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Evidence proved evolution is just a theory

TheBear

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Originally posted by tyler4588
Technically, evolution is not a theory. There are a couple religions that can come from evolution though.

Liberal Christianity
Agnosticism - Not knowing if God exists
Gnosticism - Believes that God does not exist
Wicca - Not really from evolution, but Wiccans believe in it

Your statement makes absolutely no sense at all. Why don't you re-group, get some logical thoughts together, and post something credible.

BTW, are you implying that anyone giving any plausability to evolution, is either a non-Christian, or a 'lesser' Christian than you?


Thanks,
John
 
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seebs

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Originally posted by Tinker Grey
GEL,
These Christians are not balancing faith in Darwin with faith in God.

Rather they trust there own observations and the ability of their minds to find the pattern to the data and create a theory that takes into account all the observed facts. (That is not to say that the theory is the same as the facts, or that the theory is fact, just that the theory doesn't contradict known facts since it was designed to take them into account! (*whew* -- and you thought Paul wrote long sentences.))


Exactly! Everything I've seen suggests that God made me the way I am, and did so on purpose. It was not some weird accident; this is what I am meant to be.

I believe that God provided us with simple stories when we didn't have the educational framework or knowledge to understand the complicated stories; He treated us the way we treat *our* children; he explained things as well as we could understand them.


Contrary to what you may be thinking right now (or not), this is not necessarily faith in our selves. Rather it is faith in God that he designed our minds to be able to find the patterns in the data (it is for this reason that conspiracy theories are so popular.)

God has enabled our minds to create models of systems (e.g., astronomical systems, biological systems, systems of the body, etc.). From these models, we predict from a set of data what will happen next. If the model fails to predict accurately, the model is revised. This is the strength of science. It is the strenght of humanity -- we learn from our mistakes.

And it is the amazing accuracy with which a carefully considered model can predict the world that reinforces this faith...


This faith in how God made us and made our minds is exercised every time we go to the doctor. I don't understand how aspirin works, yet I have faith that consistent observation by the relevant scientists (pharmacists, chemists, and doctors) that it will work.

I hope this helps explain that for many of us that the question of Evolution v. God is not an either/or proposition.

Indeed. I have not yet seen a quote saying that God is required to do everything simply by declaring it to be so. He seems fond of careful processes of building and development.

If I were to describe my day job to someone not in the field, I would probably say "I decide what the computer is to do, and then it does it." In fact, the process is endlessly complicated, and very hard to explain... So I don't try to explain it completely, but I capture the essense: It is through my will, and its application, that my computer does certain things.

That's how I've always interpreted the creation; God tells us "I say let there be light, and there is light", but He doesn't, in the scripture, explain about photons, relativistic velocity, or molecules in excited states emitting photons as their electrons settle back into the shells they'd normally be in.

We can observe these things, though, and in doing so, we come closer to an understanding of how God makes the world. If you don't approach it with a confrontational and hostile attitude, science can be a great way to grow in appreciation of God's work.
 
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Shane Roach

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I don't know, but I think if God's purpose in Genesis was to speak down to the education level of his ancient audience, He would ahve made it a little bit more straight foreward. "Billions of years ago, I spoke and there was a great explosion."

A big part of the whole purpose of the creation according to the Bible seems to be to have people act on their own without the kowledge or thought of someone watching them over their shoulder. At some point God reveals Himself, and people weigh that with their desires and so forth. A person who wants to reject God, though, needs to have some safe way to deny God's authority. Apparently, Satan had some idea he could beat God at His own game, being the annointed covering cherub of the throne of God, but people by and large would probably not think that way. In fact, the society of Abrahams seed that followed Moses out of Egypt reluctantly did do what they were told, with much goading and miraculous sings and so forth.

I guess I believe that Genesis is, like Jesus parables and so forth, meant to be a method of putting the word out without making it so obvious that God exists that everyone would weight that heavily in their decision making.

God appears to be showing us something aboutourselves, and about Him.

Very few people read Genesis closely. It is a difficult book and full of important but rarely discussed little tidbits. Many people aren't even aware that the tree of life was right there inthe garden with the tree of knowledge.

These things mean something. I don't know exactly what. What I do know is that extrapolating what we think we know about life now back millions of years is risky science. This is why I have my doubts about evolution. I also know that refusing to teach the creation idea alongside in school is a serious infraction on the free exchange of ideas. I don't care if scientists acknowledge it as "science" or not, the creation story exists and people have a right to a forum that is open and fair. Instead of trying to reinvent an entire curriculum around philosophy so there is a "correct" place to put this discussion, it seems fitting enough to me to just place it where the discussion already comes up anyhow. Science itself has a philosohical base, and is explained in science classes, so this is a perfect opportunity to compare and contrast ways of knowing and the process of critical thought and analysis.

