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Exial

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Evidence, that, if it was true, all the kinds were on it. There is lots of indications and evidences of the flood. Science is out of the running in being able to comment one way or the other on it. What evidence does science have against it? None!

You seem to be mixed up here. It is not "sciences" job to search for evidence against a global flood but rather your job to find evidence for your claim that a global flood occured.

Extradinary claims require extradinary proof, and you have yet to show any.
 
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troodon

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This doesn't mean too much to me without explaining why this is inconsistent with the theory.

So is there any empirical data which fits the hypotheses that Jesus walked on water or turned water into wine?
Any data that fits with it? What kind of data, archaeological? Not that I'm aware of.

If not, are those hypotheses scientifically falsified?
No, you need data about an event before you can try to falsify it. That's why scientists call Intelligent Design "unscientific", because it makes claims about things for which we have no data - ergo it is unfalsifiable.

And if they are scientifically falsified, does this mean they didn't actually happen?
If a hypothesis is falsified then it did not happen. If I hypothesize that my Peter Cushing was my babysitter when I was a child, and I falsify that hypothesis, that means Peter Cushing did not babysit me as a child.

The existence of the present nation of Israel, they descended from a literal Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob as recorded in Genesis (Jesus also descended from them).

....
Why would I be talking about Abraham, Isaac, or Jacob? When I say "a literal interpretation of Genesis has been falsified" I don't mean the entire book, I mean the creation myth and Noah's flood, Genesis 1-8.

And what “little” evidence is that?
The fact that a movement was sprung up around him and something motivated these followers to be willing to martyr themselves in order to spread that movement. It didn't spring out of nothing, something probably started it, and I think that 'something' was the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus.
 
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Nathan Poe

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Evidence, that, if it was true, all the kinds were on it.

And if it's not true, it's another in a long series of myths.

Refresh my memory -- you're not the one who thinks myths are historically true?

There is lots of indications and evidences of the flood.

IF we accept your "Different state past" blather, which only exists because -- you need it to provide "evidence" for the Flood.
 
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USincognito

a post by Alan Smithee
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Really? Are you sure about that? So If I can point to at least one paleontologist who does disagree then your point is shown to be false right?

Off the top of my head, how about Dr. Niles Eldridge just for a start??

Go ahead and produce a quote where he disagrees whether a particular hominid fossil is "fully ape" or "fully human" and I'll retract my assertion.

Just because you think they're bogus doesn't make them so.

It's not just me. It's everyone in anatomy and paleontology who is familiar with hominid remains and Lubenow's claims. He's still making the Neanderthals = rickets one many years after it's been debunked.


This is a Creationist myth. If you look at Australian Aborigines you do not see brow ridges like forensic reconstruction - done by the same people who put faces on murder victims - of Neanderthals and other hominids evidence. You also don't see a brow ridge per se in their skulls. That's more the result of fat and muscle. All modern human skulls look like N in the photo below.
http://www.christianforums.com/attachments/25093d1102473008-hominids2.jpg
and it is the major differences between all modern humans and our archaic sapiens and other hominid ancestors that allows us to create this cranial spectrum.
And the disease "excuse" is laughable. How amazing is it that we only find the bodies of diseased individuals in those strata, but never healthy ones? How amazing is it that every individual said to be of a hominid species has exactly the same proportional manifestation of the disease? How amazing is it that Creationists can't tell us what the disease is except for the long debunked rickets?

A little narcissistic of you to think that him and I alone thought you were wrong in that debate but if it makes you feel better I won't try and dissuade you of that notion.

If I were so wrong I would have expected more readers to step up in the commentary thread and explain to me where I was in error. The only criticisms I saw were of my style, not my substance.


How do these quotes turn my argument on it's head. I mention that Piltdown was a fake right in the very first paragraph:


In my "logical fallacies" section I mention fraud 5 times and fake once more. In my "the rest of the story" section I note that:

Again, fraud, fraud, fraud mentioned over and over by me. I then go on to explain why other legitimate finds - before, shortly after and over the next 80 years - are reason enough that Creationsts aren't making a point when they object to hominid fossils by pointing out Piltdown. How then do your two quotes turn my argument on it's head?
 
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USincognito

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I bolded that one comment you made above and have to wonder if exaggeration can fall in the catagory of "faked"? You say there are dozens of hominid fossils unearthed. Where do they fall in this statistic?

