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| Calicis |
Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2008 6:46 pm Post subject: How about Evolution AND Creationism, instead of VS. |
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 Forum Freshman

Joined: 08 Jul 2008 Posts: 3 Location: BC, Canada
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If all man-made things were invented & created by someone - cars, computers, artificial intelligence, etc. - then why do some people get so repulsed by the idea that the universe and its laws were also created by someone?
Evolution is undoubtedly real, because fossil records proved as such. But like missing links in fossil records, just because a higher being can't be seen/found doesn't mean it doesn't exist. So how about this, a higher being started it all (creation) and is guiding it along (evolution). This just might solve the conflicts between the two parties. Or offend both. *sigh* there's just no pleasing some people. _________________ "We gather strength from sadness and from pain. Each time we die we learn to live again" - Unknown |
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| JaneBennet |
Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2008 7:13 pm Post subject: |
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 Forum Ph.D.

Joined: 06 Apr 2008 Posts: 878
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| Obviously |
Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2008 8:50 pm Post subject: |
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 Forum Professor

Joined: 14 Aug 2007 Posts: 1221 Location: Norway
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| Calicis wrote: |
If all man-made things were invented & created by someone - cars, computers, artificial intelligence, etc. - then why do some people get so repulsed by the idea that the universe and its laws were also created by someone?
Evolution is undoubtedly real, because fossil records proved as such. But like missing links in fossil records, just because a higher being can't be seen/found doesn't mean it doesn't exist. So how about this, a higher being started it all (creation) and is guiding it along (evolution). This just might solve the conflicts between the two parties. Or offend both. *sigh* there's just no pleasing some people. |
You'll undoubtetly offend both parties.
Creationists because they don't want to believe that they are animals, they want to believe we're created in our present form as a "special creation of God", which is stupid.
Evolutionists/scientists because of the scientific method. A nonexplanation like God can't satisfy as a logically sound explanation for a phenomena/observation. You'll just replace one unknown with another.
However, there are people who think God is driving evolution. Though I doubt they consider "missing links" a work of God. _________________ "I cannot imagine a God who rewards and punishes the objects of his creation, whose purposes are modeled after our own -- a God, in short, who is but a reflection of human frailty. Neither can I believe that the individual survives the death of his body, although feeble souls harbor such thoughts through fear or ridiculous egotisms."
-- Albert Einstein
"I believe in Spinoza's God who reveals himself in the orderly harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with the fates and actions of human beings."
-- Albert Einstein |
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| Pong |
Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2008 11:14 pm Post subject: Re: How about Evolution AND Creationism, instead of VS. |
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Forum Professor

Joined: 08 Apr 2008 Posts: 1412
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| Calicis wrote: |
| If all man-made things were invented & created by someone - cars, computers, artificial intelligence, etc. - then why do some people get so repulsed by the idea that the universe and its laws were also created by someone? |
Unlike cars and corporations and all human appliances, the universe and its laws don't break. Why would something unbreakable require a builder? I know it's impossible to wrap one's mind around, if one cannot grasp infinity. Very many scientists are still enthralled to the assumption our universe (and laws) were created e.g. Big Bang.
| Calicis wrote: |
| how about this, a higher being started it all (creation) and is guiding it along (evolution). This just might solve the conflicts between the two parties. |
If it can't be broken, does it want a maintenance guy? |
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| Calicis |
Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 8:10 am Post subject: |
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Joined: 08 Jul 2008 Posts: 3 Location: BC, Canada
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Man made things break because the tools (the math & engineering) we use to create are only estimates, never completely precise. The laws themselves are perfect, but we aren't so we can't utilize them perfectly. Then it's only expected that man made things break over time. A perfect being can create perfect laws, and since it makes sense that one knows its own creation inside out, this being can execute the laws flawlessly.
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Calicis wrote:
how about this, a higher being started it all (creation) and is guiding it along (evolution). This just might solve the conflicts between the two parties. |
If it can't be broken, does it want a maintenance guy? |
It's not maintenance, it's progress. _________________ "We gather strength from sadness and from pain. Each time we die we learn to live again" - Unknown |
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| arkofnoah |
Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 9:27 am Post subject: |
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Joined: 15 Jun 2008 Posts: 102
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| So how about this, a higher being started it all (creation) and is guiding it along (evolution). |
My stand is that God might well exists and might be experienced subjectively by individuals (which I seriously doubt but I give the benefit of doubt to those believers), he doesn't play any role in the natural processes (as far as we know).
If evolution can be explained by purely natural phenomenons such as natural selection, we should leave God out of any scientific explanation. Any argument along the line that evolution depends on too "luck" and is therefore unlikely to happen spontaneously is basically just argument from ignorance since there might be new evidences that proves otherwise. Creation-cum-evolution is therefore highly improbable. _________________
₪ [size=75]Blog[/size] ₪ |
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| Obviously |
Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 1:33 pm Post subject: |
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 Forum Professor

