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What are the Weaknesses of Evolution?

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Wiccan_Child

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Are you lurking??:confused:
in·fuseplay_w("I0136900") (
ibreve.gif
n-fy
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z
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) tr.v. in·fused, in·fus·ing, in·fus·es 1. To put into or introduce as if by pouring: infused new vigor into the movement.
2. To fill or cause to be filled with something: infused them with a love of the land.
3. To steep or soak without boiling in order to extract soluble elements or active principles.
4. To flavor or scent (a liquid) by steeping ingredients in it: "He would infuse . . . vegetable oil with the pungent taste of scallions" Nina Simonds.
5. To introduce (a solution) into the body through a vein for therapeutic purposes
Thank you.
So explain to me how plants can exist without light when they are 'infused with the Energy of the Creator'.
 
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TheOutsider

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Are you lurking??:confused:
in·fuseplay_w("I0136900") (
ibreve.gif
n-fy
oomacr.gif
z
prime.gif
) tr.v. in·fused, in·fus·ing, in·fus·es 1. To put into or introduce as if by pouring: infused new vigor into the movement.
2. To fill or cause to be filled with something: infused them with a love of the land.
3. To steep or soak without boiling in order to extract soluble elements or active principles.
4. To flavor or scent (a liquid) by steeping ingredients in it: "He would infuse . . . vegetable oil with the pungent taste of scallions" Nina Simonds.
5. To introduce (a solution) into the body through a vein for therapeutic purposes

Like I said, Christian Pantheist. God is infused in every living thing.
 
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Tomk80

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I think your pretty confused about what you think I should be doing. I recognize your apparent need to moderate my actions, but I certainly do not need your input as to how I would construct my arguments. I'm not interested in talking about what you feel I "must" or "must not" demonstrate. As I have told you personally on now 2 occasions; if you don't like my arguments, feel free to ignore them.

Now, about Demski and Shannon, I really dont even know who Shannon is, and I am only vaguely aware of Dembski, so I'm pretty certain that I know nothing about what they consider to be genetic information.
I would argue that you indeed 'must' demonstrate what I have been saying. I do not say this to 'moderate' your actions, but because otherwise your arguments either show nothing or are not logically consistent. Of course you can disagree there, but if so you should have good reasons to. I have good reasons for the statements I made:

On statement 1 that your concept of information must be applicable: The reason I am saying this is that if the concept of information you provide is vague or not clearly applicable to genetics, it doesn't demonstrate anything. Wouldn't you agree?
Statements 2 and 3 are corolaries of each other and basically follow from your statement that "The degeneration of the genome is not only evidence against evolution, but it is conclusive evidence. Evolution cannot explain it." But as has been pointed out, evolution can explain the degeneration of genomes. The only way evolution would not be able to explain this would be if genomes couldn't go the other way either, namely in the direction of a build up. In informational terms you could argue that the genome only loses information. But if it can also gain information, this is not evidence against evolution, because then three situations can occur, namely an overall loss of information, an overall balance of information or an overall gain of information. That way, if you demonstrate that the genome can loose information, that doesn't demonstrate anything particular for your theory.
As a second reason for my statement 2: if you define your concept of information in such a way that it any change in information is per definition a loss, it is no wonder that you are going to find a loss of information subsequently. That is because it is inherent in your á priori definition. Again in that case you have eventually demonstrated nothing.

So yes, you must keep the things I said in mind if you want to make an argument that makes logical sense, an argument that actually demonstrates something. You may not like it, but that follows from your own statements. Note also that I am not the only one to make the above observations, so I'm not the only one who thinks that your statements so far have certain logical consequences that your argument should fullfill.

And:
Bigdug said:
if you don't like my arguments, feel free to ignore them.
What kind of a statement is that? I am interested in what you have to say, otherwise I would not be reading your posts in the first place. But this is a discussion forum. So you should expect for people to respond to your arguments, not ignore them. I for one think that the former of the two is the respectful one, since it shows that one takes the argument seriously. That is also the reason for my statements on what you 'must' do, because I hope you to make a valid argument. And because if you ignore the things I brought up, the chances that you actually make a good argument are close to nill.
 
