• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

  • CF has always been a site that welcomes people from different backgrounds and beliefs to participate in discussion and even debate. That is the nature of its ministry. In view of recent events emotions are running very high. We need to remind people of some basic principles in debating on this site. We need to be civil when we express differences in opinion. No personal attacks. Avoid you, your statements. Don't characterize an entire political party with comparisons to Fascism or Communism or other extreme movements that committed atrocities. CF is not the place for broad brush or blanket statements about groups and political parties. Put the broad brushes and blankets away when you come to CF, better yet, put them in the incinerator. Debate had no place for them. We need to remember that people that commit acts of violence represent themselves or a small extreme faction.

Evidences for evolution

seebs

God Made Me A Skeptic
Apr 9, 2002
31,917
1,530
20
Saint Paul, MN
Visit site
✟70,235.00
Faith
Seeker
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Republican
 
Upvote 0

If this were true then the debate of evolution/creation would not be so fiery today.

Anthropologists recorded evidence of crop rotation almost from the very beginning of agricultural society, and before written history.

Consider this: If the Christian church was so harmful to scientific progress, why was the Rennaisance only observed in the places where the church was dominant?
The renaissance was a resurgence of learning. India and the Middle East had no need of a resurgence of learning because they had been learning all along.
The Dark Age was a European phenomenon.

There's a big gap between promising to do no harm, and starting to *STUDY* disease.
The Egyptian doctor/architect Imhotep (not to be confused with the fictional Imhotep in 'The Mummy') wrote many treatises on medicine and its practical application, including anatomy charts and where disease struck the body.
That was 1,500 years before even the Hippocratic Oath came about.


That second sentence is in great contrast to what other Christians have been posting in these evolution threads.

By the time of the Industrial revolution, the Empires of Britain, France, Spain, Portugal, Holland, etc. had subjugated other cultures.
 
Upvote 0

seebs

God Made Me A Skeptic
Apr 9, 2002
31,917
1,530
20
Saint Paul, MN
Visit site
✟70,235.00
Faith
Seeker
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Republican
Originally posted by brt28006

If this were true then the debate of evolution/creation would not be so fiery today.

I don't see your reasoning. Compare, not with modern industrialized cultures, but with primitive ones.


The renaissance was a resurgence of learning. India and the Middle East had no need of a resurgence of learning because they had been learning all along.
The Dark Age was a European phenomenon.

And yet, by 1700 or 1800 or so, Europe was VERY far ahead. The "dark ages" were never all that dark, and they set the stage for the first real leap past the iron age.


And then it stayed there, stagnant, with no further work. Where did the germ theory of disease come from? Europeans raised in Christian cultures.


Yes, because their cultural foundations led to a substantial technological lead over everyone else. They were learning more, faster, than everyone else... Why? Because they had a good foundation on which to build.
 
Upvote 0
Originally posted by seebs


I don't see your reasoning. Compare, not with modern industrialized cultures, but with primitive ones.

I don't see why I should. Unless I missed the point of your original post.

And yet, by 1700 or 1800 or so, Europe was VERY far ahead. The "dark ages" were never all that dark, and they set the stage for the first real leap past the iron age.
I won't debate the Europe got real far real fast after the 1600's, when the Renaissance turned into the Age of Reason.
But the dark ages were VERY dark.

And then it stayed there, stagnant, with no further work. Where did the germ theory of disease come from? Europeans raised in Christian cultures.
Most ancient Egyptian texts were burned by the Koptic Christians.
Egypt was practicing brain surgery as long as 4,000 years ago. So were the Nazca natives of S. America.
Archaeological evidence suggests the survival rate in these cultures for those who underwent brain surgery surpassed the survival rate of similar surgery in early 20th century Britain.

Also, you can't chalk up every developement made in a Christian society or by a Christian to Christianity itself. After all, Darwin was a Christian.

Yes, because their cultural foundations led to a substantial technological lead over everyone else. They were learning more, faster, than everyone else... Why? Because they had a good foundation on which to build.

They were much stronger than everyone else, that was the key.

Interesting story, On March 31st of 1492, Ferdinand and Isabel of Spain expelled all the Jews and Muslims from their country.
Unfortunately, all their merchants were Muslim and all their bankers were Jewish.
The Spanish empire's economy collapsed soon afterwards. People of different religions work together to make the world go 'round.
 
Upvote 0

seebs

God Made Me A Skeptic
Apr 9, 2002
31,917
1,530
20
Saint Paul, MN
Visit site
✟70,235.00
Faith
Seeker
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Republican
Originally posted by brt28006

I don't see why I should. Unless I missed the point of your original post.

