er, it is primarily the basis for western thinking.Quote:
Really? I am agraduate in philosophy. Pls enlighten me about the original contribution that the Bible has made to my subject.
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er, it is primarily the basis for western thinking.Quote:
Really? I am agraduate in philosophy. Pls enlighten me about the original contribution that the Bible has made to my subject.
This thread is going nowhere. I think some of you forgot to click on any of the links I provided. You can't compare creationism to evolution. One is based entirely on "faith" and the other is based on what we as humans have researched (and have found evidence for). You guys make it seem like Darwin was an idiot. You guys also make it seem as if there is no evidence supporting evolution. http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolib...hp?topic_id=46
Any shred of evidence that supports evolution gives it more credibility than creationism, because evolution is not a theory based strictly on myth.
You can't compare the imaginary to the practical. Like I said before, most Christians are aware of how adam and eve is a "parable". If you seriously take adam and eve literally then that must mean you take Noah's Ark (one of the more unpractical stories in the bible) seriously. As smart as some of you people are, I'm surprised to see that all you believe in creationism.
Here's a video stream that's interesting:
http://www.hhmi.org:8080/ramgen/evol...eligion_225.rm
I'm not arguing that evolution didn't happen, I'm saying God caused it.
The only 1991 poll listed on this page concerns the general public - not exclusively Christians. As well, the only 1991 poll on this page indicates that the Creationist view was held by 47% in the "Everybody" category. While my guess was wrong, your numbers do not add up either. As well, I indicated "monkeys" while you have conveniently added "monkey-like": there's a difference. The poll indicates nothing about developing from monkeys, which was the focus of my comment (I specifically avoided saying "evolution" because I'm aware that a portion of Christianity believes in some form of that).
In 1997, the poll indicates that a little less than half still believed in Creationism (44%) and only a tiny number (10%) believe in Naturalistic evolution (that which I am primarily arguing against).
As far as the poll from the Christianity section of About.com - those results are not clear in how they were tabulated; as well, the sample was very small (2904 votes) - highly unrepresentative of mainstream Christianity. Below this poll is the following disclaimer: "Needless to say, Internet surfers are are not necessarily typical of the general public."
Why? Here's what I said: "I'm willing to guess that an equally small percentage of Christians believe we evolved from monkeys - so?" Where on that page did you find anything that contradicted that idea? Here's an interesting note from the page:
Auctioneer Gary Corwin said: "I believe that the Lord God created everything, just like the Bible says, I don’t think we came from apes." [Author's note: 95% of scientists support evolution and have reached a consensus that humans did not come from apes either; they believe that humans and apes have a common ancestor.
As far as I'm concerned, my numbers may be off (it was a guess, after all) but I don't think you've made a solid "hit" of any sort.
I am free to post whatever I wish that conforms to the forum rules. I could easily respond that your commentary about the Bible and Christianity (to any well-read Christian) is equally uninformed.
Irrelevant. That's an "apples vs oranges" comment. Your original comment dealt with "intelligence" rather than philosophic thought - now you've changed the comparison - faulty reasoning. CS Lewis revolutionized Christian apologetics and it was said that an atheist never bested him in a debate.
Oh - it's a conspiracy thing. I get it. Only those "in the know" understand. Utterly ridiculous. Whenever I post such things about Christianity and how unbelievers cannot fully understand the message of the Bible I get criticized for saying such things. Now you do too.
Why? Because you said so? You're kidding, right? I don't recall asking either you or JGL for advice as to what I "have" to do. Perhaps you could table your unsolicited "advice" and concentrate on your argument?
<er, it is primarily the basis for western thinking.>
I think you'll find that Greek philosophy is primarily the basis for Christian thinking.
To claim that some texts from ancient Palestine are the basis for western thinking is unbelievably christocentric of you. For starters, lets ask where virtually all the languages of the West came from. Then I suggest you start looking at where the knowledge that inspired the Greek philosophies came from.
You know, I respect Nietzsche as a philosopher, and many of his statements that at first glace seem to be attacks on Christianity are more "live up to what you claim." But this statement is inflammatory, questioning the intelligence of a great number of Christian scholars, and should not have been allowed. That said, might I remind you that Nietzsche died mentally unstable?
<That said, might I remind you that Nietzsche died mentally unstable?>
What point are you trying to make? That people who die mentally unstable are unintelligent?!?
This is a circular argument. You understand that given infinity, Anything can, and even must happen. Your words. But then you say I must prove that God is possible. We are talking Infinity here, where Anything is possible, so God is possible. Compatibility is not a question, because Infinity makes it possible. Ergo, Infinity makes God's esistance as much a fact as anything else. Because the concept is beyond your own way of thinking doesn't put it beyond Infinity. That is like making A the proof of B, then turning around and making B the proof of A.
I only talked about empirical proof because that's what everyone seems hung up on. The dismisal of things without giving any reason besides "improbbable" is certainly the easy way out, for either side, that is for sure.
And since we learn that what we think is correct is often mistaken upon further research or new discovery, are we doing that much better a job? We devote time to the study of the tempetature at the core of stars when we don't yet understand the complexity of the Earth around us.
Oh, and how much Science has been put to a search for Atlantis, which was in a book written by Plato, I believe?
That's what I believe as well. I'm arguing that God didn't create humans in the beginning and from scratch. He created the universe which led to evolution of microscopic organisms which led to us.
Did he write his great works while he was mentally unstable? I didn't think so. At least he is one that created his own philosophy and questioned faulty metaphysics + religion. He didn't live his life according to some "book"...a book filled with myths that weren't meant to be translated literally.
<This is a circular argument. You understand that given infinity, Anything can, and even must happen. >
I actually said anything THAT can happen, not anything can happen. If something is impossible, no matter whether the Universe be infinite or not, it cannot happen. How does limitless time make something contradictory possible? If something is impossible it is impossible now and every other now til infinity. Just by adding an infinite number of nows does alter the possibility of something impossible.
<Oh, and how much Science has been put to a search for Atlantis, which was in a book written by Plato, I believe?>
Big deal. Plato, in the Timaeus, writes of a fable about Atlantis. Again, what is your point? Furthermore, the reason why so little science has been put into a search for Atlantis, is because scientists don't tend to waste their time on fables and myths like Atlantis and the Creation story. Leave that to the people who do not care about evidence-based theories.
<And since we learn that what we think is correct is often mistaken upon further research or new discovery, are we doing that much better a job? >
The great thing about science, is that it is constantly open to revision and updating, if the evidence suggests this is necessary. Unlike most religion I might add. Furthermore, what would you suggest? That we abandon all knowledge that doesn't claim to be absolute? That we ditch any methodologies which are mutable, open to improvement? What kind of world do you live in?
Stanislaw said: <I'm not arguing that evolution didn't happen, I'm saying God caused it. >
Hyperborean said: <That's what I believe as well. I'm arguing that God didn't create humans in the beginning and from scratch. He created the universe which led to evolution of microscopic organisms which led to us. >
Once you have accepted evolution, why do you need to find some design behind it? What are you actually adding to the theory by postulating that God designed evolution?
I believe in the divine. You can accept evolution and believe in the divine.