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Old 06-04-2002, 10:47 PM   #421
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OC: ... Seriously, does this guy have ANY understanding of how science works? You have to go by the actual data!
Ed:
I think I do. Especially empirical evidence, there is no empirical evidence for macroevolution. And there is nothing magical about time.
I wonder what Ed would consider empirical evidence -- going back in time in a time machine and watching evolution happen as he goes back farther and farther?

Quote:
OC: No surprise that Ed has misunderstood this story. It is true that Latimeria proved to have some unexpected features ... it retains a vestigial lung (now filled with fat and functioning as a buoyancy organ) and a pulmonary vein, which strongly suggests that it had ancestors for whom air-breathing was significantly relevant. ...
Ed:
How do you know it is vestigial lung? Please demonstrate how the gradual filling with fat of an organism's lung does not kill the organism.
It doesn't if that lung was growing without its owner really using it.

Quote:
Ed:
There is no evidence of a fin turning into a forelimb and the skull changing from two parts to a single solid piece.
Ed, what would you consider evidence? Going back in time in a time machine and watching it happen?

Quote:
Ed:
End of part I of my response.
Thus said Mr. Smugness.
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Old 06-05-2002, 03:40 AM   #422
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Ed:
“There is no evidence of a fin turning into a forelimb and the skull changing from two parts to a single solid piece.”

(sigh) one, last time......... There is every evidence!

Perhaps the most important findings to alter our understanding of tetrapods evolution followed the discovery and analysis of Acanthostega in the late 1980s and early 1990s. A skull roof of this tetrapod was first discovered by Gunar Save-Soederberg and Erik Jarvik in 1933, but the significance of this animal was not realized until after additional material was recovered by Jenny Clack in 1987. Together with Michael Coates, Clack realized that this animal was clearly a tetrapod, but that it was a poor excuse for a land animal. Its legs were ill-suited to support its weight and the wrists were absent. Yet, it sported well developed digits (fingers and toes). Surprisingly, the forelimbs possessed eight digits rather than the anticipated five digits, while the hindlimbs possessed seven.
Additional features from the spine, ribs, pelvis and tail corroborated the notion that Acanthostega would not be able to support itself on land. Since it was essentially contemporaneous with the apparently more terrestrial Ichthyostega, Acanthostega, like modern-day dolphins and whales, may have secondarily lost the skeletal features needed for life on land. This possibility, however, is undermined by the presence of internal fish-like gills. (It also breathed with its lungs.) Acanthostega, with its four limbs, pelvic girdle and assorted other features, was clearly a tetrapod, but its lineage probably never left the water.
The unexpected characteristics of Acanthostega have led to reinterpretations of Ichthyostega by Per Ahlberg, Jennifer Clack and Michael Coates. They found an animal that was less adept to life on land than the one depicted by Erik Jarvik, but they also found one that was probably less aquatic than Acanthostega. Ichthyostega's forelimbs were more robust than those of Acanthostega and were probably able to lift the front half of the body. However, its hindlimbs were relatively small and probably functioned more like paddles than legs. Like Acanthastega, it had seven digits on its hindlimbs, but it lacked evidence of internal fish-like gills.

<a href="http://www.mdgekko.com/devonian/Order/new-order.html" target="_blank">http://www.mdgekko.com/devonian/Order/new-order.html</a>

For an example of fins being used as forelimbs OUT OF THE WATER, check out the mud-skippers.

d
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Old 06-06-2002, 06:44 PM   #423
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Originally posted by Oolon Colluphid:
<strong>
Ed: ...as far as fish becoming reptiles, the lack of fossil specimens intermediate between anurans or urodeles and the older amphibians has forced paleontologists to base their speculations about the evolution of the group upon evidence from the anatomy and embryology of modern species which is a highly questionable practice.

OC: So which is it going to be, Ed? If using evidence from modern organisms to draw inferences about relationships is "a highly questionable practice", then Latimeria is irrelevant to the problem of tetrapod origins. If Latimeria is relevant (as you obviously believe) then your criticism of modern-species data is unfounded. You can't have it both ways.

Of course, it is not at all "questionable" to use information from living creatures to reconstruct the relationships and evolution of a group; on the contrary, it is the very foundation of systematic biology. Fossils give us a direct glimpse into the past, but they can never yield as much information as living organisms because soft tissues, physiology etc are not preserved. Ed is simply demonstrating his ignorance here. [/b]
My point was that you cannot be too dogmatic when extrapolating from living organisms to extinct forms. It was not that you can NEVER do so, because as you said that is the only way we can get some possible ideas about soft tissues and also behavior.

