
 
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tall73 said:
And might I mention, you seem overly stressed at all these Creationist sources...you don't consider talkorigins to be a biased site? Do they show evidence of any theory besides evolution? Of course not. They are a clearing house for debaters. That is biased by definition.

The only bias talkorigins has is towards science, as is evidenced by their references to scientific papers when making a claim.
 
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Donkeytron said:
The only bias talkorigins has is towards science, as is evidenced by their references to scientific papers when making a claim.

Please....now if you are going to say that we are being dishonest, then you must admit that a group COMPLETELY dedicated to arguing one point is biased.

Moreover, the articles I cited from origins magazine have extensive documentation, often from their own research or reputable journals.

The average number of references given per article was 33

So give it up. All sources are biased to one degree or another, but if you cannot even admit a clearing house for evolution is biased you need to step back a bit.

I added more articles to my previous post. Enjoy.
 
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tall73 said:
The underlying theory of evolution involves one overarching necessity–long time periods. This is the key to the genetic changes, the key to the strata, the key to the fossils, etc. So it is not unrelated at all. Now if you truly wish to be scientific, stop your arrogant talking and simply give evidence.

And I notice you still give no thought out comprehensive view of your own. Why not? Afraid I might poke some holes in that too? It is always easier to shoot down someone else's details than give your own.

There is no "underlying theory" of evolution. There is only the theory of evolution. Geology is separate from biology. What comprehensive view are you talking about? You don't seem to grasp the fact that once contradictary evidence of a theory is well established, it has to either change or be laid to rest. In this case, the catastrophic flood theory (meteor impacts are well established) is already dead. Posting "interesting evidence" with no scholarly reference isn't very encouraging. Are you even reading these articles? Heres a snippet from the canyon-on-Mars article:

"[font=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica]A ridge on the edge of the crater gave way, suddenly releasing the flood that carved Ma'adim Vallis, said Irwin. [/font] [font=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica]Unlike Arizona's Grand Canyon, which was carved over millions of years by the Colorado River, Ma'adim Vallis was made ``within a matter of months, certainly less than a year,'' said Irwin."'
[/font]

[font=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica]And how bout them lava flows? Are you refering to Steve Austin's work over at ICR?
[/font]

[font=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica]
[/font]
 
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