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If Evolution were true...

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Lion Hearted Man

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If I come across as talking down to everyone, it isn't my intention. I am assertive and sarcastic, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, but it can come off differently than intended in text and, if I'm not watchful, I can take it too far.

I apologize for offending you and I apologize for getting as snarky as I did on the Morality of the Flood thread. I did go over the top there and your criticism is justified.

Glad that you're at least aware of it

Those are not even remotely related.

There are still a great many things that we will be discovering but I don't think abiogenesis is one of them. All the evidence says it doesn't happen and even when designing an experiment with an atmosphere most favorable for the theory, it was a failure. In the 50 years since, there has been no progress and the hypothesized make up of the atmosphere Miller and Urey used is now claimed to not have even been possible.

I'm just wondering why you think abiogenesis is totally off-limits, and that science will never be able to show that it works.

You're a bit wrong about abiogenesis having no promising ideas. Every day we're getting closer to understanding it. A set of failed experiments under a certain group of settings does not completely undermine the idea.

Please post peer-reviewed studies that show that abiogenesis is "impossible" or I'm just going to assume that you've hastily rejected abiogenesis (like you've done with evolution) in favor of "Goddidit".

I never claimed authority. It's an internet discussion. I'm expressing my view based on all I have studied about the issue.

I don't accept universal common descent and I don't accept the philosophy it is used to prop up. That has nothing to do with my understanding of science. I just recognize where the science ends and the philosophy begins.

Nothing is more frustrating than someone who thinks that arguing over archaic definitions in philosophy is somehow relevant to the world today.

I'm just going to assume that you simply have not studied enough biology to make an informed decision about evolution. It is the foundation for modern biology, and nothing makes sense in biology without evolution. You don't have to believe that, but then again, I'm betting you don't think about or study biology all that much.

What was condescending? I acknowledge I can be a smart alec, but you are either overly sensitive to what I say or just playing the victim card here.

As a Christian, to not hope and pray for someone to come to repentance would mean being apathetic to their eternity. It was a sincere statement. If it offends you, then I guess you'll just have to be offended.

I was playing a bit of the victim card, but I also think that your beliefs are condescending towards unbelievers.

No, that isn't science. You just acknowledged in the first sentence that it is philosophy.

Everything boils down to or rests on philosophy, so much so that talking about philosophy is painfully pointless exercise.

Science deals with what can be observed. A miracle, by definition, is a rare occurrence that is outside of the observable norm. Acknowledging miracles, or at a minimum being agnostic of them, does not prevent you from making scientific observations, discovering laws and principles, or formulating experiments based on what you learn.

Yeah, you can believe in miracles and be scientific but not at the same time. You have to compartmentalize that which you ascribe to miracles and that which you ascribe to science. It seems arbitrary and contradictory to me for someone to do that, so I picked the one I think is better and stay consistently with that.

Adding a priori theological, historical, and philosophical claims onto science via naturalism is dealing with the supernatural, by definition, regardless of your claims to the contrary. In addition, if there is evidence of a creator or a phenomenon that is beyond the material universe, it mandates that we ignore it and instead impose a naturalistic explanation on those events.

You see, the thing is this: IF we could observe God, then God would be natural, not supernatural, and thus subject to naturalism. Anything supernatural is a superfluous and unneeded addition to this world.

The man who was persecuted for the claim was a Christian and very little of the scientific community supported his findings. The conflict was between Copernican science, which Galileo argued for, and Aristotelian science, which was the dogmatic view of the scientific community and the Roman Catholic Church.

There was no scientific community back then. Science was the handmaiden of the church, and everything they did was in accordance with the church. That's where the dogma was. True science has no dogma. People can have dogmas, and sometimes it's hard to let go of a cherished theory, but good scientists do it in the blink of an eye if the evidence demands it.

Now, instead of an oppressive church declaring what is and isn't permissible as science via its mandates, rules, and financing, we have a 'secular' government doing it.

How's that?

Regardless, my point stands. Scientists are just as susceptible as anyone else when it comes to being dogmatic about unreasonable paradigms, whether it is because of true belief, funding, or peer pressure.

I think I hit this point up there a bit

"God is known by nature in his works, and by doctrine in his revealed word."

~Galileo

So God used evolution to create man. Got it.

Don't leave it alone. If it is so ridiculous why don't you show how those who were pioneers in science adhered to strict naturalism and excluded God from their work?

You've completely changed the subject here. You said that Christianity spawned science, not a belief in God. "Strict naturalism" doesn't play into it at all.

But Christianity does not deserve all or most of the credit for spawning science. So many cultures that pre-date Christianity had scientific enterprises. The Greeks, the Chinese, the Romans, the Egyptians...

Of course I have evidence. Just because you reject it doesn't change that.

Post away. If it's decent evidence I may change my mind. I have a standing policy that if I see good evidence for the Christian God I will gladly re-convert back (it would actually make my life simpler, seeing how I'm dating a Christian).

ID most certainly is testable. Many aspects of creationism are as well but, like Darwinism, it is heavy with philosophical interpretations.

Some claims of creationism can be tested (like the age of the earth, whether evolution is true or not), but many elements cannot. In ID, how would you tell if something is designed or not? How can you measure design? Because you can't measure it with complexity, because things that are designed can either be complex or simple, and things that are natural can either be complex or simple.

