Darwin Day Celebration... for developers? How about other religions? [modified]
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Chris, I am sorry you are ignoring my appeal to avoid ad-hominem attacks, this does not help a rational discusion, but that's ok. I corrected my previous post becuase my quote from Gould had the word 'probably' in brackets and it was removed from the comment. About how something is proven, please try to realize the implications of my question: do you assume that science is the only way of knowing something for sure? If so, can you follow the scientific method to prove that conviction to be absolutely true? Can all instances be observed to come to an absolute conclusion? Do you believe this because you were taught or because you have observed it? Think carefully before answering. How was it first established that something must make predictions and validated to be true, if it was not by assuming first the principles of induction and causality, which in themselves cannot be scientifically proven? Is it not true that you require the excercise of faith in intangible and absolute rules to make sense of your trust in your sensory perception, your memory and the principles of science? Let's get back to my original question. Personally, please mention one thing you know FOR SURE about evolution.
Juanfer
sorry, i'm not going to play your semantic games. if you want twist logic so much that you're on the verge of claiming no knowledge at all is possible, there's literally nothing left to discuss. that's a dead-end. so, let's get back to the real world: either propose a viable alternative theory for evolution, which a) explains the existing data from biology, genetics and paleontology - at least to the degree evolution does (ID does not), b) predicts what new data we may find (ID does not), and c) fits with what we know about the other sciences (ex. physics, geology and cosmology) (again, ID does not), or admit that you're just proselytizing (which ID certainly is).
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sorry, i'm not going to play your semantic games. if you want twist logic so much that you're on the verge of claiming no knowledge at all is possible, there's literally nothing left to discuss. that's a dead-end. so, let's get back to the real world: either propose a viable alternative theory for evolution, which a) explains the existing data from biology, genetics and paleontology - at least to the degree evolution does (ID does not), b) predicts what new data we may find (ID does not), and c) fits with what we know about the other sciences (ex. physics, geology and cosmology) (again, ID does not), or admit that you're just proselytizing (which ID certainly is).
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Chris, This was not a semantic game by any means. The implications are really important if you decide to honestly challenge how you know what you know. My point is not that no knowledge at all is possible, but I like you bringing that up because I hope you have started to realize that this is precisely the only possible logical consequence of the 'materialistic/scientific only' worldview, and it requires a lot of blind faith. Knowledge is not only possible but attainable, but its certainty can only be accounted for by acknowledging the principle of God being the precondition of it, in spite of your attempt to ridicule the idea in a previous post. I have to admit this is not easy to swallow because it took me a lot of time to realize why this is the only viable alternative. Let me submit this assertion: God created the heavens and the earth, and every creature after its kind, and He is the only reason why we, being created in his image, are different from other creatures in the sense of our self-awareness and intelligence. We can confidently trust in the existence of absolute laws and predictability that make all the branches of science possible, because without God we cannot explain the nature of these principles. If this is not true, we cannot explain rationally why we trust in causality, ethics, language, love, duty, etc. or why we demand them from others. It predicts that no transitional form can ever be found between any species and that one species have been given dominion with responsibility over the others. This answers rationally and consistently in every area, the issues I presented as problems in my first post from the evolutionary perspective. If it doesn't, please show me how it violates the one of them, the laws of logic or empirical evidence. Of course, you don't have to believe this, but then you have to give a better and consistent account for why you don't, not just an arbitrary appeal to humanism and naturalism.
Juanfer
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Grand Negus, God's existence can indeed be proven. The problem is that the kind of proof we offer is not the one that an unbeliever wants for this specific case. Please check the kind of evidence I am asking Chris to provide. The proof of God's existence, in a nutshell of course because the explanation of why this is so is rather lengthy for this site, is from the imposibility of the contrary: Without Him we cannot prove anything. God provides the preconditions to make anything intelligible, like the universality of the laws of logic and reason, which the unbeliever uses but cannot offer an account of why is it that he can use them. Please ask them to prove that immaterial universal entites like laws exist at all. If they succeed, they would have proven God's existence. The Bible says that God has plainly manifested Himself to every creature so that they are without excuse; in other words, He has proven Himself (Rom 1:18,19). For a demonstration of this principle in a practical historical debate (1985), please check this: http://www.cmfnow.com/index.asp?PageAction=VIEWCATS&Category=234 Blessings.
Juanfer
juanfer68 wrote:
God's existence can indeed be proven. The problem is that the kind of proof we offer is not the one that an unbeliever wants for this specific case... The Bible says that God has plainly manifested Himself to every creature so that they are without excuse; in other words, He has proven Himself.
Agreed. In my post to Chris I meant exactly that - we can't prove the existence of God in a way that will incontrovertibly convince the unbeliever. There are kinds of evidence that they won't allow, because their intent is to disallow, by their "rules of proof", any train of thought that leads to God before the argument even begins. And they're blinded, in any case (2 Cor 4:3-4). A man who is physically blind will not accept evidence that a sighted man will - which is not altogether unreasonable. That's why we're instructed to approach the whole matter with "meekness", expecting and ignoring, for example, ad-hominem attacks, however unhelpful they may be (2 Tim 2:24-26). In short, there's no reasoning with unbelievers on their ground - and that's the only ground they have. The best we can do, in my view, is to shine the light around and see if anyone blinks. If nobody does, we go on to the next village.
