mark kennedy said:
For one thing creation science is a movement started by scientists not laymen.
Name them. Because I know the names of most of the founders of the creationist movement, and they were all laymen.
The only fanatics I see arguing this issue a evolutionary extremists who want to exclude all theistic reasoning isolated, in politics, in professional science, in education and this exclusivly is nowhere more pronounced then in the concept of evolution.
I think you're going to have to define "theistic reasoning", because as I understand it, theistic reasoning is nothing more than using the baseless excuse "goddidit" instead of seeking to understand the real processes involved. That and your brand of theistic reasoning appears to be nothing more than obligately following whatever the Bible says, which isn't reasoning as I could recognize it.
Evolutionary rationalizations neglect the larger issues and are clearly more confrontational then substantive.
I refuse to neglect any of the issues. So why don't you point out what you think I am neglecting now?
Name calling has been at the heart of the emphasis at every turn and the same pedantic satire transends every post. I realize that these debates often get heated but the red and tooth mentality of the modern Darwinian is a reflection of the content of evolutionary thought.
What I see are creationists determined to prove evolution wrong, without presenting anything to promote any alternative, and without bothering to research anything they claim, -snipping questions they know they can't deal with, and refusing to concede any errors that are exposed. That's not an honest practice. And this post is an example of that, since you still didn't concede your erroneous claim that the PubMed site didn't state their support of common ancestry.
I defined the difference between the creationist model and universal descent from the begining.
No, you didn't. We've agreed on some of the known mechanisms of evolution, (while you claimed there were none) and you've failed to provide any mechanism whatsoever for creation. You've also admitted there was no reason to believe in creation, or even God, in the first place. Therefore, you haven't provided any alternative explanation. Remember the explanation was key to the point of this discussion.
Now, in biological evolution based on geologic isolation and universal common descent. This is nothing new, creationists do not argue that evolution happens,
Be careful of all-inclusive statements like this one, because many of them do. JohnR7 for example denies even microevolution, remember? I've known many other creationists in my life who still adhere to the immutability of species, some of whom have even believed in Lamarkism while refusing anything Darwin ever proposed simply because he proposed it. I've even encountered some creationists, both in the web, and in my own family, who deny that dinosaurs ever existed. One of them posted a website saying that all the dinosaur fossils were forgeries made of dental plaster, and another denied the museum fossils even existed, saying that all our "evidence" were a matter of trick photography and chicken bones. My own mother continued to deny evolution at any level until about five years ago, when her church told her it was OK to believe it. Very few creationists believe as you do, so don't claim they all do.
it's the naturalistic assumptions that are projected on the evidence that is the heart of the issue.
That wasn't the case during our debate, but it can be now if you like. However, I suggest we move to the flood next, because nothing will better demonstrate the universal common ancestor model than that topic will.
What you have tried to do is to make this a debate between creation and evolution, which is bogus. This is about the single common ancestor model that is presumed throughout natural science and it is nothing more then rethoric.
It isn't rhetoric, Mark, and I will prove that once you start answering questions as you agreed you would. But our debate was never about that. Though you tried to turn it into that, I expressed what it really was very clearly in the wording of my challenge before you ever accepted the terms.
I never argued against evolution as it is properly defined only contested the presumption of universal descent.
Then you never should have accepted the terms of the debate. If you wanted to argue something else, you should have said so before accepting my terms.
This thread in particular and the formal debate in general is focused on evolution as a philosophy of science. This is inescapable and Mayr said explicitly that that the Darwin concept was an exclusivly secular worldview and yet you deny that this is over our 'world view'. Gould has been explicit about the theological implications of evolutionary thought yet you claim this is irrelevant.
That's true.Even if Mayr and Darwin were "exclusively secular", the hundreds of millions of theistic evolutionists aren't. If you want me to argue against the existence of God, I'm sure I can accomidate you there. But I can't do it in this debate because evolution doesn't require the exclusion of God, much as you seem to want it to.
Darwin's Origin of Species can be considered nothing other then philisophical argument against the naturalistic implications of Genesis and this is at the heart of the emphasis.
Naturalistic implications of Genesis? This is a new concept. Explain.
My primary contention is that the word 'monkey' is a nillistic, nebulas, semantical rationalization of the explicit differences between human beings and their most simular counter part in the natural world.