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Inan3

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Thank you.
So explain to me how plants can exist without light when they are 'infused with the Energy of the Creator'.

The glory and brightness of the Lord is so great that when Moses met with Him on the mount and Moses asked to see God's glory...

Exo 33:18 And he said, I beseech thee, shew me thy glory.
Exo 33:19 And he said, I will make all my goodness pass before thee, and I will proclaim the name of the LORD before thee; and will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will shew mercy on whom I will shew mercy.
Exo 33:20 And he said, Thou canst not see my face: for there shall no man see me, and live.
Exo 33:21 And the LORD said, Behold, [there is] a place by me, and thou shalt stand upon a rock:
Exo 33:22 And it shall come to pass, while my glory passeth by, that I will put thee in a clift of the rock, and will cover thee with my hand while I pass by:
Exo 33:23 And I will take away mine hand, and thou shalt see my back parts: but my face shall not be seen.

...he was only allowed to see His back parts. The glory was so great that when he came down from mountain his face shone and the people were afraid so Moses had to put a veil upon his face when he spoke with them. God is a more awesome Being than either you or I understand but He has revealed Himself in different ways so that we might have some inkling of what He is like. Plants infused with this power, life, light, glory could be sustained for as long as needed if that was God's intent.
 
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Wiccan_Child

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The glory and brightness of the Lord is so great that when Moses met with Him on the mount and Moses asked to see God's glory...

Exo 33:18 And he said, I beseech thee, shew me thy glory.
Exo 33:19 And he said, I will make all my goodness pass before thee, and I will proclaim the name of the LORD before thee; and will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will shew mercy on whom I will shew mercy.
Exo 33:20 And he said, Thou canst not see my face: for there shall no man see me, and live.
Exo 33:21 And the LORD said, Behold, [there is] a place by me, and thou shalt stand upon a rock:
Exo 33:22 And it shall come to pass, while my glory passeth by, that I will put thee in a clift of the rock, and will cover thee with my hand while I pass by:
Exo 33:23 And I will take away mine hand, and thou shalt see my back parts: but my face shall not be seen.

...he was only allowed to see His back parts. The glory was so great that when he came down from mountain his face shone and the people were afraid so Moses had to put a veil upon his face when he spoke with them. God is a more awesome Being than either you or I understand but He has revealed Himself in different ways so that we might have some inkling of what He is like. Plants infused with this power, life, light, glory could be sustained for as long as needed if that was God's intent.
What do you mean by 'glory'?
 
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BigDug

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On statement 1 that your concept of information must be applicable: The reason I am saying this is that if the concept of information you provide is vague or not clearly applicable to genetics, it doesn't demonstrate anything. Wouldn't you agree?
Yes of course I would agree, yet I think we are playing up this notion of genetics as information much too much. Genes are like information, nucleotides are like letters in a long series of words that code proteins and other things. I honestly don't know where the trouble is here. I am assuming that these other authors and 'creationists' have some sort of warped idea of what genetic information might be, and that you seem entirely ready to argue about such definitions with the likes of Demski and others seems to presuppose that all creationists would see things the same way, or whatever, its really kind of confusing. I said before that sfs's comment what cryptic to me, and I am still having trouble with it. Maybe someone should tell me what "all creationists" think about the definition of genetics being like information that way I can finally figure out what I should think.

Anyways, point one, genetic information is just that, the first dimension being a linear sequence of 4 extremely small molecules called nucleotides. These molecules are the 'letters' of our genetic instruction code and are shown symbolically as A,T,C, and G. This is what I mean when I talk about genetic information, or genetic code. These letters are strung together like a linear text.
ok.

Once again, this has much less to do with my point than it does with the point you think I should have.(which I assume comes from these ID'ers you guys have been mentioning)

As for the demonstration that mutations cannot 'increase' information, I never made such a claim, as a matter of fact I don't even know what you mean by such a statement. IN my initial chart I added a small curve for beneficial mutations as well as some references showing the ratios of beneficial : deleterious mutations. So I don't deny that they can happen. IM afraid Im missing some crucial creationist argument here by Spetner or Demski, and I havent read either of their books. However I will read the books when I get a chance.