We both apply the assumptions of our paradigms to everything, including science. Everyone does. Yes, they are different. That is why I firmly believe that the foundational reason for this debate is entirely philosophical.

I'm sad that you think it's philosophical. Say goodbye to any possibility of reaching a conclusion.

I am not bothered if scientists look for natural explanations. Given the subject matter it deals with, that should always be the first avenue in scientific inquiry. I am bothered when philosophy is paraded as science and dissenters are seen as ignorant heretics in need or reeducation. I am outraged when that philosophy is established and enforced on the populace via government coercion.

Don't know what to tell you other than maybe you should read up on evolution and you'll understand more why it's the only game in town.

If the scientific community was content to stick to science, it would be great for everyone involved. As it stands it seeks to be the ultimate authority on reality, usurping philosophy, history, theology, and ethics on subjects it is not equipped to deal with.

Evolution has a lot to say about a lot of things, with implications stretching far and wide. Any philosophy or ethic that doesn't take into account evolution is starting out with big gaping holes in my opinion. We must understand ourselves, and evolution provides us a lot of insight into that.

Regardless of what I post, it can be dismissed and I didn't post this as evidence.

Then post your evidence.
 
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AV1611VET

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I'm just wondering why you think abiogenesis is totally off-limits, and that science will never be able to show that it works.
That's the Antichrist's job.
 
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Skaloop

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Fossils can be explained through the Flood of Noah.

Please explain how. In your own words, preferably. You'll need to cover the order we find them in, their relative ages, their regional dispersal, and geological differences between various fossil-bearing layers. For starters...
 
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Orogeny

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Please explain how. In your own words, preferably. You'll need to cover the order we find them in, their relative ages, their regional dispersal, and geological differences between various fossil-bearing layers. For starters...
I would suggest that you two bring this over to the Noah's Ark thread, so as not to distract from the topic at hand in this one. :)
 
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Tiberius

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So, the absence of evidence for a mechanism that prevents Mendelian genetics (over time with countless mutations) from bringing about new life forms, body plans, and organs (something we have never observed or been able to produce with all our intellect and technology) is evidence that Mendelian genetics can, in fact, do all of those things?

No. Nowhere have I said, "There's nothing to say that evolution can't do such-and-such, therefore it CAN do such-and-such."

What I am saying is that changes of the type described by "macro" evolution are explainable by the processes that we KNOW take place with microevolution, albeit on a much longer time scale. And the records we have (fossils, changes in DNA etc) that contain data and evidence about such timescales show that the microevolution processes do indeed operate on the macroevolution timescale.

How about some evidence that the mechanism can do what you claim it can do rather than nonsensical claims about no evidence of a mechanism to prevent it from doing what you haven't established it capable of doing in the first place?

As I have said, the fossil record is evidence as it shows how animal body forms have changed over time. DNA evidence can also tell us how closely related two modern species are - that is, how long ago the most recent common ancestor of the two lived.

I don't think I'll allow naturalistic interpretations of DNA and fossil homology to serve as decisive evidence for Naturalism. I've read tons of stuff on both and it is an interpretive tour through the past based on Naturalistic assumptions with very little science involved.

Why do you think that there is little science involved?

There is a limit to the variety that can be squeezed out of an organism. Thousands of years of human manipulation in animal husbandry and, more recently, in the laboratory has shown us that we have no mechanism for universal common descent.

Bear in mind that humans have been doing it for only a few thousand years, as you said. nature's been doing it for millions.


glad you agree.

Except for when poorly disguised philosophy is labeled 'science'. Then it's based on consensus.

Given that evoluytionary theory is based on testing of DNA and other such testniques which are expressable in mathematical terms, I don't think that it counts as a philosophy. After all, isn't philosophy inherently subjective? How can one test it in the real world?

It may be benign for some things, I admit. We don't need to know why God made water to understand its physical properties or how it reacts to heat, cold, or electricity. However, we don't require Naturalism to make those observations either, and we're not prevented from making them without it.

If by naturalism, you mean the scientifically accepted theory of evolution, no you don't need it to understand water. But you don't need electrical theory either. Just because a theory doesn't say something about a particular thing, doesn't mean that the theory is useless.

Naturalism becomes detrimental when its adherents, in their zeal, seek to mandate it on science, culture, government, religion, education, et al., and seek to suppress alternative explanations or critiques of its tenets.

This is getting rather political and outside the scope of the topic, but science isn't trying to do away with religion. it's trying to do away with religion taught as science.

If God exists and He created the universe, designed the laws it would operate under, designed and created different lifeforms capable of reproducing and adapting to whatever habitat they may eventually wind up in, writing that flexibility into their OS (DNA), a naturalistic explanation is completely insufficient to accurately explain reality.

Why couldn't God have used the naturalistic explanations as a tool for creating those life forms?

Let's see some examples. You claim it makes predictions, pony up the examples.

Here's a video on Youtube which explains 8 predictions that evolution has made which were later shown to be true. This is another video that looks at some of these predictions. And here's another.

Science doesn't do anything, scientists do and they always start with assumptions. What is a hypothesis?

true, but if a scientist's investigation of the real world shows him something that couldn't exist if his assumption was true, he throws out that assumption.

Your claim is just not realistic.

