Evoken
New member
...seperate creations are unlikely to use the same "hardware".
Why? We humans do that all the time.
Evo
...seperate creations are unlikely to use the same "hardware".
Doesn't the fact that they can trade genes argue for a common ancestor? A gene is a pretty complex protein and seperate creations are unlikely to use the same "hardware".
Yes, and the simplest creatures known use hundreds if not thousands of such complex proteins and the "rules" for generating them are stored in the DNA, which in turn requires proteins to support the translation machinery. All this literally boggles the minds of those involved in figuring out how it all works in detail. I will reactive my thread :Cell Trends Two so you can get a "feel" for why people believe that the cell is the most sophistated and complex piece of machinery ever designed, by a country mile, making anything ever created by mankind to look absolutely childlike in comparison.
But getting back to your posting, if creation by God is involved who are you little man to tell God what He can or cannot do when creating the first lifeforms?
And if you are suggesting that nature did the "creating" then you should be able to use your own argument to rule out separate creations.
(Except for the inconvenient fact that not all creatures use the same DNA code scheme.)
There is some reason to believe that such inconvenient exceptions like non-standard DNA code schemes may have been planned deliberately in advance to thwart a future evolutionary explanation. At least that is the theme of "The Biotic Message".
Why? We humans do that all the time.
Evo
I would not presume to put limits on the Divine- but it seems to me that the set-up favors evolution. MAcguy mentioned "The Biotic Message". I checked it out, and it doesn't seem to fly. It's basically just a rehash of arguments for the punctuated equilibrium model of evolution spun to try and bolster creationism. I have yet to see any of this prove to be a better explaination than evolution. What are you talking about not using the same DNA scheme- it's all based on the same amino acids, same basic shape. What exceptions are these? I'm curious.
99.9% of lifeforms use a "standard" translation table to go from DNA code to the amino acids which make up proteins.
But some lifeforms have been found that use a slight variation of the "standard" translation table.
Of course, evolution is so flexible that people can invent a "story" to explain any possible finding. This isn't science, it is psuedoscience posing as science.
Much of what goes on in biology is good solid science that can be tested and replicated, but there is a darkside element in biology that substitutes "stories" for experiments and has been very successful in convincing our society that it must be good solid science because it gets published in otherwise respectable journals.
Even some of the good solid science can be tainted by evolutionally storytelling in the conclusion section of an otherwise valuable article. This may sometimes be necessary to make the article "acceptable" to be published in what has become a very "politically correct" environment regarding the subject of evolution versus creation.
I don't think its storytelling- I think variations on a basic theme are what evolution is all about. Even when taken down to the level of DNA. If it were completely different then some people would have some 'splainin to do, but I don't see why this bothers you.
For a lifelong science lover like myself it is rather appalling to recognize the pathetic scientific state of most of what is known as "evolutionary science".
My favourite subject on evolution is the Whale. I made a post about this.
http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?t=35863&highlight=Whale
Whales and their land ancestors are a good evidence for evolution, even their spines ect.
Abiogenesis is unproven but a logical preconclusion to evolution.
The very existance of the whale and it's transistional fossil record completly disproves YEC.
Slowly slowly tranformy monkey (Not that whales came from monkeys)
Personally, I believe that the universe is ~20 billion years old, the earth is ~4 billion years old, and evolution is an unproven and, in light of recent evidence, a fairly flimsly hypothesis. The fossil record does everything but support evolution.
I would recommend reading Evolution: A Theory In Crisis by Michael Denton. He is an agnostic. I personally will do my best to refute every claim in support of evolution.
Take your best shot! :chew:
What kind of science do you like, bob?
nope, 13.7 billion years ago. you were closer with the age of the earth, it's 4.5 billion years old.Didn't the Big Bang occur ~20 billion years ago? Or am I behind in the times? Hmm....
fair enough.I think the universe is old because of science. In the words of another Old Earth Creationist, to say the universe is only a week old is an insult to science, scientists, and the One who invented science in the first place.
He manages to support his argument rather well. The Hebrew word for day, yom, actually has three meanings: sunrise to sunrise, sunrise to sunset, and a period of time. Hebrew is literally a thousand times smaller than English in terms of vocabulary, so Hebrew words usually have several meanings, determined by context.
Besides, I believe Genisis 1 is a literary framework-- God simply organized it in the fashion that he did for the sake of the Hebrews, and to create a seven day week with one rest day.
It's not so much that the fossil record contradicts Darwinism-- it's more that it simply does not support it. However, I can think of two examples that contradict it: the Cambrain Explosion and the lack of evidence for a prebiotic soup that really ought to be there.
Personally, I believe that the universe is ~20 billion years old, the earth is ~4 billion years old, and evolution is an unproven and, in light of recent evidence, a fairly flimsly hypothesis. The fossil record does everything but support evolution.
I would recommend reading Evolution: A Theory In Crisis by Michael Denton. He is an agnostic. I personally will do my best to refute every claim in support of evolution.
Take your best shot! :chew:
The Cambrian Explosion occured ~500 million years ago (very rough estimate... the date escapes me.) Prior to this, we have a few sponges, a few cute little jellyfish, nothing in particular-- then bang! Complex organisms with no prior common ancestors. It's been a huge thorn in the side of Darwinism since it was discovered.
As for the pribiotic soup, Darwin speculated in one of his letters that life originated in a nice, little pond with all the things necessary for life. Since one of these ponds has a fairly high content of certain elements, that should be present in the fossil record. Sadly, there are none.
Java man and archaeoptryx (sp?) are another two examples that are cited by evolutionists, though it is fairly easy to prove them wrong.
Personally, I believe that the universe is ~20 billion years old, the earth is ~4 billion years old,
I would recommend reading Evolution: A Theory In Crisis by Michael Denton. He is an agnostic.
again, you've come very close by just guessing the dates based on memory. the cambrian explosion took place about 540 million years ago, but it was not the origin of complex life. evidence of multicellular life from about 560 million years ago as well as from about 590 million years ago appears in the doushantuo formation in china (chen et al. 2000, 2004). testate amoebae are known from about 750 million years ago (porter and knoll 2000). eukaryotes (which have relatively complex cells) may have arisen 2,700 million years ago according to fossil chemical evidence (brocks et al. 1999). there is more...The Cambrian Explosion occured ~500 million years ago (very rough estimate... the date escapes me.) Prior to this, we have a few sponges, a few cute little jellyfish, nothing in particular-- then bang! Complex organisms with no prior common ancestors. It's been a huge thorn in the side of Darwinism since it was discovered.
As for the pribiotic soup, Darwin speculated in one of his letters that life originated in a nice, little pond with all the things necessary for life. Since one of these ponds has a fairly high content of certain elements, that should be present in the fossil record. Sadly, there are none.