Quote:
OC: Looking at Ed’s claim in a bit more detail, note that the question of finding intermediates between anurans (frogs and toads) and urodeles (salamanders and newts), and "older amphibians" (what palaeontologists would call ‘early tetrapods&#8217 , is only tangentially relevant to the move from water to land (‘fish becoming reptiles&#8217 . As should be apparent, the move onto land was something that happened during the evolutionary transition from fishes to early tetrapods, ie at the origin of Ed’s "older amphibians" (which is why they are referred to as "older amphibians", not "older fishes"... simple when you think about it...).

Whether there is a gap in the fossil record between these "older amphibians" and the anurans and urodeles is irrelevant to the question of whether tetrapods evolved from
fishes. Just to give a few more details on these two topics:

Tetrapods evolved from fishes during the Devonian period, about 365-355 million years ago. The fossil record of this transition is rather good, and new discoveries are being made all the time. Key steps in the transition are represented by:

1) Osteolepiform fishes, of which Eusthenopteron is the best known. These are one of the subsets of Ed's "rhipidistians"; they have a normal fish shape and seen to have been entirely aquatic, but have certain tetrapod features in their anatomy such as paired fin skeletons containing equivalents of the limb bones humerus/femur, radius/tibia and ulna/fibula.

Eusthenopteron

2) Panderichthys. This form has all the tetrapod characteristics of osteolepiforms, plus a few more. It also has a crocodile-like head and body form with reduced fins, suggesting that it operated in very shallow water and maybe made short journeys over land. Panderichthyids and all other osteolepiform fish had a hole (choana) between the nasal passage and the mouth, which allowed air to pass from the nose into the mouth which is not present in other lobe-finned fish. Panderichthys also had external nostrils which were in the same position as those of the early tetrapods. The skull bones of these fish are bone for bone equivalents to the skull bones of the earliest tetrapods, and the braincase is so similar to earliest tetrapod ones that they were originally classified as tetrapods until a complete skeleton was found.

Eusthenopteron and Panderichthys

3) A fish similar to Sauripterus (Daeschler and Shubin (1998): Nature vol 391 no 133). Inside its fins are eight ‘fingers’ attached in a similar way to the digits of the earliest amphibians. Note that some early amphibians also had eight digits.

3) Ichthyostega and Acanthostega. These are the earliest tetrapods known from complete skeletons. They have limbs (with seven or eight digits apiece, rather than five), but retain tail fins, lateral line canals (sensory organs that only work in water) and a number of other fish characteristics. Both have external nostrils and choana; Acanthostega also has internal gills.
However none of these animals show a gradual transition from fins to feet and from a two piece skull to a one piece. Not to mention all the major soft tissue differences. Are you sure lateral line canals were found in a fossil? They are ususally only present in the soft tissues.

Quote:
OC: After the Devonian, the tetrapods (Ed's "older amphibians") lost their last few fish characteristics and diversified rapidly into a number of groups. One of these was the reptiles. The origin of reptiles is fairly well understood; the earliest reptiles (such as Hylonomus) are Late Carboniferous in age (about 300my) and very similar to some of
the "older amphibians" such as gephyrostegids and seymouriamorphs. The origin of lissamphibians (= anurans, urodeles and caecilians) probably occurred during the Permian, about 280 million years ago. The anurans are very similar to an "older amphibian" group called the temnospondyls, and almost certainly derives from these; there is a Triassic fossil from Madagascar, Triadobatrachus, that is neatly intermediate between temnospondyls and early anurans. The origins of the urodeles and caecilians ("worm amphibians") are less well understood. These groups are structurally very modified, and also have a poor fossil record (essentially because they are small animals), which makes them more difficult to position. However, they have a lot of characteristics in common with the anurans, and are clearly related to them, so most probably they too have a temnospondyl ancestry.
However none of this addresses the main differences between amphibians and reptiles, ie, terrestrial eggs and the circulatory system.

[b]
Quote:
OC: All plus more of which can be found here:
<a href="http://www.glenn.morton.btinternet.co.uk/transit.htm" target="_blank">http://www.glenn.morton.btinternet.co.uk/transit.htm</a>

And most of it was covered in the Devonian Times link I gave previously. Which shows that Ed isn’t reading what we offer him, and that he has no excuse for not knowing what the hell he’s talking about.