Blah blah blah blah I know I know you want me to shut up and go away. I find it frustrating to put forth this idea in thousands of different ways, even find myself uncovering the point at which the scientific community is actually shortcutting the scientific method here, and still be treated as if I am some sort of religious kook. I just absolutely hate being told what I may and may not think, believe, or know about.
 
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Originally posted by tyler4588
Technically, evolution is not a theory. There are a couple religions that can come from evolution though.

Liberal Christianity
Agnosticism - Not knowing if God exists
Gnosticism - Believes that God does not exist
Wicca - Not really from evolution, but Wiccans believe in it

I think you meant to say that "technically, evolution is not a religion." Is that correct? And many people have use evolution to rationalize their world view just as many have used religions to justify their actions. This argument is really a non-starter, but it gets a lot of air time.
 
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seebs

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Originally posted by Shane Roach
I don't know, but I think if God's purpose in Genesis was to speak down to the education level of his ancient audience, He would ahve made it a little bit more straight foreward. "Billions of years ago, I spoke and there was a great explosion."

And how would he have explained "billions"? What would an "explosion" be to people without explosives? Why not just say "see this? I made it." Anyway, as I recall, we're told that a day is to man as ten thousand years to God, and "ten thousand years" strikes me as allegorical for "longer than you can possibly imagine". So, in seven periods, longer than you can possibly imagine, God made the world, starting with light, then gradually cooling things off until some of the matter turned into firmament... I really can't imagine how you could describe it *ANY* better in terms that could be comprehended by nomadic people who barely have agriculture down.


I guess I believe that Genesis is, like Jesus parables and so forth, meant to be a method of putting the word out without making it so obvious that God exists that everyone would weight that heavily in their decision making.

I think it is also, like the parables, full of allegory and metaphor.


These things mean something. I don't know exactly what. What I do know is that extrapolating what we think we know about life now back millions of years is risky science. This is why I have my doubts about evolution. I also know that refusing to teach the creation idea alongside in school is a serious infraction on the free exchange of ideas.

I disagree. Creationism is interesting, but it's not the slightest bit like science. There's no testing and refuting of hypotheses in sight. Evolution is science. Maybe it's risky, but no one will be horribly hurt if we have to revise it a few more times. Science is all about revising and updating your theories.

I don't care if scientists acknowledge it as "science" or not, the creation story exists and people have a right to a forum that is open and fair.

Hmm. "The world was made when the people in the next universe over tried to use a black hole for garbage disposal." Should I get equal time now, too?

Science classes should cover science, not theology.


Blah blah blah blah I know I know you want me to shut up and go away. I find it frustrating to put forth this idea in thousands of different ways, even find myself uncovering the point at which the scientific community is actually shortcutting the scientific method here, and still be treated as if I am some sort of religious kook. I just absolutely hate being told what I may and may not think, believe, or know about.

The scientific community is not, in general, shortcutting the scientific method. If you propose a testable hypothesis, people will be happy to test it... Unfortunately, insofar as creationism is testable, it *fails* every test we have, unless we assume that, in fact, all of our physics, statistics, biology, and chemestry are wrong.

The only way out is to declare it untestable, at which point, it's no longer science.
 
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Shane Roach

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Originally posted by seebs


And how would he have explained "billions"? What would an "explosion" be to people without explosives? Why not just say "see this? I made it." Anyway, as I recall, we're told that a day is to man as ten thousand years to God, and "ten thousand years" strikes me as allegorical for "longer than you can possibly imagine". So, in seven periods, longer than you can possibly imagine, God made the world, starting with light, then gradually cooling things off until some of the matter turned into firmament... I really can't imagine how you could describe it *ANY* better in terms that could be comprehended by nomadic people who barely have agriculture down.



I think it is also, like the parables, full of allegory and metaphor.



I disagree. Creationism is interesting, but it's not the slightest bit like science. There's no testing and refuting of hypotheses in sight. Evolution is science. Maybe it's risky, but no one will be horribly hurt if we have to revise it a few more times. Science is all about revising and updating your theories.



Hmm. "The world was made when the people in the next universe over tried to use a black hole for garbage disposal." Should I get equal time now, too?

Science classes should cover science, not theology.



The scientific community is not, in general, shortcutting the scientific method. If you propose a testable hypothesis, people will be happy to test it... Unfortunately, insofar as creationism is testable, it *fails* every test we have, unless we assume that, in fact, all of our physics, statistics, biology, and chemestry are wrong.

