Originally posted by Nineveh
Are you implying being exclusive makes one wrong on the face of a matter?
What is this supposed to mean???
Originally posted by Nineveh
Are you implying being exclusive makes one wrong on the face of a matter?
As aharvey has said, his "beliefs" about ultimate origins of the universe or life are irrelevant to the validity of the science of common descent in evolutionary theory. He could say, for instance, God "poofed" into existence the first single-celled creature which then divided according to the natural laws God infused into the primordial biological processes of life, and then those two divided, and so on... And then the entirely "naturalistic" process described by evolutionary theory lead to the emergence of the diversity of life as we know it. Or he could say that God "poofed" the entire creation into existence, aka the "big bang," and completely "naturalistic" processes lead to the emergence of everything we see today, life included. Or he could say that our "universe" is really just an insignificant "bubble" that emerged from the interaction of an infinite number of other "universes" and there is, in fact, no God and no "beginning" to any of this "stuff" we call the "universe" or "reality."Originally posted by Nineveh
So your personal ideas about where matter came from and how it got into a form your schooling can pick up with are...?
That's the weird, wild nature of message boards.Originally posted by Nineveh
While the "Degrees" in this forum would love dearly to keep this thread on an evo only topic, this thread was about a museum to begin with.
So what? I design and develop databases and client-server and web applications using various techniques and programming languages, but I don't have to know or even care about or even vaguely think about the origins of the languages I use to program something. I don't have to know a darn thing about the old vacuum tube computers to program a web site in Cold Fusion, for instance. If I have any interest in the "origins" of computing, that interest has little, if any, direct relevance to how I do my job today. Same thing is true of doing science (and theory, for that matter) in the biological disciplines.As of this point in the thread, no one has bothered to address their ideas on origins of matter or the origins of the "origional ancestor/s". Evo doesn't cover that, remember? Yet there isn't much in the way of even guesses from people who hold degrees as to their own beliefs on the topics.
Hence my referrence to teaching philosophy in high school.Except the issues of where matter came from and how the matter became arranged to produce an "ancestor"?
Originally posted by Nineveh
this thread was about a museum to begin with.
Originally posted by Nineveh
"Except the issues of where matter came from and how the matter became arranged to produce an "ancestor"?
Originally posted by Jukia
For what it is worth--I think all the matter came from the big bang 15 billion +/- years ago, and we are here through natural processes.
No clue what caused the bang. Nor any real idea of whether or not the math works but all the big shots with "Degrees" seem to be in basic agreement.
Don't like my answer--then get yourself a "Degree" and attack it.
And exactly how it all began has little to do with evolution and the biology behind it (and that is something I do know something about as a result of my (horrors) degrees).
Get some real education for a change and stop depending on AIG etc.
Originally posted by Nineveh
While the "Degrees" in this forum would love dearly to keep this thread on an evo only topic, this thread was about a museum to begin with.
I did address your questions by using the analogy of the origins of computers and their irrelevance to the current work of computer programming, and I also addressed your questions by reflecting on the irrelavance of "grand myths" to the validity of scientific methods in the work of discerning biological common descent.Originally posted by Nineveh
cur_deus_homo,
And out of all you had to say, you still didn't address the questions, why?
No, it's not, and that's precisely the point! Thanks for making that point for us.Is it really so hard for evos to think outside what evo explains?
Originally posted by Nineveh
What makes evo any more or less "true" to you than your feelings about how matter came to be?
Real education like: "No clue what caused the bang. Nor any real idea of whether or not the math works but all the big shots with "Degrees" seem to be in basic agreement."?
Where did I say "I don't care" about the philosophy / theology of "origins?" And also how can you possibly accuse me of never having pondered these issues when the bulk of my nearly 700 posts on TOL are related to this issue?Originally posted by Nineveh
So basically you don't care where matter came from nor how it got in an "ancestor" form. I guess it's just hard for me to imagine you have never pondered the thought.
See above.Well, so far, aharvey hasn't, and you simply just don't care.
Jukia? For the record, I'm an IT professional and a seminarian with the goal of entering a PhD program in theology in the next one or two years.I guess the lawyer is the only one who can even imagine anything outside evo so far...
Originally posted by Nineveh
(ICR loyalty oath requires members to believe in a young-earth-goblal flood view of the world)
john,
Are you implying being exclusive makes one wrong on the face of a matter?
Originally posted by Nineveh
aharvey,
So it's not about Coral Ridge teaming up with CSI? Odd title for the thread then. Still no thoughts on matter or the first ancestor/s?
Originally posted by cur_deus_homo
Where did I say "I don't care" about the philosophy / theology of "origins?" And also how can you possibly accuse me of never having pondered these issues when the bulk of my nearly 700 posts on TOL are related to this issue?
Come on...
Jukia?
For the record, I'm an IT professional and a seminarian with the goal of entering a PhD program in theology in the next one or two years.
Originally posted by john2001
I am pointing out that ICR is not a scientific organization. It is not possible to do science, an investigative enterprise, when the end results of your investigations are already predetermined.
In science the chips fall where they may. We have to accept the results of scientific investigation whether we like them or not.
Since Nin is looking for our thoughts on this, I'd like to recall something I read in Davies's The Fifth Miracle (if I remember correctly) about the replication of "pre-genetic" material and the crystallization of clays. Ah, here's a site that talks about this in detail. I think the chemistry of it all is somewhat tenuous as it might account for the origination of life, but, hey, that's how science works.Originally posted by aharvey
As far as the origin of life is concerned...
No, I don't.Originally posted by Nineveh
Do you believe Christ was the Word?
Originally posted by aharvey
I was challenging the notion that this was an evolution-free thread, not that it wasn't about a museum!
If you had any familiarity with string theory, you would understand why I don't have any strong opinions about the origin of matter!
As far as the origin of life is concerned, I can easily imagine that, given a billion years or so, and the (insert unimaginably large number) atoms on planet Earth, the flukey conditions needed to get the ball rolling
are likely to have occurred somewhere at least once.
And there's no reason to assume that the earliest life forms...
Originally posted by cur_deus_homo
No, I don't.
I believe Christ IS the Word.