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Kent, Thanks for your reply and desire for fair balance. I must say I appreciate this as an opportunity for a healthy discussion about what is, indeed, a religion, if you follow closely its broader definition (second paragraph) from the Wikipedia. I am not personally looking to resolve a "you have a link, we don't" kind of issue. My interest is to make people realize how much we are willing to take uncountable, apparently small, leaps of faith to defend a belief, while at the same time not willing to consider the alternative, which requires only the application of the faith they already have to the only substantiated option. Why don't we do it? Because we would have to pay what we consider the highest price: our autonomy and the sacrifice of the god we have built out of humanism. Regards. -- modified at 13:15 Saturday 17th February, 2007
Juanfer
OK, pulling said second paragraph from Wikipedia:
In the larger sense, religion is a communal system for the coherence of belief—typically focused on a system of thought, unseen being, person, or object, that is considered to be supernatural, sacred, divine, or of the highest truth. Moral codes, practices, values, institutions, traditions, and rituals are often traditionally associated with the core belief, and these may have some overlap with concepts in secular philosophy. Religion can also be described as a way of life.
Taking the last line of that paragraph, anything could be described as a way of life, and therefore following a political party of even the Atkin's Diet could be a religion using that weak sentence. Taking the paragraph as a whole it begins to become a better description of most religions as it brings in "an unseen being, person or object." With this, the scientific method (and therefore our current understanding of evolution) cease to qualify. The scientific method does not require any practices, values, etc. other than the endless cycle of observation, hypothesis, proposal, test, theory. Few theories have reached the realm of Law: momentum, gravity, etc. The theory of evolution is just that, a theory. However, it is not a theory in the sense that lawyers or others commonly use it, but as working scientists define it. In this sense it is a much stronger, heavily tested concept. On the whole religion vs. science non-battle, I give you my old Molecular Evolution professor. The professor I had for that final year course at University was a devout Mennonite. He believed in evolution, as science as observed and tested and refined the theory for > 100 years. He believed, however, that it was a mechanism of God. For him, and many others, this is a perfectly rational explanation. Science would not dispute this, as there is no way to prove (or disprove) God on the basis of the scientific method. I definitely agree with Chris on another thread though. Rather than continuing to attack some facet of evolutionary theory, what the opponents really need to do is provide an alternate hypothesis. One that may be tested in its own right. Lamarck tried it, Lysenko tried it, now it's your turn.
-------------- TTFN - Kent
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Chris, This was not a semantic game by any means. The implications are really important if you decide to honestly challenge how you know what you know. My point is not that no knowledge at all is possible, but I like you bringing that up because I hope you have started to realize that this is precisely the only possible logical consequence of the 'materialistic/scientific only' worldview, and it requires a lot of blind faith. Knowledge is not only possible but attainable, but its certainty can only be accounted for by acknowledging the principle of God being the precondition of it, in spite of your attempt to ridicule the idea in a previous post. I have to admit this is not easy to swallow because it took me a lot of time to realize why this is the only viable alternative. Let me submit this assertion: God created the heavens and the earth, and every creature after its kind, and He is the only reason why we, being created in his image, are different from other creatures in the sense of our self-awareness and intelligence. We can confidently trust in the existence of absolute laws and predictability that make all the branches of science possible, because without God we cannot explain the nature of these principles. If this is not true, we cannot explain rationally why we trust in causality, ethics, language, love, duty, etc. or why we demand them from others. It predicts that no transitional form can ever be found between any species and that one species have been given dominion with responsibility over the others. This answers rationally and consistently in every area, the issues I presented as problems in my first post from the evolutionary perspective. If it doesn't, please show me how it violates the one of them, the laws of logic or empirical evidence. Of course, you don't have to believe this, but then you have to give a better and consistent account for why you don't, not just an arbitrary appeal to humanism and naturalism.
Juanfer
juanfer68 wrote:
God created the heavens and the earth
prove it. show your work.
juanfer68 wrote:
and every creature after its kind,
prove it. show your work.
juanfer68 wrote:
and He is the only reason why, being created in his image, we are different from animals in the sense of our self-awareness and intelligence
prove it. show your work. etc.
juanfer68 wrote:
We can confidently trust in the existence of absolute laws and predictability that make all the branches of science possible, because without God we cannot explain the nature of these principles.
that is, literally, nonsense. you're begging the question, again.
juanfer68 wrote:
It predicts that no transitional form can ever be found between any species and that one species have been given dominion with responsibility over the others.
and yet, we do find those fossils. the fact that you guys keep making the goalposts closer together doesn't mean science won't keep scoring on them.
juanfer68 wrote:
This answers rationally the issues I presented as problems in my first post from the evolutionary perspective
there is absolutely nothing rational about anything you just said. you're offering circular definitions, appeals to ignorance, and semantic games. you offer no proof of anything. your dogma has zero predictive power - it simply draws lines in the sand and says "all beyond this line is unknowable, for here is God!"; and science has been blithely stepping over your lines since the 1400s.
juanfer68 wrote:
If it doesn't, please show me how it violates the laws of logic or natural evidence
i have. apparently you choose to ignore it.