The only way out is to declare it untestable, at which point, it's no longer science.

You left out evening and morning in your counting argument. I know, I liked that idea myslef for a while, before I really studied the Bible. Still, I don't leave off the idea that there are some time alegories involved there. I am just saying it is not that simple.

The idea of large numbers was certainly not foreign, neither the idea of a fire, and anyone who has started a fire and put green wood on it knows about pops and explosions.

As for the philosophical part, one also learns from tradition. How do we find tradition to be reliable? because it has lasted many hundreds of years. Is tradition fallible? Certainly, sometimes people make mistakes and hold to them for a long while.

Likewise, science gains reliability through testing and time. If you trust history and tradition, you have to trust the historians. If you trust science, you have to trust scientists and the scientific community.

Perhaps the most frustrating thing is I can't even get an evolutionist to admit they can't test the hypothesis. All the bones and rocks and dating in the world cannot equal the old "seeing is believing" standard of proof, and hard science rests firmly on that rock.

There is too much politics flying around academia today to ignore the encroaching bias there. You are losing trust. Too devoted and fiery eyed argumentation about something that supposedly happened billions of years ago just naturally sets people's teeth on edge. And then the argument that if all the species didn't evolve from a common ancestor that this sets all of biology off its course, as if we wouldn't have modern biochemistry. No. That fails even the most basic smell test.

This subject is so absolutely inaplicable to modern life. Ideas about the begining of all life and all reality are not scientific arguments. They are by their very nature deeper, and have to take more of philosophy and human nature into account. If anything, the refusal to let creation even be mentioned in a science class looks a lot like fear, which is of course absolutely irrelevant, but politically it has its effect.

Hrm... Don't get it. Oh well.
 
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seebs

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Originally posted by GreenEyedLady
Here is a link to what scientist think is noah's ark.
Doesn't that prove that us christians are right?
How can one part of the bible be right, noah, and the other just hogwash?
Just a thought

http://www.arksearch.com /
GEL

Just a couple of points on the reasoning:

Imagine the following statement: First, I'm posting to this BBS, and second, I am the owner of three thousand Bengal tigers, all named Herb.

I bet you can convince yourself, quite easily, that one part of that statement is right, and another is wrong.

Secondly, note that "scientists" are a broad and varied group; they don't necessarily agree on everything.

Thirdly, while I think the guy doing the search is fascinating, I would never in a million years call it "science". What's the testable, falsifiable, hypothesis? Imagine that I find a boat in the mountains; what does it prove? For that matter, try to imagine, if you will, a boat large enough to hold two of everything - and probably many more, once you allow for the need for diverse populations. You'd pretty much have to rule out insects entirely, or you'd never be able to come close.

Finally, I don't see any announcements on the site saying they've found anything.

So, in short, they haven't found anything, they're not scientists, and even if they found something, it would hardly prove anything else to be true - and that's even assuming that the thing found could come anywhere close to being big enough to be a real ark.

(Just think about elephants, lions, bison, and a few other animals; you run out of space real fast.)
 
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seebs

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Originally posted by Shane Roach

You left out evening and morning in your counting argument. I know, I liked that idea myslef for a while, before I really studied the Bible. Still, I don't leave off the idea that there are some time alegories involved there. I am just saying it is not that simple.

I don't know enough to say what to make of evening and morning, but frankly, it sounds like pure poetry to me.


The idea of large numbers was certainly not foreign, neither the idea of a fire, and anyone who has started a fire and put green wood on it knows about pops and explosions.

Frankly, given a choice between that, and "let there be light, and there was light", I think the Bible is much closer to any reasonable guess at the cosmology of the universe than what you describe. Once again, think poetically and allegorically.

There is no *POINT* in trying to tell these people exactly what happened; they won't understand the details, and they don't care. They mostly just want to be assured that this world *IS*, and that it *IS* because someone said so, and that this someone is going to be laying out some ground rules.


As for the philosophical part, one also learns from tradition. How do we find tradition to be reliable? because it has lasted many hundreds of years. Is tradition fallible? Certainly, sometimes people make mistakes and hold to them for a long while.

But tradition doesn't adapt well when it doesn't work out. This is its central weakness; if you've always done things a certain way, and that way doesn't work, "it worked last year" doesn't save you.


Likewise, science gains reliability through testing and time. If you trust history and tradition, you have to trust the historians. If you trust science, you have to trust scientists and the scientific community.

True. Most importantly, though, you have to understand that the concept of "trust" or "results" is a bit different there. Every few years, an airplane goes down because engineers and scientists weren't *quite* right about a theory. Do I believe that airplanes fly? You betcha. And yet, I know that there *are* accidents, and that some of them are the results of failures to understand the technical issues.