If you compare anyone living even a couple hundred years ago to people today, they look strange, primitive, and backwards. All of 'em.


I won't debate the Europe got real far real fast after the 1600's, when the Renaissance turned into the Age of Reason.
But the dark ages were VERY dark.
That's what they taught me in 7th grade, but since then, people have started looking more closely. The "dark ages" were the foundations of modern culture and science.


Most ancient Egyptian texts were burned by the Koptic Christians.
Egypt was practicing brain surgery as long as 4,000 years ago. So were the Nazca natives of S. America.

Uh-huh. And it was just as good as ours, and there's no chance at all that it was shamanism and guesswork with all the medical brilliance of trepannation, right?


Indeed. So, apparently, Christians are not opposed to science, are they?


Agreed. However, I object to the categorization of the Christians as somehow specially backwards and unenlightened. They contributed a great deal to modern science, and built the foundations on which, after hundreds if not thousands of years, people finally got past the standards for "science" that earned the early Arabs such an amazing reputation.

This isn't to say they weren't also crucial, or that their work wasn't brilliant.... But they gave up, and said "we're done", and waited until someone came along and said "we can do more than this".
 
Upvote 0
Originally posted by seebs


If you compare anyone living even a couple hundred years ago to people today, they look strange, primitive, and backwards. All of 'em.


That's completely true. But what did it have to do with the original post?
I seriously don't know; its not like I'm not trying to say you were right or wrong.

That's what they taught me in 7th grade, but since then, people have started looking more closely. The "dark ages" were the foundations of modern culture and science.

Foundations of modern culture, yes, they were. Everything from nothing, sorta.

Uh-huh. And it was just as good as ours, and there's no chance at all that it was shamanism and guesswork with all the medical brilliance of trepannation, right?
Deliberately drilling into someones skull in a non-random spot to relieve pressure caused by a brain tumor (archaeological find from Old Kingdom Egypt) doesn't seem like guesswork to me.

Indeed. So, apparently, Christians are not opposed to science, are they?
I never said they were opposed to science. However, the scientific advancements made by liberal Christians probably (and I emphasize the word probably) outweighed the advancements made by literalists.
It would seem, in fact, that the literalists are only interested in disproving science not firmly rooted in Biblical belief.

I won't argue with this, and I didn't intend to portray Christians as being especially backwards. Examples exist throughout history of a bigoted nation throwing a particular race or creed out and then realizing how important they were once it was too late.

This isn't to say they weren't also crucial, or that their work wasn't brilliant.... But they gave up, and said "we're done", and waited until someone came along and said "we can do more than this".

This is true.
Science is a group effort.
 
Upvote 0

seebs

God Made Me A Skeptic
Apr 9, 2002
31,917
1,530
20
Saint Paul, MN
Visit site
✟70,235.00
Faith
Seeker
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Republican
Originally posted by brt28006


That's completely true. But what did it have to do with the original post?
I seriously don't know; its not like I'm not trying to say you were right or wrong.
I think the point I was trying to make is that looking at medieval Christians and saying they look backwards is uninformative; the interesting question is whether they represented progress from the cultures they replaced, and in most cases, I think they did.

Deliberately drilling into someones skull in a non-random spot to relieve pressure caused by a brain tumor (archaeological find from Old Kingdom Egypt) doesn't seem like guesswork to me.

It does to me... People come up with this independantly all the time, and it's fairly random whether it helps at all.

Agreed. I think the literalists are not giving God enough credit for being beyond our comprehension; they insist that, despite being beyond human understanding, He is obliged to document everything He does in texts dictated to people who barely had agriculture, let alone particle physics.


This is true.
Science is a group effort.

Yup.
 
Upvote 0
I basically agree with what you said in your last post, basically.

I think I view Dark Age Christians as being a little bit further behind than you do. Remember, that fact is not necessarily a blow against Christianity, as the Dark Age did not begin until many centuries after the Crucifixion.
 
Upvote 0

seebs

God Made Me A Skeptic
Apr 9, 2002
31,917
1,530
20
Saint Paul, MN
Visit site
✟70,235.00
Faith
Seeker
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Republican

I guess, it's a question of "behind what"? They certainly started from a lower standard of technological advancement than the Arabs, or the Chinese... But they advanced at an amazing rate, because they had a strong belief in the utility and relevance of knowledge.
 
Upvote 0

Shane Roach

Well-Known Member
Mar 13, 2002
14,552
1,328
57
✟23,036.00
Faith
Christian
The basic falacy of this whole "backwards Christians" model of European history is that you have to make yourself aware that Rome was demolished by European Pagans, who then adopted much of Roman culture in the way that Rome adopted Greek culture.