How so? Look at evidence in the real world. Say, "Maybe that stuff works b mechanism X." Then go out and see if there is anything that shows that mechanism X can't occur. If you find such a thing, you may need to re-evaluate or even dismiss the idea of mechanism X, depending on what you find.

Don't blame your inability to follow a simple analogy on me moving goalposts. You are not helping your cause on this one.

You asked what would be different about babies if kissing got people pregnant. I said that the reproductive organs would need to be in a different place, and thus we would see babies being born with their reproductive organs in a different place. What's the problem there?

DNA and fossils are two examples of evidence. What you are referring to are naturalistic interpretations of the evidence. Look at them and look at your claims about science in this post:

"Science is based on observable and testable and repeatable evidence."

~Tiberias

"As I have said before, science does not start with assumptions. it starts with evidence gathered from the real world."

~Tiberius

Your view of science is inconsistent and you are blind to the philosophical claims that permeate the issue of origins.

My claim is that everything we see in both DNA and the fossil record supports the claim that evolution takes place.

There are many things we could see in both that would prove that evolution could not be responsible, and yet we never see any of those things.

I don't think what I mean by absolute morality and what you mean by absolute morality are the same thing. I am not implying that every circumstance is black and white, like you seem to think, only that there is a true, rather than arbitrary, morality known innately to all normally functioning humans, regardless of sophistication, advancement, or geographic location.

Do you also not believe in absolute truth?

If this is true, how do you explain things like societies where human sacrifice was the norm? Cannibalism? Women as property? Black people as property?

I think there's a thread in this discussion. Perhaps we should start a new thread and move the discussion about absolute morality over there?
 
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Shemjaza

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I dont see the missing link.
hominids2_small.jpg

Take your pick. ;)
 
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WretchedMan

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Glad that you're at least aware of it

I'm just wondering why you think abiogenesis is totally off-limits, and that science will never be able to show that it works.

I think it is off limits for the same reason I think gold at the end of the rainbow, leprechauns, or fairies are off limits. I think it is pure fantasy. An alleged miracle of Naturalism. Science shows that like begets like and non-life never generates life.

You're a bit wrong about abiogenesis having no promising ideas. Every day we're getting closer to understanding it. A set of failed experiments under a certain group of settings does not completely undermine the idea.

Like I said, you can come back and gloat if they pan out...or, your great-great-great-great-great grandkids can gloat to mine. Whichever.

Please post peer-reviewed studies that show that abiogenesis is "impossible" or I'm just going to assume that you've hastily rejected abiogenesis (like you've done with evolution) in favor of "Goddidit".

It won't be your first wrong assumption.

Nothing is more frustrating than someone who thinks that arguing over archaic definitions in philosophy is somehow relevant to the world today.

You should try arguing with someone that claims their philosophy is science and doesn't think they should have to have sound reason for it.

I'm just going to assume that you simply have not studied enough biology to make an informed decision about evolution. It is the foundation for modern biology, and nothing makes sense in biology without evolution. You don't have to believe that, but then again, I'm betting you don't think about or study biology all that much.

That is definitely a more comforting stance for your position. Seek to discredit a position that challenges your entire paradigm rather than examining your position to see if the criticism is valid.

Considering much of modern biology was already being developed decades before Darwin published his theory in the peer-reviewed journals of his day, I hardly see that it is foundational. I see that claim a lot, but I've yet to see it shown to be a valid claim.

Everything boils down to or rests on philosophy, so much so that talking about philosophy is painfully pointless exercise.

If everything boils down to philosophy, why do you find it painfully pointless? Painful, I can understand. Pointless, not so much.

Yeah, you can believe in miracles and be scientific but not at the same time. You have to compartmentalize that which you ascribe to miracles and that which you ascribe to science. It seems arbitrary and contradictory to me for someone to do that, so I picked the one I think is better and stay consistently with that.

That's fallacious. If you mean that you cannot believe in miracles and Naturalism at the same time without holding contradictory views, I would agree. Accepting the supernatural does not impede one's ability to do good science. There are numerous examples, even Nobel Prize winners.

You see, the thing is this: IF we could observe God, then God would be natural, not supernatural, and thus subject to naturalism. Anything supernatural is a superfluous and unneeded addition to this world.

What do you base this idea that God cannot be observed and still transcend the natural world? I don't see any logic to that. Observing a car designer doesn't make him part of the car, neither would observing the Creator of nature make Him part of nature.

You don't have to see God to see the evidence of His existence. Whether we think God unneeded doesn't matter if He exists. If He exists, He is absolutely necessary.

There was no scientific community back then. Science was the handmaiden of the church, and everything they did was in accordance with the church. That's where the dogma was. True science has no dogma. People can have dogmas, and sometimes it's hard to let go of a cherished theory, but good scientists do it in the blink of an eye if the evidence demands it.

So, you acknowledge Naturalism is not true science.

If having a sugar-daddy means scientists are not part of a scientific community, we don't have a scientific community today. Very few scientists are self financed.

That is a weak attempt to avoid the fact that most of the scientists in Galileo's time were fighting tooth and nail for a wrong paradigm against a man who believed in God, special creation, and miracles. Yes, they were funded by the Roman Catholic Church, most things were at that time, and yes, the RCC persecuted Galileo for his claims, but it wasn't because that is what Scripture says. This claim is not an argument against God or in favor of Naturalism.

