catallus wrote: » Self-criticism is one of the biggest themes in any organised religion.
El Guapo! wrote: » Thought? As in...'don't know for sure'? As in...'guesswork'? As in....totally made up?
endacl wrote: » Guys. I read on a website that the Earth is flat. Any thoughts? I'm kind of in the fence meself.
Skylinehead wrote: » Isn't Hades Greek mythology?
SaveOurLyric wrote: » Great explanation. So if I have it correct :
SaveOurLyric wrote: » Just not on the timescale? So more like man was created 150000 to 200000 years ago ?
J C wrote: » ... it happens Sheldon Cooper who was off by a factor of 10,000!!!
J C wrote: » No ... the question is how 'the fittest' arrived i.e. came to be, in the first place. NS is quite good at selecting out 'un-fit' organisms that result from mutations and other injuries ... but it doesn't explain how the perfect or almost perfect organisms we observe came to be. It is Human Nature to want to win arguments. This tendency occurs across all disciplines. Lawyers have a 'nose' for the truth ... and they are trained to follow lines of questioning that establish the truth.
J C wrote: » ... you can hang onto that, if you want ... the evidence is clear that we are all descended from one man and one man only. ... of course, we are descended from many other different men down our family trees ... just like your father and my father were different people ... but none of these was Adam ... and nobody is arguing that they were.
Wibbs wrote: » Christ *heads desk*. How can anyone be so ill informed. TBH when Mitochondrial "Eve" was first described it galled me that they decided the discovery of this person(rather a group of women) was to be dumbed down for the cheap seats and named "Eve". I just knew the dribblers and the fcuktards would be out in force shouting "see the Bible was right". This "eve" is simply the most recent common ancestor of living humans today. She(rather they) wasn't the first human woman, nor was she taken from some guys rib. She had a mother and a grandmother and so on going back thousands of generations. There were other women around her at the time and their mitochondrial lines continued for a time, but then died out. That can happen quite easily and indeed has happened historically. Look to our nearest neighbour the UK. There was an invasion and colonisation by Saxons over a thousand years ago. We know this for a fact. Today? A tiny proportion of English men can trace Saxon DNA in their lines. Of English women? None. Zip. Nada. The Saxon female lines have entirely disappeared. If one was to apply biblical "logic" to this particular event they could claim Saxon women never existed. On "Adam"(gah!), same thing occurred. "Him", rather his male lines, are the most recent common ancestor of human male lines of today. The today part is important. As I have pointed out Mungo man found in Australia, a guy from around 40,000 years ago after this so called "Adam" and "Eve" had a different set of lines. How's that work then? Neandertals have a very different matrilineal and patrilineal setup. Like I've said how many Adams and Eves did this god of yours create?
J C wrote: » Facts are facts ... as you guys keep saying ... ... so science has proven that we are all descended from one woman (Mitochondrial Eve) and one man (Y-chromosome Adam) ... ... sounds like the Bible was correct, after all, when it said that we are all descended from Adam and Eve.
Wibbs wrote: » This "eve" is simply the most recent common ancestor of living humans today. She(rather they) wasn't the first human woman, nor was she taken from some guys rib.
osarusan wrote: » I'm surprised that so many posters still seem to under the assumption that logical argument will actually have an effect, and that a failure to be convinced up to this point is down to insufficient evidence.
tigger123 wrote: » That there's 92 pages arguing whether evolution is true or not is kinda depressing, but ultimately a warning in some ways.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Now here's the thing, they proposed theories that differed from the conventional. Because in science you can do that. And yet all creationists tote the party line. Again I don't think you understand what science is. If Rosalind Franklin hadn't shared her research to Watson and Crick then you may never have heard of them. Hoyle was big into panspersia so no creator, no 6,000 year old earth , and most definitely earth isn't special. Also while some of his early work was inspired , carbon cycle in stars and stuff, not so much attention was paid to the later stuff. Also if life didn't originate on earth you are back to a chicken and egg scenario. Except we have finite age for heavy elements so even his theories say that life evolved.
endacl wrote: » OK. That's enough. I'll leave it to the more patient posters on the 'actually know what they're talking about team'. Best of luck to you with the Ingenue and the Eel. I'm afraid I couldn't be bothered. They're taking the pi55. Holybabyjebus! Nearly ten years of stubborn, wilful stupidity, Really? Can evolution run in reverse? Please tell me he hasn't bred....
floggg wrote: » We don't outright lie (at least we shouldn't), but we are often required to try and interpret the facts in a way which suits a narrative, rather than searching for an objective truth.
yellowlabrador wrote: » the evolutionary adam and eves didn t live at the same time or in the same place,so there goes the garden of eden....
MrPudding wrote: » He alleges that he has bred, with his allegedly very hot wife. Have a search on the A&A board, he has some kind of creepy sexual innuendo posts there. Apart from the bit I have struck out, you make lawyers sound a lot like creatards. MrP
Brian Shanahan wrote: » Oh, and saying Crick was an early proponent of creatardism is a big fat lie, along the same lines (but not quite the same magnitude) as holocaust denial.
floggg wrote: » If you looked at the context, they was tge point. A law professor isn't a good authority on advanced biology and evolution - what he is though is skilled at editing and presenting facts in a way which supports whatever argument he is asked to advance.
Doctor Jimbob wrote: » But why does the earthworm compost? :pac:
Brian Shanahan wrote: » Took me tree dace to read the thread, but I've your answer for you James, and it goes something like this: "om, nom, nom, nom. There's good eatin' in dem dere clumps of hummus. Oh hold up a minute, gotta poop out all dat clay."
iDave wrote: » Can those who know what they are talking about answer this please. (That excludes creationists) Genuine curiosity needing an answer. The Mitochondrial 'eve', am I right in saying only non Africans can trace their decent to her? And Africans are not descended from her?