This isn't a spelling bee, but that should be Homo Floresiensis and Denisovans.
Yup, I was careless and pushed for time on my phone...
This isn't a spelling bee, but that should be Homo Floresiensis and Denisovans.
Let's use words the way they're commonly used. I'm a little disappointed that I thought I was discussing evolution with someone who genuinely had some knowledge about it and wanted to learn more and discuss informed opinions, and now I find out you think it's just something expanded on and taught by atheists, so it can't be trusted.
All or nothing! No middle ground of a combination of the two?
An analogy. Assume you are a passenger in a self-driving car. The car was designed and made to get you from your starting point to your destination. But it seems that there is an unforeseen event (as happened with a big truck making a turn across the car's path) that input from the driver is required.
With evolution, the path is set (programmed if you want) to produce the stars, planets and galaxies. And for a planet such as Earth to evolve life, and ultimately intelligent life. This is a totally deterministic universe requiring no input from God once he starts the process. He might as well not exist, and he has no purpose since man has no free will and he knows everything that will happen. (Some people do believe this to be the case.)
But what if God is either not able to pre-program the entire universe from t=0 to t=infinity, or he does not wish to pre-program in order to give man free will?
He would then require one or maybe more strategies. Intervene now and then to guide the process, or rewind time and make an undetectable correction.
Darwin explained evolution by natural selection. This explanation does not exclude God as much as many atheists would like to think it does. Can you or anyone else provide evidence that says that subtle (or should I say non-detectable) intervention has not taken place?
Why are you twisting my words then Pup?
I have made it clear that my impressions of hard atheists and how they use the theory of evolution to hold up their belief that humans are nothing special, make the theory suspect.
Humans are obviously something special.
You attempt to link me with theoretical material which will convince me that humans are nothing special.
Perhaps the problem here is that you cannot really believe that some atheists are as much liars as some theists, but whatever.
4/3rds of Americans don't understand fractions you know.
No... I really don't think I've misrepresented anything that you've written.You are obviously misrepresenting what I have written.
By your logic, chimpanzees are special kinds of apes. Gorillas are also special kinds of apes. Every species within a genus or a family is a special kind of that animal. Heck, every species is a special kind of something. There's a reason that the root words for species and special are the sameMy point had everything to to with the particular species called 'ape' and in that regard, yes, we are indeed a special kind of ape. Not just the same in the way a dog and a wolf are the same. We are more evolved than any other ape.
The error in your approach, as I see it, is that the designation of "special" presupposes that there's a hierarchy to evolution - that there's a "better than", or a "more evolved" state. There's no hierarchy. It assumes that humans are "more evolved" than chimpanzees or cats or cockroaches. We're not.
We've simply evolved along a different path that passed on different traits, and those traits benefit us as a species very well. But we're not "better evolved" or "more evolved" than any other animal in existence.
Darwin explained evolution by natural selection. This explanation does not exclude God as much as many atheists would like to think it does.
Can you or anyone else provide evidence that says that subtle (or should I say non-detectable) intervention has not taken place?
This seemed something new, a new admission that you distrusted evolution not because you'd studied it and found it lacking, but because you didn't like the kinds of people who taught it. It was "taught according to strong atheist alphas and as such it can't be trusted..."
I thought we were discussing the elements of the theory and that perhaps, by explaining it better, I could show that what you thought were mistakes, really weren't. That your conception of evolution used to be common, but had changed in the 20th Century. That "advanced" really wasn't a stand-alone word and needed a modifier, but if you added a modifier so I understood what you were asking, I'd probably agree.
Now it seems that everything I said was wasted, because it was all about me and others as people, not about the actual evidence or logic behind the theory.
Is that not accurate? What's inaccurate about it? I don't want to twist your words and didn't realize I was.
Well, that's the theory of evolution as it stands today. I wanted to show that I was accurately reporting modern mainstream science, not going off on my own quirky interpretation.
If you just want to reject it because you don't like the people involved, well, reject away. Knowledge about science wouldn't matter.
Though I'd suggest at least getting the people right. Theists and soft atheists probably make up the majority of teachers/writers on evolution. I have no way of knowing the religious beliefs of the people who wrote those pages, but that's the point. One can't tell. The science is the same. A biologist who was Christian, Jewish, hard atheist, or soft atheist would describe the current theory of evolution the same way, just as a Christian, Jewish, hard or soft atheist astronomer would describe the solar system the same way, regardless.
