relspace
Senior Member
Point taken. Impression are subjective and can be greatly influenced by cultural prejudice. And thus science does have an important role. But I notice that in your counter examples you use the words, "less human" not "animal". My point is that if the cultural prejudice can be trained out of the observer, the impressions does contain a great deal of accurate information that is possible yet more difficult to measure.jereth said:With all due respect, I still find that I can't agree with you here. Our "impressions" of other people are subjective, and determined in part by socio-cultural factors. When white people arrived in Australia and the New World, their impression of the indigenous peoples were that they were less evolved. Modern genetics has now shown this impression absolutely wrong.
When we meet people with severe intellectual disability, or people with Down's syndrome, our deepest instinct is to classify them as "less human". But in God's eyes this is false.
So yes, if we met Adam's biological father, we may well feel that he is a savage beast, not a human. But this man may be as much in the image of God as we are.
Clearly I am saying that Adam's father is human in potentiality if not in actuality. After meeting him, I have no doubt that depending on how we treat him, he would quickly learn to imitate us and learn much of those same things which make us human ourselves.
That is true. For by comparison, although chimps and gorillas can learn many human behaviors from us there are some rather severe limitations.jereth said:Whatever the case, we're still dealing with a great deal more advancement than chimps and gorillas. That's all I was saying.
Yes but it can be explained away by the stubborn and unreceptive mind as delusional. I also consider it miraculous, but then I consider the miraculous to be quite common place and not something which cannot be explained away.jereth said:Personally, I would consider this a miraculous act. In other words, we couldn't explain it naturalistically.
Well it is now known (from the study of genetics) that all of humanity originated fairly recently (on a genetic time scale) from migrations of a rather small population originating in Africa. Current studies show that this occured in three successive migrations at 1.5 million years, 700,000 years and 100,000 years ago. Certainly 100,000 years ago is a much farther time in the past than would be expected from reading the Bible. But I would not rule these out as possible times when true humanity spread throughout the world.jereth said:For instance, how do you account for the spread of "humanity" to other peoples living on earth at the time? I presume you believe that Adam lived in Mesopotamia. When and how did humanity spread to the Americas, or the Pacific Islands, or Australia? Surely there must have been a considerable lag in some areas, where "people" remained "animals" for hundreds of years after Adam was adopted by God.
However since I do not believe that the change from animal to man was a genetic one but a "cultural" one this could be something which happened much more recently. In this case, since a genetic impact is not required, it would not be limited by the speed of conquest but only by the speed of communication.
I suspect that what bothers you the most is the sharp division implied between animal and man. But I do not think that it is such a sharp division myself, but perhaps not in the way you might think. The lack of sharp division between animal and man in my mind is not in the slow evolution of capabilities in the human species but in the failure of human kind to complete the transformation. We are stuck in a halfway state that is far from uniform. Some behave more animalistic, governed only by instinct and biological need while others are govened completely by abstract principles in almost complete denial of their biological drives.
If you are focused on the view of God on the issue, then I think for God it has always been a matter of seeing our potentiality rather than our actuality and that when He adopted Adam and Eve, He also by extension adopted the whole species. And as for judgement, in contrast to the legalistic system of rules by which we judge ourselves, God is quite capable of judging us quite differently according to our circumstances (what we have been given).
The spread of sin is identical to the spread of humanity.jereth said:What about the spread of sin worldwide? When and how did this occur?
I, frankly, do not know. I am not commited to the 6000 year timetable implied by scripture.jereth said:Can I please ask: roughly when do you think Adam and Eve lived?
Upvote
0