How intrepid!Lon also breaks the irony meter.
:nono: Truth is truth no matter where it comes from
and you'd be an idiot (frankly) to think the scientific process is the only 'source' of it. That's really 'stupid' thinking, frankly.
On top of that? Truth stands no matter what lack or advance we might possess to apprehend it.
We likely differ on how much we think we can verify is true. I'm saying what is true is true whether you or I verify it or not. We can change opinions but we are powerless against what is constant/true. God and whatever He says will remain constant are logically and philosophically and biblically, the only constants, verifiable or not (doesn't matter if we can or cannot).This is to say that truth is true. Indeed it is, but this is a tautology. The contention here is whether or not the claim as made by 6days, is the truth. That is what we disagree on. If only it were as simple as declaring what we believe the truth, then what need have we for evidence?
Agree. I was using some of your reasoning's implications to enter the discussion. The discussion between science and religion will always lead to respective concerns but I'm saying we are more on page if both theologians and scientists are doing what they are supposed to. For the most part, it isn't over data, it is over 'interpretation' of data.I don't believe I've ever stated this. In any case this discussion has consisted of 6Days asserting that the science supports his position of faith that neanderthals are the ancestors of anatomically modern humans. In his faltering attempt to do so, he has receded into assuring me that his faith is its own evidence. He has failed the standard as he has set for others (i.e., not invoking religion in a Evolution v Creation debate).
If you are talking about 'interpretation of' well and fine. If not, :nono:Beyond that, what he is claiming is "God's Word" is merely an inference he has made based upon his particular biblical hermeneutic. To call that "God's Word" is asinine in every sense of the word. Not to mention a wee bit presumptuous.
On interpretation of facts, we agree. On what one is 'capable' of asserting about imperical, I likely disagree quite a bit. "Evidence" doesn't always or even nearly always lead to facts (opinion, endeavoring to reveal educated derivative). The sooner we all get on page with this, the sooner, I think, we can jointly move forward on a theology/polical/philosophy/science discussion forum, at least on some matters. I just think it's good to discern and point out which is which so that we can banter over what is debatable and move along from what is not. It is mho that much debate comes from assertion of pseudo-facts. It is when assumed 'facts' collide that debate tends to become rigorous.Again, a meaningless tautology. Of course the truth is true. The question here is whether or not what is believed is true. Believing something doesn't make it true. We can only 'know' something is true if it can be defended rationally and empirically. If it cannot be defended rationally and empirically, then it's probably not true, and the holder never had good reason to believe it anyway.
Daedalean's_Sun said:And here we have it. One failed evidence and you are already appealing to faith.6days said:Neandertal humanity does not hinge on DNA, but that is one of many evidences. The best evidence ....the only one that ultimatly matters is Gods Word. We know that all humanity are descendants of Adam and Eve.Science also confirms the humanity of Neandertals. They created art. They used jewelery and makeup. Neandertals made tools. They farmed and had healthy diets. They created music. Neandertals cared for their young...and the elderly. Neandertals seemed to understand some chemistry making things such as pitch.
Daedalean's_Sun said:I'm sure you believe this. Belief is not knowledge. We don't know any such thing.6days said:We know that all humanity are descendants of Adam and Eve.
We likely differ on how much we think we can verify is true.
I'm saying what is true is true whether you or I verify it or not. We can change opinions but we are powerless against what is constant/true.
Agree. I was using some of your reasoning's implications to enter the discussion. The discussion between science and religion will always lead to respective concerns but I'm saying we are more on page if both theologians and scientists are doing what they are supposed to. For the most part, it isn't over data, it is over 'interpretation' of data.
If you are talking about 'interpretation of' well and fine. If not, :nono:
On interpretation of facts, we agree. On what one is 'capable' of asserting about imperical, I likely disagree quite a bit. "Evidence" doesn't always or even nearly always lead to facts
The sooner we all get on page with this, the sooner, I think, we can jointly move forward on a theology/polical/philosophy/science discussion forum, at least on some matters. I just think it's good to discern and point out which is which so that we can banter over what is debatable and move along from what is not. It is mho that much debate comes from assertion of pseudo-facts. It is when assumed 'facts' collide that debate tends to become rigorous.
