Swerve:
"I read a book a few years ago about creationism vs. evolution...
And what intrigued me the MOST was that it really takes FAITH in either belief...
With that it mind, one belief offers redemption and the other one doesn't...
Until science can COMPLETELY PROVE evolution -- the results above don't really surprise me; nor, do they trouble me..."
I agree.
Passels:
"There are no peer-reviewed papers that support creationism. None. Because it's inherently unscientific. "
Presupposition and circular reasoning . Surely I don't need to explain why.
"Honestly, creationists would be better debaters if they actually read something written since the nineteenth century. Studying evolution didn't begin and end with Darwin."
Your statement here disproves your claim that evolution is a fact. 'Scientific facts' change rather frequently. Almost every generation of so-called scientists is proved wrong by the next.
And your assumption that creationists haven't read Darwin and every evolutionist since is laughable.
MercuryJones:
"You can't point to any body of science that is "against" evolution. I doubt you could point to any accredited university that would air such claims in its science education."
More presupposition and foggy circular reasoning. It seems to be epidemic on this thread.
nguypete:
"Oh my god, I don't know how to explain this to you -- there is no missing link.
Do you understand how things evolve? Things don't pop out in phases, it's transitional, growing and dynamic.
You arn't a baby one day and turn into a tween in the next. "
You just contradicted yourself. Where are all those transitions in the fossil record? There are probably millions of them missing. Even the evolutionist Stephen Jay Gould realized this and therefore presented his punctuated equilibrium theory.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punctuated_equilibrium
Even the 'official evolutionary scientists' are in disagreement among themselves. Doesn't speak well for the 'facts' does it?
WaGWaG:
"Religious belief has evolved as much as humanity has. It began at some point around a fire, when communication finally grabbed ahold of our tongues and allowed us to speak to one another beyond just the physicality of the world and onto deeper musings.
When we finally started asking "What is the sun?" "What is the moon?" "My fallen brother, where do you live now?" "Why are we here?" Someone started giving answers (some cheeky, cynical caveman no doubt). And these answers caught on to groups of people. These stories helped to explain the world and humanity's place in it.
And then it leapt forward, people began claiming land, battling, killing, taking, all behind the impossible power of their own god(s). This was when those explanations of the sun moved beyond mere musings and into a way to control people. And like the tides, religions overtook and then faded back, and then a new religion swept in and consumed the old. And then that religion receded only to be changed by a new wave of religion. And so on...
Much of this absorption and destruction of religions is done when a new culture has come in and taken control of old. And it is in this that you see religion's purpose at that time, control the masses.
Fast forward to more modern times, the specific issue of sexuality and religion. Why are all these gods obsessed with their creations sexualities? Because at our most basic, biological level, we are all sexual--reproductively driven beings...it's something WE ALL share, so it is an important element to control.
Now, on to how this all fits into public acceptance of evolution through natural selection. Once the advent of true science comes, it begins answering the questions that were asked so very long ago, and they answer them with such finesse, beauty and quite often finality. This is sure to bother the men who sit high in the thrones of the major religions, that control that they have is in jeopardy. What are they to do? They instill a sense of mistrust in science and those that pursue scientific truths. They advise their communities to not take science's word for it, do not forget the explanations for the world and its workings that were established a millennia ago.
Public disbelief (although I don't like using the word belief at all) in evolution is directly related to so many religious factions that intend to suppress knowledge (even in tiny, incalculable ways), in order to maintain a slipping stranglehold on their power."
And exactly how was this an improvement over ape 'thinking'.
Pianist:
"Well, even if they DID read them, and I suspect some do, none of them are intellectualy capable, or academically trained sufficiently to actually understand the data."
How do you explain the future creationists who graduated from the same schools as evolutionists?
"By the bye, I believe humans and great apes are, taxonomically speaking, both members of the Hominidae Family. See? We're family."
The family, genus, species concept is simply a construct created from presuppostion.
MercuryJones:
"I've yet to encounter anyone who refutes evolution that actually understands evolution."
That doesn't mean they don't exist. How big is your world and how many non-evolutionists have you talked to? All of them?
"You say "I bend toward where the science goes", but talking about "the missing link" just demonstrates how far from science you are on this.
There really is no body of reputable scientists who claim evolution is disproved in any way. It is the basis of the entire science of biology."
Missing link already addressed. 'Reputable scientists'? Presupposition. Again!
"And, according to one scientist's calculations, only 364,000 years would have been needed for a camera-like eye to evolve from a light-sensitive patch."
What? Only one scientist? What did he base his calculations on? Are you sure there aren't other 'scientists' who have come up with a different calculation?
The entire paragraph is preposterous.
WaGWaG:
"People, we're all entitled to our own beliefs, sure. But you're not entitled to your own facts."
Presupposition.
randomfreak:
"Now, because many theories about the same thing can be true at once, we only mount evidence to judge which theory is the most probable."
I can't even begin to address this
incredibly incongruous statement. What am I missing here? How can two or more differing theories be true at the same time? And even if we assume that they could all be true why the need to find the most probable?
"So far we have not found a fossil that is in the wrong era, even though scientists have looked hard."
Thanks for a perfect example of circular reasoning.
"There is no "missing link." Evolution is all about small, incremental changes. Imagine the number line. To make it more concrete, let's talk about, say the length of a horse. Imagine that at timepoint A we find the horse to be 2m long, and at timepoint B to be 4m long. Do you scream "but you can't say that the horse grew longer, because for the horse to become 4m long, it must've been 3m long first. Because we have not found a horse that's 3m long, your theory cannot be true!" And then imagine if we DO find a horse that's 3m long between timepoints A and B. People will scream again "but to get to 3m long, the horse needs to be 2.5m long first! Show me the 2.5m horse or else you're just making things up!"
The missing link is not at all about variations within species. The missing link refers to a transition between SPECIES. And there is not a single one in existence in the fossil record. If evolution were true there would be a great amount of transitional species in the fossil record.
"The basic "proof" for natural selection is the experiment with the guppies. I forgot the name of the person who did this, but the experiment has been replicated several times with consistent results. Natural selection happens."
Again, NOT evolution. No transition between species. Same with bacteria.
wooffy:
"In colloquial (everyday) use, a "theory" is just an idea, what a scientist might call a hypothesis.
In scientific terms, a theory is a systematic explanation of the some part of the natural world. It is more complex than a "law", and thus subject to revisions, tweaking, or minor points of disagreement - but on the whole is supported by evidence and has been thoroughly examined."
Only difference between the two is the second paragraph is more wordy.
barnbuddy:
"Since the same bronze age theology that embraces the young earth and eden also calls gays and lesbians abominations, I'd imagine it would concern you."
I'll leave this for another thread if I can remember to. Too much to say on the subject and some may consider this post too long already.