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Science, religion...thoughts
The following is the random thoughts put in an understandable topic of a 14 year old with a lot of questions and few answers. I’m not going to pretend I’m an expert, but I was thinking about all of this, and felt I HAD to share it. Remember that these are my views and you do not need to share them or even slightly understand them. You could always pm me if you want to….I don’t exactly find anything special about these thoughts, but please do read on!
Think about this: We have no point in the universe, we are just a random amount of matter and cells, and moreover, we are no more than an accident. Then ponder this: There is a higher power out there. He/ She/ They are the reason we are who we are. Both options have logical answers as to why they are likely. There are also more questions, and opponents of each. On one side is science, which gives us answers, but most of the time leaves us more frustrated then before. For example: We live in a city. Our city is a part of a county (this is in perspective of the US so bear with me). Our county is a part of a State. Our State is a part of a country, which is a part of a continent, which is part of the world. Our world is earth. Our earth is one of (arguably) 8 or 9 planets in our solar system, which orbits our sun. Our solar system is, in turn, a part of the Milky Way Galaxy. There are many, many, MANY galaxies, all of which have random jumbles of cells and substances of which we may have no idea! Our universe, with all those galaxies with things inside that we can hardly dare imagine, could be one, or it could have another mess of universes. Which begs the question; when does it stop? Does it ever stop? What’s outside? Is it just empty white, is it filled with our wildest dreams and deepest desires? That’s the part of science I tend to dislike. I hate that as soon as you think you’ve gotten your answer, another appears! That’s where religion steps in. Religion is faith, where Science is fact, or theories. Religion is believing, that somewhere out there is a higher power, a deity, a god, a spirit, nothing at all that has some impact on our day to day lives. Religion can fill all of those gaps in science that can be so frustrating at times. With religion, you can say that the entire purpose of living, is to reach the other side. It was a measure of your worth, an entry ticket into eternal bliss or the Hell of the Damned. Some religions believe you can be incarnated, either here, or some completely alternate dimension. That’s always a comforting thought that you won’t cease to exist entirely. I hope that people can build upon these ideas, and hopefully correct me if I messed up somewhere. So which argument presents the better side? What are your thoughts? |
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There is no evidence suggesting that there is any hyperintelligent being obseving or controlling the universe. It is possible, of course, but mere possibility should not be enough to convince you of something. It's possible that if you mail me all your money, I could invest it and earn you millions of dollars, but you'd be a fool to do so. You should always demand evidence of something before you believe it to be true; any less robs you of your freedom and makes you a tool to those who might wish to manipulate you. The limitations of science shouldn't be an aggravation. Think about how much we already know; enough that ten lifetimes wouldn't be nearly long enough to learn it all. And yet with all this knowledge, it's barely a fraction of all that there is yet to learn. Now think of how much we have achieved with our little sliver of knowledge. Human lifespan has doubled, the internet allows the entire world to communicate instantly, we've visted our moon and sent a probe outside our solar system. All this, from so little. When we've learned ten times more than what we know now, imagine what we will be capable of. Knowledge is what drives our species forward; without it, a human is little more than a rather curious monkey. With it, we already have all this. Science is the vehicle that powers our understanding of reality, and I think that makes it the most incredible thing imaginable. </soapbox> |
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Thanks for the views. I agree that religion doesn't answer much, but it gives you hope for those that choose that. I agree that science is where it's at, and i like it because it is us, using the limited resources around us to come up with even more evidence. Although you could argue that we could be spending more attention at getting of this rock. We landed on the moon close to 50 years ago, and we haven't seen much improvement. Well of course there's been improvement, just as a greater picture. What's going to help more, a colony on a planet or the moon, a space station, or knowing what is out there so we can find out more about what is out there, discover more information, and continue using it to our advantage.
If we were to discover another intelligent race, a peaceful one, we could compare and contrast all of our knowledge. If this were to happen, who knows the things we could do? |
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While science is great and all, it doesnt face the facts of life, it doesnt help you get through the hardships. It most certainly doesnt answer all questions.
Religion, depending on which one you are in, may or may not give you answers. My religion gave the the answers, plus some. Im not bashing on science, its great and all, but to say science solves all is just ludacris. |
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If there was a God (I know that there is, I'm just saying "if" so that the athiests/agnostics here will get what I am saying), don't you think that He would be greater than everything- including science? Don't you think that if there was a God, He wouldn't be able to be proven by science because He is so much bigger than it? I mean, there is scientific evidence that Jesus is God, but it's not like.....SO much evidence that it takes away every doubt from people's minds about God. I believe that God is so powerful that He can't be contained/proven by science because He is bigger than it.