How's that?

Government gives the money for research, schools, mandates curriculum, via judges decides what is and isn't science, etc.

I think I hit this point up there a bit

So God used evolution to create man. Got it.

I don't know what 'it' you got, but I don't think it is the 'it' you think it is.

You've completely changed the subject here. You said that Christianity spawned science, not a belief in God. "Strict naturalism" doesn't play into it at all.

But Christianity does not deserve all or most of the credit for spawning science. So many cultures that pre-date Christianity had scientific enterprises. The Greeks, the Chinese, the Romans, the Egyptians...

My point was that Naturalism isn't foundational to science as you claim.

But, I'm not unreasonable. Show me how science was not born specifically out of Christian thought.

The Origin of Science

You can start here. I hope Columbia University is sufficiently non-AIG, DI, or ICR a source for you.

Post away. If it's decent evidence I may change my mind. I have a standing policy that if I see good evidence for the Christian God I will gladly re-convert back (it would actually make my life simpler, seeing how I'm dating a Christian).

We've already discussed a few. They weren't good enough for you. You don't believe there are morals that are true, you don't believe there can be any evidence of design. I could get into prophecy, but it's hardly on topic. You don't accept the cosmological constant argument, I assume. Do you accept that information has to originate with a mind? I assume you believe unintelligent, blind forces are the source of intelligence since you accept Naturalism. Those are some. If you want to pursue any of them, I guess PM me.

Some claims of creationism can be tested (like the age of the earth, whether evolution is true or not), but many elements cannot. In ID, how would you tell if something is designed or not? How can you measure design? Because you can't measure it with complexity, because things that are designed can either be complex or simple, and things that are natural can either be complex or simple.

Read some of Behe, Meyer, Dembski, etc. If you don't want to read, look up some of their lectures on YouTube. It's far more involved than I have space.


I'm sad that you think it's philosophical. Say goodbye to any possibility of reaching a conclusion.

I don't know why reality makes you sad. It's true and I have come to a conclusion.

Don't know what to tell you other than maybe you should read up on evolution and you'll understand more why it's the only game in town.

Yeah, no dogma to see here.

Evolution has a lot to say about a lot of things, with implications stretching far and wide. Any philosophy or ethic that doesn't take into account evolution is starting out with big gaping holes in my opinion. We must understand ourselves, and evolution provides us a lot of insight into that.

What do you mean by evolution? Universal common descent? Can you give any compelling evidence for it without resorting to philosophical assumptions?

Then post your evidence.

Already touched on this.
 
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Skaloop

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Science shows that like begets like and non-life never generates life.

Why do people keep spouting this sort of nonsense? Every bit of the stuff making up the life that is you came from non-life. So your statement is demonstrably and undeniably wrong.
 
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MarkT

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ah ok, so you believe in evolution now? You are saying the birds got to the island and then evolved to fit their environment, forming 14 or 15 new species. well you are right, so that's cool and glad we could agree on something. also glad you believe in evolution now :)

It depends on what you mean by evolution. I have a different take on it. Not to confuse you, but I believe in speciation. I would put it this way. The birds that arrived on the island speciated into a number of species. I don’t know if speciated is even a word, but I hope you get my meaning.

I agree they managed to survive the environment, but I wouldn’t say they evolved to fit the environment. I would say they speciated in isolation into a number of species, and that that would account for the differences in their physical appearance. Some of the birds have a large beak. Some of the birds have a smaller beak. But they are all finches.

None of the species has any particular advantage over another species when they are not in competition, which, I guess, is most of the time, since they live on different islands. It’s only when a drought occurs that the birds have to compete. And even then alot of the birds with the large beaks die off. Even so, the small beaked G. fortis hasn’t died out.

I don’t see this competition going on in the animal kingdom where, according to theory, animals with a slight advantage survive, and the ones that don’t have the advantage die off. There’s a lot of variation. Sometimes it might turn out to be an advantage to have a longer neck, for example, but it doesn’t mean the short necked animal can not survive.

And that brings me back to the question of the living transitional species. According to your theory, they died off. But I would have to question that.
 
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Lion Hearted Man

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I think it is off limits for the same reason I think gold at the end of the rainbow, leprechauns, or fairies are off limits. I think it is pure fantasy. An alleged miracle of Naturalism. Science shows that like begets like and non-life never generates life.

You are simply entrenched in creationist fallacy so far that I don't think I could ever pull you out. You think that something you don't like is simply a "fantasy" without ever studying it, and you resort to the "non-life never generates life" crap.

By calling abiogenesis a "fantasy" you really aren't making an argument against it. "Non-life never generates life" is a complete and total fallacy. No one expects new life to emerge from organic molecules. Any proto-life that springs up would immediately be ripped apart for resources by the extremely well-equipped life that is already here. The origin of life only needed to happen once, and from there it boomed into what we see today.

Like I said, you can come back and gloat if they pan out...or, your great-great-great-great-great grandkids can gloat to mine. Whichever.

I have a feeling your kind will come up with new excuses by then.

You should try arguing with someone that claims their philosophy is science and doesn't think they should have to have sound reason for it.

