My closing comments:
Beckijhn said:
Yep - I'm outta here. I got into this discussion because it has to do with parenting and teaching our children. I stay in because I believe I'm right.
Creation Science is very real and I believe Chino AZ houses over 600 of them dedicated to answering questions having to do with Science and God. I urge you to do a search that looks at Creation and science.
I am sure I have read more creationist material than you have read mainstream science. The problem is that the creationist material does not actually hold up to scrutiny.
The flood is the one undeniable world wide event that all cultures remember in some way or another.
Curiously, only cultures that settled near river valleys have flood myths, not "all" as you assert. I wonder why that might be? I wonder why there is no single world-wide flood deposit in the geological record? Why Catal Huyuk, 5,000 years and more old, has no flood evidence in it?
That would tend to emphasize it's validity since all people are descended from Shem Ham or Japheth and they were all there.
It might be were it true. It isn't.
In addition to having sea creature fossils all over the world (and I mean ALL)
Yes. And mainstream science knows how they got there. What the flood model can't explain is the distribution. Mainstream science can. Do you have a reason why trilobites are always found in different strata to bony fish?
there is other evidence of the event as well.
Assertion is meaningless. Only evidence counts.
You might want to watch which society you hang with. There are many things accepted by different sects of society that I would never accept or believe. It goes with which ring you throw you hat in. There are as many scientist that don't accept evolution as those that do.
Nonsense. I believe the proportions are something like 95% mainstream to 5% creationist. Which society I hang with? In my country, young Earth creationism is a fringe belief held by a tiny minority of extreme fundamentalist Christians. The vast majority of UK Christians find it ridiculous.
I believe it was an evolutionist that stated that the chances of getting all the parts of one strand of DNA to combine at the same time with the right number of enzymes would be a chance less than 10 to the neg 40000 (10 with 39,999 zeros behind it).
Wouldn't matter, because (a) that's not evolution, and (b) that's not even how biogenesis is believed to have occured. Why calculate the odds of something no-one's proposing?
Another evolutionist said that was optimistic and for that to happen would equate with a miracle (something else about that not happening even if the whole world were made of organic soup... Heard it tonight but didn't take notes).
Names would be nice. And references.
Oh one last thing - the Bible mentions dinosaurs too. If you just throw out Genesis - or at least the creation part,
I DO NOT THROW OUT GENESIS. I HAVE LINKED YOU TO MY ARTICLE DEMONSTRATING I DO NOT THROW OUT GENESIS. STOP MAKING FALSE ACCUSATIONS. THIS ANGERS ME.
and don't throw out the rest you might look at where dinosars and people are together in the Bible.
Behemoth and Leviathan? Rather flimsy. They don't resemble dinosaurs. Every culture has mythical beasts - here are two middle-eastern ones. If they're not just hippopotami and crocodiles....
I'm sure it's been mentioned in the Evolution/Creation forum.
It has. And thoroughly debunked.