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  4. Evolution works in mysterious ways

Evolution works in mysterious ways

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  • P Patrick Etc

    I don't understand why you don't just give up. You're the unarmed savage against a well-equipped, advanced Roman army. What is your professional training that might give you even the slightest bit of knowledge in the fields of chemistry and evolutionary biology? It's getting kind of pathetic watching this go on. You're talking about things you know absolutely nothing about, against someone who does this for a living and has extensive education on the subject. First year biology students know more about this subject than you are demonstrating. You believe all sorts of things about how genes behave, except all of them are demonstrably false by repeated proven experiment. Really, this is getting pathetic.


    It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity. - Albert Einstein

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    73Zeppelin
    wrote on last edited by
    #228

    Patrick S wrote:

    I don't understand why you don't just give up.

    Are you kidding? Did you see the exercise in momentous frustration I had to endure before the Grand Idiot finally shut up about the origin of atmospheric oxygen? I don't particularly like to swear, but it was absolutely fucking ridiculous that I had to go through that to prove something that was obvious from the beginning. Understand that these two don't understand reality the way you and I understand reality.

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    • D DemonPossessed

      Matthew Faithfull wrote:

      In fact it is extremely unlikely that an organism will evolve any positive mutations in one generation and then the probability of them surviving is reduced in every generation by the chance of their effect being undone by far more common negative mutations.

      This is disproven because we can observe bacteria and insects evolving resistance to pesticides and antibiotics because of evolutionary processes on a small scale.

      Matthew Faithfull wrote:

      The chances of two single mutations, both positive and cumulatively positive accumulating in one organism are exponentially less and then even less likely to survive because the target for random damage is now twice as big and so on and so on until you find that the few hundred tiny differences supposed to exist between a pliocence era horse and modern one are so unlikely you're talking 1/number-of-atoms-in-the-universe and then some.

      Wrong. If organisms with a certain small positive change are more likely to survive then ones without that change, over time organisms with that small mutation will be the norm in a species, then from there organisms with another positive change will be selected by natural selection the same way as before. It is not two random steps in the dark. For instance, using the bacteria example again, if natural selection was truly random, which it is not, what are the odds of bacteria evolving resistance to antibiotics?

      Matthew Faithfull wrote:

      In fact so unlikely that spontaneous generation of the whole horse at once through quantum fluctuations is actually more likely. And that just to get a horse form un ugly horse in a hundred million years. To get a full blown mammal even a tiny one from a single celled proto organism, well you'd be writing zero's on every quark in the universe and you'd run out.

      Once again, you fail to understand that cumulative change by natural selection is not random.

      I'm a Christian: I *know* that I'm perverted. - Ilion

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      Matthew Faithfull
      wrote on last edited by
      #229

      DemonPossessed wrote:

      This is disproven because we can observe bacteria and insects evolving resistance to pesticides and antibiotics because of evolutionary processes on a small scale.

      No we do not, where do you get the idea that these traits are evolved?

      DemonPossessed wrote:

      Wrong. If organisms with a certain small positive change are more likely to survive then ones without that change, over time organisms with that small mutation will be the norm in a species, then from there organisms with another positive change will be selected by natural selection the same way as before. It is not two random steps in the dark.

      Wrong, you can't take the good wihtout the bad, every surviving organism however selective you are will always carry more detrimental mutations than positive ones however many positive ones it has, by the time your fly has evolved a leg it will have lost its wings and be blind in one eye. No good saying then it will be selected out because there goes your half eveolved leg, selecte dout with it. no good saying there'll be another fly along wiht the same positive mutations because it will carry its own overload of negative mutations. In practice of course by the time you've go this sort of large scale change by mutation you've wrecked the species and its gone extinct.

      DemonPossessed wrote:

      Once again, you fail to understand that cumulative change by natural selection is not random.

      :laugh: So you add random to random and get not-random now that would be magic indeed if it wasn't nonsense. The non random nature of the selection does not reduce the randomness of the mutation. Every time it occurs it's random. Every time it occurs you're firing a bullet at your mechano construction, 1 in many millions it sticks and makes it stronger but by the time you've fired that many bullets there's nothing left to stick to. If you throw out every structure when it start to get badly damaged you just run out structures, however many you've got, because you can't make any less damaged than the previous generation.

      "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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      • I Ilion

        Paul Watson wrote:

        Reason is what we base everything on.