Is this what it boils down to? Let's get to the main point:

I think that science rests on methodological naturalism. Which it does. I freely admit that I am making a philosophical assumption. But the reason I do is because science works extremely well at analyzing and predicting events in this world. I'm not really arguing for philosophical naturalism that much (which I should have made clearer before), which would state that "only natural causes exist", but rather that science can only deal with natural causes. I'm sure we agree here.

You are free to ascribe to Gould's Non-Overlapping Magisteria if you want. If you want to believe in supernatural stuff, sure, knock yourself out. But don't misrepresent what science is: methodological naturalism. Science MUST assume that there are natural causes, otherwise it won't work.

That is definitely a more comforting stance for your position. Seek to discredit a position that challenges your entire paradigm rather than examining your position to see if the criticism is valid.

-1 point for using the word "paradigm".

Considering much of modern biology was already being developed decades before Darwin published his theory in the peer-reviewed journals of his day, I hardly see that it is foundational. I see that claim a lot, but I've yet to see it shown to be a valid claim.

CerealSpitting.png


Wow, okay, someone needs to re-take their biology class.

-1859 - Origin of the Species
-1869 - Isolation of DNA
-1920s-1930s - Discovery of major metabolic pathways (glycolysis, citric acid cycle, glycogen and steroid metabolism); discovery of genetic recombination, Griffith's experiments
-1940s - Discovery of ATP
-1953 - Discovery of Structure of DNA; central dogma of biology articulated
-1950s - Discovery of the functions of mRNA, ribosomes, tRNA,
-1960s - First complete genome sequenced (bacteriophage), discovery of reverse transcriptase
-1970s - Discovery of small RNA, ribozymes, transposons; recombinant DNA technology emerges with discovery of restriction enzymes
-1980s - Discovery of telomerase; invention of PCR

And I didn't even get into the vast new discoveries made since the 80s. Everything you learned in your biology class was probably discovered after evolution. Evolution IS the foundation of biology, and it has been there before genetics and everything has only strengthened it.

Modern biology is a sea of information that Darwin and his contemporaries would have never imagined. The fact that there are textbooks devoted to the glomerulus alone should tell you something.

That's fallacious. If you mean that you cannot believe in miracles and Naturalism at the same time without holding contradictory views, I would agree. Accepting the supernatural does not impede one's ability to do good science. There are numerous examples, even Nobel Prize winners.

Anyone who believes in the supernatural while also being a scientist must check their supernatural beliefs at the door when doing science. Science is methodological naturalism, not necessarily pure naturalism.

What do you base this idea that God cannot be observed and still transcend the natural world? I don't see any logic to that. Observing a car designer doesn't make him part of the car, neither would observing the Creator of nature make Him part of nature.

God "transcending the world" is some idea you guys have made up to make him exempt from observation.

If having a sugar-daddy means scientists are not part of a scientific community, we don't have a scientific community today. Very few scientists are self financed.

Ah, so conspiracy theory time.

That is a weak attempt to avoid the fact that most of the scientists in Galileo's time were fighting tooth and nail for a wrong paradigm against a man who believed in God, special creation, and miracles. Yes, they were funded by the Roman Catholic Church, most things were at that time, and yes, the RCC persecuted Galileo for his claims, but it wasn't because that is what Scripture says. This claim is not an argument against God or in favor of Naturalism.

It's not an argument against God or in favor of Naturalism, I agree. I never said it was. It's an argument against dogma and religion.

Government gives the money for research, schools, mandates curriculum, via judges decides what is and isn't science, etc.

Conspiracy theory again? Scientists write the textbooks. Are you just sad that creationism keeps getting excluded? Even the conservative judge presiding over Kitzmiller v. Dover said that ID wasn't science.

My point was that Naturalism isn't foundational to science as you claim.

How about methodological naturalism? I'm making a big distinction now.

But, I'm not unreasonable. Show me how science was not born specifically out of Christian thought.

The Origin of Science

You can start here. I hope Columbia University is sufficiently non-AIG, DI, or ICR a source for you.

Hahahaha, the guy won a Templeton Prize. Yeah, I'll take what he says seriously. I don't have time to get into this, but the ancient Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, Chinese, Aztecs, etc. all did some pretty good science without Christianity. The ancient Arab world also did some amazing stuff.

We've already discussed a few. They weren't good enough for you. You don't believe there are morals that are true, you don't believe there can be any evidence of design. I could get into prophecy, but it's hardly on topic. You don't accept the cosmological constant argument, I assume. Do you accept that information has to originate with a mind? I assume you believe unintelligent, blind forces are the source of intelligence since you accept Naturalism. Those are some. If you want to pursue any of them, I guess PM me.

I do believe that morals are true, just not absolute like you seem to claim they MUST be. I also am open to seeing the evidence for design. I'm not like you - I refuse to say "design COULDN'T HAVE HAPPENED. IMPOSSIBLE!" like you said about abiogenesis.

Prophecy is grasping at straws if you're talking about Biblical prophecy. The cosmological constant argument has been shown to be fallacious. "Information originating from a mind" needs a LOT more clarification, especially the word 'information'. I think that intelligence is a product of our biology.

From what I can see, you really don't have any arguments beyond what most apologists use. But I do want to follow up on them.

Read some of Behe, Meyer, Dembski, etc. If you don't want to read, look up some of their lectures on YouTube. It's far more involved than I have space.

I have, and they've been refuted time and time again. Every idea they've put forth has been shown to be fallacious by real scientists.