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juanfer68 wrote:
God's existence can indeed be proven. The problem is that the kind of proof we offer is not the one that an unbeliever wants for this specific case... The Bible says that God has plainly manifested Himself to every creature so that they are without excuse; in other words, He has proven Himself.
Agreed. In my post to Chris I meant exactly that - we can't prove the existence of God in a way that will incontrovertibly convince the unbeliever. There are kinds of evidence that they won't allow, because their intent is to disallow, by their "rules of proof", any train of thought that leads to God before the argument even begins. And they're blinded, in any case (2 Cor 4:3-4). A man who is physically blind will not accept evidence that a sighted man will - which is not altogether unreasonable. That's why we're instructed to approach the whole matter with "meekness", expecting and ignoring, for example, ad-hominem attacks, however unhelpful they may be (2 Tim 2:24-26). In short, there's no reasoning with unbelievers on their ground - and that's the only ground they have. The best we can do, in my view, is to shine the light around and see if anyone blinks. If nobody does, we go on to the next village.
I meant exactly that - we can't prove the existence of God in a way that will incontrovertibly convince the unbeliever
no doubt, if we accept the truth of proposition A without proof, you could clearly then convince us of the truth of proposition A. you've certainly got a point there!
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juanfer68 wrote:
Your quick and smart response makes me think you are capable of doing more than dismissing my question by pointing out my mistake.
Okay, since you want a serious discussion... IMO I comment first that you are mushing three major lines of investigation into one umbrella - those of the Big Bang, of abiotic synthesis, and of evolution. None of these theories/hypotheses require the other to be valid. Secondly, you are attempting to discredit evolutionary theory by specifically pointing out the gaps in knowledge or evidence that currently exist. This is disingenuous - it's basically goalpost shifting, as Chris suggested above. The question is, how consistent is evolutionary theory based on the preponderance of existing evidence? How well does evolution explain what we can measure in the world? As a biochemist, I rely on the experts in other fields to make such conclusions based on their observations. From the fields paleontology, biology, geology, chemistry, and physics etc, there exists various independent lines of evidence that are consistent with the hypothesis that the earth is billions of years old. So I ask: How consistent is that with my own observations? I am specifically capable of discussing, say, the overall structure and function of the human genome, or the structure and function of the immune system. Various observations in these fields are explained extremely well by evolutionary theory. For example, the human genome is ~44% comprised of noncoding crap DNA. Evolutionary theory explains this well - retroviral infections, shifts, duplications, translocations, etc, none of which are selected against. We observe a roughly 0.01% difference in the genome between each human, a ~0.05% difference in the genome between humans and the latest neandertal sequences, a ~0.1% difference between the human genome and the chimpanzee genome. Divergence from a common ancestor explains this observation very well and supports findings by paleontologists. The immune system is a system that is explained extremely well by evolutionary theory. For example, the diversity in humans is created by a specific enzyme that mediates DNA rearrangement in developing B and T cells. If we examine the immune system of distantly related species (as determined by the field of biology), we find that jawed fishes have adaptive immunity, where jawless fishes do not. Evolution can explain this by suggesting gene disruption from an exogen
Fisticuffs, Please correct me if I am wrong, but if I didn't follow a different educational path, this sequence without its problems is presented to us in schools and universities today, in little packages at a time and over longer periods of time, but all unified in answering the question: How did we get here? And naturally so, is it not the ultimate goal of the scientific quest to arrive to the unified theory of human knowledge? If we are part of the same universe, is it not irrational to say that conflicting results among the different areas of knowledge are acceptable? Now, I have to admit my ignorance and commend you for your knowledge in the area of biology, which will not try to compete or contradict by any means. Now with that said, I think I, as any other rational being, am in a position to cross-examine the reasons behind the conclusions you draw and ask you, as a scientist, the same questions I asked Chris in another post: how do you determine that you know something for sure? Is it by empirically, rationally, or pragmatically? You mention your trust in the findings of experts in other fields, which is good. The problem with this is that, if we appeal to the authority of other human beings, as soon as we find one with similar knowledge arriving to different conclusions, we have to either let go of our argument, or prove that the latter is not reall an expert in the field. In other words, do experts in any field all agree today that evolution is true? If they don't, does a scientist get automatically dismissed and stop being consired an expert if he arrives to a different conclusion? Please check the following list for some of them: http://www.christiananswers.net/creation/people/home.html I hope you agree that an appeal to authority or popularity does not prove anything and distracts us from the main argument about evolution, so let's stay focussed on your field of expertise. In analyzing what is useful and what not in your study of the DNA, what do you use as a standard of 'what works'? When you examine the facts, is the evolution of the species the objective necessary and only conclusion you can arrive to, or do you have to start believing evolution to believe the numbers support your observations? For example: What assumptions do we need to make in order to determine that the 44% of non-coding crap DNA is to be categorized as 'non-coding crap'? It looks like part of DNA in mice previously categorized as 'junk' turned out to have a function in mice during their embrionary stages.