So for those of you who don't believe in God because there isn't enough scientific evidence, let me ask you.....if there was a God (again, I am only saying "if" so that the people who don't believe will understand what I'm saying), don't you think that He would be too powerful to be contained by science? And if you agree to that, don't you think that maybe there is a God and you are missing out because you are relying on your own small human brain's understand instead of on all of the wisdom and power in the universe? |
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I don't even know where to start with this question. It may seem that science is clearly "better," but I truly think that there is no such thing. I believe that both are equally important. For instance, Xujhan mentioned that science allowed us to visit the moon. We spent millions of dollars to visit the moon for what purpose? I assume we visited the moon to satisfy our curiosity, and to prove to be better than someone else. Does the moon actually taste like cheese? Is there some kind of life on the moon? Now what's happening? People are still going to the moon for millions of dollars. For what purpose? Being in a world surrounded by science, we're never content with the way things are. We want the best of the best. We become cocky and what happens? Nature creates a tsunami, an iceberg, and hurricanes to show us that no matter what you THINK you know, it is never enough. Science has damaged nature, and now we're slowly getting to the point where we're trying to fix what we've damaged. We're shooting ourselves in the foot, and will continue to do so. Why? Because of our curiosity. The only reason why we need technology is because we rely on it. Science answers more questions than religion does, but why does that matter to religion? It doesn't matter. We get upset when a religious person believes in something that they don't know exists because it defies our logic. If they believe in God, for instance, do they question how the Earth was created or humans were formed? Not if they're truly religious. Religion answers questions that science can't, even if science says it's wrong. If someone believes the Earth is flat, why does it matter if they're right or not? If they're happy, then that's all that really matters. Both science and religion have pro's and con's, and although science has contributed more to Mankind than religion, that doesn't necessarily make them better. It can actually make them worse.
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I agree with religion, I am an active member in my church, so I didn't mean to bash one side or the other. If Religion was the solid base, if there was ONE God or higher power, why do we have so many different religions? Are they one in the same? Are we talking about the same being in each, but through the eyes of different people?
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Hope that makes sense - it's a bad rendition of it but it gets the basic point across. |
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For example, Bob believes Bobism is correct and he tells Ted that Tedism is incorrect. Ted furthers his knowledge on Tedism and Bobism to tell Bob otherwise. Cindy sees this and wants in on the action so she tells them Tedism and Bobism are wrong, Cindyism is correct. Bob and Ted want to prove her wrong so they study on all three. I hope you can see where it's going, anytime one religion, a method of attaining knowledge and a guide of what knowledge is correct, is made, it's refuted by others. To complicate matters, you then have Sue who says all are incorrect. You then have Sally who says all them are correct. Bob, Ted and Cindy are going to disagree with both Sue and Sally. Alternatively, if Bob and Ted said Cindyism is correct, then you only have 1 religion, everyone agrees but people don't agree. It's like dr2005's example, which now that I read it, sounds a bit clearer than mine. As for which presents a better argument, religion or science, well it depends on the perspective you take. If you take the perspective of which one can answer everything there is, religion wins. If you take the perspective of which one can answer some things in great quality, science wins. If you take the perspective of which can further human knowledge, science wins. If you take the perspective of which can have an influence of social control, religion wins. So to say which gives the better argument, you need to say in what respect are you asking about. However, science influences religion in the present day more than religion influences science. By the first, I mean when something is either uncertain or not known, religion fills it in but once it is somewhat known, religion cant quite fill it in as easily. As more scientific advancements occur in that area, religion has a harder time filling it. For example, years ago if you asked someone how does the brain work, you may have gotten a religious answer along the lines of Descartes' mind-body paradox. In modern times, if you ask that you'll get a scientific answer, not just of what area of the brain does what but what is going on inside the brain to have it work. Not all of it is known though. For the other way around, that did occur, religion did influence science however you're hard-pressed to find current topics of that. The ones I can think of are more controversial ones, such as stem cell research, cloning, influencing genes of the soon-to-be-baby as a "designed baby" and to an extent, understanding of sexual orientations. Some of those areas are controversial for ethical and moral reasons as well though. Quote:
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And again, I know for 100% certain in my soul that Jesus is God; I would believe that just the same even if there was absolutely no evidence. I’m just explaining the evidence because you asked. And I'm not going to debate about whether or not Jesus is God, because I know it by faith not by evidence- therefor I have no way to debate. Quote:
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And I mean....yes you still have to walk by faith and not by sight, but the bible DOES back up mostly everything on this Earth. It doesn't go at all against it anyways. And on top of that, in my original post I never even said that God makes us smarter....I simply said that we should trust God instead of trusting our own understanding. Quote:
But if everyone else is wrong and I'm right, what do they loose? After their life on Earth is over, they loose everything. I'm not a Christian for what I can get out of it though, I simply said all of this to answer your question. Quote:
But either way, don't you think that if any god existed, whether it be my God or not, that since the god would rule over everything and everyone, they would be poweful enough to go beyond science? That really is a quality for all gods anyways. |
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The Bible does not tell you how the universe works through science, and provides no actual evidence that what it says is true, so in all honesty, you haven't learned anything about the universe. It doesn't prove or explain anything really, it just says that God did all of it therefore stop searching for answers. |
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Nowhere in the bible does it say to stop searching for answers. It says to search for answers, and it says to trust in God and He will give you answers to the things that you need to know. Nothing in the bible goes against science/the universe/how our Earth is at all. Everything in the bible is proven that it can be true. So since I became a Christian and started reading the bible (about a year ago), I have learned how the bible says everything works.....and then looked to see if it could all be true based on what we know for 100% sure about our Earth.....and none of it could be disproven. So, I learned that, and believe in the whole bible as fact. That's what I meant. I know that not all of the bible can't be proven as fact, but I also know that none of it can be disproven.
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It does say to stop looking for answers. It says, "Here's the answer to anything you don't understand: God." and that's all there is to it. Trusting in God doesn't somehow magically transfer information to your brain, it just means that you are prepared to stop searching for the truth and are happy to accept the untruth. |
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I know I'm getting off topic here, but I'm curious, how do you think Adam and Eve can be disproven?
And where exactly does the bible say that? The bible says to search for answers to your questions as you would search for treasure. And yes there are some things that we still don't know, because no human is all-knowing, but nowhere in the bible does it say to not search for answers. |
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Evidence can never prove anything to anyone. Someone can present a case, but evidence is never 100% infallible, nor 100% guaranteed to prove anything. I believe one day I will die. But this is not a guarantee. That is, the people I've observed, the people I have witnessed, are all mortals, I believe I am a mortal, and I believe all mortals die because this is what I've witnessed. However, until that day comes, there is a chance, if even .0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 00001% chance, that I will not die. Science itself cannot PROVE anything to anyone, nor can anything be true or not true, just supportable.
There is evidence that Christ existed, and there is evidence of the things He has done, and many of them are supernatural. Some believe this evidence is enough to believe He was/is God, others believe that it was just magic, others believe He was just another religious figure, despite the evidence of what He has done. I disagree with the notion that there is no support for Christ at least being able to do supernatural things, even if you don't believe He is God. The difference is, many people will not accept the evidence as provable to them that He is God, or they deny the evidence of it all together. The reality is that we have many historical documents (needless to present here as there are countless books written on the subject) which prove Christ was either A) A Magician B) Supernatural D) God. There's no denying this. I mean, really, I'm fairly certain every person here believes one of those 3 options, or they simply deny the evidence and recordings of what Christ has done, and dismiss them as rubish, concluding that Jesus was only a man with nothing special. Yet even Christ's genealogy is somewhat of a mystery -- that is -- it would be nearly impossible to fake Christ's birth, of which was prophesied exactly as it happened 3,000 years before He was even birthed. If we had a YouTube recording of Christ performing His miracles, people would go out of their way to discredit the videos. They'd claim it was Hollywood, a hoax, a performance, that He was just a great magician. Why? The same reason the Jews and others refused to believe that Christ was God back then. 1) Because they inclined to obey Him if He is God. And people want to live their life the way they want to. 2) Because His testimony of man was that they are evil, and only continually so -- who wants to believe that? and 3) Because His teachings were difficult. Not difficult to understand, but difficult to accept. It's not every day you hear someone telling others that if you wish to enter the kingdom of God that you must cut off your hand if it causes you to sin. I mean, let's face it. People wanted to crucify Christ because of how harsh His teachings were. I don't doubt we'd want something similar to day, if He were here. Even in the Christian church. I'm sure the self-righteous in our churches would still want Him re-crucified, even after professing the name of Christ. I mean really, I don't understand what "evidence" people want. Christ was performing many miracles in front of people while He was here, and people didn't believe Him then. And I don't expect people to believe Him now, without even witnessing His miracles. The reality is, as I said, even if we could watch Him do the things He did, we still wouldn't believe it, and we still wouldn't think He was God. In regards to the "evidence" of who Christ is, really, instead of debating it back and forth, and quoting source after source, if you REALLY want to know, it doesn't take much to google. I can literally think of 7 books on the top of my head. Not philosophical books, simply books providing evidence of Christs being God. But again, it cannot ever be 100% provable to anyone. Everyone must decide what is sufficient. And I'm certain that there is nothing sufficient for any of us because none of us want to believe He is God. Not that there isn't enough, simply that we will continually refuse it. |
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Then it seems you are using words you don't understand. Science does not prove anything 100% because part of its premise is falsifiability. The fact you're saying you cant show it is 100% when asked to give the scientific evidence you mentioned, means there never was any scientific evidence in the first place. Your argument that if god didn't do it, then everything would be such a coincidence is a pathetically poor argument, with no evidence at all, it's purely a hypothetical philosophical idea without evidence. Could it be a coincidence? Sure it could. The simplest example is pharmacology. Many medications either were being designed for something else yet found to be poor for that but great for another unforeseen purpose. For example, some of the initial anti-psychotic medications weren't made to be anti-psychotics. They were meant as anasthetic medications because back then, many patients undergoing surgeries had a high chance of dying just from that. As part of testing the medications, they gave it (like many medications at that time) to patients in the psychiatric ward. Some of these were found to be not great anaesthetics but amazing anti-psychotics. Purely a coincidence, completely accidental and unforseen. Point is, although there can be coincidence and odds not in one's favour, they don't mean something cannot occur. Saying that something exists because it's unlikely the product would be there without it although there are other methods but less likely, does not exclude the fact those other less likely things could occur and be responsible. Instead of suggesting I read a book, could you give some arguments from that book seeing as how you know the book better than I do. Quote:
As mentioned above, I asked for the scientific evidence you claimed. So far I've yet to see you say anything remotely resembling scientific evidence. Believing in something on blind faith is not scientific either. Quote:
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And forgive me, but the "that's only your opinion, you can't prove it" is possibly the most infuriatingly obnoxious tactic I know of. Perhaps it's just my personal pet peeve, but the limitations of English mean it's impossible to accurately notate which of the things you are saying are opinions and which you claim as fact without making everything you say messy and unreadable. If you want clarification on what my claims are, ask, dammit. Every time you assume one way or the other, god kills a kitten. Relatedly, even the things I do claim as fact I don't claim to know with 100% certainty, as should any honest person. I'm pretty damn cetain that science contributes vastly more to the pool of human knowledge than religion does, but if someone were able to show sufficient evidence to the contrary, I'd willingly change my tune. I am, of course, not holding my breath. Quote:
If you call yourself Christian, I think it's fair to say that you're more than just "open to the possibility" of it being correct. Heck, I'm open to that possibility, I just view it as a vanishingly small probability. It occurs to me that for all the time you spend on this forum, I know very few of the particulars of what you actually do believe. I'd be interested to see you lay them out for similar scrutiny sometime. Quote:
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... Whoops, look at that. No fruit. It god really wanted to convince us that he exists, it wouldn't be hard. The evidence you claim is by no means agreed upon; historians don't even universally agree that Jesus existed, let alone anything that comes after that. Now let me address the meat of your point: you seem to have a love of telling other people what they believe and why, and that's downright insulting. I doubt disbelieve Christianity because I'm afraid or cowardly or vain, no matter how much you might assert that I secretly do. The same is true of every atheist I've ever spoken to on the subject. No, I disbelieve Christianity for the same reason that I disbelieve every other religion; it's an ancient myth that I cannot see to have any grounding in reality. Believe me; if I thought for even a second that the bloodthirsty biblical Yahweh actually exists, I wouldn't be turning a blind eye to it; quite the opposite, I'd be the first to pick up the fight against him. Quote:
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-- I think I'm going to go and let my blood pressure settle down. ;>> I hope I haven't too gravely hurt anyone's feelings; I recognize that this was more strongly worded than most of my posts. I tend to get worked up very easily about this topic in particular; see my signature to understand why. |
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Alrighty then, to throw in something new:
Science people, explain to me how Jesus performed his miracles. |
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You're going to have to specify which miracles you're referring to. In the meantime, a humourous possible explanation.. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ik0yz5Jo4Os