Huh? Look, let me put it this way. Fossils are either real or they're fake. As to how they are classified, that's sometimes going to change based on new finds. Without DNA it's hard to draw up a precise cladegram. As far as hype goes... well, sometimes scientists like the spotlight. That doesn't take away the fact that the fossil exists or that we can learn a lot, even from an overhyped one.


You heard wrong. The bone fragments alone would fill up several coffins. Skulls would probably fill up several more. And semi-complete skeletons will even more. Check out the list on this Wiki entry

And to say there is no contraversay or speculation or presupposed assumptions or exaggerations given to what has been found in the 90ish years since Piltdown would be a biased opinion to say the least.

Since you just showed yourself to be unaware of how many hominid fossils we have, I'd say your opinion of my assertion is groundless.

Funny the hush in the evolutionary ranks of Ida.

Ida might not be the find she was overhyped to be, but she is an amazingly complete and fascinating 45,000,000 year old fossil with some very interesting features. The fact that she was overhyped doesn't change these other facts about her.

Here is a statement on Lucy by the founder Johanson himself:{snip}

Founder? The word you're looking for is "discoverer". And quote mining isn't evidence of anything. We have her skeleton. It's 40% complete and most of it can be mirrored because humans are bilateral beings. She clearly is an upright walking hominid of the genus Australopithecus.

And I am hearing a LOUD murmer in the camp about Ardi who ironically was brought out on the date of the Darwn celebration. How convenient.

I can't blame paleontologists for having a bit of showmanship, but what "murmers" are you hearing and from what "camp"?

{snip}It is fascinating how regularly the hominid tree is pruned.{snip}

Got a few examples? Ida's a primate fossil not a homind, Lucy is still an A. afarensis, Ardi is still a hominid, Taung child, Turkana Boy, Mrs. Ples, Java Man, etc. etc. are all still in the hominid tree.

Are you sure you meant pruned? Perhaps you meant the branches are sometimes shifted around a bit?
 
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Nostromo

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To a number of scientists, one of the observations that falsified the Big Bang theory is the existence of two different red-shifted objects in close proximity, and even connected:
We've been through that before, and why it only makes sense to people who don't think in 3 dimensions.
 
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Crankitup

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Go ahead and produce a quote where he disagrees whether a particular hominid fossil is "fully ape" or "fully human" and I'll retract my assertion.

Well I did say "off the top of my head". I seem to recall that when he co-wrote the book 'The Myths of Human Evolution', where the concept of punctuated equilibrium was first discussed in detail, a non-traditional view was taken on a particular fossil. Then again, I could be confusing his analysis of scientists turning a blind eye to the gaps in the fossil record whilst still stubbornly clinging onto Darwin's gradualism, to the way I viewed scientists as negligent with regards to Piltdown Man and how it took 40 years to show it was fraudulent.

You were originally trying to say that Lubenow was a crank on the basis that (amongst one or two other things) he didn't agree with other creationists regarding whether a particular fossil was hominoid or simian. I countered that paleontologists disagree as well and your response seems to be along the lines that they don't disagree to the same degree, e.g. on whether a particular fossil is hominoid or simian. I'm sure if I had the time I could find an instance where a paleontologist has disagreed with the orthodoxy on this point, whether it be Niles, or whether it be a creationist paleontologist like Kurt Wise (who studied under S. J. Gould) or someone else. Perhaps for now it might be enough for you to consider that paleontologists do disagree on some very large and elementary things like whether all the fossils from the Cambrian Period and the earlier Precambrian, are animals. Does this make them all (to use your earlier line of reasoning) cranks?


It's not just me. It's everyone in anatomy and paleontology who is familiar with hominid remains and Lubenow's claims. He's still making the Neanderthals = rickets one many years after it's been debunked.

That's the common misconception in atheistic evolutionary circles. Lubenow never claimed that Neanderthals were modern humans with rickets. He did suggest it as a possible cause of Neanderthal and Homo Erectus morphology but this wasn't anything new.

And the disease "excuse" is laughable. How amazing is it that we only find the bodies of diseased individuals in those strata, but never healthy ones?

If there was an environmental factor causing the disease then it would make perfect sense wouldn't it, or is that too much of a stretch for you?