DNFTT & TTFN, OC

</strong>
I did read it.
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Old 06-06-2002, 07:34 PM   #424
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Ed:
My point was that you cannot be too dogmatic when extrapolating from living organisms to extinct forms. ...
Sure, but will Ed show similar critical thinking about whether Noah's Flood had happened?

Quote:
Ed:
However none of this addresses the main differences between amphibians and reptiles, ie, terrestrial eggs and the circulatory system.
How are those supposed to be impossible-to-evolve features?
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Old 06-07-2002, 08:20 PM   #425
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Originally posted by Oolon Colluphid:
<strong>A couple of missed points:

Ed: Creation expects microevolutionary subtle differences.

OC: (Emphasis added to, well, emphasise that we’re not just talking about normal variation between individuals, but rather, inheritable variation that can lead to speciation and beyond -- remember that Ed defined a ‘kind’ as ~ Family.)
Nonsense. Please show where the bible says so. Creation has been forced to accept such ‘microevolution’ because to say otherwise is perverse even by their standards. Hence the old joke:
Macroevolution: Evolution that no reasonable person can deny.
Microevolution: Evolution that not even creationists can deny. [/b]
We have learned in the computer age that computers can be designed with programs to adapt to different inputs, so it is rational to assume that if there is an intelligent designer then he probably designed organisms to adapt to different environments within limits.


Quote:
Ed: Yes, but the whole point [of the Nature article] is to show erectus intermediary between humans and apes which is the same thing [as establishing relationships between erectus and apes].

OC: Don’t be ridiculous. What would be the point of simply showing a connection between erectus and apes, when this is utterly uncontroversial except for people such as yourself. As the abstract (Nature (2001), 414(6864):628-31) says:

Here we report differences in enamel growth that show the earliest fossils attributed to Homo do not resemble modern humans in their development. [...] Neither australopiths nor fossils currently attributed to early Homo shared the slow trajectory of enamel growth typical of modern humans; rather, both resembled modern and fossil African apes. We then reconstructed tooth formation times in australopiths, in the approximately 1.5-Myr-old Homo erectus skeleton from Nariokotome, Kenya, and in another Homo erectus specimen, Sangiran S7-37 from Java. These times were shorter than those in modern humans. It therefore seems likely that truly modern dental development emerged relatively late in human evolution.

OC: It’s noting differences, not suggesting a connection. The connection is thoroughly established as far as palaeoanthropologists are concerned.
I was referring to YOUR point for using the article, your point was to establish a connection.


Quote:
ED: But if they occupy the same ecological niche, and they do,

OC: You know this how? Simply by coexisting, they cannot be occupying exactly the same niche. That’s basic -- very basic -- ecology. Except of course if one is driving out the other over a (possibly large) number of generations.
The evidence points to them requiring the same food sources. And they can occupy the same niche if they are the same species.


Quote:
Ed: then they cannot be ancestral to humans.

OC: How does that follow? You do know how speciation occurs, don’t you? And anyway, the ones coexisting wouldn’t be ancestral, by definition, any more than fox terriers and Jack Russells would be ancestral one to the other. Let me spell it out. Recent. Common. Ancestor.
Well I should have said unlikely to be ancestral to humans. So you are saying that Homo erectus is NOT a human ancestor?


Quote:
OC: It in fact implies that they [Java man] are just different looking homo sapiens like your dog skulls.

OC: Please explain the logic underlying that conclusion.
Because it demonstrates that two animals can have extremely different skulls and yet be the same species.

[b]
Quote:
OC: Mind you, if you consider KNM-ER 1813


to be just a different-looking Homo sapiens, then I guess the more subtle differences between erectus and sapiens are mere nit-picking.

TTFN, Oolon

</strong>
Exactly.
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Old 06-07-2002, 09:29 PM   #426
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OC: Mind you, if you consider KNM-ER 1813 to be just a different-looking Homo sapiens, then I guess the more subtle differences between erectus and sapiens are mere nit-picking.
Ed:
Exactly.
I can't believe that Ed considers Homo erectus and Homo sapiens to be one and the same species. There are just too much different, and not only in physical features. H. erectus had lasted for something like a million years, with little variation in the artifacts that they had produced. By comparison, even the earliest "modern" H. sapiens had shown a lot of regional variation in the artifacts that they had produced.

I suspect that the only way that Ed will become convinced that these are two different species is if the old name Pithecanthropus erectus for H. erectus becomes popular again.
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Old 06-09-2002, 08:08 PM   #427
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Originally posted by lpetrich:
<strong>
lp: Noah's Flood could equally well have been a local flood written from the point of view of someone with little knowledge of geography. Ed, why don't you consider that possibility?
Ed:
Actually there are some scholars that point out that the scriptures often use the term "earth" to mean just the inhabited part of the earth and so if that is the correct understanding then the flood may have been just local if it occurred early in man's history when he was only living in a relatively small area. If someone can convince me that that is the meaning of earth in Genesis then maybe I will change to believing it was local.

This sort of argumentation seems to me like arguing over how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.

Also, our species was confined to a relatively small area only before about 100,000 years ago; at that time, our species was confined to Africa (I consider Neanderthals and such to be separate species). Since then, however, our species spread over most of this planet's land area using only Stone Age technology.

The time when humanity only lived in Africa was beyond the reach of the cultural memories of all documented and self-documenting societies; there is no memory of one's ancestors having lived in Africa over 3000 generations ago, complete with getting to see Africa's distinctive fauna, like giraffes.

Even more-recent fauna is not really remembered; there is no cultural memory of hairy elephants in Eurasia or North America, hairy rhinos in Eurasia, giant armadillos or giant ground sloths or horses in North America, and other species that went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene 10,000 years ago.[/b]
Now you are contradicting yourself, you have been prodding me to consider the flood local but when I tell that some scholars believe there is evidence it was local in the bible, you brush it off with the angels on a pinhead comment.


Quote:
(On pathogenic microbes...)
lp: A book that is supposedly full of fulfilled prophecies and miraculous cures might also mention such tiny troublemakers and how to fight them -- that would be an additional indication of superior knowledge.
Ed:
That is not its purpose.

lp: That's the old claim that one never lost because one was not in the race.
Nevertheless a true claim in this case.


Quote:
Ed:
Not usually, because without God science is an irrational leap of faith. And without Christianity modern science probably would have never come into existence.

lp: That's absurd triumphalism and projection. The existence of a Universe-controlling superbeing states nothing about how orderly the Universe is. Also, many theologians have fought against various advances in science.

Consider what Copernicus and Galileo had gone through -- they certainly weren't commissioned by the Pope to explore alternate possibilities of the motions of the planets, which is what Ed's scenario suggests.

And did the Pope commission Vesalius to do dissections?

And did the Church of England commission Charles Darwin to study how different species might be related?

And were the various churches eager to install lightning rods?
Nevertheless, the christian worldview teaches that the universe is orderly, objectively there, and that we can learn about God by studying it. And these teachings gave the impetus to develop modern experimental science. No other worldviews held to these truths that is why no other worldview came up with science.


Quote:
lp: However, the Biblical God is described as a miracle-worker, and there is no explicit concept of regular natural laws in the Bible.
Ed:
Yes, but a not really very often miracle worker. 99.9% of time God works through natural processes. Natural laws are plainly implied in the books of Job and the Psalms, read them. Also in the New Testament Paul says "God is a god of order."

lp: Where is that number to be found in the Bible? And the Biblical God is described as working lots and lots of miracles.
From the origin of the universe in Genesis to Revalation, as much as 15 billion years have passed. The number of miracles is actually quite small given such a time span.


Quote:
(Hellenic-pagan scientists...)
Ed:
Somewhat influenced yes, but modern experimental science was invented and founded by Christians.

lp: Who would not have been allowed to be anything else by their governments -- 400-500 years ago was the time of the Wars of Religion, when Catholics and Protestants viciously fought each other over whose religion shall be Europe's religion.

Isaac Newton, for example, was seriously interested in theological questions, but had some beliefs that the Church of England considered heretical, and kept his mouth shut about them.

But Francis Bacon, for example, seemed as if he was trying to cover his rear end about religion.

Again, I wonder if the examples of Copernicus and Galileo make Ed want to convert to Catholicism. Or the examples of Brahe and Kepler make him want to convert to Lutheranism. Or the examples of Bacon and Newton make him want to convert to Anglicanism/Episcopalianism.
No, most of these men were also Christians in private, if you read their private journals and writings. Their private writings would not have been seen by any government so they would not have been pretending to be something they were not.


Quote:
Ed:
And also Christianity was the only major worldview that taught that an objective reality existed that could be studied and operated according to orderly natural laws so that experiments could be repeated. Thereby allowing the formation of modern science.

lp: I'd be surprised if Ed has ANY knowledge of belief systems other than his, or how much of Christianity has worked out. Consider what one has to do to become a saint -- work miracles. And medieval saints were noted for working LOTS and LOTS of miracles.
See above how much time has passed.


