if its invisible, how can it be pink?Aegeri said:No, but it's a better guess to think they came from *a* factory rather than poofing into existance because on an invisible pink unicorn![]()
if its invisible, how can it be pink?Aegeri said:No, but it's a better guess to think they came from *a* factory rather than poofing into existance because on an invisible pink unicorn![]()
bobtheking said:if its invisible, how can it be pink?![]()
A Honda Civic and a Geo Metro kinda look alike. Doesn't mean they came from the same factory.
But wouldn't it stand to reason that even created things are created in their "order" and any seeming similarities could be attriuted to their creation and not to "evolution"?Metakill said:If scientists were able to dissect the Civic, as well as many other honda models, and compare it to the results of dissecting the Metro and many other Geo models, eventually patterns would become apparent that would enable a classification of these cars by the type of designs and manufacturing processes used to build them. Of course, it wouldn't even be analagous to an evolutionary chart, since cars don't evolve naturally, they are created.
Why exactly couldn't he have human-like qualities? Anyway, I would argue that creation isn't a HUMAN process, but an INTELLIGENT process.Creation is of course, a human process, and in the long struggle to preserve the ethnocentricity of maintaining a God created in the image of man, creationists insist on ascribing human-like qualities to God.
I wouldn't say that as such. Dolphins and chimps are intelligent too, but they've never created anything (at least to my knowledgeSir_Brizz said:Why exactly couldn't he have human-like qualities? Anyway, I would argue that creation isn't a HUMAN process, but an INTELLIGENT process.
No less apparent than you being persistently anti-funny. It doesn't help your argument that you base your pun on nitpicking a fairly common literary device.Zarkazm said:It is however apparent that you are persistently anti-humourous.
Actually, the Metro looks exactly like the Suzuki Swift. And there's a reason for that.catfuzz said:A Honda Civic and a Geo Metro kinda look alike. Doesn't mean they came from the same factory.
As much as you have railed against straw men, I was hoping you would eventually move away from these absurd comparisons. By selecting an example which has absolutely no basis for belief, you draw an unfair comparison to a belief in God which in fact has a very solid basis for belief. And if there are reasons to believe that God exists, then you have to consider whether the God of the Bible is true. And if there are reasons to believe that, then you have to consider whether He did in fact create the universe, as claimed. It's a pretty simple progression of reasoning. Flights of fancy that you made up 5 seconds before typing them for the sole reason of being arbitrary, are not a good comparative analogy.aegeri said:No, but it's a better guess to think they came from *a* factory rather than poofing into existance because on an invisible pink unicorn.
I'm amused that evolutionary theory can seek the moral high ground in this case, after the grand adventures like Piltdown Man, Nebraska Man, the Cardiff Giant, Shinichi Fujimura digging up "artifacts" he buried himself... the bottom line is, people who are predisposed to certain ideas can go to great lengths to propogate their theories. This is not a "creationist" problem, this is a human problem.For the short answer, the fact they blatantly lie and distort even simple facts. Without these little liberties of truth they don't get very far. If you have to rely on fraudulent means to establish your position, you haven't got much of a scientific position to begin with.
Aegeri said:I have yet, in all my time of arguing about this topic, never encountered a creationist who had any decent grasp of biology at all.
science/other scientists rejects people like this (as soon as they know it of course). as far as i can tell, creationism generally does not.\/\/0RF said:I'm amused that evolutionary theory can seek the moral high ground in this case, after the grand adventures like Piltdown Man, Nebraska Man, the Cardiff Giant, Shinichi Fujimura digging up "artifacts" he buried himself... the bottom line is, people who are predisposed to certain ideas can go to great lengths to propogate their theories. This is not a "creationist" problem, this is a human problem.
That applies equally to religion. The difference is, I'm giving science credit for weeding out fraudulent claims.bobtheking said:science/other scientists rejects people like this (as soon as they know it of course). as far as i can tell, creationism generally does not.
you will never prevent all frauds of any field, how the rest of the field reacts is what matters.
\/\/0RF said:As much as you have railed against straw men, I was hoping you would eventually move away from these absurd comparisons.
By selecting an example which has absolutely no basis for belief, you draw an unfair comparison to a belief in God which in fact has a very solid basis for belief.
And if there are reasons to believe that God exists, then you have to consider whether the God of the Bible is true.
And if there are reasons to believe that, then you have to consider whether He did in fact create the universe, as claimed.
It's a pretty simple progression of reasoning. Flights of fancy that you made up 5 seconds before typing them for the sole reason of being arbitrary, are not a good comparative analogy.