In this case, what 'can' and 'can't' we know about the fact that Neandrathal DNA and ours is nearly identical?
At the very least, science is having to take a few sheepish steps back from bold assertions. That's a good thing. Any time my child's textbooks can be corrected to reflect what many of us thought was rather obvious, is a good step in the right direction.
What failed evidence are you talking about? DNA?
DNA IS just one of many evidences of the humanity of Neandertals.
So Evolutionists have backpedalled and now say it seems Neandertals and 'moderns' interbred about 37,000 years ago.....Not 550,000–690,000 years ago. The evolutionists still aren't quite correct on their dates but are about 600,000 years closer to correct than they previously were.
I don't expect you to agree with me on that point DS. But I think most Biblical creationists would agree "We know based on knowledge, that all humanity are descendants of Adam and Eve".
Yes...VERY similar to us. You and I are also similar to each other, just as we are also similar to Asians, Australian Aborigines, and Pygmies. Neandertals are simply a people group that has gone extinct.Daedalean's_Sun said:Neanderthals are human in the sense that they belong to the genus Homo and they are very similar to us...
Daedalean's_Sun said:but your claim that Neanderthals are our ancestors is most certainly false.
The DNA evidence isnt what YOU want it to show...but it is what creationist Dewitt predicted.Daeedalean's_aSun said:The DNA simply doesn't show what you want it to show.
Daedalean's_Sun said:After realizing that the science you claim backs up your assertion, does not in fact make any such claims, you've retreated to assertions of faith.
Daedalean's_Sun said:In either case, your claim is still wrong. We share a common ancestor with neanderthals, i.e., they are our cousins not our ancestors.
Yes...VERY similar to us. You and I are also similar to each other, just as we are also similar to Asians, Australian Aborigines, and Pygmies. Neandertals are simply a people group that has gone extinct.
Im sure you believe that, the same as evolutionists used to believe Neandertals were stooped over hairy dimwitted beasts. But science has proven the evolutionists wrong on those points and many others
Isn't it interesting that it is actually the evolutiinists faith which has been proven wrong about Neandertals. T Neandertals were not the stupid carnivores without culture....that evolutionary faith once claimed.
The reason evolutionists were so surprised at the 2010 results of Neandertal DNA sequencing is that it wasn't what they wanted. It is the Creationists who basically were saying 'told ya so'.
Science / archaeology has shown the Biblical creationists was correct as we now know about the humanity of Neandertals.
[/QUOTE]Nope... it seems you either aren't understanding, or not believing, it seems many of us are descendants of Neandertals.
My great-great-great grandfather’s a Neanderthal
http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/features/my-great-great-great-grandfathers-a-neanderthal/
For me: "...and/or vise versa." Meaning, some people are frankly 'too' smart (meaning unbelievable, jumping to conclusions based on supposedly intelligent assertions.Most likely.
Sure, there are probably plenty of true statements about reality which we have yet to verify. As Carl Sagan once pondered "Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known."
But this hardly does us in this discussion any good until we can assign truth, to statements about reality. I don't know if this is what you are saying, but I bristle with the notion that we can just know things without verification.
From my experience? They cry and moan like babies with any challenge. Frankly? That's EXACTLY why debate frustrates them and why creationists or any other frustrate them. "We are being hindered in our discovery!" <-- Lie. They (or you or I) shouldn't 'get' to pick our peer reviews all the time or else it is bandwagon and false. I genuinely do think too much of that is going on, and self-admittedly, even among creationists with our agenda. Personally, I have no problem with someone challenging if I 'interpret' scripture correctly or not. That is between the peer-reviewer and me, not between scripture and God so I'm not defensive other than to whatever conviction I carry that my understanding is right. I'm not really anti-science at all. I'm anti-linguistics and and over interpretation of data (just like my peers over mine). It is mho that many in both groups get too big for their shorts. Without peer review, a seeking of mutual truth is no longer the functional goal and we fight over our contrived dogmas and interpretations rather than what is true. So-what-if some things either thinks/believes is true is scrutinized along the way? If it is actually true and not an interpretive derivative, it will stand on its own merit.I think the conflict arises when you attempt to interpret the data with a pre-determined conclusion in mind. In the scientific realm, peer-review and independent reproducibility is intended to mitigate this. Certainly some 'interpretations' fit the data better than others.