[b]
Quote:
Ed:
You are welcome to join paganism but if it ever makes a major come back science is dead.

lp: I wonder what Ed considers "paganism".
</strong>
Belief in spirits occupying everything.
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Old 06-09-2002, 09:15 PM   #428
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Ed:
Actually there are some scholars that point out that the scriptures often use the term "earth" to mean just the inhabited part of the earth ...
LP:
This sort of argumentation seems to me like arguing over how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.
(on our species' actual history...)
Ed:
Now you are contradicting yourself, you have been prodding me to consider the flood local but when I tell that some scholars believe there is evidence it was local in the bible, you brush it off with the angels on a pinhead comment.
What I was comparing to angels dancing on the heads of pins was the style of argument -- arguing that the Bible meant by "earth" only the part of our planet inhabited by our species. It is as if Ed only accepts that something is seriously real only if he can find it in the Bible.

Quote:
(On pathogenic microbes...)
lp: (why doesn't it mention them?)
Ed:
That is not its purpose.
lp:
That's the old claim that one never lost because one was not in the race.
Ed:
Nevertheless a true claim in this case.
Very ingenious.

Quote:
(asking is various church authorities commissioned various sorts of pioneering scientific work...)
Ed:
Nevertheless, the christian worldview teaches that the universe is orderly, objectively there, and that we can learn about God by studying it. And these teachings gave the impetus to develop modern experimental science. No other worldviews held to these truths that is why no other worldview came up with science.
This is a very after-the-fact viewpoint, one that reminds me of Paul's comment about being all things to all people. Because for most of the history of Christianity, it's the miracle-working that had been emphasized.

Also, Ed's comments remind me of certain Muslim apologists who brag about Mohammed had supposedly worked no miracles.

As to the development of science, it took up where ancient Greece had left off, and most of the ancient Greek scientists had never heard of Jesus Christ!

Ed had made the comment that no other worldviews feature an objectively real and orderly universe. That comment suggests rather extreme ignorance of other worldviews on the part of Ed.

Quote:
(Early scientists...)
No, most of these men were also Christians in private, if you read their private journals and writings. ...
And how had these gentlemen agreed with Eddianity, as it might be called? Sir Francis Bacon's writings have a cover-one's-rear-end quality, Sir Isaac Newton believed in something that the Church of England considered gross heresy, Galileo claimed that the Bible tells us how to go to heaven, not how the heavens go, etc.

Quote:
Ed:
You are welcome to join paganism but if it ever makes a major come back science is dead.
lp:
I wonder what Ed considers "paganism".
Ed:
Belief in spirits occupying everything.
That's the opposite of a godless, materialistic worldview, isn't it?
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Old 06-11-2002, 08:47 PM   #429
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Quote:
Originally posted by lpetrich:
<strong>
(lots and lots of wicked things...)
Ed:
Just because he foresaw it, doesn't necessarily mean He wanted it to happen. But of course since he knew it would happen, it was incorporated into his plan.

lp: An omnipotent being who allows something to happen is indirectly responsible for it happening. Let's say that you are driving and you hit someone. Would "I didn't do anything" be a valid defense when you could have slammed on the brakes and swerved?[/b]
True but being indirectly responsible for something is very different from directly responsible for something, especially if it is allowed in order for a greater good to occur. A better analogy would be a rapist with an activated nuclear weapon strapped to him in a large city. He starts raping a woman but if you try to stop him millions could die, so you have to allow him to do it until a better way of getting rid of him can be discovered.

Quote:
(OC: predatory animals' attacks on other animals...)
Ed:
I wouldn't say he takes delight in it, but it is to demonstrate that he is not a manmade tamed god. And show his awesomeness.

lp: Very ingenious. One is entitled to act wicked, because one shows how awesome one is.
How is animals behaving naturally, wicked?


Quote:
OC: crossover diseases like SIV -&gt; HIV
Ed:
That is because our morphologies are similar to apes and other animals due to being the result one designer.

lp: Carefully created with the appearance of the appropriate amounts of genetic drift, of course. Philip Gosse rides again. Would an omnipotent being who considers humanity something special really want to make apes look and act almost human and have almost-human genes?
Our resemblance to animals is to keep us humble and help us to realize that even though we are created in God's image we are still creatures and not the Creator. If we were totally different from other creatures, we may think of ourselves as gods.