I'm amused that evolutionary theory can seek the moral high ground in this case, after the grand adventures like Piltdown Man, Nebraska Man, the Cardiff Giant, Shinichi Fujimura digging up "artifacts" he buried himself... the bottom line is, people who are predisposed to certain ideas can go to great lengths to propogate their theories. This is not a "creationist" problem, this is a human problem.
In short, the entire problem with arguments of this nature is that empirical science presupposes a closed system. By its nature it can only qualify what it can quantify, therefore by default nothing can exist outside of such a system.
Religion, on the other hand, is largely metaphysical in nature, and grounded in things that exist outside a closed system, or within an open system, depending on your perspective. On these grounds, science and religion are based on wholly incompatible premises (other than their common quest for truth and advancement of the human condition), because some who believe in strict science will use the closed system to demonstrate that God does not AND CANNOT exist (never mind the paradox they have created), and some who believe in a higher power will similarly conclude that science must invariably be wrong and unreliable when they appear to contradict each other.
Renegade Retard said:Sorry Pal, but just because someone disagrees with the evolution model doesn't mean they don't "grasp" biology.
You can't deny that there are many creationists who are just as qualified as you (and I ) in the fields of study.
You know your stuff and are right on in your facts, and I've enjoyed debating with you, but please don't be overly pompus. It would ruin the debate.
(yes, I understood every word you posted, though you tried to talk above everyone heads)
You are talking about two completely different concepts here. I didn't say God exists because you can't disprove Him. I said there ARE evidences FOR His existence. I refuse to get into a debate with you about proving negatives. As a scientific mind you should know better.Aegeri said:Disprove an Invisible Pink Unicorn please. Until then, it stands.
If you can't prove your concept, don't front it.Yeah it is, there is just as much evidence for you to prove "God" as an invisible man in the sky, as there is to prove my invisible Pink Unicorn. For all you know, my Invisible Pink Unicorn could be identical to your invisible man in the sky. You can't disprove that concept, I cannot prove my concept.
I've understood your argument just fine. And I utterly reject your notion that people believe in something "just because".All you've done is establish you haven't understood any of my argument.
I think it's more accurate to say that the frauds were accepted by the scientific community, until such time as the evidence was such that it was then rejected by that same community. Anyone who scoffed at such notions I'm sure were dismissed as unscientific, until their claims were demonstrated to be correct. Hypothetical: if we discover that the earth is in fact 10,000 years old, who gets the credit then, the Young Earthers, or "other scientists"?I made 100% sure to bring this up much earlier becuase I knew it would come up, obviously I didn't make it blatantly obvious enough. Of course, it's worth nothingw aside from the fact I already answered it, is the evolutionary frauds were all shown as such, by other scientists.
There are one or two people smarter than me who don't necessarily agree with you. I generally don't like to appeal to authority but if you're going to make it an issue than here are a few people with an alphabet soup after their name.etc etc etc about how evolution is obvious and creation is a whim of the foolhardy and no one who knows anything about biology thinks it can happen
other scientists, absolutely. because right now Young Earthers seem like irrational crackpots. if someone proves the earth to be 10,000 years old, it will be done with science, not the bible.\/\/0RF said:Hypothetical: if we discover that the earth is in fact 10,000 years old, who gets the credit then, the Young Earthers, or "other scientists"?
they don't claim to know. they claim to have theories, some of which appear to be better than others. we will research them more, attempt to poke holes in them, etc. until we find out what really happened. this is the major difference, creationists would be satisfied to continue blindly believing the bible. if science could prove creationism right, that would be a victory for science. science is after what really happened, not to keep the religious people down (unlike what your edit: (your being religion) massive persecution complex tells you), but not one iota of empirical evidence exists to support this 'theory', so science doesn't invest much time in it.\/\/0RF said:where scientists can't even agree on how it happened.
... because... no creationists use scientific methods?bobtheking said:other scientists, absolutely. because right now Young Earthers seem like irrational crackpots. if someone proves the earth to be 10,000 years old, it will be done with science, not the bible.
