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I'm still waiting on the answer to how freshwater and saltwater animals lived at the same time in a flooded world.
:thumbsup: Yeah, and in a couple of more years they'll be walking upright on two feet & playing UT football.
It's fun, but not very constructive, to attribute the standards and expectations of one theory on another. The flood theory does not predict that fish had to have time to evolve into people-- just that fish would need time to evolve into...
Fish.
Why anybody that believes any of the fantastic stories in the bible would even worry about empirical explanations or theories about what may have physically happened is beyond me. What's the point?
It's faith, is all it is. Then when some piece of "evidence" does come up, be it the supposed remains of the ark itself, Jesus tomb, bleeding statues, or divine faces on grilled cheese...it is pounced on like a man floating aimlessly through some ocean of uncertainty that has finally found a little island of data.
That's a common, but very strange statement, if I may say so. When two groups are discussing two possibilities of "truth", there are lazy shorthands to discount the arguments of the "other" side. One is to a priori attribute the competing viewpoint as fantasy. The other is slightly more subtle, but equally a lazy, shorthand bypass.
And that is to use a similar argument to "well, you are arguing faith, and that has nothing to do with reality, now does it?"
See how that's an ignorant, lazy shortcut to discussion? Both sides of the argument are wrestling for "truth". Both sides are wrestling with what did, or did not happen on the planet earth. Both sides have physical evidence to observe and weight.
The funny part is that both sides are using forensic and logic to seek that truth. Neither side can recreate the events of the past.
Funny. Really funny way to live life and seek dialog with others...
Disagree on fundamental grounds. In this case, one side has an end state (Biblical) and is working backwards from that to formulate theories and discuss evidence. The other side is starting with available evidence and using that to formulate theories on an ever changing possible end state(s) as new data becomes available.
Two different modes of thought. One requires faith up front, the other puts faith....I guess you can call it...into the evidence and has no preference to any given final explanation.
Most of the issues that non-believers hang their hat on, are non issues.
Most of the issues that non-believers hang their hat on, are non issues.
To believers I would agree. If it is matters of faith people will believe what they feel is necessary, regardless of empirical or physical evidence to the contrary. So any attempt to play that game with non believers seems rather fruitless to begin with.
Exactly!
To believers I would agree. If it is matters of faith people will believe what they feel is necessary, regardless of empirical or physical evidence to the contrary. So any attempt to play that game with non believers seems rather fruitless to begin with.
Hmmm... This, coming from the proponent of a scientific materialism that defines that the only framework from which to interpret evidence is the a priori belief that physical reality is all that exists.
Once again, you show your utter and unabashed hypocrisy.