Quote:
OC on parasites:
1. These things are wonderfully adapted to their lifestyles.
2. According to creation, wonderful adaptations are the result of divine design. (including parasites' adaptation)
3. Instead, you say that all the amazing and intricate adaptations of parasites are due to evolution. (as much as 80 million years of it!)
4. Why, then, do we need a creator to explain any other adaptation? If evolution can explain the coat protein of Plasmodium or how the genome of Rickettsia makes it able to live in human cells, it can explain the rest too.
Ed:
Nos. 1-3 are true. As far as 4 goes, evolution cannot explain the existence of Plasmodium and Rickettsia.

lp: Ed does not explain why that is the case. Pathogens and parasites have numerous adaptations that Ed has conceded are the result of evolution. These include:

Cold viruses cause their hosts to cough, thus spreading themselves.

Some bacteria that live in the intestines' contents cause their hosts to have diarrhea, thus spreading those bacteria.

The complicated lifestyles of many parasites, often involving 2 or 3 hosts.

A common adaptation by pathogenic microbes is to produce a surface layer that looks like the hosts' own cells; this keeps the immune system from recognizing them as invaders.

Again, Ed recognizes that much evolution occurs, even if he does not consider it real evolution.
Because there is no evidence that these creatures developed in a gradualistic manner from simpler organisms.


Quote:
OC: (how long since Noah's Flood for some peacefully-coexisting symbionts to become dangerous...) Long enough for all these symbionts to become pathogenic?
Ed:
Not necessarily all of them that we know today. I dont know when it was created or how long between the creation and the flood.

lp: Pure evasion.
Why? Given my explanations in all my threads.


Quote:
OC: Take your hog elsewhere. It won’t wash here. Else please provide evidence for this ‘Tree of Life’.
Ed, go home. Your village is missing you.
TTFN, Oolon
Ed:
No need for the typical atheist condescending attitude. The only evidence for the TOL is the documentary evidence in the scriptures.

lp: As is evidence for talking snakes, which suggests that the story is some kind of fairy tale.
Not in the context of the whole bible.

[b]
Quote:
lpEd, I suggest that you do a lot of growing up. Your whining is childish
</strong>
I am not whining, I am just trying to teach atheists not act according to their stereotypes.
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Old 06-11-2002, 09:37 PM   #430
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lp: An omnipotent being who allows something to happen is indirectly responsible for it happening. Let's say that you are driving and you hit someone. Would "I didn't do anything" be a valid defense when you could have slammed on the brakes and swerved?
Ed:
True but being indirectly responsible for something is very different from directly responsible for something, especially if it is allowed in order for a greater good to occur. ...
However, an omnipotent being would have no trouble arranging for that greater good to occur without anything bad happening, otherwise that being would not be omnipotent.

Quote:
OC: crossover diseases like SIV -&gt; HIV
Ed:
That is because our morphologies are similar to apes and other animals due to being the result one designer.

lp: Carefully created with the appearance of the appropriate amounts of genetic drift, of course. Philip Gosse rides again. ...
Ed:
Our resemblance to animals is to keep us humble and help us to realize that even though we are created in God's image we are still creatures and not the Creator. If we were totally different from other creatures, we may think of ourselves as gods.
Where in the Bible does it say that?

And claiming to be "in the image of God" is very much like claiming that one is a god

Also, I'd rather be descended from an ape than some dirt (see Genesis 2). At least apes look almost human.

Quote:
(parasites/pathogens...)
Ed:
Because there is no evidence that these creatures developed in a gradualistic manner from simpler organisms.
I wonder what Ed would consider acceptable evidence -- going back in time in a time machine? Microbes and tiny worms simply do not fossilize very well.

Quote:
OC: (how long since Noah's Flood for some peacefully-coexisting symbionts to become dangerous...) Long enough for all these symbionts to become pathogenic?
Ed:
Not necessarily all of them that we know today. I dont know when it was created or how long between the creation and the flood.

lp: Pure evasion.
Ed:
Why? Given my explanations in all my threads.
Ed, I call it evasion because when you advocate something, and when someone asks you about critical details, you claim that you don't know. If you don't really know the critical details of some pet hypothesis of yours, you ought not to advocate it.

Quote:
(on the "Tree of Life" in Genesis 2)
lp: As is evidence for talking snakes, which suggests that the story is some kind of fairy tale.
Ed:
Not in the context of the whole bible.
What "context"? Something manufactured to explain away embarrassments?
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