Yeah, no dogma to see here.

I actively use evolution every day. That's why I think it's the bees' knees.

What do you mean by evolution? Universal common descent? Can you give any compelling evidence for it without resorting to philosophical assumptions?

I can give compelling evidence for it using science. If you think science cannot be used, then the discussion is over.
 
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OllieFranz

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It depends on what you mean by evolution. I have a different take on it. Not to confuse you, but I believe in speciation. I would put it this way. The birds that arrived on the island speciated into a number of species. I don’t know if speciated is even a word, but I hope you get my meaning.

I agree they managed to survive the environment, but I wouldn’t say they evolved to fit the environment. I would say they speciated in isolation into a number of species, and that that would account for the differences in their physical appearance. Some of the birds have a large beak. Some of the birds have a smaller beak. But they are all finches.

None of the species has any particular advantage over another species when they are not in competition, which, I guess, is most of the time, since they live on different islands. It’s only when a drought occurs that the birds have to compete. And even then alot of the birds with the large beaks die off. Even so, the small beaked G. fortis hasn’t died out.

I don’t see this competition going on in the animal kingdom where, according to theory, animals with a slight advantage survive, and the ones that don’t have the advantage die off. There’s a lot of variation. Sometimes it might turn out to be an advantage to have a longer neck, for example, but it doesn’t mean the short necked animal can not survive.

And that brings me back to the question of the living transitional species. According to your theory, they died off. But I would have to question that.

So he does back off. "Speciation is not evolution, its micro-evolution." I called it:

....[T]he explanation he gives -- and which he calls simple and claims is based on observation and common sense -- is the same explanation that Darwin came up with: evolution. He doesn't use the "E" word, or any other phrase associated with "Darwinists," but what he describes is natural selection.

Of course, now that I've pointed it out, he'll back down and say that it is not evolution, but just "micro-evolution." After all, they are still finches, aren't they?
 
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WretchedMan

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Why do people keep spouting this sort of nonsense? Every bit of the stuff making up the life that is you came from non-life. So your statement is demonstrably and undeniably wrong.

That's not what I said. Even the most hardcore of Creationists believe God formed the first man from dust.

Genesis 3:19:
By the sweat of your face
you shall eat bread,
till you return to the ground,
for out of it you were taken;
for you are dust,
and to dust you shall return.”


Until you can actually demonstrate life arising from non-life via purely naturalistic causes, you have nothing but assumptions. Your statement is just not true.
 
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OllieFranz

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And that brings me back to the question of the living transitional species. According to your theory, they died off. But I would have to question that.

Most of them have died off. Most of everything has died off. Most species are extinct. Living species represent only a small fraction of the species that have existed and for which we have fossils.

But there are living transitionals. Look up the term "Ring Species." You will find things like Larus Gulls, Ensatina salamanders, Green Warblers, etc. Which are in the middle stages of the same kind of speciation as the Galapagos finches went through. Each subgroup can still freely interbreed with its nearest neighbors, but where the split population meets up again, the two subgroups can no longer interbreed. The subgroup that still lives in the original home territory can be considered representative of the parent group (though there were probably some changes even in this subgroup), and the subgroups between this "parental" subgroup and the end subgroups represent the transitionals.

For transitions that took place long enough ago, even if the transitional form did not die out, the branch that retained the transitional morphology continued to evolve, just as the new branch did. Consider an early reptilian creature as one step in the evolution of mammals from a fish or fish-like ancestor.

After the split one subgroup's metabolism increases. In order to survive, the creatures had to develop ways of ridding themselves of the excess heat generated. Scales developed into hairs and mechanisms developed to control the fur that resulted to shade the skin from the heat, and to allow moisture to escape through the skin and evaporate and thus cool the body. They also adapted to living constantly with a higher body temperature than what had been the average before the change in their metabolism, and so the fur must also be used as a blanket to keep in the heat during the winter.

The metabolism of the other subgroup does not increase.They remain reptilian, but they do not remain constant. They, too, undergo some changes -- minor compared to the changes the mammals are going through -- and also evolve. At some point the minor changes add up, and it becomes nearly impossible for them to make the kind of changes that could set them on the path of becoming mammalian. Either they could not survive a metabolism increase long enough to adapt to it, or their scales have changed so much that they cant be turned into hair, etc. In any case they are no longer transitional to mammals. But they still share that common ancestor which was transitional.
 
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Split Rock

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It depends on what you mean by evolution. I have a different take on it. Not to confuse you, but I believe in speciation. I would put it this way. The birds that arrived on the island speciated into a number of species. I don’t know if speciated is even a word, but I hope you get my meaning.
I would use "underwent adaptive radiation," but I don't think you would like that.

I agree they managed to survive the environment, but I wouldn’t say they evolved to fit the environment. I would say they speciated in isolation into a number of species, and that that would account for the differences in their physical appearance. Some of the birds have a large beak. Some of the birds have a smaller beak. But they are all finches.
Its not jsut a case of diferent size beaks, but different shapes as well. The sizes and shapes fit different feeding styles, so it is hard to argue that the environment had nothing to do with it. Unless you are going to claim what they feed on is not part of the "environment."

