It's funny you should say that because most evolutionists argue that one cannot have any real grasp on a scientific field of study without first knowing and embracing evolution.
Actually, most of us don't say that -- but please, don't let facts stop you.
Can one study medicine without a background in evo? Not according to evolutionists. Can one study biology or botany or paleobotany without first knowing and embracing evolution? Not according to the evolutionists.
Well, those are life sciences, so it would help to know the current understand of how life got to be the way it is, don't you think?
Can one study the stars and the planets without first studying and knowing and embracing evolution? Not according to evolutionists.
Well, that's more or less a load of bunk. Astronomy and astrophysics have nothing to do with evolution.
But hey, you're on a roll -- don't let me stop you.
It's funny how people are forced to accept evolution as true without demanding an answer to the very first question that should be out of their mouths, "How did we get here?"
Nobody's forced to do anything -- it only makes sense to crawl before you walk.
How did life come about? Evolution has no answer and it cannot have a suitable answer so it pushes the question of life under the proverbial rug.
Because that's not the question that evolutionary theory answers. I wouldn't go to a dentist to ask questions about a heart condition, would you?
Evolutionists mock those who have a different answer than themselves to the origin of life
No,
everybody mocks those who try to pass off dogma as an "answer."
Any idiot can come up with an "answer" -- but actually having a
useful answer to something means also having the means to back it up.
but will offer no answer in and of themselves. Evolutionists even go so far as to say it is completely unnecessary to even require such an answer!
Because it is. I know uncertainty frightens you, but most scientists, being specialized in their fields, don't stray too far outside them.
Yet it is a perfectly absolute necessity to understand how life evolved.
Indeed -- the mechanisms which were and still are at work are vitally important.
Consider -- an auto mechanic doesn't need to know which factory a car came from in order to change its oil.
If life is capable of such evolution as evolutionists claim, then how did such a complex existence come into being? Where did it all come from?
That's a good question -- but let's start with an even better one: How do you define "life"?
What forces could possibly bring about such organization and diversity and beauty in symbiotic relationships that are more interconnected than a spider's web?
beauty? but what standard are you calling it beautiful?
It is an absolutely necessary question if we are to be forced to swallow such an enormous pill as evolution.
Even more important when you're looking for an excuse not to.
I guess if there is no answer under your belief system, then the only necessity is to say there is no necessity in answering the question of "How did life begin?"
Ask a dentist a question about heart surgery -- then tell him that dentistry is too big a pill to swallow.