        This isn't actually true as a general rule; quite opposite, in fact. And, on a personal level, I've encountered only one atheist trying to be reasonable and rational ... and his fellow 'atheists' would have none of it ... and I encountered him personally precisely because I "went out of my way" to register at Internet Infidels (or, as I like to call it, "Invincible Ignorance") so that I could try to give him a spot of encouragement to act as a counter to the visciousness of his fellow 'atheists.'

        Paul Watson wrote:

        I do admit atheists can be difficult to reason with however as we tend to have been quoted the Bible as valid points against our arguments. We grow weary with scripture and do not always give enough time and respect to every Jesus freak who comes along.

        'Atheists' "can be difficult to reason with" precisely because they tend to be irrational and unreasonable persons. The flaw is within the 'atheists' themselves; it has nothing to do with the local concentration of Jesus Freaks. For example, I *never* throw the Bible at you people ... but you all continuously claim I do. All the arguments and claims I make are drawn entirely on what you people claim to "base everything on" ... and you all still act like vampires encountering garlic. Or crosses.

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        Paul Watson
        wrote on last edited by
        #230

        Ilíon, please don't think that because I am an aethist that I am part of some greater movement or that I have fellow atheists around me or that I go to gatherings or visit atheist websites or any such thing. I barely got through the God Dellusion. I dislike radical atheists and dislike what many atheists are doing; repeating the mistakes of religion (radicalism, vitriol, arrogance, ignorance etc.) In the context of this thread Matthew said that I cannot be moral as I have no God to give me moral guidance. That is insulting and arrogant. If you believe that too then you are also arrogant and you are insulting me (not aethiest, you are just insulting me. If other aethiests want to be insulted by it then fine but I don't claim they are.) Another thing, as I am soon to be a father; your belief is overt while what I believe is not. My children won't be brought up as atheists, just good people. If they choose faith over reason then fine. But in a Christian household children are brought up as Christians and have to choose to get out. Opt out vs. opt in. And you cannot refute this; Christian children are christened at an age where they do not understand what is going on. That is so wrong I find it hard to tolerate. And I am not "you people" just as you are not "you people." We're both guys trying to live the best lives we can in the way we see fit.

        regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa

        Fernando A. Gomez F. wrote:

        At least he achieved immortality for a few years.

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        • M Matthew Faithfull

          So you say and yet not one argument I have made has been shot down, the great mountain of hard evidence for the magic information generating mechanism of evolution has turned out to be non existent, most of those claiming expertise have turned out to know less than I do and I never claimed that was very much. Evolution has been dimissed and we have moved on to more interesting topics. you cling to your primitive beliefs if you wish but they will produce nothing but technical dead ends, philosophical black holes and social disintegration. I understand fully why you post empty insults but it doesn't make you any less wrong.

          "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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          73Zeppelin
          wrote on last edited by
          #231

          Matthew Faithfull wrote:

          So you say and yet not one argument I have made has been shot down,

          Dear God, I'm having flashbacks... :omg: :wtf: :wtf: :omg: :omg: X|

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          • M Matthew Faithfull

            DemonPossessed wrote:

            This is disproven because we can observe bacteria and insects evolving resistance to pesticides and antibiotics because of evolutionary processes on a small scale.

            No we do not, where do you get the idea that these traits are evolved?

            DemonPossessed wrote:

            Wrong. If organisms with a certain small positive change are more likely to survive then ones without that change, over time organisms with that small mutation will be the norm in a species, then from there organisms with another positive change will be selected by natural selection the same way as before. It is not two random steps in the dark.

            Wrong, you can't take the good wihtout the bad, every surviving organism however selective you are will always carry more detrimental mutations than positive ones however many positive ones it has, by the time your fly has evolved a leg it will have lost its wings and be blind in one eye. No good saying then it will be selected out because there goes your half eveolved leg, selecte dout with it. no good saying there'll be another fly along wiht the same positive mutations because it will carry its own overload of negative mutations. In practice of course by the time you've go this sort of large scale change by mutation you've wrecked the species and its gone extinct.

            DemonPossessed wrote:

            Once again, you fail to understand that cumulative change by natural selection is not random.

