Correa Neto
Philosopher
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2003
- Messages
- 8,548
Nick Harman said:...snip...Yes, a rabbit giving birth to a rabbit. The proof I have been looking for.
Nick
Sure, you've just found evidence for something called EVOLUTION .
Nick Harman said:...snip...Yes, a rabbit giving birth to a rabbit. The proof I have been looking for.
Nick
Nick Harman said:Yes, I know the rest of the page was anti-creationist, I was referring to the table only.
This list defines over 600 sciences, arts and studies of various degrees of respectability and rarity, ranging from the common and esteemed (chemistry) to the obscure and quirky (peristerophily).
Phaycops said:Once again, animals that cannot produce fertile offspring are different species, regardless of what "kind" of animal they appear to be (I'm sure the biologists here are cringing at this gross oversimplification, but I feel it is warranted to keep the debate on-track). The two rabbits that cannot produce viable offspring are different species. Get it? Regardless of the fact that they all look and act like rabbits. Lions and tigers cannot produce fertile offspring; norway rats and roof rats cannot produce fertile offspring; horses and donkeys cannot produce fertile offspring; eastern and western meadowlarks and skunks cannot produce fertile offspring.....
Jocce said:And, being a bird watcher, I have to add the roughly 8-9000 different bird SPECIES on the earth.
Nick Harman said:So is this basically an admission that you only pay attention to pro-YE text, and just ignore anything that contradicts it?Ashles said:Uh, Nick, did you read the rest of that page?
Yes, I know the rest of the page was anti-creationist, I was referring to the table only.
Then what's the point of asking us questions, or trying to answer our questions?
Do you listen to scientific sites or books for information on other matters? Or do you not trust them to teach you anything?
How would you learn what a diode is for, or how a stalactite forms, or how fast light travels, or how a television works, or anything else?
Do you trust scientific sources for some things, but not anything which contradicts your personal beliefs?
Or are you just not interested in learning anything at all to do with the world around you?
You're happy to sit in your home, warmed by gas or electricity, fed by scientific farming methods, communicating electronically with people around the world, with a lifespan extended by scientific medical knowledge... but you still won't believe anything science tells you?
How do you decide which bits to believe and which to ignore? I'm genuinely curious?
With regard to the YE and flood theories, As I said earlier, if you are going to constantly end up saying "God did it" as an answer to all these questions, then what is the point of discussing it?
And believe us, any debate about these issues will ultimately have to end up as either you saying that "God just did it", or agreeing that the earth cannot possibly by 6.000 yeears old.
All scientific evidence is completely at odds with the YE theories. All information otherwise provided by sites like AiG are either mistaken, quoting facts taken out of context or using actual deliberate misinformation.
Here's my final question for you Nick (as you appear to be ignoring most of my previous ones).
Pretend (just pretend for a second) that the Earth really is as old as we claim.
Pretend that evolution acts exactly as we claim, and that macro-evolution is real.
What would you expect to find? What things about the earth would you expect to see? What properties of geology would you expect to find?
What things would you not expect to see?
What have you ever observed in real life or learned about (from any source other than an actively pro-creationist one) that is at odds with any of this?
H3LL said:It's a good job Noah and co. dropped off the Secretary Bird in Africa before carrying all those snakes to Australia.
H3LL said:
H3LL said:I'd like to add anthropology to the list, as it's a big one that gets under YEC's skin for some reason.