None of the species has any particular advantage over another species when they are not in competition, which, I guess, is most of the time, since they live on different islands. It’s only when a drought occurs that the birds have to compete. And even then alot of the birds with the large beaks die off. Even so, the small beaked G. fortis hasn’t died out.
What stops birds from flying over to one of the other islands and competing with the local birds?

I don’t see this competition going on in the animal kingdom where, according to theory, animals with a slight advantage survive, and the ones that don’t have the advantage die off. There’s a lot of variation. Sometimes it might turn out to be an advantage to have a longer neck, for example, but it doesn’t mean the short necked animal can not survive.
Its not always about direct competition, so you are partially correct. Sometimes it is though.

And that brings me back to the question of the living transitional species. According to your theory, they died off. But I would have to question that.
Well, we see them in the fossil record. So, yeah.. they existed and died off.
 
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rjc34

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That's not what I said. Even the most hardcore of Creationists believe God formed the first man from dust.


Until you can actually demonstrate life arising from non-life via purely naturalistic causes, you have nothing but assumptions. Your statement is just not true.

No, we have hypotheses, and small amounts of evidence currently. The official position (and the intellectually honest one) is 'We don't yet know'.

You've previously made a ton of sweeping and unsubstantiated statements about abiogenesis, and how you believe it's impossible (and therefore goddidit).

Now, while it is true that we may very well never know exactly how life first formed on earth, that doesn't change the evidence for or veracity of evolution in the slightest. I'm also sure that if somehow you could take off your creationist-goggles and objectively read the wiki on abiogenesis (and study the current hypotheses and their supporting evidence) you'd change your position to 'we don't yet know', rather than claiming that your creation myth is the correct one.
 
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WretchedMan

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No. Nowhere have I said, "There's nothing to say that evolution can't do such-and-such, therefore it CAN do such-and-such."

No, you didn't say it can for that reason, true.

I was pointing out that you were using the absence of awareness of a mechanism -P which prevents mechanism M from producing the disputed result U as evidence that M can produce U.

What I am saying is that changes of the type described by "macro" evolution are explainable by the processes that we KNOW take place with microevolution, albeit on a much longer time scale. And the records we have (fossils, changes in DNA etc) that contain data and evidence about such timescales show that the microevolution processes do indeed operate on the macroevolution timescale.

As I have said, the fossil record is evidence as it shows how animal body forms have changed over time. DNA evidence can also tell us how closely related two modern species are - that is, how long ago the most recent common ancestor of the two lived.

This is what I have been talking about. Fossils and DNA are having the presuppositions of Naturalism applied to them in order to come up with interpretations.

Of course someone operating under Naturalism will draw these kinds of conclusions because they are consistent with the way they view reality.

An equally intelligent and skilled scientist who does not think according to Naturalism can look at DNA and see evidence of a programmer at work. In that framework it is logical that animals that are more similar in structure will also have many similarities in their DNA. It does not prove relation. It is the evidence that we have regardless of how we view the world and it provides circumstantial support to both positions when examined within their paradigms.

Why do you think that there is little science involved?

Because I have gone through an immense amount of the literature on the fossils that are claimed to be intermediates.

Many of them are nothing but fragments, if you can find images of the fossils at all. There are beautiful illustrations of what they looked like which fill in details that we have no evidence for. Even many of the skeleton replicas are more than 85% made up, some even more. We are given tales about how they lived and when, what they ate, how they bred, what their ancestors were, and who their descendants were, all from a few fossilized remains.

There is little to no science to substantiate the claims I have read.

Bear in mind that humans have been doing it for only a few thousand years, as you said. nature's been doing it for millions.

For the sake of discussion I'll say that you are right. Even still, we have something that is a great multiplier versus nature's millions of years and that is our intellect.

We can protect what we manipulate from predation, makes sure its needs are met and intentionally direct the genetic progress, ensuring no progress is lost as it is in nature.

We have put flies and bacteria through how many generations all the while forcing mutations on them and manipulating their genes? Still, they have not produced anything more than flies and bacteria.

If it is so simple for nature to take us from bacteria to all that has ever lived, surely we can do it in a short time.

glad you agree.

Given that evoluytionary theory is based on testing of DNA and other such testniques which are expressable in mathematical terms, I don't think that it counts as a philosophy. After all, isn't philosophy inherently subjective? How can one test it in the real world?

Evolutionary theory was around a while before DNA ever came in to view.

Again, I don't have any issue with the fact that an equine type could produce horses, ponies, zebras, and donkeys. I do have an issue with calling it 'evolution', but that is semantics. I am more concerned with concepts.

I reject universal common descent because I do not see any evidence for it that does not require me to accept the tenets of Naturalism, which is philosophy. The scientific evidence, shed of any philosophical conjecture, seems to indicate that universal common descent is not at all probable.

I won't say that there is no subjectivity that goes into philosophy. Every person who thinks practices philosophy whether they realize it or not, so there is a great deal of subjectivity in that sense.

On a higher level, I think philosophy isn't nearly as subjective. The primary function of philosophy is to get to what is reasonable, logical, and true. While subjectivity is impossible to avoid as humans, I think philosophy has some potent tools at its disposal to keep subjectivity as minimal as is possible.

If by naturalism, you mean the scientifically accepted theory of evolution, no you don't need it to understand water. But you don't need electrical theory either. Just because a theory doesn't say something about a particular thing, doesn't mean that the theory is useless.

