Brother, those pale ales rresulted in my academic probation and yes many an arse to kick out of the place. If u really partied back then please tell me u hit Campus Pub. My claim to fame was dancing with Ace Clement in there one night. Mike and Willys was also live, I partied with D Goodrich and Fred White the night D Good went shopping with his agent and had just bought that new Mercedes droptop. Oh yes i rode in it. Crashed on his couch and lost my keys in his couch which was shipped to Dallas a few days later bc he had just been drafted by the 'Boys. Cost me $100 for a key to raggedy No Limit Clement dorm room lock. Lol. The lacrosse and rugby parties were the best and the around the world parties at college park! Man sorry to post OT but this all came back like a flashback in Nam. Great times
I am curious how teaching intelligent design is a laughably bogus theory while teaching that we evolved from monkeys isn't? There are some out there that use religion as a means to an end but most Christians do not shove anything down anyone's throats. Christians, for the most part, prefer to spread our religion through showing the love and kindness of our Savior to others. We preach service and sacrifice to the needy. Jesus calls us to give and care for widows, orphans, and those in need. He teaches us to love others as we love ourselves and to turn the other cheek. If this makes me a crazy delusional nonsensical person then I'll wear that mantel proudly. If you choose not to participate in religion, that is of course completely up to you. God gives us free will because He does not want our love and worship to be forced. He wants us to come to him but he will not force it. I have personally witnessed to many personal blessings and choose to see God in the design of our world to not believe in Him. I would appreciate it if you would tone down on your condemnation of religious folks on this message board. Nobody is in here giving sermons. If someone makes a religious post then you have the ability to skip it. If you do choose to respond, I'm sure everyone would appreciate a more measured response in the future.
I think you made some good points in the rest of your post, many of which I agree with (in spirit, if not in religious belief).
But I just wanted to point out that that isn't how evolution is taught or what is currently accepted by the scientific community.
Brother, those pale ales rresulted in my academic probation and yes many an arse to kick out of the place. If u really partied back then please tell me u hit Campus Pub. My claim to fame was dancing with Ace Clement in there one night. Mike and Willys was also live, I partied with D Goodrich and Fred White the night D Good went shopping with his agent and had just bought that new Mercedes droptop. Oh yes i rode in it. Crashed on his couch and lost my keys in his couch which was shipped to Dallas a few days later bc he had just been drafted by the 'Boys. Cost me $100 for a key to raggedy No Limit Clement dorm room lock. Lol. The lacrosse and rugby parties were the best and the around the world parties at college park! Man sorry to post OT but this all came back like a flashback in Nam. Great times
I am curious how teaching intelligent design is a laughably bogus theory while teaching that we evolved from monkeys isn't? There are some out there that use religion as a means to an end but most Christians do not shove anything down anyone's throats. Christians, for the most part, prefer to spread our religion through showing the love and kindness of our Savior to others. We preach service and sacrifice to the needy. Jesus calls us to give and care for widows, orphans, and those in need. He teaches us to love others as we love ourselves and to turn the other cheek. If this makes me a crazy delusional nonsensical person then I'll wear that mantel proudly. If you choose not to participate in religion, that is of course completely up to you. God gives us free will because He does not want our love and worship to be forced. He wants us to come to him but he will not force it. I have personally witnessed to many personal blessings and choose to see God in the design of our world to not believe in Him. I would appreciate it if you would tone down on your condemnation of religious folks on this message board. Nobody is in here giving sermons. If someone makes a religious post then you have the ability to skip it. If you do choose to respond, I'm sure everyone would appreciate a more measured response in the future.
As for your first question, I'm not exactly sure what you mean. If you're asking why there are currently no Neanderthals or Homo Erectus populations walking around, then there are a couple layers to answering that question.Darth, you keep up with this stuff fairly well. I'd be curious why there are no transitional forms in existence today (i.e., the multitude of forms that have evolved from apes (or horses, etc.) to the final human form. I've never really read a good answer to this and I'm hopeful you can help. I've also never read a good proposal about how something like the eye could evolve. Thanks in advance (feel free to recommend reading sources as well).
I think you made some good points in the rest of your post, many of which I agree with (in spirit, if not in religious belief).
But I just wanted to point out that that isn't how evolution is taught or what is currently accepted by the scientific community.