To certain degrees. This is where we respectively overstep bounds. We try and assert over one another beyond what we believe is true. For me, however, having an appeal to ultimate authority helps steer what I believe about facts. Scientists, leaving that assumption behind, will indeed be searching a bit more in the dark (granting that said is true). Therefore, it would be good, as a scientist, to actually use scripture to help steer scientific inquiry. For instance: If God truly did create man unique and in His image, and if God made animal groups to produce 'after its kind' then we necessarily would have to qualify what is and isn't possible by scientific terms. For this example, I reject 'evolution' and rather say "after its kind.' God did create animals to produce after their kind so Darwin's observations about finches was fine within that construct. Some scientific terms actually eliminate God from the equation and there are scientists that try to purport a purposeless existence from random evolutionary (non sentient) processes.I am talking about both, but for the purposes of this thread 'interpretation of' works just fine to make my point.
No, this is our respective paradigm difference. I am more than convinced that things can exist whether you can verify them or not? Why? Because you are a finite (meaning limited thus unable to verify all truths) being.You've got it backwards, methinks. Facts -- and when I say facts I mean verifiable observations -- together constitute evidence of certain propositions.
I'm not sure if we are on the same page. I live as if 1+1=2 is a fact, a constant that cannot change, but I also live with the belief that individual and corporate expressions and appreciations of love cannot be (at least in any full sense) quantified. The dynamics are beyond the ken of any lab or test imho.I think this may be due to an imprecise understanding of what 'facts' are. If facts are merely true statements, then sure. I tend towards a more precise definition, to avoid just this. Usually when I speak of facts, I'm referring to verifiable observations. These kind of facts are disagree on less often.
Yep. Great question. Hitler thought it was just blonde aryans that were 'we.' I'm not sure what he was going to do with Italians or Japanese after the war. I'm not sure I'd go for a girl with a unibrow and strong forehead but that doesn't mean she was at all inferior to me.Very similar, and yet distinct enough to recognize that they are different to all living humans today. I think the disagreement is on what constitutes 'us', how human does something have to be to be regarded as 'us'?
Exactly. I don't want my Bible quoted in class persay either. I'm saying 3 steps back from assertion should be the goal. A christian kid and a nonchristian kid both can learn a lot about science together without having to hear assumptions on either's part. We know that the science community gets some leeway because they are teaching their field of study, but 'some' and 'overt' leeway is different. Corporations are perfectly suited to indoctrinate whoever they like after a student gets the elements and chemistry and biology (etc.) basics. I really don't know of any scientific endeavor at the moment that depends upon whether the earth is 6 thousand or 6 billion years old, at the moment. Let NASA teach/train or require what they need for a rocket to take off and let the rest of us concentrate more on what isn't controversial. Why waste my tax dollars (and/or your's)? It doesn't make sense. Teach what we don't fight about.What "many of us thought was rather obvious" is not indicative of veracity.
I'd think it the opposite when their 'model' looks like Jimmy Durante!How inconvenient this must be for you 6Days? Better ignore it.
I'd think it the opposite when their 'model' looks like Jimmy Durante!:doh:
For me: "...and/or vise versa." Meaning, some people are frankly 'too' smart (meaning unbelievable, jumping to conclusions based on supposedly intelligent assertions.
I went to college to think so naturally when any one or two profs asserted something where I highly doubted the connecting dots, they went crying to the dean. The dean told them what I told them: "Teach who is paying your salary! (loved that dean).
From my experience? They cry and moan like babies with any challenge. Frankly? That's EXACTLY why debate frustrates them and why creationists or any other frustrate them.
"We are being hindered in our discovery!" <-- Lie. They (or you or I) shouldn't 'get' to pick our peer reviews all the time or else it is bandwagon and false.
I genuinely do think too much of that is going on, and self-admittedly, even among creationists with our agenda. Personally, I have no problem with someone challenging if I 'interpret' scripture correctly or not. That is between the peer-reviewer and me, not between scripture and God so I'm not defensive other than to whatever conviction I carry that my understanding is right.
