- Apr 29, 2010
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Can anyone help me understand this? In another thread, a member tried to explain to me that the only reason people like me cling to the theory of evolution is because if evolution is untrue, belief in god must follow. I asked him to explain this logic, but he opted not to, accusing me of "already knowing". But he neglected something in this: I'm an ignoramus!
No, seriously, I'm kinda dumb! There are a lot of things I just don't know! I've repeatedly bowed out of cosmology discussions because I barely know anything about basic physics, let alone quantum physics or astrophysics. And, if it turns out most of what colloquially gets referred to as "evolutionary science" is wrong, then there are a lot more things I don't know as well.
If the theory of evolution is wrong, I have no way of accounting for the diversity of life on the planet. I don't know. Haven't the foggiest what valid alternative there might be.
If the theory of abiogenesis is wrong, I have no way of accounting for the existence of life on this planet. I don't know!
If our understanding of cosmology is wrong, again, I have no way of explaining how everything came to be. I don't know.
Some people claim that if these are wrong, it leads to god. I'd like to ask... How? God is a proposed explanation, sure, but it's a false dichotomy to propose either God or Evolution. What if there was some other, as-of-yet undiscovered mechanism for the birth and diversification of life? It's not like some boolean choice - proving evolution wrong does not necessarily tell us that God is true, it just means that we need some other explanation. God might be that explanation, but it needs to be justified, just like any other explanation. That means we need evidence that God did these things.
What I've seen so far, however, is a big fat argument from ignorance. "We don't know that cause, therefore god". This argument has been used countless times, and never once has it been a good argument, as things attributed to god, or spirits, or the supernatural are constantly revealed to be nothing more than natural phenomena.
So is there a logical pathway from "Evolution is wrong" to "God did it"? If so, I'd love to see it, because, as said above, I'm kinda dumb, and it's something not immediately obvious to me.
No, seriously, I'm kinda dumb! There are a lot of things I just don't know! I've repeatedly bowed out of cosmology discussions because I barely know anything about basic physics, let alone quantum physics or astrophysics. And, if it turns out most of what colloquially gets referred to as "evolutionary science" is wrong, then there are a lot more things I don't know as well.
If the theory of evolution is wrong, I have no way of accounting for the diversity of life on the planet. I don't know. Haven't the foggiest what valid alternative there might be.
If the theory of abiogenesis is wrong, I have no way of accounting for the existence of life on this planet. I don't know!
If our understanding of cosmology is wrong, again, I have no way of explaining how everything came to be. I don't know.
Some people claim that if these are wrong, it leads to god. I'd like to ask... How? God is a proposed explanation, sure, but it's a false dichotomy to propose either God or Evolution. What if there was some other, as-of-yet undiscovered mechanism for the birth and diversification of life? It's not like some boolean choice - proving evolution wrong does not necessarily tell us that God is true, it just means that we need some other explanation. God might be that explanation, but it needs to be justified, just like any other explanation. That means we need evidence that God did these things.
What I've seen so far, however, is a big fat argument from ignorance. "We don't know that cause, therefore god". This argument has been used countless times, and never once has it been a good argument, as things attributed to god, or spirits, or the supernatural are constantly revealed to be nothing more than natural phenomena.
So is there a logical pathway from "Evolution is wrong" to "God did it"? If so, I'd love to see it, because, as said above, I'm kinda dumb, and it's something not immediately obvious to me.
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