Uh, no. No one, not scientists, not even you, "have to" believe in god, any god, for any reason.
You didn't even glance at the doc, did you? :chuckle:
Uh, no. No one, not scientists, not even you, "have to" believe in god, any god, for any reason.
The point is that, when it was first discovered, it was the evolutionary experts (so-called) who labelled it such and then had to backtrack.
When will you guys stop doing that? But if you do, wouldn't it be nice to have as much exposure to the recant as there is to the original embarrassing mistake?
Evolutionists love it when the argument is over what something is called.
Does a scientist from a Buddhist background have to believe in Buddha in order to do his work?
Evolutionists hate reading.Take the time to read the linked item. The answer is therein.
AMR
Your question implies that if they aren't found together in the same fossil layer, they didn't live on earth at the same time. By that line of reasoning, we might assume coelacanths and humans didn't live at the same time. Humans and coelacanths both live in 2015 but are not found in the same geological layers.If dinosaur fossils are the result of the Flood and we have found dinosaur fossils all over the world, where are the fossilized remains of the hundreds of millions of humans that would have perished in the Flood?
Your question implies that if they aren't found together in the same fossil layer, they didn't live on earth at the same time. By that line of reasoning, we might assume coelacanths and humans didn't live at the same time. Humans and coelacanths both live in 2015 but are not found in the same geological layers.
Your question implies that if they aren't found together in the same fossil layer, they didn't live on earth at the same time. By that line of reasoning, we might assume coelacanths and humans didn't live at the same time. Humans and coelacanths both live in 2015 but are not found in the same geological layers.
Your question implies that if they aren't found together in the same fossil layer, they didn't live on earth at the same time.
There are lots of reasons to reach that conclusion. Not only are they never found in the same strata, they are separated by tens of millions of years of strata.
I understand how up front, you refuse to accept that conclusion, but that only matters to you. In the meantime, science marches on, and none of it is based on your beliefs about dinos co-existing with humans.
You didn't even glance at the doc, did you? :chuckle:
Jose,
what should we make of finding a mammoth who has died by unnatural wounds?
Those which have been killed by spears and clubs and rocks. Are those images false? Are they merging two times which could never have overlapped?
There are lots of reasons to reach that conclusion. Not only are they never found in the same strata, they are separated by tens of millions of years of strata.
I understand how up front, you refuse to accept that conclusion, but that only matters to you. In the meantime, science marches on, and none of it is based on your beliefs about dinos co-existing with humans.
Interplanner said:6days,
I don't think you've got his question. The fair question would be 'would human and coelacanth fossils of today show in the same layer in the future?' How on earth could we both be alive today but not in the same layer in future findings?