Joined: 14 Aug 2007 Posts: 1221 Location: Norway
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| Calicis wrote: |
| Man made things break because the tools (the math & engineering) we use to create are only estimates, never completely precise. The laws themselves are perfect, but we aren't so we can't utilize them perfectly. Then it's only expected that man made things break over time. A perfect being can create perfect laws, and since it makes sense that one knows its own creation inside out, this being can execute the laws flawlessly. |
The laws aren't necessarily perfect, but they might seem perfect.
The way I see it, the forces or laws of nature are simply a product of matter and energy, and that seems to be the case. For example natural selection is a force which is dependent upon enviroment, and the strenght of gravity depends upon mass. _________________ "I cannot imagine a God who rewards and punishes the objects of his creation, whose purposes are modeled after our own -- a God, in short, who is but a reflection of human frailty. Neither can I believe that the individual survives the death of his body, although feeble souls harbor such thoughts through fear or ridiculous egotisms."
-- Albert Einstein
"I believe in Spinoza's God who reveals himself in the orderly harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with the fates and actions of human beings."
-- Albert Einstein |
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| prasit |
Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 9:39 pm Post subject: |
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Forum Bachelors Degree

Joined: 08 Mar 2006 Posts: 495
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If God existed and did anything that affected our universe, all the things God did were done before Big Bang. _________________ Einstein is not always right. |
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| BumFluff |
Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 11:07 pm Post subject: |
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Forum Senior

Joined: 06 Mar 2008 Posts: 394 Location: Canada
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| prasit wrote: |
| If God existed and did anything that affected our universe, all the things God did were done before Big Bang. |
Where did God find the time to do anything before the Big Bang? _________________ "The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt" - Bertrand Russell |
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| mitchellmckain |
Posted: Sat Jul 12, 2008 12:58 am Post subject: |
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 Forum Professor

Joined: 06 Oct 2005 Posts: 1987 Location: Salt Lake City, UTAH, USA
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"Evolutionist" and "Creationist" extremists who believe that their ideas cannot be reconciled are like the following idiots in a grocery store. The "creationist" says, "see how perfectly red, round, fragrant and beautiful the tomatoes are, this is proof of design and so there must be a factory somewhere employing the very best engineers so that these tomatoes can be constructed according to exacting specifications." To this the "evolutionist" says, "there is no evidence of any engineers here so you are obviously delusional, these tomatoes must have come into existence entirely due to the action of the mathematical laws of nature." Both are idiots because they fail to see one simple fact that is in front of their face and that is that tomatoes are alive and are a part of living organisms. As a result neither sees the truth which is a relationship between the farmer and the tomato plant -- how blind can they be?
This fact and nature of living things is what makes nonsense of both the creationist's divine watchmaker and the evolutionist's mechanistic laws. The fact that what they are discussing is alive, means two very important things. One is that living things do things for their own reasons and come into existence NOT by design and construction but by growth and learning. The other thing is that living things do not grow and learn in a vaccum but are radically open to their environment and thus they have plentiful room in their lives for caretakers, shepherds and teachers. Yes. teachers. For here we find the role of God. Not controling. Not designing. But involved in a relationship with the student, trying many different ways to .... to what? To remake the student in some pre-envisioned pattern that all people should be? To stamp them out according to factory specifications? To make them understand the world as the teacher believes is the only way that the world must be understood? OR... is it to facilitate, aid and inspire them to find their own understanding, to find and become according to their own choices the person that they can become?
Yes there are factual goals. For we do not want them to confuse 1+1=2 with a matter of opinion as if 1+1=3 were just as good. And likewise we do not want them to be confused about the difference between science and theology, imagining that creationism is a scientific theory, or that evoution is a religious heresy. Oh well I suppose parents and pseudo-christian cults can program and indoctrinate their children to believe that scientists are all going to hell. I certainly cannot stop them. But I will certainly fight to keep their filth out of the public classroom. Meanwhile I shall also try to put out the fires of outrage they create to assure the more reasonable atheists that not all Christians are brain dead zombies. _________________ See my physics of spaceflight simulator at http://www.relspace.astahost.com |
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| Pong |
Posted: Sat Jul 12, 2008 2:14 am Post subject: |
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Forum Professor