Perhaps the most frustrating thing is I can't even get an evolutionist to admit they can't test the hypothesis. All the bones and rocks and dating in the world cannot equal the old "seeing is believing" standard of proof, and hard science rests firmly on that rock.

Actually, this isn't quite true. A great deal of modern science is based on inference and testing. Are you familiar with the terms "predictive power" and "explanatory power"? A theory is said to have good explanatory power when there is no data available that does not fit the theory. A theory is said to have good predictive power when you can, from the theory, conclude that a given thing should exist, but you haven't seen the thing yet... and then you *find* it.

Evolution does well on both of these. "Perfect" isn't quite measurable, but to the best of my knowledge, there's nothing in the fossil record that creates a real problem for evolutionary theory, and we've found a number of "transitional" things similar to what we would have expected. So, for instance, there are things that are "between a reptile and a bird".


There is too much politics flying around academia today to ignore the encroaching bias there. You are losing trust. Too devoted and fiery eyed argumentation about something that supposedly happened billions of years ago just naturally sets people's teeth on edge. And then the argument that if all the species didn't evolve from a common ancestor that this sets all of biology off its course, as if we wouldn't have modern biochemistry. No. That fails even the most basic smell test.

That's not the claim. The claim is that, if we throw out the *basic* model - the belief that species change over time, and that new species can be formed through change from old species - we have a lot of biology, and even some computer science, that have to be reevaluated, and in many cases, the results in those fields are *so* obvious that it's very hard to say "but we should throw this out".


This subject is so absolutely inaplicable to modern life. Ideas about the begining of all life and all reality are not scientific arguments.

The beginning of life certainly is. It's part and parcel of our attempts to understand life well enough to be better equipped to deal with it. Theories about how species form, and how evolution works, are crucial to modern medicine; the idea of "antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria" is 100% output of the theory of evolution.

They are by their very nature deeper, and have to take more of philosophy and human nature into account. If anything, the refusal to let creation even be mentioned in a science class looks a lot like fear, which is of course absolutely irrelevant, but politically it has its effect.

Hrm... Don't get it. Oh well.

So, is it "fear" if someone says you shouldn't teach that pi is exactly 22/7 in school? I don't think so; it's just the recognition that the theory in question won't stand up to casual observation.

Creationism is great myth, and awful science. There are literally thousands upon thousands of pieces of data which are poorly explained by creationism, and it is totally useless for making predictions.

The theory of evolution allows me to suggest that, if I use not quite enough of an antibiotic on an infection, not only will I not cure it, but the resulting bacteria will be resistant to the antibiotic.

Creationism, in this context, tells me that it's quite possible that God created those bacteria. It doesn't tell me what to do about them, and it doesn't even tell me what day He created them on, because the story doesn't address kinds of life we didn't know about. What about mushrooms? Single-celled life? How about symbiotes which can only exist in cooperation with one of the forms of life he created on a given day, but which we would otherwise think were created on another day.

What day were dolphins created on?

I say it again: If it can't even *start* to answer questions like this, Creationism is not "science". I think it's reasonable to teach it along with other religious beliefs in a class which covers religious beliefs. However, as a Christian who doesn't for a minute believe in literal creationism, and never has, I would object to it being portrayed as "the belief of Christians".
 
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the thing i like about the scientific community is that they will (if they re doing their science properly) adjust their hypothesis when confronted with facts and data that will not fit with previously held ideas.

-case in point: creation. It was once assumed/believed by astronomers/ cosmologists that the universe was eternal, that it had no begining, no creation event. But when Hubble discovered the redshifts in galaxies and Einstien acknowledged his fudge factor in his equations - they had to admit that at some point in the distant past, the universe began.

Christian fundementalists when confronted with facts and data that don't fit their literal interpretation of biblical narratives shout and scream and wail as if they were being persecuted and thrown to the lions by the 'pagan academic intelligentia'
 
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Originally posted by tyler4588
Technically, evolution is not a theory. There are a couple religions that can come from evolution though.

Liberal Christianity
Agnosticism - Not knowing if God exists
Gnosticism - Believes that God does not exist
Wicca - Not really from evolution, but Wiccans believe in it

I doubt that any religion practiced anywhere in the industrial world does not have at least a few members who believe in evolution.
 
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Oliver

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Originally posted by OntheRock
Theory is still not a fact, neither is evolution. The 'evidence' is not exclusive to the hypothesis of evolution, but could be applied to other hypothesis.