It is none of the above, Mark. This is just a feeble excuse to get out answering a question you know you can't answer. Tell me, is the word, "dog" nihilistic? Nebulous? A semantical rationalization, etc.? Why didn't Linneaus think so? He was able to define both words as a God-fearing creationist, without either of them being any kind of nebulous rationalization. So why can't you?
This is what happens when you're central term is considered 'undiscoverable'.
Even if it were, (which in this case, it is not) the word "species" is irrelevant here, as there are many species of monkeys in several different genera, within a few different families within a couple different infraorders. You can be very vague about the species distinction and still come up with good, working definition of what a monkey is.
This has been the primary focus and the line between micro and macro evolution have become indiscernable. This is simply wrong and has plunged the large body of work of Zoological classification into a state of flux where nothing is ever defined or determined.
Whatever you need defined or determined, just ask, and I'll accomidate you as best I can. But as you say you accept speciation, and several levels of common ancestry beyond that, then you accept macroevolution by every definition I know of. So it doesn't matter how species is defined, and I don't see what your contention is here.
This at the heart of the emphasis in Darwin's work, Mayr's, Dawkin's and Hitler's.
Hitler's "work" wasn't remotely related to this topic in any fashion. I know it, you know it, and everyone reading this knows it. Get over it, and get back on-topic.
And you still ignored my challenge to explain why modern, exclusively creationist Christian terrorists and nazis adhere to Hitler's racism while refusing evolution entirely.
In New Testament Christianity we at least have a standard and anyone contradicting the sacred content of the New Testament can be readily refuted.
Not me. But you're welcome to try....in another, more relevant forum of course.
I was asking you to compare to very simple, general, and ubiquitious principles.
And I was debating evolution vs creationism, another topic entirely.
My strong suite is not taxonomy, it's history and the influence of culture on civilization. Do you even realize that this world view came of the same political and philosophical environment as Hitler's?
Its hard to understand what you're talking about, since you seldom clarify when you change the subject, but I do realize that the late 19th and early 20th centuries were a profound period of revolutionary idealism in Europe, not that any of that is remotely related to what we're talking about now. We're talking about what has been discovered by mostly-Christian evolutionists in the decades since then.
The war of nature in Darwinian thought is also a political theory, this I have qualified irrefutably.
I already refuted that when I pointed out that "social Darwinism" wasn't even based on Darwin, or anything he actually said, but on distortions of that proposed by Herbert Spencer, and others of a socio-political, rather than biological persuasion.
Anyone who makes an honest attempt to study the actual history and teaching of evolutionary biology can see this clearly.
Social Darwinism would be a real issue if we were discussing history and the cultural influences on civilization. But we're not talking about sociology. We're discussing biology, and not the history of the science, but the science itself,
modern genetics, evolutionary mechanisms, and the latest concepts in paleontology, anthropology, and taxonomy. We're not arguing any archaic, historic perspective, but the modern, updated perspective.
To be honest, the only reason I didn't respond to you're answer is because you dismissed the racist elements and I was just trying to get you're thoughts in the first place.
You got them, in the beginning, (post #14) and several times since. Your question wasn't relevant then or now, and still won't be as we proceed. And whether it was or not, that still didn't give you any excuse to ignore my question even once, much less a dozen times.
The only reason we are still discussing it is because you keep bringing it up without honestly admitting the racist element in both statements. When you kept bringing this up with so much ferver it became far more important.
I didn't bring it up, ever. You did every time. But I did "admit" the only racist elements in post # 296 of this thread, which I pointed out to you before. However, it
still isn't relevant or remotely on-topic.
Hitler was a pagan, pure and simple and this is no big secret.
Apparently it is, as most of the world, and even most Germans believe he was Catholic, as per his many comments to that effect, both public and private. Now some of his henchmen were Odinists and Helenists, but he himself was not, unless you have some citation to indicate otherwise.
Other then that, I really like the effort you made here, I have brought this up a number of times and while there are problems with what you're saying, it is at least thoughtfull. You do realize that the racist elements of early evolutionary thought can be expunged from evolutionary thought right?
I realize that no racist elements of evolutionary thought were present in the beginning. Some were interjected by sociologists, (and socialists) but not by biologists. And I have already stated that even these were "expunged" many decades ago, and were never relevant to anything we're supposed to be discussing now.
The Army thinks it's more important that I go to work right now then deal with this post. I really like this part and I want to give it more attention then I can right now. I also have an idea for a thread on taxonomy but I just keep getting sidetracked.
Then I'll look forward to a more substantive reply in the future.