The first paragraph is a classic example of psychological projection at work, the second is indicative of ignorance and bigotry.
Perhaps you are unaware some of the responses given to you in this thread have come from scientists who happen to be Christians.
While I find your comments rather amusing, it wouldn't surprise me if others find them offensive.
I’m aware that some Christians believe in evolution, but when they attribute the design and wonder of creation to blind, natural processes, they still redirect glory away from the Creator. That’s not a minor issue. I make no apology if that offends. What does offend me is when people give credit to chance and animals for what God clearly deserves praise for.
You do need help with definitions. "unguided" and "without purpose" do not mean the same thing, Yes, mutations are random (they have to be) variation is randomly distributed and natural selection has no forsight. And no, you don't mean accidental, you mean contingent. But none of that means purposeless.
If there's no guiding mind, no intended outcome, and no foresight, then calling it "purposeless" is entirely fair. Word games don’t change the core idea. If everything is the result of undirected processes, then design and purpose are illusions. That’s the point.
said credible explanations. The ID you are pushing here is not credible. It has no scientific merit and many Christians (including the Pope, BTW) find that it has no theological merit, either.
LOL. The pope has issues
Correct. I am glad that you understand that. And in the process, more complex biological structures can arise, step by step, but evolution doesn't "lead" to them or approach them as a goal. But an intelligence doesn't need to be" steering" it in order for it to be purposeful.
That’s where we fundamentally disagree. Purpose, by definition, implies intention, a goal in mind. If evolution isn’t directed, doesn’t aim for outcomes, and has no foresight, then any “purpose” attributed to it is just a projection.
Without a mind to intend or steer, calling it purposeful stretches the meaning of the word beyond recognition.
You've repeatedly dropped or greatly modified claims when it's been pointed out that they're clearly incorrect without ever acknowledging that you've changed your position. Are you aware that you're doing this?
No, I haven’t changed my position; I’ve clarified it. There’s a big difference between random variation and the origin of specified, functional systems with interdependent parts. That’s been my point all along. Shannon information and functional information are not the same and bringing that up isn’t backpedalling, it’s adding necessary detail to a complex discussion. If you're reading that as a contradiction, you may be conflating different levels of argument.
What specific assumptions are you referring to?
For starters: the assumption that unguided processes can account for the origin of life, that mutations plus natural selection can build all biological complexity, and that present rates and mechanisms can explain the distant past. These aren’t directly observed, they’re inferred within a framework that assumes naturalism from the outset.
How do you know that's the case? Do you stay up to speed on the science by regularly reading the relevant journals?
I don’t need a subscription to every journal to recognise when core claims go beyond what’s directly observable. Many of the key points, like abiogenesis, or mutation plus selection producing vast complexity, remain assumptions built on interpretation, not direct demonstration. I stay informed enough to know where the line is between data and made-up story.
But if it was well documented, I wouldn't be saying there's no evidence and asking for you to provide evidence. You say that I'm "less interested in truth and more interested in guarding a position., I could easily say that you are showing nothing but intellectual laziness in refusing to provide evidence that, according to you, exists but you refuse to do something as simple as present the evidence when asked. This is definitely a two-way street with regards to any insults we can bandy against each other.
Simply put: if there is evidence as you claim, then simply show it!
I have already pointed to the fine-tuning of physical constants (e.g., gravity, strong nuclear force, cosmological constant), the specified, code-like nature of DNA, and the sudden appearance of fully formed systems in the fossil record, all well-discussed in scientific literature. You keep saying “that’s not evidence” without engaging with what’s actually being referenced. Dismissing every example as “not evidence” simply because it doesn’t support your worldview isn’t a scientific rebuttal, it’s evasion.
If you're genuinely interested, I can list specific peer-reviewed sources. But if your only goal is to keep repeating "where’s the evidence" regardless of what’s shown, then I have to wonder whether you’re even open to considering anything that challenges your assumptions.