The reason "all" the bankers in Spain were Jewish and "all" the merchants were Muslim is because Spain had been an occupied territory for centuries, so perhaps that might help to explain the Spanish resentment. The purge was symptomatic of nationalism, one of the driving forces of civilization in Europe at the time.

Spain recovered from this economic hiccup and dominated for quite a span of time before squandering their armada in an ill-fated naval campaign against England.
 
Upvote 0
The last Roman historian died hundreds of years before the Dark Ages though... unless you were referring to something else.

Spain recovered from this economic hiccup and dominated for quite a span of time before squandering their armada in an ill-fated naval campaign against England.
You mean the Spanish Armada attack on England, also known as the Fifth Crusade? That happened less than a hundred years after 1492, which is hardly a significant time span.
 
Upvote 0
 
Upvote 0

LouisBooth

Well-Known Member
Feb 6, 2002
8,895
64
✟19,588.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Libertarian
"The propensity for Christians to burn pagan works is much higher than for other faiths. That religion is single-handedly responsible for the destruction of more accumulated scientific knowledge than any other. "

You haven't read much history have you?
 
Upvote 0

Sinai

Well-Known Member
Apr 2, 2002
1,127
19
Visit site
✟1,762.00
Faith
Protestant
When discussing evolution, a distinction should be made between micro-evolution (the gradual evolution of a trait that only slightly alters the morphology of the plant or animal) and macro-evolution (the gradual evolution of one body plan into another, such as a worm or insect or mollusk gradually evolving into a bird or a fish).

There is plenty of evidence of micro-evolution. It can be documented that gray moths can change into black moths or that pink daisies can evolve into blue daisies. In just a few thousand years, a wide variety of cichlid fish species evolved in Lake Victoria. And we are all aware of the introduction of new varieties of corn or of dogs or of other species. As I said earlier, micro-evolution is supported in the Bible (and in the fossil record). It is macro-evolution--the gradual evolution of one body plan into another--that finds no support in the Bible, in the fossil record or in the lab.

In Origin of Species, Darwin repeatedly implored his readers to ignore the evidence of the fossil record as a refutation of his concept of evolution or to "use imagination to fill in its gaps." He claimed the fossil record's leaps and bounds were the result of its being incomplete. That was quite plausible at the time Darwin penned his theory.

The fact that the long anticipated "missing links" are still missing has caused many scientists within the area to become increasingly skeptical about the full validity of a theory that had been widely accepted only a few decades ago. Granted, there are at least potentially valid reasons why transitional fossil forms might be lacking. Nevertheless, today's extensive paleontological evidence has shown a staccoto pattern in which new life forms suddenly appear in the fossil record without the theorized long gradual development or adaptation.

If you check the works of such professionals active in evolutionary biology as Gould and Dawkins, Eldredge and Smith, you will find that there has been a battle raging over whether gradual evolution ever occurred and if it did, why it is not evident in the fossil record.
 
Upvote 0

Shane Roach

Well-Known Member
Mar 13, 2002
14,552
1,328
57
✟23,036.00
Faith
Christian

Regarding Rome, yes, I am referring to something else. I am talking about pre-Christian Europe, and the idea, passed down from Roman times and only recently really being given proper critical scrutiny, that the Europian "barbarians" were indeed all that backwards. They did, after all, overthrow Rome.

As to Spain, so you're saying Spain was devestated economically by Ferdinand and Isabella, yet somehow remained the leading European power for nearly a hundred years, and contiued to be a leading European power for another century or so? Where is this devestation supposed to have taken place?

I gues what you're point is here is that the ceturies of civil war prior to this point were actually better for Spain, and that even though Spain reached the apex of its power after being re-united, it was still better for the Spanish to be ruled by foreigners in their own land? Is that the point you're trying to make? Do you have a point other than reaching for any straw that you feel might make Christianity look bad?

It doesn't seem as if you do.
 
Upvote 0

Shane Roach

Well-Known Member
Mar 13, 2002
14,552
1,328
57
✟23,036.00
Faith
Christian
Originally posted by Heath Anderson


Punctuated Equilibrium seems to be one of the leading reasons

Rationalization you mean.

I missed, was it on this thread or another, whether you ever told me that you believe the common ancestor of all life was one living thing, or a group of spontaneously generated living thigns that were all identical?
 
Upvote 0

Actually, quite a bit, and Christians are still burning books today. Here's a link to a list of Christian contributions to knowledge:

http://www.geocities.com/paulntobin/bookburn.html

"To teach superstitions as truth is a most terrible thing." - Alexandrian philosopher and mathematician Hypatia, dragged to her death by a Christian mob in 415, which then peeled her body with oyster shells and then threw her parts into a fire.
 
Upvote 0