Carcharodon
Avenger
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Little Timmy gets the gloved-hand.![]()
That makes Little Timmy scared.
I should start taking bets about what the next topic will be. Abortion, maybe?

Little Timmy gets the gloved-hand.![]()
That makes Little Timmy scared.
I should start taking bets about what the next topic will be. Abortion, maybe?

Well, until that happens, I'll be right over here on the edge of my seat.Awwww... cant we leave it open for a while, it ALWAYS livens up around this thread whenever Venomfang drops by.
Dude, where have you been for 22 pages? Of course it's religious reasons.Check further down the evoultionary tree,they came from rodents that surived the meteor impact that killed the Dinosaurs.
Why do people still refuse to accept this?Is there religious reasons?Humans are not special from any other animal.
You didn't give reasons. You gave quotes from authorities in evolutionary biology, intentionally taken out of context in order to give the impression that they were saying something they were not. You were, at best, propagating other people's clear attempts at deceit.
That a bold accusation. Prove it.
Yes indeed, everyday I and my fellow "Darwinists" pray to Darwin, and on sundays we visit the Darwin temples spread across the world. I try my best to follow all the moral laws and traditions laid out by my evolutionary religion, but sometimes it gets hard to do. And of course my religion makes many specific statements about spirituality, and how we should all better ourselves...
Oh, wait...
Belief in evolution is no more a religion than belief in gravity.
In science its called theory, in religion its called faith. Semantics.
I really have no interest in "converting" you, believe it or not. But responding to your posts have turned out to be an excellent way to expose the way creationists think and act when trying to "debate" evolution.
In science its called theory, in religion its called faith. Semantics.
The word theory has a number of distinct meanings in different fields of knowledge, depending on their methodologies and the context of discussion.
In common usage, people often use the word theory to signify a conjecture, an opinion, or a speculation. In this usage, a theory is not necessarily based on facts; in other words, it is not required to be consistent with true descriptions of reality. True descriptions of reality are more reflectively understood as statements that would be true independently of what people think about them.
In science, a theory is a proposed description, explanation, or model of the manner of interaction of a set of natural phenomena, capable of predicting future occurrences or observations of the same kind, and capable of being tested through experiment or otherwise falsified through empirical observation. It follows from this that for scientists "theory" and "fact" do not necessarily stand in opposition. For example, it is a fact that an apple dropped on earth has been observed to fall towards the center of the planet, and the theory which explains why the apple behaves so is the current theory of gravitation.
That a bold accusation. Prove it.
In science its called theory, in religion its called faith. Semantics.
Thats quite an accomplishment. Too bad I'm not a creationist.
A current "theory" in science is an explanation of nature that has never been refuted and is supported empirically. Get your head around it.
Ok, I'll concede that these out of context quotes might not have found themselves into your hands through someone's intentional attempt at deceit.
It might also be the result of some of the most insanely shoddy research I've ever seen... that or stupidity/ignorance.
Either someone somewhere along the line read the quotes in context and therefore knew that people reading them would think they said things that they in fact did not. In which case it is deceit.
Or someone somewhere along the line read the quotes in context, but didn't understand the context. In which case it is stupidity/ignorance.
Or someone somewhere along the line came into contact with these quotes out of context (some of which have large amounts of text skipped, the skipping of which gives a misleading impression) and decided they didn't need to look them up for themselves. In which case it's insanely shoddy research.
So I guess I retract my accusation of deceit, and replace it with deceit or stupidity/ignorance, or insanely shoddy research. Neither of which speaks very highly of the sources you've chosen to use in these discussions.
If you have actually come up with these quotes all by yourself without using for instance a creationist source, then you stand accused of one of the three. I would, however, like to think this is not the case.
Forgive me for only spending only a few minutes responding to this topic. I do have a life and don't have the time to do an indepth thesis that would satisfy you. Not that it would make a difference anyway. Like me, your mind is already made up.
It's not semantics.