Third, to support your own statements it is not enough for you to demonstrate that mutations can decrease information. You need to support that they cannot increase information.
You see, this isnt my point at all, while I certainly don't want to oversimplify it, I feel that you are forcing me to, even though I am not ready to sum it up. But for a concise summary I would say by way of illustration that my idea basically states that the very few beneficial mutations would never be able to cause evolution because humanity is basically suffering the kind of genomic deterioration which causes species to become extinct. Basically any good mutations can be visualized to be like small drops swimming against a tidal wave of deleterious mutation. Here is the previous information about it, which I still havent heard any feedback about which addresses what it is I am really proposing here.OK. So the following is a quote originally written by me:

Ok. Well the question becomes: How much mutation is too much? This is where evolution begins to become a tautology, especially when there seems to be a mindset which places no limit to the rescuing power of natural selection.

Human mutation rates are much too high. For decades geneticists have been worried about the impact of mutations on the human population.(Muller 1950, Crow 1997)
Muller, American Journal Human Genetics 2:111-176
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/94/16/8380

When these concerns first arose, they were based on a rate of deleterious mutation of .12 to .30 per person per generation(Muller 1956)
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/42/11/855

Also there was a concern that if the rate got as high as 1 per person per generation, then their would be a real problem with long-term deterioration.

That would be a real problem because there would be no way to get rid of the deleterious mutations, we would need to keep the number below .33 per person per generation in order to select out the bad mutation and have two people left to reproduce and continue a healthy population.

So needless to say, good geneticists are not just saying "so what?" about mutation rates, rather they would tend to watch mutation rates very closely.

So back to our original numbers and questions: even if we accept estimates of Kondrashov, Nachman and Crowell about the amount of mutation to be ~200, which we had tentatively agreed on, and we consider 95% of the genome to be as you said: "completely neutral" (or junk), what is the new bottom line? 95% of 200 = 190 leaving 10 deleterious mutations per person.

So I would be eager to find out what kind of selection structure is going to halt this kind of deterioration.

*Also bearing in mind that this number 200 is a low, conservative estimate.

**Also the portion of the genome that is recognized as truly functional is quickly rising from 95%.

***These are just the point mutations, not counted are the other types:deletions,insertions,duplications,translocations,inversions, and mitochondrial mutations.
if you don't like my arguments, feel free to ignore them.
What kind of a statement is that? I am interested in what you have to say, otherwise I would not be reading your posts in the first place. But this is a discussion forum. So you should expect for people to respond to your arguments, not ignore them. I for one think that the former of the two is the respectful one, since it shows that one takes the argument seriously. That is also the reason for my statements on what you 'must' do, because I hope you to make a valid argument. And because if you ignore the things I brought up, the chances that you actually make a good argument are close to nill.
Well I agree with you. All Im saying is that if you think that my argument is 'not good' or based on some method of logic that you do not see as valid then certainly I can relate with you. But personally, if someone is making nonsense, I would not be able to listen very long.:scratch: I would be too confused.

However I think that I am making sense, and I think that I do indeed try to back up my points with real evidence...

OK. So I think that most honest geneticists would admit that the human population is genetically deteriorating, due to rapid mutation accumulation and relaxed natural selection pressure. (Basically the 'relaxed NS pressure would refer to the relatively low pressure which humans have put themselves in due to civilization, nutrition,technology, etc). Basically I think they realize that genetic information is being lost in our collective genome, and that the result is reduced fitness. This reduction in fitness for our species is believed to be occuring at 1-2% per generation(Crow 97)
http://www.pnas.org/content/vol94/issue16/
There are some charts and figures here to refer to.

So the question becomes: How much selection pressure would be needed to completely stop genetic degeneration?

Or a better question would be, can it be stopped?
 
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Inan3

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What do you mean by 'glory'?