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juanfer68 wrote:
Sorry, I did not get the point. I will need some help here.
Your post is so far down the hierarchy that I'm not sure what it's attached to; I'm going to assume it's my lengthy quote from David Berlinski. Berlinski's point is that the mutation of a novel into other novels in the same and even other languages by means of unintentional copying errors is simply ludicrous. Anyone can (or should be able to) see that such things just don't happen, no matter how much time and how many copies are involved. And yet the evolutionist wants us to accept just such a tale - that higher forms of life (novels) are created through random mutations of the letters (DNA bases), words (amino acids), and phrases (proteins) of living cells. Note, incidently, that Berlinski's fable begins with a novel and doesn't address the even more difficult matter of where the original novel (the Quixote) came from. Now if Berlinski's tale evokes immediate and reasonable responses like "preposterous" and "absurd", shouldn't the evolutionists' amplified tale do the same? and more?
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Fisticuffs, Please correct me if I am wrong, but if I didn't follow a different educational path, this sequence without its problems is presented to us in schools and universities today, in little packages at a time and over longer periods of time, but all unified in answering the question: How did we get here? And naturally so, is it not the ultimate goal of the scientific quest to arrive to the unified theory of human knowledge? If we are part of the same universe, is it not irrational to say that conflicting results among the different areas of knowledge are acceptable? Now, I have to admit my ignorance and commend you for your knowledge in the area of biology, which will not try to compete or contradict by any means. Now with that said, I think I, as any other rational being, am in a position to cross-examine the reasons behind the conclusions you draw and ask you, as a scientist, the same questions I asked Chris in another post: how do you determine that you know something for sure? Is it by empirically, rationally, or pragmatically? You mention your trust in the findings of experts in other fields, which is good. The problem with this is that, if we appeal to the authority of other human beings, as soon as we find one with similar knowledge arriving to different conclusions, we have to either let go of our argument, or prove that the latter is not reall an expert in the field. In other words, do experts in any field all agree today that evolution is true? If they don't, does a scientist get automatically dismissed and stop being consired an expert if he arrives to a different conclusion? Please check the following list for some of them: http://www.christiananswers.net/creation/people/home.html I hope you agree that an appeal to authority or popularity does not prove anything and distracts us from the main argument about evolution, so let's stay focussed on your field of expertise. In analyzing what is useful and what not in your study of the DNA, what do you use as a standard of 'what works'? When you examine the facts, is the evolution of the species the objective necessary and only conclusion you can arrive to, or do you have to start believing evolution to believe the numbers support your observations? For example: What assumptions do we need to make in order to determine that the 44% of non-coding crap DNA is to be categorized as 'non-coding crap'? It looks like part of DNA in mice previously categorized as 'junk' turned out to have a function in mice during their embrionary stages.
I'm not convinced that continuing this conversation is useful, for two reasons. 1) You don't appear to understand the fundamental nature of science - to seek the best explanations for observed phenomenon based on the best evidence that we have. Missing evidence is inconsequential compared to contradictory evidence - because the missing evidence could just as easily support the theory as refute it, all else being equal. 2) I don't think there's anything I could ever say to convince you in either the scientific utility or the potential "truth" of evolution because it directly contradicts your firm, unquestioning, sacred belief that God created the universe. I suggest if you would like to learn about science and evolution, or perhaps "take on" the claim that evolution is a useful scientific idea, you take some science and biology classes - FYI, I was once anti-evolution, too. Barring that, perhaps you would benefit from viewing evolution as merely a tool for explaining diversity that allows scientists all over the world to make useful advancements in knowledge. Many biologists manage to maintain a belief in God yet use evolutionary theory every day.
- F "You are really weird." - Kyle, age 16
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I'm not convinced that continuing this conversation is useful, for two reasons. 1) You don't appear to understand the fundamental nature of science - to seek the best explanations for observed phenomenon based on the best evidence that we have. Missing evidence is inconsequential compared to contradictory evidence - because the missing evidence could just as easily support the theory as refute it, all else being equal. 2) I don't think there's anything I could ever say to convince you in either the scientific utility or the potential "truth" of evolution because it directly contradicts your firm, unquestioning, sacred belief that God created the universe. I suggest if you would like to learn about science and evolution, or perhaps "take on" the claim that evolution is a useful scientific idea, you take some science and biology classes - FYI, I was once anti-evolution, too. Barring that, perhaps you would benefit from viewing evolution as merely a tool for explaining diversity that allows scientists all over the world to make useful advancements in knowledge. Many biologists manage to maintain a belief in God yet use evolutionary theory every day.
