Can Divine Revelation shed any light on the topic we are discussing? Can two people use divine revelation to arrive at mutually inconsistent conclusions about the same issue? If so, how do we know who is right?
You pose an interesting trio of questions here but they are problematic because of our respective and divergent understandings of "Divine Revelation". Setting aside for a second whether or not God exists, IF he did exist, his perspective as the author would necessarily be superior to human discovered knowledge. That's what I meant by that statement and I don't think anyone would disagree with that in principle. Richard Dawkins said something similar once during a radio interview on NPR.
I'd like to answer these three questions more fully. They way they are framed indicates a huge problem in discussions of this kind. Before I do, it would be helpful if you could define what you mean by the phrase "Divine Revelation".
I think this is slightly misleading. Science never claims to have the absolute truth for anything. Instead science claims to hold provisional truths: answers that are the best explanation for things at the present time. The implication of your statement is that “Absolute truth cannot be known, so no idea can be considered to be absolutely right; therefore all ideas are equally valid.” - this is not true.
I disagree with your assessment of my statement. The three points in my phrase are flatly true: people do make mistakes. Scientific (human) knowledge is fallible for that reason. And, for anything to be scientifically valid, it must be capable of being falsified, just ask Bertrand Russell. But to be clear, I do believe that Absolute Truth can be known (Ephesians 4:20) and thus not all ideas are equally valid or true.
Yes, I partly agree. Although if God is omniscient, he would know when he created the universe that the natural laws he put in place would eventually result in humans, even if there is an element of randomness in Evolution.
That would all depend on the nature and purpose of evolution in God's creative process.
Evolution isn't a worldview. It just describes what is, not what should be (morality or ethics).
That's exactly while I qualified the word with the phrase "as a metaphysical worldview". I have no problem with evolution per se, only with the addition of metaphysical interpretations and presuppositions.
How do you infer design and purpose in nature? Unless you mean it in a very loose sense?
Tell me what you mean by "in a very loose sense" and I will (hopefully) be able to clarify what I mean.
This is the part that I'm really interested in. Before the "deception, rebellion, curse and banishment" that you speak of, were humans any different to humans of today? If you believe that God used evolution to create humans, then there shouldn't be any difference.
It might be helpful if you could list all the possible permutations for how you think God employed evolution. In other words, what are the various ratios of divine power, divine wisdom, divine goodness, direct creation to the use of divinely created algorithmic processes (of which evolution might be an example).
Assuming you agree with me, doesn't this then seem bizarre to you that a benevolent being would create a law against sin, specify its punishment as eternal damnation, then create humans with a sinful nature such they would be 100% likely to break this law, and then punish them for sinning (unless they take the "medicine" which he prescribes).