Well I'm not totally sure but if it made Moses' face shine and it made the top of the mountain look like it was burning and if the New Jerusalem had no need for the sun or the moon because the glory of God did lighten it, then I think it is the absolute pureness of His Life, Light, Love and Power. The scripture says in Him is no darkness at all. His holiness is beyond flaw and therefore in itself brightness beyond what we know.

Rev 21:23 And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to shine in it: for the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb [is] the light thereof.

We won't have to wonder there which came first the chicken or the egg. We will see the Source of all Life and we will know even as we are known.
 
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Tomk80

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Yes of course I would agree, yet I think we are playing up this notion of genetics as information much too much. Genes are like information, nucleotides are like letters in a long series of words that code proteins and other things. I honestly don't know where the trouble is here.
The trouble is that you want to show that mutations can cause a loss of information. The question than becomes what you define as a loss of information, how we can arrive at such a conclusion objectively. With what you say above, we still have no good way of seeing what a loss or gain of information would be in the first place, let alone that we can determine what the direction of it would be.

I am assuming that these other authors and 'creationists' have some sort of warped idea of what genetic information might be, and that you seem entirely ready to argue about such definitions with the likes of Demski and others seems to presuppose that all creationists would see things the same way, or whatever, its really kind of confusing.
Not really. I did give Dembski and Shannon (the latter of whom has laid the foundation for information theory) as examples, but not more. Especially my first two points hold whichever argument you are giving. The third point may not hold, depending on your argument. But given the arguments you have made till now, I don't think it is far off.
I said before that sfs's comment what cryptic to me, and I am still having trouble with it. Maybe someone should tell me what "all creationists" think about the definition of genetics being like information that way I can finally figure out what I should think.
The problem is that such a definition has never been given. Not one that can be applied. That is also why I was asking you for one. If you have no applicable definition, you cannot say whether information increases or decreases.

Anyways, point one, genetic information is just that, the first dimension being a linear sequence of 4 extremely small molecules called nucleotides. These molecules are the 'letters' of our genetic instruction code and are shown symbolically as A,T,C, and G. This is what I mean when I talk about genetic information, or genetic code. These letters are strung together like a linear text.
ok.
When is the information increasing, when is it decreasing? If the 'letters' increase in number? Or if they confer some 'meaning' in the form of functioning genes?

Once again, this has much less to do with my point than it does with the point you think I should have.(which I assume comes from these ID'ers you guys have been mentioning)
I think it has quite a lot to do with your statements, although of course what you are trying to demonstrate may be less connectd with those. But then why make them? This I find confusing.

As for the demonstration that mutations cannot 'increase' information, I never made such a claim, as a matter of fact I don't even know what you mean by such a statement. IN my initial chart I added a small curve for beneficial mutations as well as some references showing the ratios of beneficial : deleterious mutations. So I don't deny that they can happen. IM afraid Im missing some crucial creationist argument here by Spetner or Demski, and I havent read either of their books. However I will read the books when I get a chance.
So now you are defining 'information' as whether the code is beneficial or not? Then why not say that? Because a detrimental mutation may actually contain more 'information' than a beneficial one. For example, the deletion of 32 bases from the genes of a certain white blood cell shut down the function of one of their receptors. This could be described as a loss of information in several ways, namely in the loss of number of base pairs, as well as in the loss of functions. However, it is beneficial. It makes it harder for HIV-viruses to latch onto the white blood cell, hence increasing resistance to it.

You see, this isnt my point at all, while I certainly don't want to oversimplify it, I feel that you are forcing me to, even though I am not ready to sum it up. But for a concise summary I would say by way of illustration that my idea basically states that the very few beneficial mutations would never be able to cause evolution because humanity is basically suffering the kind of genomic deterioration which causes species to become extinct. Basically any good mutations can be visualized to be like small drops swimming against a tidal wave of deleterious mutation. Here is the previous information about it, which I still havent heard any feedback about which addresses what it is I am really proposing here.OK. So the following is a quote originally written by me:
Such questions can definitely be problematic now, with the relaxed mutation rate. That is also the statement Muller makes in the article you provided by him. However, natural selection 'rates' were brutal in the past. But then again, birth rates were also high. Look at epidemics in the past such as plague outbreaks. Although some estimates (such as a 70% decimation of the population in England) may be high, more reliable esimates put the death on between 10 and 40 percent of the population in a year. The initial outbreak of the plague in Hubei (China) may have claimed as much as 90% of the population. In 1990 in Angola the child mortality rate under 5 was 260 per 1000. This means that a quarter of the children born there did not make it past age 5. 15% will not live beyond their first year. Yet do you see an indication that these populations will become extinct? No, because these high rates are offset by high birth rates of 45 births per 1000 people, which is more than twice as high as the world average. It is four times as high as the dutch birth rate (11 per 1000).

