racer said:
Yes, but note what is listed as near antonyms:
Near Antonyms: assurance, certainty, fact, knowledge
True, but this is for the whole range of meaning of theory, not just that used in science.
Okay, some theories are more substantiated than others are, but theyre still theories.
All theories are still theories no matter how well substantiated they are. Atomic theory, for example, is still atomic theory. What you need to unlearn is the fallacious idea that theories ever become facts. Even when we are as certain of a theory as that the sun will rise tomorrow, it is still a theory.
So treating a theory as if it has some "growing" to do before being taken seriously just shows that you do not grasp what a theory is and why it is distinguished from fact.
There is still much information needed to substantiate the "theory of evolution" in regards to humans.
Not really. That we share a common ancestor with chimpanzees is well-evidenced.
I disagree. I think in certain instances, such as environmental adaptation, it is fairly factual. However, regarding the existence of humanity, there is way too much missing to declare it as anything but a theory.
Actually both involve both fact and theory. That species are adapted to their environment is a fact. That they became adapted through the mechanisms of evolution is theory. That humans have an evolutionary history is a fact. The precise details of that history is complex and will likely take many more discoveries before we can nail down the pathway that links us back to the ancestor we share with chimpanzees.
I think that is backwards. Facts explain, uphold, validate, or substantiate theories.
Facts do uphold, validate and substantiate theories, but they don't explain them. An apple falling from a tree does not explain gravity. Gravity explains why the apple falls from the tree to the ground instead of flying to the moon.
I vaguely recognize Linnaeus name from College Biology I, a general requirement.
To refresh your memory
http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/0_0_0/history_05
However, I think we are talking in circles here. I think we agree to a certain extent and disagree to a certain extent. To disprove that "man" was created by God and prove that he has evolved from some primate, science is going to have to show from what primate we evolved. I know they have some generalized lineage attempting to show this evolution, but have they discovered the missing link? If so, I guess I missed out on that bit of information.
Science does not disprove or prove creation. The evolution of humanity is not a denial of God as creator. Creation and evolution are not mutually exclusive because evolution is a mechanism, a process. It is generally accepted by TEs that this is the process by which God brought all but the first living species into existence. Creationism generally asserts that God used a magical process instead of natural processes. So among Christians, the debate is not over whether God created us, but about how God created us.
btw missing links are for chains. In the article on Linnaeus you will see reference to the "Great Chain of Being" proposed by Aristotle. It was a very influential concept for two millennia, and it is not surprising that some people super-imposed it onto evolution. But evolution is not a chain or ladder. It is more like a branching tree (or even better a bush). This cartoon illustrates the incorrect and correct concepts.
OH-kayyyy, youre way over my head here.
Sorry. The point is, if you get the same answer from two or more different procedures or methods that operate independently of each other, the probability that the answer is correct goes up. It is like having one person's testimony backed up by another's. The more independent witnesses agree on what happened, the more likely it is that it happened.
In the case of genetic evidence, we actually have hundreds of independant witnesses since each gene and each protein produced by a gene has evolved more or less independently of each other. So when they all tend to point to the same genetic lineage, it is likely correct. And that lineage is also the one suggested by the examination of visible traits like the arrangement of bones and nerves and muscles in living animals (and to some extent in fossil specimens).
UHM, I still think we are not addressing the same issue. Yes, mutation and adaptations are fact. However, mutating and adapting to such an extent that the final outcome resembles not the original object has yet to be proved. Theorized with substantial evidencein some instancesmaybe, but not proven.
Theories are never "proven" beyond doubt, though they may be substantiated to the point that it is perverse to refuse them provisional acceptance. That is because biological science is not based on pure mathematics but on observation and evidence. No one claims we have gathered all possible evidence or made every possible observation
So a theory is the concept which best accounts for all the observations--both natural and experimental--which we have made. Scientific procedure does not so much try to prove a theory, but to disprove or falsify it. Because science is based on observation and inductive reasoning, you never know when an exception to the rule will show up. But you can show that some hypotheses are
not possible. A theory stays alive as long as it has never been falsified. And the more evidence behind it, the less likely it is to be falsified. Since evolution is one of the best substantiated theories in science, the probability that it will be falsified are quite slim.
