Originally posted by OntheRock
We do have documents that support creation. I think that almost every religion has somekind of creation account. Whouldn't true science allow for research of the claims of these religions? To my knowledge they do not look into any creation account. From the get go God is not real. True science dictates that this is a false assumption. Why doesn't science try to proove there is a God and a supernatural realm? Yes, there is now some research in this area. The point is that science is antichrist from the get go.
This is an interesting point, but it misses a crucial point about science: Science has never, ever, tried to make claims about God. It can't. However, how exactly would you propose that scientists "look into" creation accounts? Say we take the old "six thousand years old" figure. We have a couple thousand years of history, and we can study objects of known age, and we can show that certain compounds change over time. (Carbon 14, for instance.)
Given this, we can find objects which appear to be well over six thousand years old.
Thus, the best available data we have suggest that the world is *older* than that.
This is the point at which the theory is flagged as "not very likely".
This happens to scientific theories all the time; it's how we improve the state of the art. At one point, people generally believed that women were not as intelligent as men. When we developed ways of testing "intelligence", we found that women are just as smart as men, possibly smarter. The old theory got thrown out; it was no longer reasonable to accept it.
However, most creation stories *can't* be tested. One of the points of the scientific method is that you don't use a theory that you can't test for; if you can't describe how the world would be different if this theory were false, there's no point in trying to find out; it's no longer a scientific theory at all.
This is called "falsifiability". If I have the belief that the cat dish is empty, I can propose a test: I'll go look. This means that, however humble it might be, this theory is a reasonable scientific one. By contrast, if I hypothesize that God occasionally comes to earth in human form to play Skee Ball, there's not much I can do to test this theory. There's no test I can describe that would show this not to be the case. Thus, I can't do anything about it; it's not science.
Concerning genetic adaptation:
Quote
"The odds are 10(with 161 zeros behind it) to 1 that not one usable protein would have been produced by chance in all the history of the earth, using all the appropreate atoms on earth at the fantastic rate they describe"
"The probability of forming one protein molecule by chance is 1 in 10(with 243 zeros behind it)"
Every time someone comes up with numbers like this, I laugh. We don't have nearly enough information to be that precise. For that matter, every few years, we come up with a new data point showing that the probabilities are different.
We simply don't know how likely or unlikely this would be. We don't even have a good way to find out. We've verified, trivially, that you can get simple basic proteins by putting simpler chemicals in a test tube, occasionally zapping it, and waiting. We don't know how long it would take to make more complicated things - but the planet appears to have had a billion years to try.
One key point of science: If you have a theory that says something is unlikely, and you observe that it's happened more than a few times, the theory is probably wrong.