- F "You are really weird." - Kyle, age 16
Just as I said, someone would point out my ignorance about science, but in doing so you are suggesting the way you seem to apply the scientific method in evaluating evolution by drawing conclusions according to a pre-conceived notion and with little data. I have indeed gone through the study of those fields, particularly on physics, but to mention the extent of those studies drives more attention to me as an expert rather than my arguments. Would it help your cause if I mention I have a Ph.D.? Or what about no college at all? I hope you have taken a course on the metaphysical foundations of science to question why you trust it so much instead of taking it for granted. In my case it happened in the opposite way, just as with many others, I started as an evolutionist until I couln't give an answer to why I had such faith in many unsubstantiated claims. The list I sent shows that there are scientists that apply their knowledge every day by holding to a creation view. The success of their jobs is not the point. My point is: either evolution happened or it did not happen, and it is not only that there lack of evidence, but that the available evidence either supports both sides or contradicts evolution, like Pasteur's experiment. Science rests on certain assumptions about the nature of reality like causality and induction, which in themselves are not subject to the rigor of the scientific method; after all, everybody knows they have to be true, right? Well, so much for strictness and formality in our quest for truth. Please read Russel and others about this. To practice science, how do you account for (not just apply) those principles? If evolution is such a well established scientific theory, wouldn't it have sufficed to point out what we know FOR SURE about it? What do other scientists have to say? Let's check geneticist Jerome Lejeune during a lecture in Paris: "We have no acceptable theory of evolution at the present time. There is none; and I cannot accept the theory that I teach to my students each year. Let me explain. I teach the synthetic theory known as the neo-Darwinian one, for one reason only; not because it’s good, we know it is bad, but because there isn’t any other. Whilst waiting to find something better you are taught something which is known to be inexact, which is a first approximation…." Oh, probably just needed to take some courses as you sugest, just as many other evolutionist with similar quotes! The sad thing is that I am the one sitting here in frustration without being able
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juanfer68 wrote:
God created the heavens and the earth
prove it. show your work.
juanfer68 wrote:
and every creature after its kind,
prove it. show your work.
juanfer68 wrote:
and He is the only reason why, being created in his image, we are different from animals in the sense of our self-awareness and intelligence
prove it. show your work. etc.
juanfer68 wrote:
We can confidently trust in the existence of absolute laws and predictability that make all the branches of science possible, because without God we cannot explain the nature of these principles.
that is, literally, nonsense. you're begging the question, again.
juanfer68 wrote:
It predicts that no transitional form can ever be found between any species and that one species have been given dominion with responsibility over the others.
and yet, we do find those fossils. the fact that you guys keep making the goalposts closer together doesn't mean science won't keep scoring on them.
juanfer68 wrote:
This answers rationally the issues I presented as problems in my first post from the evolutionary perspective
there is absolutely nothing rational about anything you just said. you're offering circular definitions, appeals to ignorance, and semantic games. you offer no proof of anything. your dogma has zero predictive power - it simply draws lines in the sand and says "all beyond this line is unknowable, for here is God!"; and science has been blithely stepping over your lines since the 1400s.
juanfer68 wrote:
If it doesn't, please show me how it violates the laws of logic or natural evidence
i have. apparently you choose to ignore it.
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Chris, You appear to have learned very well what the rules of logic argumentation are and how they are to be applied. Now, let's put on our thinking caps and see if you can justify why you believe those rules. Circularity is absolutely prohibited in argumentation, right? Well, the problem is that this principle has exceptions and cannot be applied, for example, to the issue of ultimate authority. You may think you do not believe in such a thing, but I can assure you that you do, at least unconsciously. There is something you use to test everything else, and this is an unavoidable truth. Even if you deny it, you are implicitly claiming the authority to absolutely deny that there is no ultimate authority. What is your ultimate authority? Is it reason? It cannot be, because reason presuposes the laws of logic and is therefore subordinate to them, isn't it? Then, logic could to be your ultimate authority. But then, you have to use logic to study logic, don't you? Guess what... this is circular reasoning. In that sense, I have to confess, I am guilty of that grievous sin. I accept that, if there is a God, He alone can be the ultimate authority and he authorize Himself. Logic and reason are contingent to and consistent with His nature. Whether or not you believe this is not the issue, but if you are honest in applying what you know about logic, at least you have to accept that this statement is internally consistent. Why do you believe in your ultimate authority? Can you build a consistent statement to explain it? With this I am done. Please let me know if you have any interest in following up out of this forum. Thanks.
Juanfer
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Chris, You appear to have learned very well what the rules of logic argumentation are and how they are to be applied. Now, let's put on our thinking caps and see if you can justify why you believe those rules. Circularity is absolutely prohibited in argumentation, right? Well, the problem is that this principle has exceptions and cannot be applied, for example, to the issue of ultimate authority. You may think you do not believe in such a thing, but I can assure you that you do, at least unconsciously. There is something you use to test everything else, and this is an unavoidable truth. Even if you deny it, you are implicitly claiming the authority to absolutely deny that there is no ultimate authority. What is your ultimate authority? Is it reason? It cannot be, because reason presuposes the laws of logic and is therefore subordinate to them, isn't it? Then, logic could to be your ultimate authority. But then, you have to use logic to study logic, don't you? Guess what... this is circular reasoning. In that sense, I have to confess, I am guilty of that grievous sin. I accept that, if there is a God, He alone can be the ultimate authority and he authorize Himself. Logic and reason are contingent to and consistent with His nature. Whether or not you believe this is not the issue, but if you are honest in applying what you know about logic, at least you have to accept that this statement is internally consistent. Why do you believe in your ultimate authority? Can you build a consistent statement to explain it? With this I am done. Please let me know if you have any interest in following up out of this forum. Thanks.
