lucky80 wrote:
You can accept that a computer built by a man can do millions of calculations a second, but an all powerful God (if he/she exists) that created man by an act of will can't handle "judging" one.whatever people a second?
Christian doctrine (basic scriptural "truth") says that God is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent. He knows all, is everywhere, and can do anything. When you die, there is no "time" taken to judge you, He knows what is in your heart.
The point of this thread was for you to bash christianity without provocation. yipee for you.EBSB52 wrote: And that's the point of my thread; how is it realistic to think, even on omni-terms that any deity could judge 150k people per day, create these so-called miracles thousands of times per day, and be everywhere everyone, all 6.5 billion people are at all times. This blows way past Twilight Zone stuff. Not saying it isn't real, just that the further we get into this concept, the logistical end, the further I am skeptical of it.
lucky80 wrote:I did not say any source said "proof" of anything. I said evolution is taught as if it were fact.
You're not saying me, but it's convenient that it's my argument that you're nitpicking, and misquoting.EBSB52 wrote: What we're talking here is strength of language and I find that people who use more absolute language, not saying you, but venues, organizations that use absolute language do so because their argument is weak.
Even the muslims acknowledge in the koran that there was a man named jesus, son of a carpenter that was a prophet of god. Hmmm, what else? The dead sea scrolls: relatively unmolested 1900 year old copies of much of the modern "New Testament". Lessee, what else, oh yeah, the odds of evolution leading to life as we know it being infintesimal? That a good indicator of the possibility of creation theory (whether long-day, short-day, canopy, pangea, or what have you), and the existence of god(in some form) being at least equally as probable as evolution (which you said yourself has incomplete evidence)?EBSB52 wrote: Trying to apportion proof is like trying to proportion pregnancy.
The church/religion speaks in the concept that there is no question that there is a god and he has a son named Jesus. This is patently incorrect, even if there is a God/Jesus, since there is no direct evidence...
lucky80 wrote:In 99% of the classrooms that the average american might actually pay attention through, evolution is the only theory on the origin of man that is presented with ANY kind of emphasis.
Christianity has what they believe is the word of God. Don't even bother arguing translation and bias because the same can be said about every piece of paper science has to support it.EBSB52 wrote: Agreed. Why is this? Does science own academia? Is it a political thing and that the gov hates Christianity? They give them tax-free organization, so that's hard to believe. Could it be that Christianity has only one peice of paper that supports it; the Bible. Again, all religions I’ve ever encountered are irrational, not based upon logic but hope, which is subjective and intangible.
EBSB52 wrote: This is why there is the occasional Koreshian-type group that spins off Christianity. I can think of the Hale-bop Comet folks who committed suicide, but who else did nutty things in the name of science? Religion, Christianity is intangible, how would a school teach it? There are Bible colleges, but they just teach stories of the Bible I imagine. Oh well, now the Christians can plead religious persecution.
There are many people who have committed many atrocities in the name of religion (anyone recall the crusades?) There have been just as many atrocities committed in the name of science (do some reading about surgery before modern anesthetic).
REALLY? NOW christians can claim religious persecution? Because of what's going on in american schools? You know that there was a time when just calling yourself a christian got you decapitated or fed to a lion, right? Those guys had faith in god to face that and still try to spread the message of god.
lucky80 wrote:Again it may be semantics, but there is a big difference between breeding certain qualities, and a rat giving birth to a bat, or an ape giving birth to homo-erectus (I know there were other "steps").
I'm not trivializing, and who said 1 generation? I said "steps." I was making a point you obviously missed. There is not one shred of fossil evidence from any major species split such as rodent/bat, ape/man, or whatever. Show me one rodent with a partial echo location system, or flipper-foot prewings, or any whale-like flipper-armed mammal or whatever that would have been more viable in its enviornment than it's non-mutant siblings (and therefore more likely to pass on its traits) and you can continue arguing lack of proof of whatever you want.EBSB52 wrote: Evolution doesn't work in 1 generation. Come on, quit trivializing it for the sake of argument.
lucky80 wrote:As far as I'm concerned, natural selection does not constitute evolution, although the chinese tigers whose habitat got flooded and now have webbed paws intrigues me.
When exactly did I say I don't accept natural selection as a component of evolution? I acknowledge the existence of NS. As you can see what I said was "natural selection does not constitute evolution."EBSB52 wrote: Don't know of that incident, but it couldn't have occurred with the same tigers, they don't mutate to adapt. If you look at a cat's claw, there is a sort of web anyway. Post this story, be interested to read it.
As for you not accepting that natural selection is a component of evolution, that brings me back to a thread where I posted that the USA is an Imperialist nation, posted a definition of Imperialism, Will shot back saying he didn't like that definition of Imperialism. Well, sorry, I didn't write the dictionary, I just read it. Same here, if you want to draw up your own definition, have a great time, meanwhile the rest of us will be back here in reality. Please don't take that as an insult, but let's use the common definitions of various elements.
EDIT: Tigers were from a usually well informed friend of mine. It's not a recent development. Google "Sumatran Tiger" they're a near extinct "sub-species" with a very marshy environment, webbed paws and incredible swimming ability.
lucky80 wrote:Your moth story was not an example of evolution.
Yes, it fits the definition of NS. Where did I dispute that? I said it was not evolution. You obviously have some sort of blanket belief system which is making you irrational; you should see someone about that.EBSB52 wrote:It’s adaptation to an environmental change. You don’t have to like it, but it fits every definition of NS.
lucky80 wrote:It's exactly what would have happened if Hitler had succeeded in eliminating all the non-Aryans; the human species would have appeared different, but all that really changed was the moths lost a dominant pigment trait, because those who had it were easy targets. The species is still the same.
There you go confusing NS with genuine evolution again. Your moths lost a dominant pigment trait, period. Were these moths reclassified with a new scientific name because they're a "new species", or did someone just jot down in a book that "moth species 'x' " are no longer predominantly white?EBSB52 wrote:Exactly the same, but entirely different in regard to color, the only thing that changed in their environment. So they are very different. Appearance is an element of adaptation and NS. Here we go:
Natural selection acts on the phenotype, or the observable characteristics of an organism, such that individuals with favorable phenotypes are more likely to survive and reproduce than those with less favorable phenotypes.
Observable characteristics are color, do we agree?
Right, which establishes why a moth can evolve in a few generation cycles, whereas human evolution takes waaaaaaaaaay longer. But it’s still the same NS platform.
lucky80 wrote:As far as all the problems in the world and where is God when people suffer.
Consider it this way: God gave us free will. Freedom to follow His rules or to not follow His rules. Freedom to love and worship Him, or to turn our backs and walk away. If we didn't have free will, there would be no point to existence, we would just be mindless slaves to an unloving creator. Those who don't follow the rules cause most of the suffering in the world by their actions, when God destroyed man in the flood.
Could you kindly try to stay on topic with your rebuttals? I was talking about suffering, and how can a merciful god....... where did I say anything about the origin of man there?EBSB52 wrote: Well, that’s nice Christian philosophy that people should live by with or w/o believing in a god, any god, but it doesn’t explain our origin in any kind of complex form.