Faith isn't really the right term, since science is quick to dump an explanation if another, better one is found. Faith means believing in something regardless of evidence. Science is about following the evidence.Thanks Darth! I have to admit that I'd run across most of the examples you provided beforehand but you gave a good summary. I must admit, though, that it seems to me that it would take a lot more "faith" to believe that an eye evolved from an indentation over several millennia rather than from the hand of an intelligent designer. I guess I have too little faith. ;-) I also find that "adaptations" are better referred to as "abnormalities" of which the record shows that species died as a result of them rather than being able to pass them on to the next generation.
Anyway, I do appreciate the spirit and the reasoning behind your answers.
On to football, I guess.
Faith isn't really the right term, since science is quick to dump an explanation if another, better one is found. Faith means believing in something regardless of evidence. Science is about following the evidence.
As for developing from an indentation, to me there are two reasons this seems like a pretty good explanation, one scientific and one more philosophical.
1. There are extant species that represent every stage on that evolutionary path. Planarians see with those indentations, nautiluses have deeper ones with no transparent cover, etc. It's not like scientists are just making wild speculations. We can see all of the steps from indentation to eyeball in the world currently.
2. If our eyes were designed by an all knowing, all powerful creator, wouldn't they work better? Having evolved in the ocean stunted the possibilities of eyesight (because they evolved to see almost entirely refracted light). If they'd evolved on land then (in theory) we be able to see more of the light spectrum. We'd be able to see better at night. We'd be able to see better details super up close, like fish can.
This type of argument works for a lot of features on our bodies. How intelligent is it to put a playground and a sewage system right next to one another between our legs? Who would make people breath and eat with the same tube? Why give us eyes that can only see 3/16 of light there is to be seen? The fact that humans could easily design and plan a better, more efficient body lends credence to the randomness of evolution IMO.
Canines, felines, and other wild animals see very well at night. Did they not evolve in the water like humans? Or maybe I missed something about the evolution of the eye. I am truly curious.
Darth - please explain the rate of mutation of mitochondrial DNA. Is the rate the same as scientists originally determined in the recent past or have they revised it? The answer to that question is a tad important to any theory or understanding of life.
Cats, dogs, and some other animals can see really well at night, at least relative to humans. But they still aren't nearly as well adapted to it as they would be if they could see a broader range on the electromagnetic spectrum. Furthermore, most of those animals that can see at night can't even see the spectrum of colors that humans see.
The eyes of all vertebrates evolved originally in the water. Thats not to say they haven't evolved since, though. That happened a LONG time ago. Hence the adaptations animals like Eagles (who have very good long range sight) and felines have made. However, pretty much all of them have some sort of design flaw or another as a result of the randomness of evolution.
I'm sorry. Why do people have a hard time believing in intelligent design? Let's say, for the sake of argument that all life first developed in the ocean. (I concede that only because the bible states in Genesis that God first created the creatures of the sea.) Why would all higher forms of life develop to require sexual reproduction? Does it not seem like intelligent design the way life requires both male and female to reproduce? Wouldn't it have been more likely that animals would have developed to reproduce asexually? There is just too much balance in the world to allow me to see anything but intelligent design. I appreciate your argument but I still see a creator even if your argument is proven fact.
One of the other best things about McGees, being able to stumble down the alley behind the bar, only cross one real street, and then fall down inside Clement. It was a hellhole, but at least it was a close hellhole!
The important thing to remember is that life evolving the way science currently believes it did doesn't disprove the idea of some sort of creator (though it does definitely conflict with many religions' creation stories and the age many world religions believe the earth to be). The fact that the the universe all works according to a set of rules seems indicative of some sort of creator or higher power IMO.
But evolution is a scientific theory with an enormous amount of scientific backing, much like the theory of gravity (and FTR, there is still A LOT about the way gravity works scientists haven't figured out as well...doesn't mean it's not a pretty rock solid scientific fact).
As for sexual reproduction, the easiest to understand explanation is that the origin of sexual reproduction most likely happened from asexual reproduction gone wrong due to a mutation of some sort. Honestly, it's a bit over my head as well. The thing to keep in mind though is that these were all very simple organisms and a mutation and jump from asexual to sexual reproduction isn't as big of an evolutionary leap as one might imagine (though it did lay the groundwork for the evolution of increasingly complex organisms) if you're thinking of the jump between one species of animal and other.
But there are a number of organisms (like many seedless plants and other microorganisms) that have, interestingly, LOST the ability to sexually reproduce and have gone back to asexual reproduction. So we know that transition from one method of reproduction to another can and has happened.
Faith isn't really the right term, since science is quick to dump an explanation if another, better one is found. Faith means believing in something regardless of evidence. Science is about following the evidence.