You write off my observations as a persecution complex, but this idealistic view of science I find highly pompous. As I said before, despite the best intentions of science, people are wont to bend it to their will, much like zealots do with religious convictions. I thought I made that SYSTEMIC PROBLEM OF HUMANITY plain in an earlier reply. People DO have ulterior motives which cloud the truth. Gould himself wrote "It is true that scientists have often been dogmatic and elitist. It is true that we have often allowed the white-coated, advertising image to represent us—'Scientists say that Brand X cures bunions ten times faster than…' We have not fought it adequately because we derive benefits from appearing as a new priesthood. It is also true that faceless and bureaucratic state power intrudes more and more into our lives and removes choices that should belong to individuals and communities. I can understand that school curricula, imposed from above and without local input, might be seen as one more insult on all these grounds," even as he correctly points out that evolution is simply a scientific observation, and should not itself be the culprit writ large as the root of the problem. HE ACKNOWLEDGES exactly what I'm talking about here, and what you confirm when you suggest science as the cure-all, and creationism as the pipe dream of people who base all of their reserach on the Bible.if science could prove creationism right, that would be a victory for science.
\/\/0RF said:You are talking about two completely different concepts here. I didn't say God exists because you can't disprove Him. I said there ARE evidences FOR His existence. I refuse to get into a debate with you about proving negatives. As a scientific mind you should know better.
If you can't prove your concept, don't front it.
Comparatively speaking, God said He was real, and He said that He would establish the Jewish people upon the earth as a reflection of His kingdom in Heaven.
To this day, of the civilizations of antiquity from that period in time, the Amalakites, the Philistines, the Hittites, the Amorites, the Babylonians... all gone. Absorbed into other cultures within 5 generations of the ends of their empires.
2000 years after being scattered to the 4 corners of the globe, the Jews retain their cultural and national heritage.
He also said He would send a Messiah. Jesus walked the earth claiming to be the Son of God. To prove it, He died and rose on the third day. In this very small handful of simple truths
are the basic outline of why I believe what I believe.
It's not something I made up to be facetious and start talking about proving negatives. It's something that was documented by the people who were there to see it happen.
hat's not a philosophy
, that's a historical framework that forms the basis of my faith. Again, you absolutely cannot compare garbage you make up just to try and make other people's beliefs sound more stupid than they are.
I've understood your argument just fine. And I utterly reject your notion that people believe in something "just because".
I think it's more accurate to say that the frauds were accepted by the scientific community, until such time as the evidence was such that it was then rejected by that same community.
Anyone who scoffed at such notions I'm sure were dismissed as unscientific, until their claims were demonstrated to be correct.
Hypothetical: if we discover that the earth is in fact 10,000 years old, who gets the credit then, the Young Earthers, or "other scientists"?
There are one or two people smarter than me who don't necessarily agree with you. I generally don't like to appeal to authority but if you're going to make it an issue than here are a few people with an alphabet soup after their name.
And some thick reading for the more thick-brained among us. Warning: heady stuff to the uninitiated. biologicamal stuffs
Frankly, I don't care if you read it or not, nor if it alters your opinion about origins in any way.
I'm just done with the whole, "the only people who talk about this crap are frauds and crackpots" angle
, or being asked to put it aside and place my faith in an origins model where scientists can't even agree on how it happened.
because no creationists use scientific methods
Those arguing creationism or ID are not trying to supplant science, they are trying to advance it, as per the numerous articles above.
Comparatively speaking, God said He was real, and He said that He would establish the Jewish people upon the earth as a reflection of His kingdom in Heaven. To this day, of the civilizations of antiquity from that period in time, the Amalakites, the Philistines, the Hittites, the Amorites, the Babylonians... all gone.
Disprove an Invisible Pink Unicorn please. Until then, it stands.
Metakill said:I also agree that there are definitely people who use science to further their own agendas.
That is utterly preposterous. How can an invisible unicorn be pink?
yes. how can you possibly use a scientific method for arriving at a conclusion when you don't have any evidence to base your conclusion (one way or another) on. you can't base it on the bible, because you have no way of knowing whether that is true or not.\/\/0RF said:... because... no creationists use scientific methods?![]()
Since when thoughMetakill said:The Chinese are still here.
The Iliad is not an eyewitness account. I don't know why you keep linking incomparable examples.Aegeri said:Iroically, this is my point, though we will disagree on the evidence part. What evidence you can come up with is just what you believe is evidence, but ultimately I can contrast events in the Illiad, which is arguably also based on historic events and cite it as 'proof' of the Greek Gods.
You could, but you made that up. I don't know why you keep linking incomparable examples."Comparatively speaking, the Unicorn said she was real, and she said that she would establish horse kind as her people on earth as a reflection of her kingdom in the meadows"
I understand neither your question nor your point.The English, the Americans and many other cultures did this too. Does this mean they are Gods people as well?
Correct. And they are still here.After being massacred multiple times and then fighting for a homeland.