It seems to me that you are drawing the questions in your post too much from our current, highly protected society with very low birth rates. When you look at selective pressures in developing countries or in our countries 150 years ago, the picture changes dramatically.

Well I agree with you. All Im saying is that if you think that my argument is 'not good' or based on some method of logic that you do not see as valid then certainly I can relate with you. But personally, if someone is making nonsense, I would not be able to listen very long.:scratch: I would be too confused.

However I think that I am making sense, and I think that I do indeed try to back up my points with real evidence...
Which is why I keep listening (so far ;) ). Because you are putting a lot of effort in your posts. I can listen for hours to people whom I think are wrong, as long as their arguments amount to more than just plain thumbsucking and handwaving.

OK. So I think that most honest geneticists would admit that the human population is genetically deteriorating, due to rapid mutation accumulation and relaxed natural selection pressure. (Basically the 'relaxed NS pressure would refer to the relatively low pressure which humans have put themselves in due to civilization, nutrition,technology, etc). Basically I think they realize that genetic information is being lost in our collective genome, and that the result is reduced fitness. This reduction in fitness for our species is believed to be occuring at 1-2% per generation(Crow 97)
http://www.pnas.org/content/vol94/issue16/
There are some charts and figures here to refer to.

So the question becomes: How much selection pressure would be needed to completely stop genetic degeneration?

Or a better question would be, can it be stopped?
Two things. The first to hope to clarify my point on genetic information further. If the overall fitness is decreasing due to relaxed natural selection, this could mean that genetic information is increasing depending on how you define information. Because the accumulating amount of mutations would mean that there are more, not less, variants of different genes in the human population. When we quantify information as the number of alleles in a population, decreased natural selection will mean that the number of alleles that is allowed to remain in the population goes up. This then means an increase in the amount of total information in the population.

Second, why not look at animals? Or at humans 150 years ago? Most animals do not benefit from a relaxed amount of natural selection. Natural selection has also only been decreasing for the majority of the population in the last 150 years. Look at African countries, plenty of natural selection there. I cannot give an answer to you in numbers, but I think these instances demonstrate that natural selection can be pretty brutal and despite this, organisms can still survive. Mostly because rabbits aren't the only ones who like to mate.
 
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Wiccan_Child

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Well I'm not totally sure but if it made Moses' face shine and it made the top of the mountain look like it was burning and if the New Jerusalem had no need for the sun or the moon because the glory of God did lighten it, then I think it is the absolute pureness of His Life, Light, Love and Power.
It sounds to me like radiation of the visable variety. Life, love, and power rarely emminate from radioactive sources.
Fecisiousness aside, I don't see how such abstract concepts such as 'life', 'love', and 'power' can be either 'pure' or be visably seen. Or indeed make a man's face glow, light up a city, etc.
 
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MarcusHill

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Here I think it would be better to tell me what they use to determine the evidence.

http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2002/september11/impactor-911.html.