Juanfer
juanfer68 wrote:
But then, you have to use logic to study logic, don't you? Guess what... this is circular reasoning.
err... no. if you want to insist there's no such thing as knowledge or fundamental truth, feel free. but, as i said before, that leaves nothing (literally) to discuss. and i'm not going to play your silly semantic games. and, i'll take your failure to posit a viable alternative to evolution as evidence that you have no such thing. so that's the end of that. good night
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juanfer68 wrote:
Sorry, I did not get the point. I will need some help here.
Your post is so far down the hierarchy that I'm not sure what it's attached to; I'm going to assume it's my lengthy quote from David Berlinski. Berlinski's point is that the mutation of a novel into other novels in the same and even other languages by means of unintentional copying errors is simply ludicrous. Anyone can (or should be able to) see that such things just don't happen, no matter how much time and how many copies are involved. And yet the evolutionist wants us to accept just such a tale - that higher forms of life (novels) are created through random mutations of the letters (DNA bases), words (amino acids), and phrases (proteins) of living cells. Note, incidently, that Berlinski's fable begins with a novel and doesn't address the even more difficult matter of where the original novel (the Quixote) came from. Now if Berlinski's tale evokes immediate and reasonable responses like "preposterous" and "absurd", shouldn't the evolutionists' amplified tale do the same? and more?
The Grand Negus wrote:
Berlinski's point is that the mutation of a novel into other novels in the same and even other languages by means of unintentional copying errors is simply ludicrous.
do you know what else is ludicrous? - thinking that that analogy captures enough of the theory of evolution to allow anyone to draw any kind of conclusion about the theory of evolution. there's so much more to it than just random mutations in genes. really, it's like describing the game of basketball without mentioning the hoop, or the floor, or gravity: a bunch of tall guys (why are they tall!!??) run (run!!??) back and forth (absurd!!??) and then one group somehow "wins" (based on what??!) - how ludicrous! frankly, you'd do well to learn what the theory of evolution actually says. otherwise, you come across as simply ignorant.
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The Grand Negus wrote:
Berlinski's point is that the mutation of a novel into other novels in the same and even other languages by means of unintentional copying errors is simply ludicrous.
do you know what else is ludicrous? - thinking that that analogy captures enough of the theory of evolution to allow anyone to draw any kind of conclusion about the theory of evolution. there's so much more to it than just random mutations in genes. really, it's like describing the game of basketball without mentioning the hoop, or the floor, or gravity: a bunch of tall guys (why are they tall!!??) run (run!!??) back and forth (absurd!!??) and then one group somehow "wins" (based on what??!) - how ludicrous! frankly, you'd do well to learn what the theory of evolution actually says. otherwise, you come across as simply ignorant.
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you're right... pointing out that you don't know what you're talking about is a sure sign of my closed mind.
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Fisticuffs, Please correct me if I am wrong, but if I didn't follow a different educational path, this sequence without its problems is presented to us in schools and universities today, in little packages at a time and over longer periods of time, but all unified in answering the question: How did we get here? And naturally so, is it not the ultimate goal of the scientific quest to arrive to the unified theory of human knowledge? If we are part of the same universe, is it not irrational to say that conflicting results among the different areas of knowledge are acceptable? Now, I have to admit my ignorance and commend you for your knowledge in the area of biology, which will not try to compete or contradict by any means. Now with that said, I think I, as any other rational being, am in a position to cross-examine the reasons behind the conclusions you draw and ask you, as a scientist, the same questions I asked Chris in another post: how do you determine that you know something for sure? Is it by empirically, rationally, or pragmatically? You mention your trust in the findings of experts in other fields, which is good. The problem with this is that, if we appeal to the authority of other human beings, as soon as we find one with similar knowledge arriving to different conclusions, we have to either let go of our argument, or prove that the latter is not reall an expert in the field. In other words, do experts in any field all agree today that evolution is true? If they don't, does a scientist get automatically dismissed and stop being consired an expert if he arrives to a different conclusion? Please check the following list for some of them: http://www.christiananswers.net/creation/people/home.html I hope you agree that an appeal to authority or popularity does not prove anything and distracts us from the main argument about evolution, so let's stay focussed on your field of expertise. In analyzing what is useful and what not in your study of the DNA, what do you use as a standard of 'what works'? When you examine the facts, is the evolution of the species the objective necessary and only conclusion you can arrive to, or do you have to start believing evolution to believe the numbers support your observations? For example: What assumptions do we need to make in order to determine that the 44% of non-coding crap DNA is to be categorized as 'non-coding crap'? It looks like part of DNA in mice previously categorized as 'junk' turned out to have a function in mice during their embrionary stages.