I'm not really anti-science at all. I'm anti-linguistics and and over interpretation of data (just like my peers over mine).
It is mho that many in both groups get too big for their shorts. Without peer review, a seeking of mutual truth is no longer the functional goal and we fight over our contrived dogmas and interpretations rather than what is true.
To certain degrees. This is where we respectively overstep bounds. We try and assert over one another beyond what we believe is true. For me, however, having an appeal to ultimate authority helps steer what I believe about facts.
Scientists, leaving that assumption behind, will indeed be searching a bit more in the dark (granting that said is true).
Therefore, it would be good, as a scientist, to actually use scripture to help steer scientific inquiry.
For instance: If God truly did create man unique and in His image, and if God made animal groups to produce 'after its kind' then we necessarily would have to qualify what is and isn't possible by scientific terms. For this example, I reject 'evolution' and rather say "after its kind.' God did create animals to produce after their kind so Darwin's observations about finches was fine within that construct. Some scientific terms actually eliminate God from the equation
and there are scientists that try to purport a purposeless existence from random evolutionary (non sentient) processes.
No, this is our respective paradigm difference. I am more than convinced that things can exist whether you can verify them or not?
I'm not sure if we are on the same page. I live as if 1+1=2 is a fact, a constant that cannot change, but I also live with the belief that individual and corporate expressions and appreciations of love cannot be (at least in any full sense) quantified. The dynamics are beyond the ken of any lab or test imho.
Yep. Great question. Hitler thought it was just blonde aryans that were 'we.' I'm not sure what he was going to do with Italians or Japanese after the war. I'm not sure I'd go for a girl with a unibrow and strong forehead but that doesn't mean she was at all inferior to me.
On a scientific note, I'm saying I agree but it looks scientifically as more alike than not.
Such has implications for how we write our textbooks. Most of us with these concerns simply want more facts and less drawn conclusions in our primary and secondary education programs. Teach kids to draw their own conclusions: WAY better than current drawn-conclusion propoganda trends.
Yes, go ahead if you are a corporation looking for something specific. If you are paying for it, you can search/explore wherever you like. If, however, you are using all the public's tax money, you really need to represent fairly what you are being paid to represent by said community and their children.
We know that the science community gets some leeway because they are teaching their field of study, but 'some' and 'overt' leeway is different. Corporations are perfectly suited to indoctrinate whoever they like after a student gets the elements and chemistry and biology (etc.) basics. I really don't know of any scientific endeavor at the moment that depends upon whether the earth is 6 thousand or 6 billion years old, at the moment.
Let NASA teach/train or require what they need for a rocket to take off and let the rest of us concentrate more on what isn't controversial. Why waste my tax dollars (and/or your's)? It doesn't make sense. Teach what we don't fight about.
Estimates based on DNA show that the last common ancestor of H. sapiens and Neanderthals lived around 400,000 years ago. This made H. heidelbergensis, a widespread species alive at the time, seem like a good candidate for that ancestor. The new study contradicts this idea. The tooth reconstruction of the last common ancestor of humans and Neanderthals created by Gómez-Robles and colleagues doesn't match the teeth of H. heidelbergensis. In fact, the researchers found that none of the human species living during the time predicted by genetic data fit the tooth pattern generated by the new study. More than that, "European species that might be candidates show morphological affinities with Neanderthals," Gómez-Robles says, which hints that these humans were already on the Neanderthal side of the split. This suggests that the last common ancestor of H. sapiens and Neanderthals lived sometime earlier, perhaps as far back as one million years ago. What does it mean? Paleoanthropologists have yet to find our last common ancestor with Neanderthals. Tracking this elusive human will require going back to museum collections and continuing searches in the field. From the new study's results, Gómez-Robles says that "we think that candidates have to be looked for in Africa." At present, million-year-old fossils attributed to the prehistoric humans H. rhodesiensis and H. erectus look promising. This critical window of human prehistory in Africa is still cloudy. "There are not so many African fossil remains dated to one million years ago," Gómez-Robles says, and those that have been found are often attributed to H. erectus. But do they really belong to this species? There may be an as-yet-unknown human hiding in the mix, and this human may be key to solving the puzzle of when our ancestors split from Neanderthals. Whether that species is waiting to be discovered in the field or is hiding within the broken and scattered remains of fossils already collected is a mystery waiting to be solved. |
:doh: Their (the link) rendition of neandrathal looks a LOT like Jimmy Durante. "Didn't mix races?" Then how did we get Jimmy Durante? It was tongue-in-cheek but I'd think Jimmy would laugh.I'm uncertain as to what this is supposed to mean.