            :laugh: So you add random to random and get not-random now that would be magic indeed if it wasn't nonsense. The non random nature of the selection does not reduce the randomness of the mutation. Every time it occurs it's random. Every time it occurs you're firing a bullet at your mechano construction, 1 in many millions it sticks and makes it stronger but by the time you've fired that many bullets there's nothing left to stick to. If you throw out every structure when it start to get badly damaged you just run out structures, however many you've got, because you can't make any less damaged than the previous generation.

            "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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            DemonPossessed
            wrote on last edited by
            #232

            Matthew Faithfull wrote:

            Wrong, you can't take the good wihtout the bad, every surviving organism however selective you are will always carry more detrimental mutations than positive ones however many positive ones it has, by the time your fly has evolved a leg it will have lost its wings and be blind in one eye. No good saying then it will be selected out because there goes your half eveolved leg, selecte dout with it. no good saying there'll be another fly along wiht the same positive mutations because it will carry its own overload of negative mutations. In practice of course by the time you've go this sort of large scale change by mutation you've wrecked the species and its gone extinct.

            You are just re-wording the same argument that I have addressed several times and getting more and more ridiculous. The random mutations that we are talking about are not on the scale of a leg or wing. :rolleyes: Clearly, you don't want to really try to understand what I am explaining and most every scientist and science book author can explain much better.

            I'm a Christian: I *know* that I'm perverted. - Ilion

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            • 7 73Zeppelin

              Patrick S wrote:

              I don't understand why you don't just give up.

              Are you kidding? Did you see the exercise in momentous frustration I had to endure before the Grand Idiot finally shut up about the origin of atmospheric oxygen? I don't particularly like to swear, but it was absolutely fucking ridiculous that I had to go through that to prove something that was obvious from the beginning. Understand that these two don't understand reality the way you and I understand reality.

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              Matthew Faithfull
              wrote on last edited by
              #233

              73Zeppelin wrote:

              Understand that these two don't understand reality the way you and I understand reality.

              Hey, you said something true, take a bow. :rose: :laugh: :rose:

              "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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              • M Matthew Faithfull

                On the operation of a peaceful democracy I agree with you. That you haven't let slip a belief is I think doubtful, you just don't acknowledge it as such. "You can't impose your beliefs on others" is not different in its imperative or restrictive nature from "Thou shalt not kill". The main difference is that it is internally contradictory as by stating it you are denying it, clever that. There ought to be a term for statements that explicitly or implicitly deny themselves. :)

                "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #234

                My point is simple. Any belief system that does not recognize the right of others to hold a different belief is undemocratic. People with differing beliefs cannot coexist without this imposition. There cannot be unrestricted freedom for everyone. On the other hand, if you do not see much value in such co-existence, or if imposing your beliefs on others is very important to you, you are free to do that too. But, people will try to stop you from stepping on them. That is exactly the problem with radical Islam -- they cannot tolerate people who do not agree with them.

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                • 7 73Zeppelin

                  Patrick S wrote:

                  I don't understand why you don't just give up.

                  Are you kidding? Did you see the exercise in momentous frustration I had to endure before the Grand Idiot finally shut up about the origin of atmospheric oxygen? I don't particularly like to swear, but it was absolutely fucking ridiculous that I had to go through that to prove something that was obvious from the beginning. Understand that these two don't understand reality the way you and I understand reality.

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                  DemonPossessed
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #235

                  73Zeppelin wrote:

                  Understand that these two don't understand reality the way you and I understand reality.

                  Obviously, I have been talking to Matthew Faithfull for a over an hour now and he still can't (or refuses to) grasp that natural selection is not random and that evolution does not deal with impossibly improbable single step changes.

                  I'm a Christian: I *know* that I'm perverted. - Ilion

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                  • D DemonPossessed

                    Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                    Wrong, you can't take the good wihtout the bad, every surviving organism however selective you are will always carry more detrimental mutations than positive ones however many positive ones it has, by the time your fly has evolved a leg it will have lost its wings and be blind in one eye. No good saying then it will be selected out because there goes your half eveolved leg, selecte dout with it. no good saying there'll be another fly along wiht the same positive mutations because it will carry its own overload of negative mutations. In practice of course by the time you've go this sort of large scale change by mutation you've wrecked the species and its gone extinct.

                    You are just re-wording the same argument that I have addressed several times and getting more and more ridiculous. The random mutations that we are talking about are not on the scale of a leg or wing. :rolleyes: Clearly, you don't want to really try to understand what I am explaining and most every scientist and science book author can explain much better.

