SaveOurLyric wrote: » Thanks. I think I follow that bit now. So we are just one strand of a line that evolved from some ape like animal that now longer exists ?
J C wrote: » One can ... and they're called Old Earth Creationists.
ScumLord wrote: » You're ........... It's just a natural process.
Doctor Jimbob wrote: » J C wrote: genetic information is observed to be perfect Can you explain what the bit I've bolded means exactly please?
J C wrote: genetic information is observed to be perfect
J C wrote: » i.e. Evolution explains the survival of the fittest ... but it doesn't explain the arrival of the fittest, in the first place.
J C wrote: » He brings the logic of a legal mind to the issue. Basically, we are trying to establish the truth from the evidence ... which is essentially a legalistic process.
Knasher wrote: » Of course it does. Mutations, which as your video points out are just imperfections in how genetic code is transferred during reproduction, is a perfectly adequate explanation.
Doctor Jimbob wrote: » A few of us pointed out the flaws in that video a couple of days ago, but to sum up a few of the key points since you might have missed it. 1) He isn't a relevant authority. That doesn't make it wrong in itself, but it raises some questions. To make a comparison, if a physics professor was speaking about a high profile court case, you'd think "ok, he's probably a smart guy, but what does a physics professor know about this case that your regular Joe on the street wouldn't?" The guy is a law professor, which I don't think the video mentions. Funny that.
Doctor Jimbob wrote: » 2) He's wrong about the fossil record. Our knowledge of the fossil record has increased dramatically since Darwin's time.
Doctor Jimbob wrote: » 3) His insinuation that our knowledge of evolutionary biology is solely extrapolated from Darwin's finches is wildly off the mark. They aren't even the only species we see a similar effect in, not to mention:
Doctor Jimbob wrote: » 4) This is key: he completely ignores the molecular data. I wonder why
J C wrote: » Evolution explains the NS of pre-existing genetic diversity ... but it doesn't explain the origin of the diversity, in the first place.
Vivisectus wrote: » Well, yes I do? Say what you want about creationists: once they find an idea they like, they hang on to it come hell or high water (haha) no matter what you can actually observe in reality.
marieholmfan wrote: » Surely one can be a creationist while accepting that the universe seems to be 14 billion years old (to humans).
PopePalpatine wrote: » If J C and catallus's posts aren't enough for a swing of the banhammer, I don't know what are.
ScumLord wrote: » Evolution doesn't need intelligence or direction, that's why it's so good. It just works. The problem with a creator god simply using evolution to create the animals it wants is that it goes against the benefits of evolution. Evolution only needs to be able to survive in the environment it's in, it doesn't care about the future it has no reason too, it can't control the future so it can only adapt to whatever happens. It's pointless for it to try and adapt to a future that may not happen. It's just a natural process.
Squeedily Spooch wrote: » Ah here, you're always acting the crybaby when people are "namecalling" yet you keep throwing out the same horse**** generalising digs at people on here. Grow the **** up.
Cianmcliam wrote: » Well for it to qualify as a mental illness it would have to be an abnormal state but there are so many similar beliefs, attitudes, '-isms', cults etc. that it doesn't make sense to single out religions. Take a fanatical fan of a sports team, like an Irish person supporting an English football club to which they have no tangible link at all. All the paraphenalia, the arguing with others in the pub and work, taking slights against the team personally, the ecstatic response to the team succeeding, believing there is something higher than and exists separately from the current players, manager etc. that remains through the decades etc.
SaveOurLyric wrote: » It isnt. No one claims you can turn a carrot cake into a chocolate log. But people are claiming, that by tiny steps, an apes beget men.
mickrock wrote: » "Evolution is dumb, blind and directionless." Is this a fact or a belief?
Hoop66 wrote: » Yes, I can agree that that's the most logical explanation for religious belief occurring originally. What I'm suggesting is that to maintain those irrational beliefs today, in our society, could (note could) be seen as a mental illness.
Hoop66 wrote: » I'm not trying to be insulting here, but I honestly think that a dogged, fundamentalist religious belief (examples creationism, young-earth etc.) is akin to a mental illness, if not an actual one.
endacl wrote: » I'd say it's entirely appropriate for this one. There must be something rattling loose for a belief in creationism to persist.
Wibbs wrote: » I'd agree, though it's a hard one to nail down. Apparently there have been surges in some areas. EG kids of Silicon Valley parents have higher rates. Initially this was thought to be because such parents were more likely to put their children forward for diagnosis, but when factoring in parents from a similar socioeconomic background but not working in IT they still found an increase. Other illnesses like diabetes are definitely on the rise. I'm personally convinced that alzheimers and other dementias are on the rise and not because of newer diagnostic tools. The notion that it's just because we're living longer doesn't sit with me. Not when some people are coming down with such conditions in their fifties and sixties. I reckon it's a tagalong illness of diabetes. It's known that having type 2 diabetes increases ones risk of dementia. Mental illnesses like depression and anxiety seem to be a lot more prevalent today too. But all that's a debate for another thread.
Wibbs wrote: » Mental illnesses seem to be a lot more prevalent today too. But all that's a debate for another thread.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » I am not entirely convinced there has been any such surge. Rather I think our ability to diagnose, understand and recognize it means that there is a surge in Autism as a diagnosis rather than an actual surge in autism.
Beano wrote: » I find it funny that there are people in this thread genuinely trying to use facts to show creationists that they are wrong. A pointless exercise if ever there was one.
SaveOurLyric wrote: » Well explained, thanks. And it does sort of make sense. So if evolution is correct, why are there still people who dont believe in it ? Are they simply not evolved enough ?
mickrock wrote: » "Evolution is dumb, blind and directionless."
donegaLroad wrote: » Fluid intelligence and disorders such as Autism are the next step in human evolution. Interesting theory. There must be some explanation as why there is a huge surge in Autism. I know that science is also pointing the finger at IVF.
donegaLroad wrote: » There must be some explanation as why there is a huge surge in Autism. I know that science is also pointing the finger at IVF.