A theory is not a fact, that's for sure. However, the observation that species change (both genetically and morphologically) over time is a fact. The observation that different forms of life existed in the past (fossils) is a fact.
The theory we have to explain this (the theory of evolution) is not fact, but the phenomenon itself (evolution) is.

In other words, we know that species evolve. This has been and is observed.
The best explanation scientists currently have for these phenomena lies in the various mechanisms described by the theory of evolution (mutations, natural selection, ...): they think that this is how it happen.

Originally posted by OntheRock

Are any of you evolutionists trying to say that the 'evidence' used to support evolution can not be used to support other ideas? Is evolution the only guess work that can be fathomed? Now, should we talk about closed minds?

This is not what scientists say: the evidence that today supports the theory of evolution could support another idea (and the theory of evolution has changed since Darwin first proposed it in order to better fit the evidence). But the theory of evolution is today the best theory we have.
Should someone come up with a better theory, scientists would test it and finally adopt it (after a careful and quite long process of scrutiny). But the changes that have been brought so far didn't change the theory so much that the nale should be changed.

Originally posted by OntheRock

'Evidence' only supports a guess at evolution but does not conclude evolution as fact.

Example: My dog has a limp when he walks. This is evidence that he has a broken leg. This could also be evidence of a thorn in his paw, or a bruised muscle.

Of course with the case of a dog we can do tests to proove the matter. But with evolution we have no conclusive tests to proove it.

See my answer to your first point to see why you should be careful to distinguish between evolution and the theory of evolution.

What you call "a guess at evolution" is, as The Bear already explained, much more than a mere guess.
 
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Grand Nubian

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The concept of evolution by definition exists. I think the topic starter is thinking of a specific theory that evolves evolution but didn't identify which one.

For instance, if I have this brainstorm that blah blah with evolve by yada yada...it will be called GN's super duper evolutionary theory.

When you say that my theory is false by saying "evolution is false" you've really missed the mark.

"Evolution" is a fact.


Evolution
 
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Oliver

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Originally posted by tyler4588
Technically, evolution is not a theory. There are a couple religions that can come from evolution though.

Liberal Christianity
Agnosticism - Not knowing if God exists
Gnosticism - Believes that God does not exist
Wicca - Not really from evolution, but Wiccans believe in it

Is your point that no liberal christian, no agnostist, no atheist or no wiccan could have existed before the 19th century?

(btw, some of these are not really religions, but rather worldviews)
 
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Originally posted by Oliver
A theory is not a fact, that's for sure. However, the observation that species change (both genetically and morphologically) over time is a fact.

Yes, microevolution is an observed phenomenon.

Originally posted by Oliver
The observation that different forms of life existed in the past (fossils) is a fact.

Yes, extinctions are an observed phenomenon.

Originally posted by Oliver
The theory we have to explain this (the theory of evolution) is not fact, but the phenomenon itself (evolution) is.

Explain what? You're making a connection between microevolution and extinctions that doesn't necessarily exist, and even left any mention of that connection out of your argument.

Originally posted by Oliver
In other words, we know that species evolve. This has been and is observed.

Yes, but we've never seen a species evolve into a significantly different species. (I add significantly different only because the BSC defines speciation such that a mosquito can still be a mosquito but considered a different species, which is an arbitrary distinction and does not describe changes required by the macroevolution of a bacteria into a man).

Originally posted by Oliver
The best explanation scientists currently have for these phenomena lies in the various mechanisms described by the theory of evolution (mutations, natural selection, ...): they think that this is how it happen.

That doesn't surprise me. What surprises me is that they refuse to think otherwise in spite of the evidence against it (lack of evidence in the fossil record, inability to reproduce macroevolution, irreducible complexity, etc.)
 
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lithium.

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a quote from blader.

Well, yes, you can test it. The theory makes certain predictions, such as the genetic similarity between species that the theory say had common ancestors, among others. The theory is tested by confirming or rejecting these predictions.

The particular prediction I mentioned was made long before genetic sequencing. If somehow the DNA of a monkey and an ape were less similar than say, between an monkey and a wolf, then that would falsify the theory's predictions. As yet, it has only confirmed it.

Some other predictions evolution made that were later confirmed:
* Fossils of more complex organisms would occur only in younger rock strata. (Confirmed)
* There must be some internal mechanism that creates variability so that change over time can occur. (Confirmed through the discovery of DNA)
* Fossils of similar organisms will be found in certain locations on earth, in isolation from other non-similar organisms. (Confirmed)
* DNA similarity should be predictive of how closely related two organisms are to each other. (Confirmed)

http://www.wilstar.net/evolution/predictions.html

everything that blader just said is true. Evolution can be tested.
 
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