                    I'm a Christian: I *know* that I'm perverted. - Ilion

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                    Matthew Faithfull
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #236

                    DemonPossessed wrote:

                    random mutations that we are talking about are not on the scale of a leg or wing.

                    And if they never reach that scale then those things cannot evolve, making my point precisely. Your insistence that I don't understand you is going nowhere, I comprehend what you're saying perfectly well I simply disagree with it. You conclusions do not follow from your arguments, you're saying I've got 2 and 2 of course I can make 5 and I'm saying no you can't. The fact that 5 exists simply proves it did not come about by the combination of 2 and 2. I do not require a clearer explanation of the process of addition I understand it and its consequences, in this case you clearly don't. :rolleyes:

                    "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                    • M Matthew Faithfull

                      DemonPossessed wrote:

                      random mutations that we are talking about are not on the scale of a leg or wing.

                      And if they never reach that scale then those things cannot evolve, making my point precisely. Your insistence that I don't understand you is going nowhere, I comprehend what you're saying perfectly well I simply disagree with it. You conclusions do not follow from your arguments, you're saying I've got 2 and 2 of course I can make 5 and I'm saying no you can't. The fact that 5 exists simply proves it did not come about by the combination of 2 and 2. I do not require a clearer explanation of the process of addition I understand it and its consequences, in this case you clearly don't. :rolleyes:

                      "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                      DemonPossessed
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #237

                      Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                      And if they never reach that scale then those things cannot evolve, making my point precisely.

                      :laugh::laugh::laugh: I never said that they cannot reach that scale, just that they cannot reach that scale in one mutation. The fact that you thought that was an argument proves my point.

                      I'm a Christian: I *know* that I'm perverted. - Ilion

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                      • L Lost User

                        My point is simple. Any belief system that does not recognize the right of others to hold a different belief is undemocratic. People with differing beliefs cannot coexist without this imposition. There cannot be unrestricted freedom for everyone. On the other hand, if you do not see much value in such co-existence, or if imposing your beliefs on others is very important to you, you are free to do that too. But, people will try to stop you from stepping on them. That is exactly the problem with radical Islam -- they cannot tolerate people who do not agree with them.

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                        Matthew Faithfull
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #238

                        Thomas George wrote:

                        Any belief system that does not recognize the right of others to hold a different belief is undemocratic.

                        Agreed. I have no problem with that as religion is clearly more fundamental than democracy and believe me I'm a democrat.

                        Thomas George wrote:

                        People with differing beliefs cannot coexist without this imposition

                        They can as long as the belief systems include that you should treat others as well as yourself despite their lack of a right to behave the way they do and let God be their judge. Hence Christianity can co-exist peacefully for its part anywhere except in a radical post-modernist sciety which imposes it's belief that you should not actually beileve in your beliefs, i.e. you should live a lie and believe nothing. we have not quite reached that situation in the west yet but there are many who would welcome it.

                        Thomas George wrote:

                        There cannot be unrestricted freedom for everyone.

                        I think you mean license and no there can never be unrestricted license for everyone ever, anywhere, even in an entirely post-moderinst belief denying distopia.

                        Thomas George wrote:

                        That is exactly the problem with radical Islam

                        It is one of the problems with radical Islam a close second after it being completely wrong perhaps.

                        "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                        • D DemonPossessed

                          Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                          And if they never reach that scale then those things cannot evolve, making my point precisely.

                          :laugh::laugh::laugh: I never said that they cannot reach that scale, just that they cannot reach that scale in one mutation. The fact that you thought that was an argument proves my point.

                          I'm a Christian: I *know* that I'm perverted. - Ilion

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                          Matthew Faithfull
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #239

                          No, I said they cannot reach that scale and you failed to provide any argument as to why they can. I never at any stage talked about them reaching that scale in one mutation that was your false assumption. You persist in the 'your an idiot' line of argument entirely at your own expense. It detracts from your already weak argument and just makes you look foolish.

                          "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                          • M Matthew Faithfull

                            No, I said they cannot reach that scale and you failed to provide any argument as to why they can. I never at any stage talked about them reaching that scale in one mutation that was your false assumption. You persist in the 'your an idiot' line of argument entirely at your own expense. It detracts from your already weak argument and just makes you look foolish.