How do these quotes turn my argument on it's head.

The issue is that the whole tenor and tone of your arguments in that debate is that Piltdown wasn't really that big a deal seeing as it wasn't "universally accepted" and was only "marginally considered genuine". The BBC quote that characterises it as "one of the biggest discoveries of the 20th Century" and then "it's greatest scientific embarrassment" along with Wiki's description of it as "the most famous paleontological hoax in history" lends an entirely different tone to the issue than your fumbled attempts to water it down and sweep it under the carpet, don't you think?
 
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Doveaman

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This doesn't mean too much to me without explaining why this is inconsistent with the theory.
This is why many people just accept the theory without question; a kind of faith acceptance.

I think the images speak for themselves. The simple explanation is that many astronomers believe such objects should not be connected, or even close. The images say they are wrong.
Any data that fits with it? What kind of data, archaeological? Not that I'm aware of.
Any scientific evidence at all.

Is there
any scientific evidence to suggest that a man could ever walk on water and turn it into wine as Jesus is said to have done? If not, does this mean it never happened?
No, you need data about an event before you can try to falsify it. That's why scientists call Intelligent Design "unscientific", because it makes claims about things for which we have no data - ergo it is unfalsifiable.
That depends on how the term "Intelligent Design" is used. Not all theists use it the same way. Some use it to explain observed facts. There's plenty of evidence for Intelligent Design all around us. Have you ever seen intelligence come from non-intelligence? That fact itself is evidence for Intelligent Design.

Even if you did see, the statistics go overwhelmingly in favor of Intelligent Design.
If a hypothesis is falsified then it did not happen. If I hypothesize that my Peter Cushing was my babysitter when I was a child, and I falsify that hypothesis, that means Peter Cushing did not babysit me as a child.

Peter Cushing is falsified because the evidence, or lack thereof, suggest he didn't babysit you.

Jesus walking on water is falsified because the
the evidence, or lack thereof, suggest this is impossible.

Does this mean Jesus didn't walk on water?
Why would I be talking about Abraham, Isaac, or Jacob? When I say "a literal interpretation of Genesis has been falsified" I don't mean the entire book, I mean the creation myth and Noah's flood, Genesis 1-8.
Then you need to make yourself clear when you say "book".

It is written: "The first man Adam became a living being"; the last Adam
(Jesus), a life-giving spirit. The spiritual did not come first, but the natural, and after that the spiritual. The first man was of the dust of the earth, the second man from heaven.

As was the earthly man, so are those who are of the earth; and as is the man from heaven, so also are those who are of heaven. And just as we have borne the likeness of the earthly man, so shall we bear the likeness of the man from heaven.
-
1 Cor 15:45-49.

These two men are spoken of in the same context, so they are both either metaphorical or literal.

Since the second man, Jesus, is literal, so then is the first man, Adam, since they are both spoken of in the same context.

Jesus Himself considered Adam to be literal when He said, "Haven't you read that at the beginning the Creator 'made them male and female,' and said, 'For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh'? So they are no longer two, but one. Therefore what God has joined together, let man not separate." - Matt 19:4-6.

Adam and Eve (male and female) were married by God Himself as an example for us to follow.
Or maybe is was Muhammad .

Is this the only reason that led to your Christian conversion? because I'm sure it was not enough for most Christians.
 
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Crankitup

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brinny

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Are all you mentioned above created in the image of God?
 
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brinny

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is that your way of saying that science CANNOT disprove that the ark/flood existed?
 
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Skaloop

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These two men are spoken of in the same context, so they are both either metaphorical or literal.

Does not follow. I could speak of Doveaman and Superman in the same context, but that doesn't make Superman real just because you are.
 
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SithDoughnut

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is that your way of saying that science CANNOT disprove that the ark/flood existed?

No one can disprove anything without making a mutually exclusive positive claim, which is nigh on impossible in most situations. In other words: You can't prove a negative.

However, the burden of proof puts the onus on those who make the claim. Those who claim that the ark exists must give evidence of either the ark's existence or some impact it had that can be measured now. Otherwise, the logical conclusion is to treat it like any other hypothesis and doubt it until evidence is produced.