Naturalism: a philosophical paradigm whereby everything can be explained in terms of natural causes. Physical matter is the only reality -- everything can be explained in terms of matter and physical phenomena. Naturalism, by definition, excludes any Supernatural Agent or activity.

This is getting rather political and outside the scope of the topic, but science isn't trying to do away with religion. it's trying to do away with religion taught as science.

I do not endorse religion taught as science. More generally, I do not endorse philosophy taught as science.

My issue isn't that we can't teach Genesis in astronomy or biology, it is that adherents to a particular philosophy (Naturalism) have sought to define it as science, establish it as the absolute truth and authority on every aspect of existence, insulate it from any challenge in any thought discipline, and to mandate that it is taught as fact to people starting from the earliest possible age.

If you are truly against ideologies being taught as objective science, you should be aghast at the current state of things regardless of what you believe.

Why couldn't God have used the naturalistic explanations as a tool for creating those life forms?

In the broader sense, without getting too much into theology, God could create some things via natural mechanisms. He couldn't have used 'naturalistic' mechanisms because, by definition a naturalistic process is one the forbids God or anything outside our physical universe from playing any role in it. This isn't just a matter of semantics. Words have meaning.

Universal common descent isn't a concept that is based on solely observable natural processes. It hinges on unobserved, hypothetical, naturalistic processes.

I've watched some of the videos. Thanks for linking them. I'll finish watching them, but they don't really seem to document many of the claims so far. Much of what they show are things I've studied previously and most of it suffers from the same requirement of accepting assumptions that I don't think are justified. I'll try and get back about them when I've had time to go a bit more in depth and digest them.

true, but if a scientist's investigation of the real world shows him something that couldn't exist if his assumption was true, he throws out that assumption.

Ideally, yes. The problem is that a person's way of seeing and interpreting the world isn't as easily abandoned as a failed theory.

By way of example, I have come to believe in God and in Jesus Christ. When I was convinced of the truth of Christ's claims, my paradigm shifted. Things that a moment before I viewed and interpreted one way, I now saw in a completely new light. It was not an easy point to come to and I grasped at anything I could, to the point of absurdity, to deny the truth but eventually I could no longer deny it and I had to abandon my previous paradigm for the new one.

In the same way, many people are committed to Naturalism and cannot imagine viewing the world in any other way. As a result, they accept some pretty absurd and illogical ideas so that they do not have to let it go.

How so? Look at evidence in the real world. Say, "Maybe that stuff works b mechanism X." Then go out and see if there is anything that shows that mechanism X can't occur. If you find such a thing, you may need to re-evaluate or even dismiss the idea of mechanism X, depending on what you find.

I was referring to your claim that science doesn't start with assumptions. You would have no hypothesis to test if you didn't begin with assumptions. That's all I was saying.

You asked what would be different about babies if kissing got people pregnant. I said that the reproductive organs would need to be in a different place, and thus we would see babies being born with their reproductive organs in a different place. What's the problem there?

I know what you said but it was an analogy. I wasn't asking what would have to be changed in the human schematic to make impregnation via kissing possible.

Let me try to clear this up Forget the kissing analogy.

We have explanation A and explanation B for the same result C. I hold A, you hold B. The question was if B were true, what would be different about C? My point is that if B were true, since it is an explanation of C, C should still be true. This is why I said it is a meaningless question.

That's all I was trying to say with the analogy.

My claim is that everything we see in both DNA and the fossil record supports the claim that evolution takes place.

There are many things we could see in both that would prove that evolution could not be responsible, and yet we never see any of those things.

What I see in DNA supports the claim that it is a result of design. The foundation of our disagreement is philosophical, not scientific.

If this is true, how do you explain things like societies where human sacrifice was the norm? Cannibalism? Women as property? Black people as property?

Failure to follow absolute moral principles isn't evidence against them. It is evidence that people are sinful.

If there were no true morals, why would any of the mentioned acts be wrong? We might not prefer them, but we couldn't legitimately call them wrong.

I think there's a thread in this discussion. Perhaps we should start a new thread and move the discussion about absolute morality over there?

Sure. Send me a link when you find it.
 
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MarkT

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OK... now I'm confused. You say that 2 species evolved into many on the islands? This is called adaptive radiation, and that is exactly what we say happened. It is evolution. You are just claiming that they all came from two species instead of just one. That seems to be a rather trivial point to be making, but OK.

Right. At first I said they came from two populations. In other words, they were two species. But then mathclub proposed one species and I have to agree. It’s more likely the birds came from one population. They were one species. If there were two species, and every island was a unique environment, then they would have settled on the island where they could find food. But it doesn’t make sense to imagine every island was a unique environment, though some of the islands are larger than the others.

So if the birds settled on the islands, and there are 16 of them as well as many islets, and the islands are separated by water, then you would end up with 16 populations of finches. The birds of one island would breed with one another rather than travel to another island to breed. So it’s like statistical sampling - you have + or - away from the norm or common ancestor. Every population is a statistical sample + or - , drifting to a possible beak of a size and a shape inherent to the finch. And then the alleles become fixed and you see a trait. So you find some species with large beaks and some species with smaller beaks. It’s all chance. It’s not because of the environment. They don’t have big beaks because there are big seeds. They have big beaks because big beaks are possible and that’s in their DNA.
 
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