This assertion is senseless, and is precisely why the scientific method includes critical analysis in peer review. Science doesn't let people get away with lies and false assertions like religion does.
You'll have to show me from The Bible where it allows people to lie and get away with it.
I said
religion allows this. I can't remember whether the Bible does. But the founder of Protestant Christianity did.
"What harm would it do if a man told a good strong lie for the sake of the good and for the Christian church...a lie out of necessity, a useful lie, a helpful lie, such lies would not be against God, he would accept them."
--Rev. Martin Luther; in a letter in Max Lenz, ed.,
And of course we have other admissions even by Christians on this very board that if they had certain proof they were wrong, they would continue to believe anyway, because their faith requires it.
you still parrot the lie that both are equal because you wrongfully say both require faith. I can prove otherwise.
I stated; I believe that they are not equal. It couldn't have been any plainer. I also stand by the rest of what I said.
That they are equal in that they both require faith. Yes, you were very plain, and very plainly wrong, and as I said, I can prove it.
With regard to what I said about evolution (as I defined it) and faith, you can attempt to prove otherwise, of course, but I can tell you now that you will fail.
Only if I were foolish enough to allow you to argue your straw-man as
you define it. If you're going to debate against the scientific position, you're going to cite scientific sources to make sure you're arguing against the same concept they promote. That means you have to argue evolution as
they define it, not you.
Evolution is an aspect of biology. So it doesn't matter how the universe came into being. That is an entirely different and completely unrelated subject.
Each link in a chain is related but leaving evolution out for the time being do as I have asked and take me through what you believe from the beginning?
It doesn't matter. It could be a steady-state universe, conventional big bang, string theorists dimensional rift, or or cosmic expansion via "abra-cadabra" by your version of God, or some other method used by a more reasonable one. However the universe originated does not relate at all to how life evolved.
See, I said earlier in this very thread that creationists habitually use the word "evolution" incorrectly because their real problem isn't with evolution; its against science, and not just the conclusions of science, but its methods as well. You're proving my point.
Utter nonsense and a deliberate misrepresentation of this creationists position and you're proving to be an arrogant bore.
Whenever a creationist realizes he is losing on every single point, that's when they always call me boring and pretend they haven't time for me anymore. You're so predictable. But I'm right on the money. First of all, science necessarily must adhere to methodological naturalism, which is the thing all forms of creationism, (including intelligent design) are most against. Do you deny that you yourself are opposed to methodological naturalism?
How about uniformatarianism, another necessary aspect of scientific methodology? Do you deny that you're opposed to that as well?
What about the rule where everything you want to propose must first be based on posatively indicative evidence as opposed to faith? Do you deny that you're opposed to that as well?
How about the requirement that all proposed explanations by potentially falsifiable? Do you have any examples of that in your practice of "science"? What would it take for you to admit you were wrong?
I mean, you were wrong about evolution being either a religion or a fairy tale, and you're obviously wrong about this "deliberate misrepresentation" you accuse me of. But I doubt I'll ever hear any apology from you, will I?
Try reading Genesis. ''In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth...''. How did God create them? It doesn't say but looking at the rest of the creation account I think that He commanded it and it was so.
The Bhagavad Gita is much more specific about how God created the universe. But of course that talks about magic spells just like the Bible does. In reality, since both books were poetic parables written by primitive men pretending to speak for God, then both books are almost certainly wrong on several key points even if God really does exist in some form. In which case, God would work an orchestration of natural systems rather than mere incantations or golem spells.
And what of the limit of knowledge when you believe things that can never be tested,l which you assumed without any evidence at all, and which you already admit you're unable to reconsider?
I'm not sure of the point you're trying to make here... care to elaborate?
Sure. Faith means something supernatural, [can't be evidenced in any objective way] which you assume for subjective reasons [neither demonstrable nor testable] which isn't falsifiable. The only way to improve your understanding of anything is to question your assumptions, test them to find the flaws and correct them. But by assuming your conclusions and insisting that they're flawless from the start, you're only going to start out wrong and stay wrong forever.
They don't [have faith], as I have pointed out above. I myself certainly don't.
They and you most certainly do. Look again at your definition of faith above and compare it to the dictionary definition that I posted, it proves my point exactly.
I already proved that your definition is wrong. I can't believe anything without compelling evidence, and I certainly can't believe the unbelieveable. Because I don't have faith. You can stop trying to recite the old creationist slogan that everyone has faith, because I remind you that 2 Thessalonians 3:2 says no, we don't, and I particularly don't.
Hovind is but one of myriad examples to illustrate how creationism is naught but deliberately dishonest nonsense and propaganda.
An assertion with nothing to back it up... as if your opinion alone is enough.
Really? Let's test that, because I have said many times that there has never been a single credible proponent of evangelical creationism anywhere ever, because, (
with only one notable exception) everyone who has ever published anti-evolutionary rhetoric to any medium did so only according to a prior religious agenda rather than any amount of scientific comprehension. They’ve all revealed inexcusable ignorance in the very fields where they claim expertise, and their arguments are all dependant on erroneous assumptions, prejudicial bias, logical fallacies, ridiculous parody, misdefined terms, misquoted authorities, distorted data, fraudulent figures, or out-and-out lies. Thus, there are only two types of arguments for creationism; those which can never be either vindicated or disproved, and those which have already been disproved many times over, both scientifically and in a court of law. So if you contend that this is only my opinion, then produce an exception to this rule and let me see one verifiably accurate argument in favor of creationism.
How about listening to
the author of those textbooks revealing how the creationists were found guilty of purjury once their nonsense was put on trial?
I have but it would seem that you haven't.
Yes I have, and I read the transcripts and the ruling.
Miller was talking about IDists and I agree with a lot of what he had to say regarding them. Now It may suit you to lump IDists in with creationists, it may suit the IDists and maybe even some creationists, but I know that a lot of creationists would strongly disagree with you and them.
IDists are creationists by definition.
We know who The Creator is and are not ashamed to say it loud and clear...
No you don't know that. There are lots of religions each claiming to know the others are wrong. Because faith often amounts to pretending to know what you know no one even can know, but instead only believe on faith. But the difference between knowledge and mere belief is that knowledge can always be tested. If you can't show it, you don't know it.
THE WORD, OUR LORD AND SAVIOUR JESUS CHRIST.
And hundreds of millions of Hindus "know" it is Krsna/Vishnu, and hundreds of millions of Muslims and Jews "know" it is El/Abba/Allah/YHWH, and not Jesus at all. But the fact is that none of you really knows what you all pretend to know.
Your closing statement does not impress me. That evolution happened is never questioned.
You know, repeating the same lie again and again still can't make it become truth. The fact that evolution has happened and still is happening has been very well established by now. But it is still questioned and its still being tested.
The greatest minds of the modern age is a matter of opinion, and not just yours. Creationists do not oppose taxonomy as such only evolutionists use of it as ''evidence'' for evolution.
Again, because you don't understand it and can't deal with it. That's why you still can't explain why humans are in the category of apes and Old World monkeys.
They question the assumptions behind ''deep time'' and whether or not the geologic column exists anywhere other than in textbooks.
Unless they do as former YEC, Glenn Morton did, and see it for themselves. Dr. Morton said every one of the YECs he hired from his old creationist school suffered a crisis of faith once they saw the reality for themselves in the day-to-day job of petrogeology.
Heliocentrcity. I do not know of any creationists who oppose this... Do you?
I wouldn't say so if it wasn't true, or if I couldn't back it up. Read RichardT's recent posts in this very thread!