Let me ask you a question. Why does creationism have to disclude evolutionism? Why wouldn't a creator in eternity... think boredom here... not engineer a system that would evolve into dynamic arrangements providing unexpected surprises throughout an otherwise predictable existence. Give me a break. This argument is lame. Science is the best friend of religion, but the organized folks are too hung up in the battle to see it. You're blinded by your own illusions. The bible is a parable. For social guidance. Not a scientific explanation of the universe, and its targeted to the people of its time. People were much simpler in their understanding of reality so that's what they got. Answer me this. Which would hold greater value; a puppet show where everything is controlled or manipulated, or a dynamic system to interact with that may discover you in return? What a delight, to allow entities to evolve from a birth in darkness to arrive at illumination and to walk therein. You are showing your own lack in evolving with your line of reasoning. You simplify the creator as a puppet master. I take offense to that.
This statement was never false.
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Let me ask you a question. Why does creationism have to disclude evolutionism? Why wouldn't a creator in eternity... think boredom here... not engineer a system that would evolve into dynamic arrangements providing unexpected surprises throughout an otherwise predictable existence. Give me a break. This argument is lame. Science is the best friend of religion, but the organized folks are too hung up in the battle to see it. You're blinded by your own illusions. The bible is a parable. For social guidance. Not a scientific explanation of the universe, and its targeted to the people of its time. People were much simpler in their understanding of reality so that's what they got. Answer me this. Which would hold greater value; a puppet show where everything is controlled or manipulated, or a dynamic system to interact with that may discover you in return? What a delight, to allow entities to evolve from a birth in darkness to arrive at illumination and to walk therein. You are showing your own lack in evolving with your line of reasoning. You simplify the creator as a puppet master. I take offense to that.
This statement was never false.
Chris, I know I said my last post was the last to you and Fistcuffs, but I take your desire to move on with the discussion as a very good sign pointing to the desire of searching for the truth, wherever it might be. This is in spite of the observation that you have decided to take offense from the conclusions you have drawn from my arguments. I get your point and think your question is fair: why couldn't God have done this or that? I totally agree with you on this; based on the premise that God is the Sovereign Creator, He could indeed have done whatever He pleased and never be obligued to give us a clue of why or how He did it... On the same basis, we should realize that He is not subordinate to science, but science is a manifestation of part of His character, as explained before. I also hope you would agree with me that our question should not be what He could have done but what He actually did, and how we can know anything about it. The tentative proposition I gave you about creationism earlier was not to justify it as a valid replacement for evolution as a scientific theory, because I don't believe either of them qualifies as such. Nevertheless, it served a purpose in your reaction when you said that it did not answer anything, even though you did not say why. Could you say why, evolution answers those questions while special creation doesn't? The problem is that you cannot explain origins using plain science as your only tool, and the reason why you can't is not due to any lack of skill or knowledge on your part, but because the inherent nature of science and the answer to our origins fall each one in different areas of knowledge. Let me explain, because recognizing the focus of science should make it easier to identify its boundaries. Science does not stand in the field of knowledge indepent from everything else in its development, but is a particular aspect of the broader field of philosophy. It holds to a particular view about the nature of our world and how we can know about it. Science relies on the empirical approach to knowledge; its matter of study is whatever is observable and/or measurable. This is its metaphysical foundation, or its view of what is real. So far so good, we keep studying the phenomena and we get very practical and useful results. The problem arises when, based on these results, many scientists and their followers place so much confidence in science that they end up challenging whatever is outside of its field as not real. Science becomes their god and, as the Bible
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Chris, I know I said my last post was the last to you and Fistcuffs, but I take your desire to move on with the discussion as a very good sign pointing to the desire of searching for the truth, wherever it might be. This is in spite of the observation that you have decided to take offense from the conclusions you have drawn from my arguments. I get your point and think your question is fair: why couldn't God have done this or that? I totally agree with you on this; based on the premise that God is the Sovereign Creator, He could indeed have done whatever He pleased and never be obligued to give us a clue of why or how He did it... On the same basis, we should realize that He is not subordinate to science, but science is a manifestation of part of His character, as explained before. I also hope you would agree with me that our question should not be what He could have done but what He actually did, and how we can know anything about it. The tentative proposition I gave you about creationism earlier was not to justify it as a valid replacement for evolution as a scientific theory, because I don't believe either of them qualifies as such. Nevertheless, it served a purpose in your reaction when you said that it did not answer anything, even though you did not say why. Could you say why, evolution answers those questions while special creation doesn't? The problem is that you cannot explain origins using plain science as your only tool, and the reason why you can't is not due to any lack of skill or knowledge on your part, but because the inherent nature of science and the answer to our origins fall each one in different areas of knowledge. Let me explain, because recognizing the focus of science should make it easier to identify its boundaries. Science does not stand in the field of knowledge indepent from everything else in its development, but is a particular aspect of the broader field of philosophy. It holds to a particular view about the nature of our world and how we can know about it. Science relies on the empirical approach to knowledge; its matter of study is whatever is observable and/or measurable. This is its metaphysical foundation, or its view of what is real. So far so good, we keep studying the phenomena and we get very practical and useful results. The problem arises when, based on these results, many scientists and their followers place so much confidence in science that they end up challenging whatever is outside of its field as not real. Science becomes their god and, as the Bible
Not all Chris' are the same. My last name doesn't start with an 'L' for instance. This is my second post on this subject.
juanfer68 wrote:
I also hope you would agree with me that our question should not be what He could have done but what He actually did, and how we can know anything about it.