In terms of science, I can't make an unfalsifiable claim. I have said this numerous times. My mission is not to use science to prove God, but to stop with the ludicrous notions of science somehow DISproving God.To you yes, where is your actual verifiable and testable evidence that A: God exists, and B: that these events actually happened in exactly the manner you describe?
oh, look, here we go exactly.Again, you're still trying to debate philosophy ultimately, because I'm more than certain you would regard archaeological evidence as proving one, YOUR world view and not the other (That the Greek Gods existed).
If everything you have been saying is that you can just make up ridiculous fanciful creatures and claim that I should accept that without any evidence of any sort, then yeah I guess that proves it.Again, as I kept mentioning, you argue your belief and claim it is 'right' because it is your belief. I cannot prove you wrong so obviously I have to accept your position as being a possibility. The very fact you immediately dismiss an "Invisible Pink Unicorn" merely proves everything I've been saying and nothing more.
If there are "other possibilities" for the empty tomb I'd love to hear them.Again, your beliefs are exactly that, but don't call it science unless you can truely verify and dismiss other possibilities.
Yeah, that would be creation abiogenesis as opposed to naturalist abiogenesis.Never said that, one of the things I have spoken about is that people believe things and take whatever evidence is around to 'indicate' something. For example, many people believe in a creator simply because life exists and don't need to get any more particularly complicated than that (and why bother anyway?). All I have said is it is impossible to definitively 'prove' something that you inherently cannot prove the existance of (such as a deity) to set yourself in an unassailable position (which ultimately arguing the existance/non-existance of God IS).
Like abiogenesis?Unless something can be tested through predictions that are found to be true or false, you cannot definitively say "It's because".
Peer review did not "catch them out". Experimentation did not "catch them out". What caught them out was that their evidence was FORGED. It wasn't a testing of predictions, it was examining the evidence that THEY FORGED. That is a different issue ALTOGETHER from the general idea of science through falsification.Correct, missing the entire point of something called peer review and that science will correct mistakes and replace outdated ideas with new ones. The frauds made predictions, others tested their predictions and found they did not match up. Peer review caught them out and they were essentially exposed.
This is a new low for you, briachie. Is UC Berkeley a degree mill? Harvard? Michigan State? Case Western? Clemson? SDSU? UCLA? Cincinnati? Ball State? Brown? Wisconsin? Illinois? Iowa? Kentucky?Yes, like "Dr" Kent Hovinid.
Your appeal to authority is rejected until you get an actual scientific source. Really, I've asked continually for links to journal articles, not to people with qualifications from degree mills (look up the "University" where "Dr" Kent Hovinid got his "degree".
Let me say it again, since you must not have understood the first time: I'm not trying to intimidate you, only to point out that some theories are not necessarily held by kooks and crackpots. Quite frankly I don't know what else to say to this because I'm still pissed at you for invoking Hovinid.And in case you are wondering, I also have a few letters after my name as well. I'm hardly intimidated.
If it's so clear, what is the conclusion with which I started? I'd love to hear this one.You think there is 'one' solution like those creationists up there, you've clearly started with your own conclusion and attempt to fit evidence into that conclusion and disregard evidence to the contrary.
See above.Again, you want to think that creationism is valid, then like scientists accept multiple ways that biological evolution may have occured, you need to accept multiple ways in which supernatural/deity may have created the world.
Haven't you insulted enough people for one day? Here's one guy you owe an apology (partial list):Eureka, he's got it folks!
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\/\/0RF said:Like abiogenesis?
This is a new low for you, briachie. Is UC Berkeley a degree mill? Harvard? Michigan State? Case Western? Clemson? SDSU? UCLA? Cincinnati? Ball State? Brown? Wisconsin? Illinois? Iowa? Kentucky?
NO!
He received a B.A. in Biblical Studies from John Brown University, a M.A. in Biblical Education from Columbia Bible College, and a Ph.D. in Linguistics from The Australian National University.
But of course, I doubt you really believe those are fake universities. I think you chose instead to drag up some fraudulent hack, WHOM I HAVE NEVER MENTIONED BY NAME AND CATEGORICALLY DETEST, as an excuse not to even LOOK at the credentials of other people with legitimate degrees in science and other relevant fields.
This is genuinely disgusting.
Let me say it again, since you must not have understood the first time: I'm not trying to intimidate you, only to point out that some theories are not necessarily held by kooks and crackpots.
Quite frankly I don't know what else to say to this because I'm still pissed at you for invoking Hovinid.
If it's so clear, what is the conclusion with which I started? I'd love to hear this one.
Haven't you insulted enough people for one day? Here's one guy you owe an apology (partial list):
The evaluation committee first voted 3 to 2 to approve the institutes programmes, despite the lack of scientific substance.