You cannot throw the hypothesis away entirely, but until the evidence appears it will be filed away in the same category as hypotheses like "Trees can walk and talk" or "I was kidnapped by aliens". No proof = no theory.
 
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brinny

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Therefore it is "possible" that the ark existed, until it is dis-proven?
 
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troodon

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This is why many people just accept the theory without question; a kind of faith acceptance.
I'm not terribly interested in the Big Bang, otherwise I would have gone out of my way to educate myself on the subject. I don't argue the subject on this forum because I know I don't know much about it.

I think the images speak for themselves.
Well I'm here to tell you, they don't.

The simple explanation is that many astronomers believe such objects should not be connected, or even close. The images say they are wrong.
That isn't an explanation, that's hand waving. An explanation would include the reason why the astronomers think these things shouldn't exist.

any scientific evidence to suggest that a man could ever walk on water and turn it into wine as Jesus is said to have done?
No.
If not, does this mean it never happened?
Again, no. A lack of evidence does not falsify anything, I've been quite clear on this.

It's tiring arguing science with someone who doesn't understand the very fundamentals of how science operates. Why do you even come here to say that science is wrong if you don't even know the philosophy and mechanics behind it? I freely admit to being ignorant about the Big Bang, but I don't run around telling people that the theory's right or the theory's wrong, because I know I'm not educated enough about it to speak on it. Take my word for it, Doveaman, you are very far from being educated about science.

Science looks for things to falsify theories. That's what we've been talking about, falsification. Remember when I compared it to Clue? There's no "evidence for" Professor Plum in Clue, there's only falsification of everyone but Professor Plum. Historical science doesn't care at all about "evidence for". There is no "evidence for" in these sciences except to favor one possible theory over another, those few theories that have not already been falsified.

Intelligent Design claims that there are some things that cannot evolve naturally. That is a claim that cannot be falsified, because we can never naturally evolve these traits in a lab. And even if we were able to do that, being able to naturally evolve them in a lab doesn't mean that they naturally evolved on earth.

Remember earlier when I said you can't prove a positive in a historical science, it applies here too. I can't prove that the Black Dragon member represents a shallow sea, no matter how much "evidence for" it I have, and IDers can't prove that the eyeball is too complex to evolve naturally. All that we can do with these hypotheses is try to falsify them. The Black Dragon hypothesis can be falsified, the eyeball statement cannot be falsified.

Peter Cushing is falsified because the evidence, or lack thereof, suggest he didn't babysit you.

Doveaman, read this very carefully.

"The Peter Cushing Hypothesis (great band name, btw) is falsified because the evidence suggests he didn't babysit me."

NOT

"The Peter Cushing Hypothesis is falsified because there is a lack of evidence."

Period, end of story. A lack of evidence never falsifies anything. There is a group of paleontologists who think that birds existed in the fossil record for tens of millions of years before Archaeopteryx lived. Most other paleontologists find it highly unlikely that birds could have existed that long without leaving a fossil record, but they know that this lack of evidence does not falsify the hypothesis.

A lack of evidence cannot falsify a hypothesis. Please understand this.

Jesus walking on water is falsified because the
evidence, or lack thereof, suggest this is impossible.

Does this mean Jesus didn't walk on water?
The Jesus hypothesis includes the fact that he was divine. A normal human being cannot walk on water, but a divine one may be able to, so the fact that normal human beings can't walk on water does not falsify this hypothesis.

These two men are spoken of in the same context, so they are both either metaphorical or literal.

Since the second man, Jesus, is literal, so then is the first man, Adam, since they are both spoken of in the same context.
This is theology. If you'd like to discuss it further please make a thread here and I'd love to answer it for you.

This forum is for discussions relating to science.

Or maybe is was Muhammad .
He lived 600 years later.

Is this the only reason that led to your Christian conversion?
Of course not. You asked what evidence I have that Jesus rose from the dead, not why am I a Christian. Don't expect me to read your mind and prove answers to questions you have not asked.
 
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brinny

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Originally Posted by brinny
Are all you mentioned above created in the image of God?

They are actually all created by a few bones and the presupposed imagination of man.

You didn't answer the question. Are all of what was listed in the first post of this thread, created in the image of God?
 
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troodon

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You didn't answer the question. Are all of what was listed in the first post of this thread, created in the image of God?

Does God have a physical image? and how much does He look like me?
 
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