AtomicHorror wrote: » Because it is untrue. Children can't be expected to assess things based upon reason. They tend to accept information based on authority. Critical thinking does not come easily until much later. We have an obligation to teach them only the best-established facts.
AtomicHorror wrote: » My point was that it (Atheism) opposes the concept of faith. If you take my point then why claim it's a faith? That doesn't make any sense at all. Read my posts please.
J C wrote: » Atheism is a faith in the non-existence of God.......and with considerably less evidence for it's validity than the Theists faith that an omnipotent and omniscient God exists!!!!!:)
Gaviscon wrote: » Care to elaborate on that?
J C wrote: » ......so out goes all the 'mumbo jumbo' about teaching (Christian) kids about all faiths and letting the kids decide..... ........you say that children can't be expecterd to assess these things....and critical thinking doesn't come until much later!!!!!
J C wrote: » .....so because children tend to accept information based on authority I guess it comes down to WHO has the ultimate authority over what our children are taught.....is it their parents or some Materialists who believe that we are all evolved from pondslime?
J C wrote: » .....when it comes to authority it is hard to beat the authority of the Word of God.
J C wrote: » .....many faiths oppose the faith of other faiths.....
J C wrote: » ...so Atheism isn't unique in opposing the faith of Theists. Atheism is a faith in the non-existence of God.......and with considerably less evidence for it's validity than the Theists faith that an omnipotent and omniscient God exists!!!!!:)
J C wrote: » The Universe and all life proclaims that it was created..........and the Evolutionist position that life can arise spontaneously and dragged itself up by its own bootstraps to become man is quite frankly unbelievable!!!!:D
J C wrote: » ......and the idea that huge amounts of time can breathe life into dead things is just as preposterous!!!!:D
Gaviscon wrote: » Well he's certainly a militant atheist anyway. So yes, I suppose he could be described as a fundamentalist.
J C wrote: » The Universe and all life proclaims that it was created..........
Gaviscon wrote: » Is it any more unlikely than the idea where short amounts of time can breathe life into dead things: ie Lazarus or Jesus?
santing wrote: » We seem to be understanding the issue. Yes, it is very unlikely/imposible that a human can breathe life into dead things. We therefore call this a miracle by the Son of God. Now if you want to call evolution a miraculous event caused by God, we at least make progress.
AtomicHorror wrote: » You are free to call it that. The beginning of life is not a part of evolution. Evolution covers the emergence of variation. The origin of species.
santing wrote: » Which is of course nonsense. Abiogenesissets your starting point. If you don't know where to start, you can't really say much for certain about the road taken.
J C wrote: » Life is ALWAYS observed to arise from pre-existing life …….it is called the Biological Law of Biogenesis!!!! ……and something that has died REMAINS dead…….barring a Divine miracle!!!!
Gaviscon wrote: » How can you say that? I mean honestly, you don't need abiogenesis for evolution to be true. God could have set the universe in motion allowing evolution to handle itself. Either way it does not stop evolution from happening.
robindch wrote: » Er, complete nonsense. As AH has already politely pointed out, things that have died don't remain dead (silage, for example), and something that wasn't alive can gain life (NPK fertilizer in grass, for example). Your peculiar religious understanding of "alive" doesn't represent reality.
santing wrote: » The only purpose for which evolution was invented was to get rid of God.
santing wrote: » Dead material never receives life again on its own.
wrote: Originally Posted by J CLife is ALWAYS observed to arise from pre-existing life …….it is called the Biological Law of Biogenesis!!!! ……and something that has died REMAINS dead…….barring a Divine miracle!!!! robindchAs AH has already politely pointed out, things that have died don't remain dead (silage, for example), and something that wasn't alive can gain life (NPK fertilizer in grass, for example). Your peculiar religious understanding of "alive" doesn't represent reality.
J C wrote: » I have previously said, you are confusing the life processes of living organisms (like grass and bacteria) and their use of available substrate with their Creation!!!! and the two concepts are totally separate things!!!
Gaviscon wrote: » Charles Darwin himself believed in God. He even mentioned him in The Origin Of Species.
At present the most usual argument for the existence of an intelligent God is drawn from deep inward conviction and feelings which are experienced by most persons. But it cannot be doubted that Hindoos, Mahomedans and others might argue in the same manner and with equal force in favour of the existence of one God, or of many Gods, or as with the Buddhists of no God... ....This argument would be a valid one, if all men of all races had the same inward conviction of the existence of one God; but we know this is very far from being the case. Therefore I cannot see that such inward convictions and feelings are of any weight as evidence of what really exists....
santing wrote: » He believed in God? Well, not when he wrote he famous book. [/I]
wrote: Originally Posted by J CI have previously said, you are confusing the life processes of living organisms (like grass and bacteria) and their use of available substrate with their Creation!!!! and the two concepts are totally separate things!!! robindchThey use the same source material and follow the same chemical laws -- biological dualism is a non-runner, my dear!
wrote: Originally Posted by santingDead material never receives life again on its own. robindchWell, the atoms which make up dead grass in silage can show up in the proteins in the meat of a cow. You can disagree with it all you like, but that's what happens.
santing wrote: » If you need Him at the start, it defeats its purpose.
santing wrote: » If your theory needs one act from an eternal being, and after that He can disappear, then you have a bigger problem on hand. You have introduced a being whose influence you want afterwards eliminate in your research.
santing wrote: » So you are in an impasse.