Thank you. We can't know anything about it, and that includes you. Evolution could then be a tool in his toolbox right?
juanfer68 wrote:
I have grounded my interactions on premises that I have tried to keep as cogent as possible as I can.
No you haven't actually...
juanfer68 wrote:
Granted, the Bible is not a book on science
Exactly. Its a book of parables written by man with the declaration of being inspired by god. It is not valid. You can't use scripture to argue against science. Sorry.
juanfer68 wrote:
Regarding what the purpose of the Bible is, just as I have taken the time documentating myself about evolution, not only on the nature of its claims but on its philosophical foundations as well, I hope you will also take the time to read it and discover what it really is all about, without relying on popular wisdom or even religious leaders from any denomination.
Funny. I've studied it. Read it since a wee lad. I'm even a Christian, although now more inline with the agnostics and Nassenes. But that has nothing to do with understanding our world around us in terms of science and the theory of evolution. I don't see the two as mutually exclusive or orthogonal principles. This is where I think you're confused and making Creationism a different religion. One of idolatry even.
This statement was never false.
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Not all Chris' are the same. My last name doesn't start with an 'L' for instance. This is my second post on this subject.
juanfer68 wrote:
I also hope you would agree with me that our question should not be what He could have done but what He actually did, and how we can know anything about it.
Thank you. We can't know anything about it, and that includes you. Evolution could then be a tool in his toolbox right?
juanfer68 wrote:
I have grounded my interactions on premises that I have tried to keep as cogent as possible as I can.
No you haven't actually...
juanfer68 wrote:
Granted, the Bible is not a book on science
Exactly. Its a book of parables written by man with the declaration of being inspired by god. It is not valid. You can't use scripture to argue against science. Sorry.
juanfer68 wrote:
Regarding what the purpose of the Bible is, just as I have taken the time documentating myself about evolution, not only on the nature of its claims but on its philosophical foundations as well, I hope you will also take the time to read it and discover what it really is all about, without relying on popular wisdom or even religious leaders from any denomination.
Funny. I've studied it. Read it since a wee lad. I'm even a Christian, although now more inline with the agnostics and Nassenes. But that has nothing to do with understanding our world around us in terms of science and the theory of evolution. I don't see the two as mutually exclusive or orthogonal principles. This is where I think you're confused and making Creationism a different religion. One of idolatry even.
This statement was never false.
Chris, I apologize for the misunderstanding about your identity.
Chris-Kaiser wrote:
Thank you. We can't know anything about it, and that includes you. Evolution could then be a tool in his toolbox right?
To start, please tell me how do you know we cannot know anything about it? Did you experience this absolute negative? Can you observe it? Can you rationally infer it? I do know that God created every species after their own kind because He has revealed this in the Scriptures. Don't you trust revelation? I would be utterly confused if you don't based on my last paragraphs in this post. For the time being, at least please tell me something about what you trust as a source of knowledge.
Chris-Kaiser wrote:
Exactly. Its a book of parables written by man with the declaration of being inspired by god. It is not valid. You can't use scripture to argue against science. Sorry.
Granted: the Bible is a book written by man with the declaration of being inspired by God. Now, was it inspired or not? Why is it not valid? Is it not true that you can at least start with it as a reliable historical source? I hope you haven't studied the Bible in the same way you misread my post. If you read it again you should realize that I was not arguing against science, but clearly against its irrationally misuse and deification as the only way of knowing something. Please address a simple issue: explain how do you demand scientific proof of anything without proving first the elements you will use to evaluate that proof, i.e. the laws of logic and the reliability of your senses, your past experience, your memory, along with the principles of causality and induction? Do you trust them implicitly? Is it just because everybody else does? Or you just know they are there and would not even bother to answer nonsensical questions like this?
Chris-Kaiser wrote:
Funny. I've studied it.
You may find it funny, but if you have studied the Bible, how can you come to the conclusion that it is a "book of parables" when parables comprise just a small percentage of its contents? Well, probably the people, places and events mentioned there, along with their historical value, have been taken seriously by archeologists and historians just because they enjoy reading moral stories.
Chris-Kaiser wrote:
I'm even a Chri
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I consider it not only useful, but also our duty, to apply critical thinking; particularly to any system of thought that affects or challenges our view of reality, how we know what we know and how we should live our lives.
Juanfer
Of course, I agree; it is our duty to think critically, and especially regarding world-views and other such metaphysics. This is why I was so awe-struck by the thoughtful critique of your original post so eruditely expressed by Chris Losinger that I simply could not (ok, I could have, but chose to not) resist congratulating him on a job well done. :laugh: Though, I can't help but wonder about this "duty" business. Where does that all come from? Surely, the only "duties" one can ground in the UIND ("Un-Intelligent Non-Design," aka "Darwinism") are those often referred to as the 4 Fs: Feeding, Fighting, Fleeing, and Reproducing.