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Natural occurances alter things in existance so things altered by other occurances are just as natural in that context. |
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rebuttal |
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Anyway, people are looking at evolution the wrong way. It's not a single pathway, like a straight line from chimip to man. It's more like a family tree with multiple branches. A human specie like the Neanderthal was outsted by our modern human ancestor (this is still debatable, but debatable using evidence). A core to evolution is the theory of natural selection. It is a simple concept that if one specie or a few individual within a specie adapt better, than that specie or unique individual within that specie may survive to reproduce and the rest may simply go extinct. The shortest span of evolution I have heard of was on the English peppered Moth (I think that was the specie, every bio. major knows this, so correct me if I'm wrong). Before the industrial revolution, in Great Britain this English moth was mainly white in coloration. However, during the industrial revolution, smog became a problem and white moths were easily spotted by predators such as birds and lizards. A few mutated black moths that were easily spotted before now thrive in this environment since they were better camaflage. As a result, white moths were dying out while black moths due to a mutation survive to reproduce, thus creating a new species of moth with different genetic traits. Humans have 23 pair of chromosomes. If we had one more pair, 24, we wouldn't be humans, we'll be gorillas. One extra pair of chromosome makes alot of difference. :) :glugglug |
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Answers in Genesis? Hilarious. NEXT! |
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Or maybe it's the lack of a single chromosome, not a pair. |
i have to say creation... i think the world is way to complex and well thought out to be evolution and besides what did we evolve from... where did it all start???
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http://home.att.net/~dorak/genetics/notes03.html |
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I became interested in evolution because I saw creationists constantly twisting the facts to try and promote their fundamentalist religious agenda. I saw them trying to push their bible based "creation science" into science classrooms under the guise of "equal time". I had to educate myself to rebut these fuckers. I live in Australia and the results of macro-evolution are obvious here. Our geographical isolation has produced all kinds of weird and wonderful creatures - the kangaroo, koala, platypus etc. In my experience those who deny evolution are either ignorant of the facts or have a religious agena to push - or both. :winkwink: |
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Typical for you to not read something because you discern "religious" overtones. Even to state that any religious person is ignorant is to discredit a great deal of prominent scientist, both current and in the past. |
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You, and that Answers in Geneis website, are a joke. |
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?We shall advocate the pure Christian religion, without favouring any particular sect ?? Now the current editor since late 1994, one John Rennie (b. 1959), has also fervently promoted the anti-God evolution agenda. Like many anti-creationist propagandists, he often launches into attacks with a poor understanding, and he has only a bachelor?s degree in science, so is far less qualified than the leading creationist scientists at AiG and ICR. Taken from the previously posted link by yours truly. If you would have taken your biased ass to the link and read, you would have learned something. I may be a joke but your a bad joke. |
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I'm not even going to go into it. He justifies half of what evolution is, he just calls it different things. Where does the bible talk about 'speciation'? |
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Both articles are obvioulsy biased. It's hard to title an article calling the opposition's argument 'nonsense' without being biased. |
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I agree with parts of it as well. I even agree with bits of some the reference articles. But they just seem to stop a little shy of going all the way in getting to the solution. |
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the problem that I have with the whole creation/evolution debate is somewhat akin to the democrat vs. republican debates in america: Facts and answers are put aside just to prove the other side wrong. It is not about finding the truth as much as it is making sure the other side looks stupid. Creationists fear the evolutionists because if evolutionists are right, then there is no God. Evolutionists fear creationists because if the creationists are right, then there is a God. The whole debate usually boils down to name calling and credential finger pointing. |
evolution: for people who like evidence.
creationism: for people who have taken a leap of faith. if you've taken that leap of faith then good for you.. It'd be nice to be able to believe there is a greater power (I'm not being sarcastic, I've studied too much science and am probably too cynical for my own good :)) |
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Indeed. |
Creationists....
Matthew Alper: The God Part Of The Brain Buy it. Read it. Absorb it. Then utter a single word in the creationist defense. "God" (and any other label you prefer to put on it) is a lie. Your beliefs are your "beliefs". I prefer to deal in hard cold truth. You can believe in fairy tales if that's what helps you get through life. I was brought up in an environment that pushed "God" to the fullest, but as an adult, I made the decision years ago to accept the truth. Education will set you free. |
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From Crationists who have made their mind up and aren't open to the trunth. You'll never convince people who belive in church doctrine scientific facts. |
Opps... truth
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"Anyone who can contemplate the eye of a housefly, the mechanics of human finger movement, the camouflage of a moth, or the building of every kind of matter from variations in arrangement of proton and electron,?and then maintain that all this design happened without a designer, happened by sheer, blind accident?such a person believes in a miracle far more astounding than any in the Bible.
"To regard man, with his arts and aspirations, his awareness of himself and of his universe, his emotions and his morals, his very ability to conceive an idea so grand as that of God, to regard this creature as merely a form of life somewhat higher on the evolutionary ladder than the others,?is to create questions more profound than are answered."?David Raphael Klein, "Is There a Substitute for God?" in Reader's Digest, March 1970, p. 55 |
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Did anyone ever notice how angry and bitter a lot of evolutionists are? No one knows the absolute truth, so it's impossible to fully believe in anything, that isn't 100% provable, so it's really a matter of opinion. I personally believe in both. The universe and earth has evolved greatly over years and years, but I do believe there is some kind of higher force responsible for it's fine tuned planning. The human body is the most beautiful invention ever. Nothing has come close to even duplicating the human mind. |
I don't get angry because someone is messing with my "beliefs", it's more that I get angry because people are so mis-educated.
Belief in Evolution isn't a faith, it's SCIENCE. |
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The irony of it all is enough to make a person weep. |
creation, no doubt. we are undoubtedly from monkeys
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Science is wonderful. I love it... but there's still many unknown things that are filled in with pure speculation. Science can't even agree with itself at times... there's much more to be discovered, to have any kind of definite verdict. |
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it's actually interesting to track the "evolution" of Christian thought on evolution.. As times has gone by there is less denial of biological evolution, and less literal interpretation of the Bible (as it becomes less credible to an educated society).
Just like the idea of Heaven and Hell.. a few decades back Hell was all fire and brimstone, you'd be damned to eternal agony if you commited a mortal sin and didn't reprent. etc.. Now in mainstream Christianity Hell is more "an apartness from God", kind of like the old interpretation of purgatory. I went to a Catholic highschool and even a lot of the priests didn't believe in a literal God in the traditional sense. |
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yes you're right. :glugglug
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It's a proven fact that we've evolved... I bet you don't believe in life on other planets than earth either.
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But how did we get to this earth to begin with? That's all I want to know. I'm not asking about the entire universe or even the solar system... just life on earth. I think we were created by superior life from other planets. :2 cents: |
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Is this the best analogy you can come up with? One that does not even make sense. Trying to compare a theory that is backed by hard evidence to a 'belief' that is backed by no evidence is ridiculous. (finding holes in evolution and trying to fill those holes with creationism is not evidence of creationism). Just because science does not have it all figured out yet does not mean that it won't all be figured out -they are well on the way. I would like to hear what evidence led you to believe that we were created. And BTW - we did not evolve from monkeys |
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There are so many books on this subject that you can read that will answer your questions - Im sure you will be staisfied - just go to the library or Amazon.com. |
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are you fucking stupid?? how can mechanical part evolve we are organic beaings, which evolve to the nature around us to survive if someone does not believe in evolution in 21 century, then he is a pure moron and earth for him is still square and is centre of the world |
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