Joined: 08 Apr 2008 Posts: 1412
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| mitchellmckain wrote: |
| caretakers, shepherds and teachers. Yes. teachers. For here we find the role of God... |
IIRC you're a tutor, not a teacher yet.  |
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| prasit |
Posted: Sat Jul 12, 2008 3:43 am Post subject: |
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Forum Bachelors Degree

Joined: 08 Mar 2006 Posts: 495
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BumFluff wrote
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| Where did God find the time to do anything before the Big Bang? |
I don't really know. I just know that God (if exist) did not do anything after the Big Bang. _________________ Einstein is not always right. |
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| (Q) |
Posted: Sat Jul 12, 2008 7:10 am Post subject: Re: How about Evolution AND Creationism, instead of VS. |
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 Forum Professor

Joined: 12 May 2005 Posts: 1617
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| Calicis wrote: |
If all man-made things were invented & created by someone - cars, computers, artificial intelligence, etc. - then why do some people get so repulsed by the idea that the universe and its laws were also created by someone?
Evolution is undoubtedly real, because fossil records proved as such. But like missing links in fossil records, just because a higher being can't be seen/found doesn't mean it doesn't exist. So how about this, a higher being started it all (creation) and is guiding it along (evolution). This just might solve the conflicts between the two parties. Or offend both. *sigh* there's just no pleasing some people. |
Finding out how the universe works is not about "pleasing some people" but about actually finding out how it works. Creationists are pissed off because their claims for creators and designers fail miserably under scrutiny. They live in a fantasy world.
Why kowtow to them? They simply need to get an education. |
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| (Q) |
Posted: Sat Jul 12, 2008 7:18 am Post subject: |
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 Forum Professor

Joined: 12 May 2005 Posts: 1617
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| mitchellmckain wrote: |
| Yes. teachers. For here we find the role of God. Not controling. Not designing. But involved in a relationship with the student, trying many different ways to .... to what? To remake the student in some pre-envisioned pattern that all people should be? To stamp them out according to factory specifications? To make them understand the world as the teacher believes is the only way that the world must be understood? OR... is it to facilitate, aid and inspire them to find their own understanding, to find and become according to their own choices the person that they can become? |
Substitute the word "God" for Thor, Zeus, Mithra, Allah or any other supernatural entity ever proclaimed to exist and you have a nonsensical explanation.
What Mitchell is stating is that you MUST find the role of HIS god.
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| Oh well I suppose parents and pseudo-christian cults can program and indoctrinate their children to believe that scientists are all going to hell. I certainly cannot stop them. But I will certainly fight to keep their filth out of the public classroom. |
How do we keep your pseudo-christian cult nonsense out?
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| Meanwhile I shall also try to put out the fires of outrage they create to assure the more reasonable atheists that not all Christians are brain dead zombies. |
I don't think I've ever considered you brain dead, Mitchell. Brain MIA, perhaps, but not dead. |
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| Scifor Refugee |
Posted: Sat Jul 12, 2008 8:57 am Post subject: |
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Forum Professor

Joined: 02 May 2005 Posts: 1171
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God is not necessary for the theory of evolution, and the theory of evolution doesn't explain things or predict things with any greater accuracy when you add god. You can tack god on to the theory of evolution if you want, but you are just making the theory more complicated without actually improving it.
By "improving it" I mean improving its rationality or predictive accuracy. If you want god to exist and are out to reconcile his existence with evolution, then that might be an "improvement" on the theory in terms of your own comfort. That's true of tacking on "because that's how god wants it" to any scientific theory. |
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