http://proxy.arts.uci.edu/~nideffer/Hawking/early_proto/allegre.html


http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/geotime/age.html
"The best age for the Earth comes not from dating individual rocks but by considering the Earth and meteorites as part of the same evolving system in which the isotopic composition of lead, specifically the ratio of lead-207 to lead-206 changes over time owing to the decay of radioactive uranium-235 and uranium-238, respectively. Scientists have used this approach to determine the time required for the isotopes in the Earth's oldest lead ores, of which there are only a few, to evolve from its primordial composition, as measured in uranium-free phases of iron meteorites, to its compositions at the time these lead ores separated from their mantle reservoirs. These calculations result in an age for the Earth and meteorites, and hence the Solar System, of 4.54 billion years with an uncertainty of less than 1 percent. To be precise, this age represents the last time that lead isotopes were homogeneous througout the inner Solar System and the time that lead and uranium was incorporated into the solid bodies of the Solar System. The age of 4.54 billion years found for the Solar System and Earth is consistent with current calculations of 11 to 13 billion years for the age of the Milky Way Galaxy (based on the stage of evolution of globular cluster stars) and the age of 10 to 15 billion years for the age of the Universe (based on the recession of distant galaxies)." :scratch:

I'm not sure what you're trying to say here. You've provided perfectly good explanations of how we arrive at the age of the Earth. Is the ":scratch:" meant to indicate that they're not valid simply because you don't understand what's going on? Well, I can follow it, but there are a whole load of bits of research outside of my own areas of expertise that I can't follow. However, since they've gone through the process of peer review, I'm fairly convinced they're valid. If every bit of published research had to be intelligible to everyone, we'd never make any progress.


That's right let's cut out those other guys right here and now.


I'm not going to continue the argument about the relative validity of Christianity over other religions since it's been done before and is off topic for both the thread and the forum. I'm sure there are people over on GA who will gladly discuss it if you want to.
 
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Inan3

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I'm not sure what you're trying to say here. You've provided perfectly good explanations of how we arrive at the age of the Earth. Is the ":scratch:" meant to indicate that they're not valid simply because you don't understand what's going on? Well, I can follow it, but there are a whole load of bits of research outside of my own areas of expertise that I can't follow. However, since they've gone through the process of peer review, I'm fairly convinced they're valid. If every bit of published research had to be intelligible to everyone, we'd never make any progress..

I know that this is what you agree with. All I am trying to say is why not give someone information like that?

I wanted to know where do they come from. How do they come up with those numbers.


I'm not going to continue the argument about the relative validity of Christianity over other religions since it's been done before and is off topic for both the thread and the forum. I'm sure there are people over on GA who will gladly discuss it if you want to.

You are the one who brought it up.
 
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Inan3

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It sounds to me like radiation of the visable variety. Life, love, and power rarely emminate from radioactive sources.
Fecisiousness aside, I don't see how such abstract concepts such as 'life', 'love', and 'power' can be either 'pure' or be visably seen. Or indeed make a man's face glow, light up a city, etc.

That's because you don't know the purity of any of it. They are all forces. God is also Light and Spirit. All of God emits His glory. Any of these things can become visible within the phsical realm but they are not limited to the physical realm. If all you can relate to is the physical realm then you are missing a lot that's going on.
 
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Nathan Poe

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That's because you don't know the purity of any of it. They are all forces. God is also Light and Spirit.

Where is He on the electromagnetic spectrum?

All of God emits His glory. Any of these things can become visible within the phsical realm but they are not limited to the physical realm. If all you can relate to is the physical realm then you are missing a lot that's going on.

And where are you getting this from?
 
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FishFace

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That's because you don't know the purity of any of it. They are all forces. God is also Light and Spirit. All of God emits His glory. Any of these things can become visible within the phsical realm but they are not limited to the physical realm. If all you can relate to is the physical realm then you are missing a lot that's going on.

So wait... God is love, God is light, God is spirit... anything else we should know about? I'm not quite certain of how God can all be all of these things at the same time. You could mean God is loving and God is, I don't know, light giving but you didn't say that.
If God is light, then I, like Nathan, would like to know what frequencies.

If the only evidence for a non-physical realm we have is a few people's testimony, I'm not buying it, by the way.
 
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TheOutsider

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So wait... God is love, God is light, God is spirit... anything else we should know about? I'm not quite certain of how God can all be all of these things at the same time. You could mean God is loving and God is, I don't know, light giving but you didn't say that.
If God is light, then I, like Nathan, would like to know what frequencies.


God IS everywhere, so God IS everything. Like I said, Christian Pantheism. God is every single atom and photon in this universe.
 
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