                            "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                            DemonPossessed
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #240

                            Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                            No, I said they cannot reach that scale and you failed to provide any argument as to why they can.

                            Yes, I did. But given the exponentially better odds of developing a small change that will be helpful, it is much more likely that this will happen. And by taking small steps this way, one small positive mutation "selected" by natural selection at a time, it is exponentially more likely that X will be reached then by one extremely lucky random mutation. And Wrong. If organisms with a certain small positive change are more likely to survive then ones without that change, over time organisms with that small mutation will be the norm in a species, then from there organisms with another positive change will be selected by natural selection the same way as before. It is not two random steps in the dark.

                            Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                            . I never at any stage talked about them reaching that scale in one mutation that was your false assumption.

                            You said it was equally probable As you're clearly an expert tell me now, if a single step has a probability of X and another subsequent step a probability of Y. How do you calculate the probability of X occuring and then Y occuring. I look forward to seeing how this comes out as more probable than just X occuring Now I could keep on copying and pasting my rebuttals to your same argument that you will no doubt re-word again, but I am going to let you have the last word.

                            I'm a Christian: I *know* that I'm perverted. - Ilion

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                            • A Al Beback

                              Oakman wrote:

                              Al, Adam and Eve didn't have any daughters.

                              :omg: Does that mean Eve got busy with her own sons? (I don't care enough to look it up.)

                              - Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is impotent. - Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. - Is he both able and willing? Whence then is evil? - Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God? Epicurus

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                              Oakman
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #241

                              Al Beback wrote:

                              Does that mean Eve got busy with her own sons

                              Nope. It turns out that there were some "Sons of men" living nearby for the "Sons of God" to cohabit with. No real explantion of where they came from - but then again there is some kind of a reference to Adam's first wife (Lilith) so maybe she had a litter.

                              Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

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                              • D DemonPossessed

                                Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                                No, I said they cannot reach that scale and you failed to provide any argument as to why they can.

                                Yes, I did. But given the exponentially better odds of developing a small change that will be helpful, it is much more likely that this will happen. And by taking small steps this way, one small positive mutation "selected" by natural selection at a time, it is exponentially more likely that X will be reached then by one extremely lucky random mutation. And Wrong. If organisms with a certain small positive change are more likely to survive then ones without that change, over time organisms with that small mutation will be the norm in a species, then from there organisms with another positive change will be selected by natural selection the same way as before. It is not two random steps in the dark.

                                Matthew Faithfull wrote:

                                . I never at any stage talked about them reaching that scale in one mutation that was your false assumption.

                                You said it was equally probable As you're clearly an expert tell me now, if a single step has a probability of X and another subsequent step a probability of Y. How do you calculate the probability of X occuring and then Y occuring. I look forward to seeing how this comes out as more probable than just X occuring Now I could keep on copying and pasting my rebuttals to your same argument that you will no doubt re-word again, but I am going to let you have the last word.

                                I'm a Christian: I *know* that I'm perverted. - Ilion

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                                Matthew Faithfull
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #242

                                DemonPossessed wrote:

                                But given the exponentially better odds of developing a small change that will be helpful, it is much more likely that this will happen. And by taking small steps this way, one small positive mutation "selected" by natural selection at a time, it is exponentially more likely that X will be reached then by one extremely lucky random mutation.

                                Which is nonsense.

                                DemonPossessed wrote:

                                Wrong. If organisms with a certain small positive change are more likely to survive then ones without that change, over time organisms with that small mutation will be the norm in a species, then from there organisms with another positive change will be selected by natural selection the same way as before. It is not two random steps in the dark.

                                Which is also nonsense.

                                DemonPossessed wrote:

                                You said it was equally probable

                                No I did not. I asked you to admit that a long chain of contingent proababilities gets exponentially less likely with each step. You did not because that would mean macro evolution was impossible. There is no last word on this because you cannot accept that your religious faith in a discredited barmy theory is undermined. Say what you will, I have to get dinner. :)

                                "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                                • D DemonPossessed

                                  73Zeppelin wrote:

                                  Understand that these two don't understand reality the way you and I understand reality.

                                  Obviously, I have been talking to Matthew Faithfull for a over an hour now and he still can't (or refuses to) grasp that natural selection is not random and that evolution does not deal with impossibly improbable single step changes.