Huh? Who's lying?
Really, it doesn't matter, because I'm done. If we're discussing facts, evidence, information and science, I'll do it all day, because it's fun to share information, and the basis behind the modern theory of evolution is something I enjoy discussing.
If it becomes clear that the person I'm talking with thinks such stuff can't be trusted because it's taught by people like me, then we've left the science building and are in the courtyard where the mean girls hang out.
I'm going back into the science building.
If I gassed you with helium to kill you, and the doctors said you died of natural causes, does that mean that no intervention took place? Helium or argon gassing leaves no detectable trace that I am aware of.
"More evolved" assumes a hierarchy to evolution, where there is none. Which was the entire second half of my post:
You're dancing too far away from the music.Assuming a hierarchy isn't in itself a bad thing. There is simply no denying the evidence that humans are far different than any other ape and indeed, the fact that we name things and collect significant data and every other thing which we do so differently from other apes shows clearly that in nature - specifically in human nature, hierarchy exists as a reality and is not necessarily for that - a bad thing either.
Not saying that the notion of hierarchy cannot be used for good or for evil purposes, but only that it exists as a reality - even in relation to the social structures of all the various species on the planet.
I bet even you could name those aspects of the critter kingdom which have hierarchies...not because humans have named them such, but because humans have observed them as being real things.
Tell me who is the head of the:
Bees
Wolves
Elephants
Chickens
See? Hierarchy structures are evident in nature (evolution) and to think otherwise is simply not seeing the wood for the trees.
Pecking order is a natural outcome of this process.
I would most appreciate Navigator's answer but anyone can play.
Theoretical scenario . . .
An atheist has caused the deaths of some people and is about to cause the deaths of more. You have the ability to cause the death of the atheist to prevent her from causing more deaths of these people that include children, women and members of your own family. Would causing the death of the atheist be good or evil?
ETA - There is no other way to prevent the atheist from causing the deaths than causing her death.
When all is said and done, the facts informed me.
The purpose of humanity is to pass on our genes. Same purpose of everything else alive.
Well biologists must only focus on the form rather than how differently the form works for humans than for all the other apes and biologist mustn't have noticed that all other family related animals are all too similar to one another, except for the humans re the apes.
FTFYAre you not using even the more modern up to date theory you speak of here as a means of saying (as a hard atheist) that GOD does not need to exist?
Are you not using even the more modern up to date theory you speak of here as a means of saying (as a hard atheist) that GOD does not exist?
Well if that is all you are saying, what is the fuss about the theory anyway?
Like I asked. 'What then is the fuss?' How come the theory of evolution is applicable as a device to argue against the thread topic even?

Edited to add: darn it, it's so hard to write about natural selection without implying that animals are trying, Lamarckian-style, to breed themselves better. We all know, I hope, that zebras don't try to have stripes, or wolves don't try to have human-friendly pups. There's a variation in offspring, and more of the fittest ones, on average, will survive. The next generation will also have random variation, with the average maybe a bit more toward the previous generation's success, and again the fittest on average will survive. Multiply by a thousand generations, more or less, and the change in the average might be obvious and genetically "breed true," assuming the environment is stable and hasn't selected differently.
Just wanted to be clear I wasn't saying that animals were trying to evolve to exploit a new niche. They can't help it.
Rubbish. You twist your own words to avoid revealing what you really believe because you don't want to admit you're a theist. You also don't provide explanations when asked to clarify your words.Why are you twisting my words then Pup?
If evolution has “intelligent process” and humans have “intelligent purpose” within that process, then it follows there's an intelligence behind the process and purpose (aka “Intelligent designer/creator”).Obviously it has it uses but I have seen enough of the theory to recognize the intelligence of the process therein and I have also explained why humans have an obvious purpose in relation to the universe and form they occupy.
To believe evolution can't and doesn't work without an intelligent designer is saying “evolution is bull”. You have admitted you “recognize” an intelligent designer. That's the same as admitting you believe there is one.Just a reminder, I have never said evolution was bull. It is fascinating stuff but doesn't compel me to believe it can only work without intelligent design.
Apparently they are "enlightened" facts that can only be seen and understood by the "enlightened"What facts are those?