Good question. A notion or deravative or a notion greatly substantiated without controversy? See, to me, I think 'great controversy' means someone is overstepping quite a bit or not explaining themselves very well. The only two conclusions can be 1) incorrect or 2) idiot savant.I'm not sure what you're saying. Do you accepted the before mentioned notion, that I bristle with?
:nono: Christopher Hitchens and Dawkins et al cry like babies because of the persistent questioning of supposed 'facts.' I say "Good! Cry some more and after you blow your nose, answer the question!"I disagree, but I don't see what that matters anyway.
:chuckle: Are you or am I the naive~ one? I love these questions because I don't mind if someone remotely thinks I'm naive. Doesn't bother me.Is that how you think peer-review works?
Of course. Just like above, which of us is naive and which of us is laughing? After answering that: Does it help or hinder communication? We make our own beds, I firmly believe.That seems to be precisely the problem.
I would contend that you would accept some interpretation of data if it is consonant...
...with your religious convictions, even if another interpretation better fits the data.
Yes and yes. The problem is that I have to appease/appeal to authority. It is my belief that the authority (God) cannot be incorrect or be corrected. Therefore there are only two places such can go wrong: The person telling me or the way I interpretted data myself.The only thing that should steer what you believe is the likelihood that a given statement is true.
:chuckle: (sorry) I'm a teacher. I'm fairly familiar with science within the education framework.I don't think you understand properly the culture within the scientific community.
I believe having an ultimate unfallible authority precludes such. That doesn't mean I get it right every time - I misunderstand my wife sometimes and I know her very well but that's not exactly in the dark.We are all searching in the dark, whether we want to acknowledge it or not.
I'm not convinced. If your teacher in school suggested or steered you in any scientific inquiry, you'd be wise to follow those directions. We learn from 'what we know' going toward what we don't better than when we aren't even sure what the question is supposed to be. That kind of science would be a very long time in coming around AND why we get into these conversations/debates.No it wouldn't for reasons I've already elucidated.
Somewhat agree, but also disagree. Reminds me of the joke: Two scientists challenge God when they are finally able to clone a man. God accepts and begins gathering dirt. The two scientists begin gathering materials as well and God says: "Oh no, you two have to get your own dirt!"No, God is eliminated from the equation because he is empirically undetectable by the instruments of science we have available to us. He is unmeasurable and untestable, and therefore outside the confines of the scientific method. This is not to say he doesn't exist, but that he is not subject to the scientific method.
No, not correct. You do not discover penicillin by doing a purposeless experiment. The problem is simply the scope of inquiry and I personally believe a greater scope brings greater meaning to discovery. Discovering cures for disease is certainly a corporate concern of the one shelling out money, but such cannot have meaning without the greater encompassing of helping a good deal of humanity and their families. Doctors and scientists in medicine, for example, study ethics and other philosophical matters. Philosophy has a place in our actions and in regard to them.Purpose is a philosophical question, not a scientific one.
Agreed but it doesn't preclude them either. When science and any other worldview collide, it is best to not ignore the other or disdain it. This is why there are problems yet.I've already acknowledged that there are many truths we cannot verify, but this does not grant us license to assume the truth of any unverifiable claim we like.
That there are facts that no scientist can explain. He/she/they will never be able to climb into one family and qualify the matters of love that bind it together. A good many truths are relative and very hard to qualify or quantify by any science method BUT we all believe they exist, even without those qualifications.I'm not sure I know what you mean.
Solve? No. Helps one steer their further inquiries? Yep.A great sentiment but it hardly solves the quandary.
