Belief in religion is not the same as belief in life on other planets.juraigamer said:Evolution is a fact. A proven fact.
Religion is a belief, since you can't prove it. Same with how some believe there is life on other planets, no facts support this.
Also haters gonna hate.
yeah i know what you mean. I am an athiest but it annoys me when my religious friends tell me that they are not sure what to think about evolution because it contradicts their religion. Surely if god existed evolution would be the coolest thing he ever made, i really fail to see how the two are contradictory. Unless of course you read the entire bible literally, in which case i think i would have too start questioning your judgement.Saelune said:I dont believe in evolution. Cause that means its just something I think. I have eyes and reason though, so saying I "believe" in evolution is innacurate.
Even if you believe in God, you can know evolution. But most god fearers dont understand the middle ground.
SOME OF Haeckel's embryo PICTURES were faked. Subsequent evidence, including direct photography of embryos, has supported the idea that evolution acts on embryos just like it acts on anything else. So your claims about embryology are a lie.Cerrida said:Macro evolution is a theory, which means nothing can conclusively prove it. ("a proposed explanation whose status is still conjectural and subject to experimentation, in contrast to well-established propositions that are regarded as reporting matters of actual fact. ")So far, all of the missing links and early humans, like Lucy, have been fake. (http://www.darwinismrefuted.com/origin_of_man_02.html) Carbon dating showing ages is unreliable.(http://www.archaeologyexpert.co.uk/radiocarbondating.html ) The embryos shown in every textbook have been proven to be inaccurate and misleading (http://www.millerandlevine.com/km/evol/embryos/Haeckel.html) So, no, I don't believe in macro-evolution. Micro-evolution, which concerns changes in a single population, is a proven fact.
Of course I'm not suggesting that, I'm suggesting that evolution has no set goal in mind and that even humans are an intermediary stage of further evolution and that we may well physically change further after hundreds/thousands of generations.lacktheknack said:The idea is that God started with a pack of cells and had humans in mind. Surely you're not suggesting that every "naturally guided" evolution path would end up with humans.webby said:Speaking of "guided" evolution, I've never fully understood this concept. Evolution effectively states that genetic mutations that benefit the species will survive to pass on their DNA whilst the others will die out. This effectively means that evolution is "guided" by the environment said species is evolving in. It seems odd to claim that this is actually false and that a divine being is actually guiding the evolution, but doing it in such a way that even evolutionary traits that are clearly derived from human interference are accounted for. That just doesn't seem logical.
You missed the point. Modern programs, in just about every field, wouldn't exist with out genetic algorithms [http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=genetic+algorithms&btnG=Search&as_sdt=0%2C48&as_ylo=&as_vis=1], which are based off of the principles of evolution [http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/genalg/genalg.html].lacktheknack said:That was such a bad example. Every single one of those things is manmade. Evolution of ideas, maybe, but those don't represent biological evolution in any way. Think your examples through.mOoEyThEcOw said:Are you using a computer? Do you use google? An operating system? Play video games?
Then you use programs based off of the principles of evolution every day. Don't accept evolution as fact? Then get off the internet.
Also, welcome to the Escapist.
No, they're part of the planet. Removing them would affect humanity badly, just as we'd be adversely affected if there had never been iron. Also, who knows where his endgame is. That's one reason we have religion, you know. And future evolution doesn't really matter if God kicks the end times into gear.webby said:Of course I'm not suggesting that, I'm suggesting that evolution has no set goal in mind and that even humans are an intermediary stage of further evolution and that we may well physically change further after hundreds/thousands of generations.lacktheknack said:The idea is that God started with a pack of cells and had humans in mind. Surely you're not suggesting that every "naturally guided" evolution path would end up with humans.webby said:Speaking of "guided" evolution, I've never fully understood this concept. Evolution effectively states that genetic mutations that benefit the species will survive to pass on their DNA whilst the others will die out. This effectively means that evolution is "guided" by the environment said species is evolving in. It seems odd to claim that this is actually false and that a divine being is actually guiding the evolution, but doing it in such a way that even evolutionary traits that are clearly derived from human interference are accounted for. That just doesn't seem logical.
I'm suggesting that species adapt to their environment, so unless a divine being happened to plan for... say, the industrial revolution changing the colours of trees and therefore causing many types of moths to change colour then the hypothesis that evolution is guided by a divine being doesn't hold up.
Also, if God started with "a pack of cells and had humans in mind" then he's reached his end game. therefore he has no further plan (since he's reached what he aimed for) and therefore evolution is now unguided. That would imply that evolution would no longer occur but it does. Also, if the entire point of evolution was to create humans why are there so many species around that aren't human? Were those just failed experiments?
I'm not here to questions peoples beliefs, I was simply curious how a few things in "guided evolution" are explained, most importantly how even when humans control the environment and create changes looking for specific evolutionary reactions they occur exactly how they were anticipated. If evolution were truly guided by a God does that mean this God is simply showing us what we expect to see via the stringent experimental methodology we as humans have incorporated? If this is the case surely our expectations are guiding evolution then as this God is simply mirroring our expectations back at us, and if that were the case the theory of evolution as we "know" it would be 100% true. Therefore even the idea of guided evolution is simply the idea of "regular" evolution.lacktheknack said:No, they're part of the planet. Removing them would affect humanity badly, just as we'd be adversely affected if there had never been iron. Also, who knows where his endgame is. That's one reason we have religion, you know. And future evolution doesn't really matter if God kicks the end times into gear.
Now, this is clearly wild speculation based on the assumption that there is a God and it fits the Judeo-Christian prototype, so I'm not demanding that you accept it as a theory. Just a possibility that I've embraced.
If you cannot give me evidence proving an explanation for how life sprung out of nowhere to begin the evolution process, you cannot call evolution "fact". Telling everyone that a theory is fact is asking for FAITH. Thus, science that calls itself "fact" is no better than any faith-based religion, perhaps worse for it's claims to be above it.juraigamer said:Evolution is a fact. A proven fact.
Religion is a belief, since you cannot prove it. Same with how some believe there is life on other planets, no facts support this.
Also haters gonna hate.
Preach it brother!kidigus said:Amen.Versuvius said:I know evolution. Evolution is fact. Belief and Faith don't come into it. You can disbelieve gravity, go test how well that goes for you when you walk off a cliff.