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01-14-2003, 10:25 AM | #21 |
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I just lurve this from our Radoth: “They are basically using lousy evidence to deny the possibility of creation, or creation plus evolution, and thus God.”
So, Creation is supported by something better than lousy evidence?” The Bible for instance? Yes. Yes. Yes. No one ever amended the Creation Story because the Creation Story is not dependent upon knowledge which accumulates and grows and becomes, gradually and over a very long time, more complete. The Biblical story of Creation is unsupported by any evidence outside that which is provided by the Biblical story of Creation, and to change it any any way so that it can incorporate minor little things like the Earth being a spinning globe in a solar system instead of the bottom layer of a sandwich is blasphemous. Stick to the myths, Rad. They obviously make you happy. But don’t pretend they equate with evidence - even the “lousy” evidence which supports evolution. |
01-14-2003, 11:33 AM | #22 |
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I'm still trying to figure out just which of Darwin's ideas Radorth thinks have been invalidated. That individuals of a species vary in their characteristics? That these variations can be inherited? That individuals of a species produce more progeny than can possibly survive? That, because of this variation, some of these individuals reproduce more successfully than others (=natural selection)? That the result is that species change over time? That two (or more) different species can be descended from one ancestral species? That this is a good explanation for the fact that living things have changed considerably during the history of the earth?
Which of these ideas have been proven untrue, and how? Nice try, though. |
01-14-2003, 12:28 PM | #23 |
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I sometimes suspect creationists like "punctuated equilibrum" because they misunderstand totally what it means when it says "rapid evolution." They try to make it fit into a <10K year history of the world, while, in fact, one single significant evolutionary change occuring over that timespan would alone be "rapid" in evolutionary terms.
Besides, I have failed to see Gould/Eldridge actually say anything new in their theory that was not already done earlier and better by Muir. But perhaps I am just prejudiced because Gould wrote so many utterly stupid things in his popular science books. - Jan ...who rants and raves every day at Secular Blasphemy |
01-14-2003, 12:49 PM | #24 |
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Posted by Radorth:
Anyway can we assume now that Darwin's theory is nonsense, by his own admission? Referring, I assume, to where Darwin said: "We have seen in the last chapter that the species of a group sometimes falsely appear to have come in abruptly; and I have attempted to give an explanation of this fact, which if true would have been fatal to my views. " Did it not occur to you that not only, as others have pointed out, was Darwin capable of being wrong about some aspects of his theory (such as PE), but he was just as capable of being wrong in the above assessment that a species appearing "abruptly" (e.g. over thousands of years) would be "fatal" to his views? |
01-14-2003, 01:13 PM | #25 | ||
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01-14-2003, 05:32 PM | #26 | |
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01-14-2003, 09:33 PM | #27 | |
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Personally I think the "survival of the fittest" theory has done far more harm to civilized thinking than all the Popes put together. I think Hitler and Stalin used it to justify the slaughter of 50,000,000 people. I don't claim to have direct proof, my suspicions are as sound as those claiming Jesus was anti-semetic and Hitler was a Christian. Species adapt to their environments. Darwin well proved that. And it's about all we know, even 150 years later. Darwin also said we would find all kinds of missing links and there are shamefully few so the theory had to be reinvented for all practical purposes. And maybe one of the true believers can explain how some people 2000 years ago lived to be 100 on lousy diets and bad medicine, and some today die at 50 on good diets with good medicine. When does this natural selection process start to kick in anyway? Rad |
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01-15-2003, 12:22 AM | #28 |
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Radorth:
I agree with some (not all) of the "evidence." I am objecting mainly to the conclusions drawn from the "evidence" and pointing out where blind faith in Darwin's simplistic theory has led to a false belief that there must be no God. Like how is that supposed to be the case? Radorth, I don't see you moaning and groaning about the electricity theory of lightning and how it implies that there is no such thing as Mr. G. Also, it is ridiculous to teach "evolution" in middle schools if only a biologist with a Phd can grasp the complexities involved. I don't see how evolutionary biology is much worse than the Bible in that regard. The basic ideas are actually easy to understand. I suggest we teach nothing at all which even remotely suggests how we originated. There is no reason whatsoever for them to know, and nothing they cannot do without the knowledge of evolutionary theory, especially one which changes weekly. It's the cutting edge of research that tends to be changeable in that fashion; behind that cutting edge is a lot of well-established results. Radorth, would you knock any other field of science for seemingly being so changeable? Discovery channel recently posted a news item saying some biologists now think land creatures evolved into sea creatures. I will need more details before I can evaluate that claim. However land-to-water evolution has happened several times, in some cases producing a complete return to the water (cetaceans, ichthyosaurs). In other words, even Phd's don't know a damn thing about how or where life originated, but you guys want to teach evolution as FACT anyway. The origin of the ultimate ancestor of all present-day Earth life is, I will concede, a murky question. However, there have been some valiant stabs taken at it. And it is a question entirely separate from the evolution of life. Personally I think the "survival of the fittest" theory has done far more harm to civilized thinking than all the Popes put together. I think Hitler and Stalin used it to justify the slaughter of 50,000,000 people. I don't claim to have direct proof, my suspicions are as sound as those claiming Jesus was anti-semetic and Hitler was a Christian. Darwin himself did not support this "might makes right" interpretation; he compared it to saying that Napoleon was right and every cheating tradesman was right. Also, neither Hitler nor Stalin were known for having much interest in evolutionary biology -- did either of these gentlemen wave the Origin of Species around as if it was the Bible? And there have been plenty of pre-Darwinian mass murderers; their kill count has not been as high simply because there had been fewer people to kill. How many people were available for Genghis Khan's armies to kill? Darwin also said we would find all kinds of missing links and there are shamefully few so the theory had to be reinvented for all practical purposes. Like how? And maybe one of the true believers can explain how some people 2000 years ago lived to be 100 on lousy diets and bad medicine, and some today die at 50 on good diets with good medicine. When does this natural selection process start to kick in anyway? I don't see what's the difficulty. Radorth, could you explain to us what you think "natural selection" means? |
01-15-2003, 03:42 AM | #29 |
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Radoth: “I am objecting mainly to the conclusions drawn from the "evidence" and pointing out where blind faith in Darwin's simplistic theory has led to a false belief that there must be no God.”
That’s not true: there are very many Christians who accept the fact of evolution. “it is ridiculous to teach ‘evolution’ in middle schools if only a biologist with a Phd can grasp the complexities involved.” So it’s ridiculous to teach anything which requires great knowledge in order to understand all its complexities? “I suggest we teach nothing at all which even remotely suggests how we originated. There is no reason whatsoever for them to know...” So they shouldn’t be told the Biblical story of Creation? “Phd's (sic) don't know a damn thing about how or where life originated” As Ipetrich gently and patiently pointed out, evolution says nothing about how life originated. No one yet knows. (But I think that one day we will do.) “Personally I think the ‘survival of the fittest’ theory has done far more harm to civilized thinking than all the Popes put together.” That’s like blaming gravity for the deaths of people who jump out of windows. |
01-15-2003, 05:32 AM | #30 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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(I thought I was being a little semantically pedantic in reading your above statement that way... but then you say the following, so it seems you really meant it about not agreeing with evidence... either that, or I detect some unclear thinking on your part.) Quote:
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Note, however, that Stalin’s understanding of evolution was sufficiently lousy that he fell for Lysenko and his lunatic crop breeding ideas, which led to millions starving to death. So if anything, a lack of understanding of evolution was the cause of many of the deaths you refer to. Quote:
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Funnily enough, there are ways of judging median lifespans in the past. And according to this page which compiles such figures in the table halfway down, the median male (for simplicity) lifespan 2000 years ago was 41.9 years. 2000 years before that it was 36.5. It has been at that sort of level throughout history: bobbing up to 46 in Byzantium, but mainly 35-40. Till modern times, when good diets and good medicine kick in. Then, oddly, it shoots up by thirty years or more, to 71. Perhaps you’ll argue that correlation does not indicate causation? Your premise is false, so your argument’s stuffed. Quote:
TTFN, DT |
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