So, the weight of evidence isn't important to you?
You are relatively certain that the theory supported by all the evidence is incorrect, but you are "open" to theories that are wholly supported by evidence?
t:Of course it is important. But I don't think that at this time the conventional scientific community holds the definitive evidence to our evolution. Or maybe I choose to incline more on other theories because they seem more exotic and interesting to me and mess with people's belief systemst:
...I just don't blindly follow the readings of the established scientific community. There have been numerous times in the past where scientific dogma were overthrown by newer and more radical researches. Maybe we haven't figured out all the answers yet and we are basing our knowledge on guesses. Again, I am not saying that's exactly the case of our evolution. I am just keeping my mind open to the possibilities.
) In the big picture, General Relativity became a better explanation than Newtons theory. But heres the important bit: almost nothing about Newtonian physics became obsolete as a result of this new discovery. Newtons laws still work. Indeed, scientists still use those equations to send rockets to the planets. Einsteins is just a more complete and robust system (accounting for more extreme gravitational conditions).
) but it did take quite some time and effort before we had a more through understanding of what we now know. Although it would have to be a fairly drastic overhaul of the entire system in order to accommodate for any large changes in what Alex is suggesting.Alex,this might be up your alley:
http://www.amazon.com/Darwinian-Fai...6699676&sr=8-1&keywords=darwinian+fairy+tales

I said no apes

Well if you have the belief in God and humanity's special place in his creation instilled in you from a very young age and then find out we evolved from apes your God fearing mind would feel like it is insulting or rejecting God or something of that nature which would make you fight the idea of evolution. Least that's what I've encountered in my local Baptists. They find the idea that we evolved from apes to be an insult to not only themselves but God and a slap in the face to him.
Then there is the idea that if we say we did it without God that we are being arrogant and showing a lot of hubris. Fundamentalists and Baptists and other Christian groups believe nothing, and I do mean nothing, is possible unless God wills it or allows it or helps. Even mundane tasks are accomplished through the help of God. Even our skills and talents are gifts of God. That's why you'll hear "God willing." said literally in the Bible Belt. Or "Nothing is possible without God." Or "Use the gifts God has given you."
Evolution just removes God from the equation entirely for these people. Plus, when you think about it if Evolution is true (it is) then there was no Adam and eve. Which means there was no Original Sin. Which negates the need for Jesus to die for our sins. Which means the New Testament is largely B.S.. Which essentially causes Christianity as a belief system to fall apart.
I believe in God, but not Original Sin which is why I don't worship Jesus as a god and can accept scientific facts like evolution without having a theological crisis. For others who believe in God and Original Sin this just isn't the case and their brain glitches when they try to reconcile all these ideas. For them it's a square peg in a round hole so they cling to the beliefs they've had since childhood because it makes them feel safe.
I agree (at least pretty much) with your post. And from another post, it doesn't actually matter that humans may very closely resemble another species almost identical to us, why couldn't God have created both the way they are? And it's interesting to note something on the big bang and God, that they both are said to have spread things out to create the universe. Could God be the origin behind the big bang?Yeah, something along those lines. I just don't blindly follow the readings of the established scientific community. There have been numerous times in the past where scientific dogma were overthrown by newer and more radical researches. Maybe we haven't figured out all the answers yet and we are basing our knowledge on guesses. Again, I am not saying that's exactly the case of our evolution. I am just keeping my mind open to the possibilities.
Yet somehow Catholics manage to believe in evolution without denying the divinity of Christ.
I remember being taught about original sin even though my teachers weren't really biblical literalists. I wish I remember more about how they reconciled evolution with these ideas.
I mentioned God and the big bang because as far as I know, this does not prove God does not exist. It could very well be the act of God.
As for the earth being millions or more years old, it is possible since Genesis 1:1 and the later verses of Genesis may have time in between. I'm seriously not sure of that yet. I do not believe in a gap theory that some Christians keep to, that there was a pre-Adam world with life. Just that the universe may have sat their while, perhaps, God dealt withother things like the angels and their fall (the ones that fell). Or perhaps all is just thousands of years old.
As for evolution, I agree eveolution is true, we've seen this observed. But not where one species becomes a complete new and original species over a vast amount of time. God created things to be "after their kind" and I elieve this is what we observe today.
Well I know they do, but Catholics and Baptists and some other Protestant groups come at Christianity from very different angles. Honestly I don't know how Catholics reconcile the ideas. If they really thought about it I don't think they'd be able to. Most Catholics probably don't think too much about it all tho. They just roll with it or don't pay it much attention.
There was no Adam and Eve or garden or fruit or fall of mankind or any of that so it draws into question a lot of the credibility of the New Testament and it's message. Personally, I've always found Original Sin as a concept to be ludicrous. God is over all and can do whatever he wants whenever he wants however he wants. Yet, a snake in a garden messes it all up and causes corruption to spread through the whole species. So God has to knock up a human virgin and split himself in two and become human but still be entirely God then sacrifice himself to cleanse mankind. It's just convoluted nonsense. I mean sure I guess he could but it's a long con to fix what shouldn't even be a problem for God.

I'd be way more hyped to learn aliens exist than god. Aliens would be awesome and we could learn from them (totally awesome) or have a galactic space war (not really a great option). Dealing with god or a pantheon of gods would be totally confusing and beyond weird. The creator god would probably kill us all within a week because we would not stop trying to test, study and figure out what he is and how he works. We'd pester him all the time and I'm pretty sure even infinite patience has its limits. I don't even have any idea how we'd deal with a full on pantheon.
If it turned out that the whole 6 days and 6000 years thing was true then we'd pester him for new laws of physics since our current ones don't hold to any known form that that works with. Everything we know for most sciences would be wrong and have to be retaught under new rules, there'd be mass panic and chaos for quite some time since even with small religious changes people tend to throw a ****fit and we'd probably try to kill him with nukes or what have you just because we're insane like that. Can you imagine how pissed everyone would be if he showed up, proved divinity and basically said all religions are wrong except Buddhism which only had sorta the right idea? If he said he was fine with gay folks, there's no hell and it's all just reincarnation with no afterlife?
Actually now that I've said it I kinda want to see it happen, just for the heck of it.
Yeah, something along those lines. I just don't blindly follow the readings of the established scientific community. There have been numerous times in the past where scientific dogma were overthrown by newer and more radical researches. Maybe we haven't figured out all the answers yet and we are basing our knowledge on guesses. Again, I am not saying that's exactly the case of our evolution. I am just keeping my mind open to the possibilities.
Sorry MrsK, for that now we have to burn you at the stake for being a heathen.
That's the beauty of science. It presents a certain theory as the most likely to be true based on evidence until new evidence is received to discredit the theory. Science evolves and changes with actual evidence, as opposed to religion which is neither evidenced based, nor particularly accepting of ideas that are almost completely different than what came before. Only science is able to do a complete turnabout if the eviendce points in another direction.
You mean that thing that one time that no one should know about but got leaked onto the internet anyway? It's not for that. It's that I never got those brownies you sent me.