Stratnerd
New member
exactly why religious explanations do not belong in a science classroom. Or, even better, use creationism as an example of how not to look at the world.School is supposed to be a place to learn how to think, not what to think.
exactly why religious explanations do not belong in a science classroom. Or, even better, use creationism as an example of how not to look at the world.School is supposed to be a place to learn how to think, not what to think.
Originally posted by Dimo
Well if you say so. But that is not what I consider myself.
Originally posted by Stratnerd
if you want to get right down to epistemological questions then I think science would win over revelation easy - esp comparing science to Genesis.
Just make a list of predictions about the what the world would look like given each scenario and see which one works better. The answer is obvious and is the one that is taken up by the world as a whole -
that doesn't eliminate the explanation of common descent with those sequences being important so you still can't point to a designer - especially since you don't know how a designer would go about designing. Moreover, as I pointed out before, we can predict the importance of sequences assuming an evolutionary paradigm something that can't be done otherwise.
and breaking no laws of nature... which is what you do.
it has but religious fundies don't care about evidence! The reason we get bent out of shape, at least for me, is that the fundies are forcing their way into schools sans scientific backing.
if DNA wasn't a good carrier of information how could it have lasted so long? but I fail to see why poofing it is necessary... do we see any workings of this process today?Windows XP didn't make itself out of nothing. The intelligent designers at MS did, yet the DNA code is vastly superior.
that's why poofing will never be part of science..Discovering how things work is what Science is supposed to be about.
you're invoking the supernatural as an explanation.No, when I stumble, I fall. I can't break gravity. When I don't organize, things tend toward chaos...
it's the distortion of evidence... for example, look at the way you present DNA differences between us an chimps... "looks more doubtful" etc etc but what are the differences?That seems to be enough to get you guys in a tizzy.
Originally posted by Stratnerd
As one creationist on this board likes to explain: "That which explains everything explains nothing". I still haven't heard a good justification for the "God did it" inference from looking at DNA sequences.
if DNA wasn't a good carrier of information how could it have lasted so long? but I fail to see why poofing it is necessary... do we see any workings of this process today?
that's why poofing will never be part of science..
you're invoking the supernatural as an explanation.
it's the distortion of evidence... for example, look at the way you present DNA differences between us an chimps... "looks more doubtful" etc etc but what are the differences?
but the sequences aren't random and are likely due to shared ancestry not random chance :shrugs back:Intelligence makes more since than random chances : shrugs :
Then mutations that cause death or life-long suffering are good too? And you still haven't provided a descent way to justify the God inference.God made the DNA good in the beginning, just like everything else. I think we are seeing how well DNA works everyday.
sorry, but it happens naturally every day in every living organism (there are exceptions) but this is likely a historical phenomenon - if not then what makes left-handed AA so special?*poofing*, as you call it, is what one has to believe in able to accredit mother nature accidentally joining two left handed molecules together in chuck's "essotric soup".
only for the ignorant and the handful of fundies out thereYeaaaah , but somehow it has usurped biology all together...
AGAIN I'll ask, what was the estimated difference and what is it now?I presented one thought on the topic. "the closer we look the more difference we will see". That's all I said.
Originally posted by Stratnerd
but the sequences aren't random and are likely due to shared ancestry not random chance :shrugs back:
Then mutations that cause death or life-long suffering are good too? And you still haven't provided a descent way to justify the God inference.
sorry, but it happens naturally every day in every living organism (there are exceptions) but this is likely a historical phenomenon - if not then what makes left-handed AA so special?
only for the ignorant and the handful of fundies out there
AGAIN I'll ask, what was the estimated difference and what is it now?
Originally posted by Nineveh
I think it would be neat if we could get some dino DNA to compare ...
doesn't need instructions...I guess the essoteric soup came with instructions?
of course... so DNA isn't good anymore? and sin affects DNA? got any evidence that this is so?No. But, it wasn't always that way. God created things good and we mucked it up by sinning.
you still haven't provided any framework to determine what is due to supernatural and what might be due to common decent and how to tell the difference.According to the article, apparently they thought the differences would be much less, because they were "suprised" to see that many differences in just one comparison. (chimp to human)
as a creationist, what would you predict about those same areas and why? be specific.I think it would be neat if we could get some dino DNA to compare ...
Originally posted by Nineveh in response to Stratnerd
I can't believe your prejudice. Did you bother to look at the credentials of the man who wrote the article I posted to you yesterday?
Originally posted by Stratnerd
doesn't need instructions...
of course... so DNA isn't good anymore?
and sin affects DNA?
got any evidence that this is so
you still haven't provided any framework to determine what is due to supernatural and what might be due to common decent and how to tell the difference.
as a creationist, what would you predict about those same areas and why? be specific.