There have been people treating their faith as factual for thousands upon thousands of years, and doing so has not produced unique technology and/or ideas that anyone can use regardless of if they share said faith or not (and that cannot be trivially derived by any other, non-religious, means).
On the other hand... when we treat well established scientific theories as if they were factual it gives us actual results (note here that science in the modern sense has only been around for a couple of hundred years).
The computer you're sitting at as you're reading this is based on treating quantum theory (among other theories) as factual.
Sending probes into outer space, or into orbit around planets in our solar system is based upon treating Einstein's theory of general relativity as factual.
Genetic algorithms that design circuits so complex that even experts can't tell how they work is based on the theory that mutation + natural selection can generate design without an "intelligent designer" specifying said design.
Modern medicine is here because we've chosen to treat the germ theory of disease as factual...
And so on...
Regardless, in religion its called faith and in science its called theory.
The belief of a flat earth was a current "theory" at one point too. Get your head around that.
Two very different things.
see, in "faith" you have been told of god's existence and your faith allows you to believe it is so.
in theory, there would have to be something supporting the claim.
Faith in G-d is not with supporting claims too. Among other things, is the existence of life and human life, the earth and all of creation. Now you dismiss that as a supporting claim just like I dismiss the supporting claims of Darwinism but its not up to others to dismiss what we individually accept.
and a logical chain of events leading up to the present assertion.
a progression of events that leads to no other conclusion, but that there is a god. religion doesn't work that way.
the comparison of the two is unnecessary and immaterial.
Let me repeat that:
"A replacing theory has to be able to explain the success of the previous theory."
...The idea that man and apes have no common ancestor does not do this. It cannot explain any of the molecular, paleontological, biogegraphical (etc) data, that current evolutionary theory can explain, and it most certainly can't explain more data. It is therefore not a valid candidate for a replacing theory.
The comparsion of the two was to demonstrate that both faith and theory require belief to accept them.
no, one requires Logic, the asks you to put logic aside.
Both require belief, and logic is applied to theory though it is not usually applied to religion.
However if religion was properly understood, then logic would be applied to it, and it would lead to a better understand.
Faith is an action. I have faith in X because I believe it.Regardless, in religion its called faith and in science its called theory.
Evolution is the best theory we have so far to explain how life has developed on the planet. It´s not perfect, it has its holes, but none that justify creationism or intelligent design, which is basically just a way to rephrase creationism and try to make it more pallatable.
What sometimes irritates me about religious people is not their beliefs, each person is entitled to believe in what they want, what pisses me off is the intolerance towards other beliefs. Funny thing is sometimes some rigid religious person tries to debate his/her ideas with me and they try to argue, but they come up with poor arguments and when they don´t have an argument they´ll appeal to the good-for-all-purposes blind faith argument, or that "it´s that way cuz it´s in the Bible (or Coran or whatever) and that´s it". Another funny thing is, even though even more or less reasonable religious people will speak of the importance of the leap of faith, faith without proof, etc., but it´s exactly that kinda faith that has brough the worst consequences of religion, like fanatics, religious war, etc.
Your blase' treatment of most posters here and insistence that somehow the science and research people post is no more than conjecture and heresay (not to mention using out of context quotes, refusing to acknowledge logical dilemmas in your arguments) and your general attitude towards everyone whose posted against you is pretty much counter to this claim...sorry.Its funny that you should say that because no where in this thread will you find me ridiculing anyone for their beliefs yet there are examples of where I have been.
Ah yes...the definition of tolerance if I am not mistaken.I have stated my position and my beliefs and I am not going to waver from them.
Again...and for the LAST TIME. Science is no more a belief than math is a belief or manufacturing clock radios is a belief.Time will tell who is right in their belief system.
No one here is talking about Atheism versus Christianity, or even Evolution versus Christianity...or even Evolution versus God although some people feel (incorrectly) there is a contention.Atheism is a religion, just like Christianity.