                                  I'm a Christian: I *know* that I'm perverted. - Ilion

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                                  73Zeppelin
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #243

                                  DemonPossessed wrote:

                                  Obviously, I have been talking to Matthew Faithfull for a over an hour now and he still can't (or refuses to) grasp that natural selection is not random and that evolution does not deal with impossibly improbable single step changes.

                                  Enjoyable isn't it?

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                                  • M Matthew Faithfull

                                    73Zeppelin wrote:

                                    Understand that these two don't understand reality the way you and I understand reality.

                                    Hey, you said something true, take a bow. :rose: :laugh: :rose:

                                    "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                                    73Zeppelin
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #244

                                    :rolleyes:

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                                    • P Paul Watson

                                      Ilíon, please don't think that because I am an aethist that I am part of some greater movement or that I have fellow atheists around me or that I go to gatherings or visit atheist websites or any such thing. I barely got through the God Dellusion. I dislike radical atheists and dislike what many atheists are doing; repeating the mistakes of religion (radicalism, vitriol, arrogance, ignorance etc.) In the context of this thread Matthew said that I cannot be moral as I have no God to give me moral guidance. That is insulting and arrogant. If you believe that too then you are also arrogant and you are insulting me (not aethiest, you are just insulting me. If other aethiests want to be insulted by it then fine but I don't claim they are.) Another thing, as I am soon to be a father; your belief is overt while what I believe is not. My children won't be brought up as atheists, just good people. If they choose faith over reason then fine. But in a Christian household children are brought up as Christians and have to choose to get out. Opt out vs. opt in. And you cannot refute this; Christian children are christened at an age where they do not understand what is going on. That is so wrong I find it hard to tolerate. And I am not "you people" just as you are not "you people." We're both guys trying to live the best lives we can in the way we see fit.

                                      regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa

                                      Fernando A. Gomez F. wrote:

                                      At least he achieved immortality for a few years.

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                                      73Zeppelin
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #245

                                      I know you're trying to be civil. Don't say I didn't warn you when you get a reply.

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                                      • L leckey 0

                                        I would maybe listen to someone who claims evolution never happened if they were atheist.

                                        CP Offenders: Over 50 offenders and growing! Current rant: "Me thinks CP needs an application process!" http://craptasticnation.blogspot.com/[^]

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                                        Christian Graus
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #246

                                        Well, that's a contradiction, evolution is the default position of an athiest, that goes without saying.

                                        Christian Graus Please read this if you don't understand the answer I've given you "also I don't think "TranslateOneToTwoBillion OneHundredAndFortySevenMillion FourHundredAndEightyThreeThousand SixHundredAndFortySeven()" is a very good choice for a function name" - SpacixOne ( offering help to someone who really needed it ) ( spaces added for the benefit of people running at < 1280x1024 )

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                                        • O Oakman

                                          Christian Graus wrote:

                                          Well, you're presenting an interesting dichotomy

                                          Again, it's a matter of whether the tool works.

                                          Christian Graus wrote:

                                          What if not everyone who doesn't believe 100% in evolution believes in a young earth

                                          As long as it's a matter of belief, there will be an inability to accept facts that contradict what is believed. I personally don't believe in Evolution, I simply accept it as the best explanation possible. If there is a God that actually gives a damn about such things, then I would have to assume that He created the earth in such a way as to support the Theory of Evolution to such an extent that rejecting it might be a minor blasphemy Edit:

                                          Christian Graus wrote:

                                          The Bible doesn't actually say that

                                          The quote regarding Giants is directly from the Bible, as I am sure you know.

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                                          Christian Graus
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #247

                                          Oakman wrote:

                                          The quote regarding Giants is directly from the Bible, as I am sure you know.

                                          Yes, I do know that. I meant the young earth bit. My point really, was that I saw in the paper that 'the platypus proves evolution'. It really doesn't. If you accept the basic premise then working within that premise, the platypus does not disprove it, and can be made to fit. The same is true for those who believe in a young earth ( I don't, as I think I made clear ). So, I guess my point was more about the media presenting things that people will blindly accept, that are plainly not true.

                                          Christian Graus Please read this if you don't understand the answer I've given you "also I don't think "TranslateOneToTwoBillion OneHundredAndFortySevenMillion FourHundredAndEightyThreeThousand SixHundredAndFortySeven()" is a very good choice for a function name" - SpacixOne ( offering help to someone who really needed it ) ( spaces added for the benefit of people running at < 1280x1024 )

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