Originally posted by aharvey
Credentials by themselves don't mean much. Just because Brewer has published lots of papers (none of which, from what I can see, having any connection with creation "science") doesn't mean his ideas are immune from scrutiny.
To keep it simple, let me provide just one example of deception from that piece of drivel ...
Originally posted by Dimo
I measure all my attitudes and behaviors by Christ's example. If I see things in other religions or in life that are in line with Christ's example I accept those as His truth, whether or not they claim to be Christian. The concept of Christianity was not created by Christ, but his followers. Jesus lived to set the example, his followers referred to their path as Christianity.
It may seem to you that I make things up as I go, but the only difference between you and I is that I do not make the assumptions that you make. You believe that the tradition of "fundamentalism" is the only path. I believe that the only fundamental concept of Christianity and Judaism for that matter is that there is only one God. Everything else follows historically from the point that the first humans had this revelation. And yes I often make logical and emotional connection between parts of scripture and/or life that I had not made before. So yes I guess you could say that I am making it up as I go. But that is because neither life, ourselves or our understanding of truth is stagnant. The Bible is a living breathing document. It is not just a snapshot of history.
Do you have a better way?
Originally posted by Dimo
Neither. I am my own person. I have my own set of experiences. Each person's perspective is based upon their particular set of experiences.
I assure you that I do the same. The only difference is that I do not hold the traditions that have been past down from previous generations as superior to my own reasoning ability. Nor do I hold ideas authored by contemporaries as superior to orthodoxy. To me all of these sources must be given equal consideration. I weigh all ideas, whether they be orthodox or reformative, against my own intellectual and emotional reasoning.
How do you discern the accuracy of a particular take on any passage from scriptures?
Originally posted by Nineveh
(regarding Steve Austin's bogus geology.)
... and so you you will believe as you like.
(Regarding Kenyon)
Then you should know a lot more about Kenyon than you appear to.
All I can say is... this guy seems more into the cell game than most on this thread.
School is supposed to be a place to learn how to think, not what to think.
(animal emotional structure)
Dogs do not have a sense of humor. I still can not believe you believe this.
I'm glad to see you don't believe morals are found at the zoo, like humor.
(regarding the Nature article)
They were the ones suprised by the research results. So they may know a lil more about what they put in that article. Some others are suprised at how exactly the same some parts of our DNA is compared to mice and rats, too.
Originally posted by john2001
I happen to be an earthscientist, so my opinion is not the opinion of a lay person. None of the items that ICR has published so far is science. All of these things are scientific sounding apologetics written for lay people.
There was little in what Kenyon said on that program which reflects the current issues in abiogenesis. Indeed, there was little or no discussion of the recent discoveries associated with the RNA world hypothesis, which is where the current issues of abiogenesis.
Again, abiogenesis is not evolution (i.e. origin of species) so attempting to link the two subjects as being dependent upon one another is a cheap debating trick, nothing else. Furthermore, tearing down a field of mainstream science does not automatically elevate creationism of any form, including intelligent design creationism.
From his article we only can note that the genomes of microorganisms display characteristics consistent with cross-species exchange of genetic material.
He doesn't mention that.
The intended effect is that the reader will believe that *all* genomes similarly cannot be organised in a simple heiarchy of relatedness, which is patently false.
Part of learning how to thing is to learn which people you trust, and which ones you can't trust. Students in gradeschool and highschool are not equipped to actually evalute the quality of scientific evidence, themselves. A student cannot simply walk into an advanced field of science and "play at the level of the big boys".
For example, few scientists with expertise in any of the fields related to the things we are discussing would view *any* of the articles put out by ICR, CRI, Answers in Genesis, or any of the other creationist sources as having scientific content.
I never said that "dogs have a sense of humor", however it is clear that chimpanzees do, in the sense of playing tricks. All of the mamals seem to have a sense of playfulness, which gets more complex the closer the species is to humans phylogenically. Humor as practiced by humans is largely a language thing.
Morality, as in moral *codes* are a human thing.
Animals have a social structure that seem to share many characteristics of those aspects of human culture that we would call "moral" as well as that which we would calle "immoral".
You understand, of course that when scientists study the genetic distance between species this is done via comparisons of the mitochondrial DNA. This is because the DNA in the mitochondria do not undergo recombination, and are inherited only from one parent. The only differences seen in the mitochondrial DNA are from non-recombination related mutations.
The nuclear DNA, on the other hand undergoes recombination and is inherited from both parents. No doubt there will be genetic differences between the chromosomal DNA of even closely related species. Because relatedness between species will already be established via comparisons of the mitochondrial DNA, studies such as those in the Nature article willl have no impact whatsoever on the issue of common descent. What they will allow is a measure of variation due to genetic drift and recombination related mutations.