Er, I absolutely disagree. I have absolutely no problem distinquishing any human being from a chimpanzee. Scientific? Sure it is. It isn't just appearance, it is behavior and a multitude of other differences as well. I have a very difficult time believing we have any common ancestor. On top of that "every animal producing after its kind" also enforces such notions. Science was waaaaaay to cocky to offer such up and still is. They think that 50 years or 100 and all objections would just go away? :nono: Franky, btw, that's all the more they have ever done with this. They have not fielded or entertained objections, even from their own community. Such is fairly poor discussion, fairly poor science reporting, and likely fairly poor conclusions. Its too bad they don't see the problem as one of their own making but it is.The same could be said of chimpanzees. It seems like where ever we draw the line is arbitrary.
Oh sure. I'm not for teaching creation in school unless the class is set up for the discussion of politics behind our textbooks and wants to discuss those details. I'm simply saying it is really easy to take two steps back and simply write a textbook that gives basics and lets kids and their parents draw their own conclusions. Simply tell them what we 'know' collectively. We do agree on a bit.I hope you appreciate the irony of this statement.
The only thing I want is for us to move forward on agreements, not get to hung up over disagreements. Simply don't forward them in textbooks without qualifiers. It is better to write "We believe this tells us the earth is several million years old" than "the earth is several million years old." Problem (at least for me) solved.Which is why there is a rigorous scientific process, that creationist organizations like the Discovery Institute are trying to circumvent by appealing to the voters.
Yes. See the example above.Is this a serious statement?
No, I'm talking about these peripherals mostly. Can you list one (or three) 'fact' that creationists and scientists sqabble over that is basic science that cannot be done without the divergent assumption?We're talking about the fundamentals, here. This isn't some quibble over whether Bengalia Africana belongs to Bengaliidae or Bengaliini. The age of the earth, the cause and extent of biological diversity, how fossils are dated, how reliable various dating methods are, what the fossil sequence represents, how sediments are laid down... these are fundamentals of science. These are things you need to understand to be competitive globally.
Another DS strawman. WHAT I REALLY SAID... "You and I are also similar to each other, just as we are also similar to Asians, Australian Aborigines, and Pygmies."Daedalean's_Sun said:Is that something you'd like to put to the test? That neanderthals have no more genetic differences to us than Asians do?6days said:You and I are also similar to each other, just as we are also similar to Asians, Australian Aborigines, and Pygmies. Neandertals are simply a people group that has gone extinct.
Now you are using the fallacy of moving the goalposts.....Daedalean's_Sun said:Do you have any references in scientific peer-reviewed publications that make these claims?
Daedalean's_Sun said:I'm simply arguing what the current evidence shows, if the current evidence showed that they were ancestors, then that's what I would believe. The scientists don't "want" the neanderthals to be anything and if they did why are they so willing to change the model of human origin to reflect the best available data? There is no ideological reason to favor cousin over ancestor, that's simply what the evidence shows.
Daedalean's_Sun said:6days said:Science / archaeology has shown the Biblical creationists was correct as we now know about the humanity of Neandertals.
We've always known that Neanderthals were human, the question is how closely related they are to anatomically modern humans
Daedalean's_Sun said:Your link doesn't show that. Read it. It talks about modern humans (Homo Sapiens) interbreeding with neanderthals. That would be a pretty impressive feat if modern humans didn't already exist at that point.6days said:Nope... it seems you either aren't understanding, or not believing, it seems many of us are descendants of Neandertals.
My great-great-great grandfather’s a Neanderthal
http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/featur...a-neanderthal/
Daedalean's_Sun said:more importantly you've still ignored, as I predicted you would, the more recent findings that Modern humans and Neanderthals didn't interbreed.
Neanderthals 'unlikely to have interbred with human ancestors.
Why are you ignoring the more recent findings? I know why.
In any case I replied to that article with one from April 2014 that says
"Our analysis allows us to conclusively reject a model of ancestral structure in Africa and instead reveals strong support for Neandertal admixture in Eurasia at a higher rate (3.4−7.3%) than suggested previously. Using analysis and simulations we show that our inference is more powerful than previous summary statistics and robust to realistic levels of recombination.
http://www.genetics.org/content/196/4/1241.abstract
did you read that entire paper or just the abstract? If the entire paper, does it provide a time frame consistent with your interpretation of the Bible?