Yes, but when it is being discussed in a Christian forum, usually the evolution vs. creation is the discussion. I think that is the issue here.
Yes, but we shouldn't assume that is also the scientific issue. It's not. In fact even here, the issue is not creation vs. evolution, as there is no conflict between these ideas. The issue is creationism vs. evolution. In a Christians Only forum like this one, everyone agrees that God created. So the issue is not creation. The issue is the mechanism of creation. Not "Did God create?" for we will all answer "yes" to that. But "How did God create?" In the way creationists say or in the way TEs say?
So, its all just the result of a "freak" accident? From chaos reigns order and morality?
With God all things are possible.
Why would certain species evolve to intellectual superiority and others stop evolving never developing intellectually?
Because evolution is not a ladder of progress. It is not as if every species were on the same railway track heading for the same destination. They may all come from the same station, but they peel off on thousands of different branch lines.
Then let me rephrase. Those who attempt to disprove "creationism" based upon the "theory of evolution" fail to do so.
It is the evidence which upholds evolution that falsifies creationism. But before we get too deep into this section of the discussion, we should define creationism. Some of the things you associate with creationism will be theological concepts which science cannot disprove e.g. the existence of God. Other aspects of creationism deal with the history of earth and life on earth. These can be investigated scientifically, and when they have been, they have been falsified.
So, what kind of distinguishable mutations/adaptations have humans experienced over the last six-thousand years?
I don't know how many adaptations have been timed yet. Many, no doubt, go back more than 6,000 years. I would expect differences in skin colour which are related to UV rays and Vitamin D absorption, are more than 6,000 years old. But I don't know if data is available on that.
On the other hand, some adaptations are quite recent. You may be aware that a certain type of difference in a hemoglobin produces a defect in red blood cells called sickle-cell. People who inherit this trait from both parents suffer anemia. Those who inherit if from only one parent, however, have heightened resistance to malaria. So in spite of the detrimental effects of the double inheritance, this particular gene is relatively common in areas where malaria is common.
Recently, a new mutation showed up in Burkina Faso. Like the Hemoglobin-S described above, this Hemoglobin-C confers resistance to malaria. Unlike Hemoglobin-S, the new Hemoglobin-C appears to have no detrimental side-effects, like causing sickle-cell anemia. So while it is somewhat desirable, in spite of the risks, to have Hemoglobin-S if one is likely to be exposed to malaria, it is even better to have Hemoglobin-C, because the benefit is not accompanied by any serious risk.
Scientists are predicting that within 50 years, Hemoglobin-C will replace Hemoglobin-S in Burkino Faso. That would be an instance of adaptive evolution occurring in humans in less than a century.
For a good overview of adaptive evolution, a great book is
"The Beak of the Finch" by Jonathan Weiner. Not about human evolution of course, but it gives a very good description of how adaptive evolution works in finches and other species.
I disagree again. "Creationism" is not found in biology textbooks because it can not be scientifically or factually proven, not because it has been disproved. How could science ever disprove the existence of God?
Ah, but the existence of God is not what creationism is about. The existence of God is not scientifically testable. And evolution is compatible with the existence of God. So that is not the point of the debate. The point is, Does evolution describe how God created bio-diversity over the history of life on earth? and "Is humanity included in the process of evolution or were humans created independently from other life forms?"
A theistic evolution would say "yes" to the first question and agree that humans are included in the evolutionary process. A creationist may or may not agree with the first, but usually excludes humanity from the evolutionary process.
But both agree that God exists and that God created all things, including all forms of life.
Like I said, creationism has yet to be disproved.
If by creationism you mean simply that God exists, and God created, that cannot be disproved by science, since these are not testable scientific statements. But I don't call that creationism. I call that the doctrine of creation, which all of us here uphold.
By creationism I mean additional statements such as "God created all life forms
6,000 years ago." The addition of
6,000 years ago is a scientifically testable statement and has been falsified.