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But anyways, like I said, this is SO off topic. I only brought up gay marriage as an example of something that Christians would have to give up. And it's not going to do us any good to debate about it because niether of us are going to change our opinions. If you have any serious questions for me about my views on marriage, send me a private message. But otherwise, let's just drop it. Quote:
God doesn't do those things any more. He did them in the old testament, but then He sent Jesus to take that punishment for us because He didn't want to punish us like that. So yes, I am willing and joyful to spend the rest of eternity with Him. There is going to be no torture/death/sadness/anything negative in Heaven. |
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I get what you are saying, but I wanna ask you something. some scientific discoveries happen how? By chance? or by someone having a far fetched ideas that someone may have? Now, I'm willing to bet that when these idea were put out there to begin, many people deemed it asinine and crazy, until it was proven right. Then what? The people who were right were right, and the people who were wrong were wrong? No, people have different ideas for certain things, and view things differently. Demanding evidence is actually limiting your self, and becoming a tool to who ever wishes to manipulate you. Think about it this way, demanding evidence would be. - I look into outer space, there is no solid evidence or facts pointing towards life being out there so it 100% means there isn't. (this is your view point) - I look into outer space, there is no solid evidence or facts pointing towards life out there, but this old book and many many years of people believing there is means there is 100% (this is most religious view points) Both are limiting your self and robbing you of your "freedom" as you would say, as both lack free thought. -I look into outerspace, there is no solid evidence or facts pointing towards life being out there, but as we DO know there is galaxies unexplored out there, and while we do not have the facts and evidence saying there isn't anything out there, there is no possible way of knowing whether life exists outside of what we have the ability to access and in turn study. This is free thought, what you display is limited thinking, as you only choose to believe what science HAS proven, as you say your self there is plenty of things that science has no idea about. |
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But now you're saying your arguments and evidence, at least for this issue, are weak. Faith is believing in something when there are no strong reasons to support believing in it. I consider you to use more blind faith than anything else because you believe what the bible says, most of it at least, but don't bother to think about it, don't bother to have enough knowledge to back up your beliefs. So far, your only additional knowledge was recommending that I read a book because you don't know enough of the book to give some examples from it. Further evidence of "blind faith" is your disbelief in evolution. I don't mind if people don't accept it, that's fine but I think it'd be good if people could look into something first before automatically refusing it. I don't know if it was you or another Christian user who said they took science in high-school. If it was you who said it, that's bullshit or you learned nothing because you don't know the basic idea of what science is nor do you seem to know anything about evolution. You're disbelieving it on sight and blind faith. Quote:
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While you're answering it, also say the scientific reasons why bacteria evolving to a harmful substance is not real. If you don't know much about bacteria, pick some animal you know more about but your answer has to have some scientific and biological sense. Quote:
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On a slight tangent, the kitten line did make me chuckle. :p Quote:
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It wasn’t me who talked about taking science in high school. I know that the book is about scientific evidence about Jesus without reading it because that’s the theme of the Case for Christ books. It’s like knowing that Twilight is about vampires without actually reading it. You know the theme of the book without reading all of the details, just from hearing about it. Like I said, I’ll have to get back to you with evidence from the book after reading it. Not that I really care to, because I don’t need evidence to believe. About the flood……Not all fossils would be the same depth underground because some animals died before the flood and after the flood. All of the animals that died in the flood would be in the same depth, but there were some animals who died long before the flood and some that died long after- so those wouldn’t be in the same place. And the bible specifically says that God put a curse on the Earth, making it age quicker; that explains why the fossils appear to be millions of years old when it reality they are only thousands of years old. And I’m not exactly sure what you mean my “fossilized humans”. About the sprinkling blood thing, I haven’t read the whole way through Leviticus yet to know what context that was in….but off the top of my head I’d say that it may have been a healing ritual of some sort that God took part in that couldn’t be done without Him. Or maybe it COULD still work now and scientists just won’t fund something like that to find out. Um….there are probably even more logical options, but that it off the top of my head. I’ll have to ask someone about that. You seek and THEN God grants you wisdom. It’s both. Seek and you shall find (I know that verse isn’t exactly about wisdom, but it works for that too). When I said evolution, I just meant evolution of humans. I don’t know much about evolution of bacteria or anything like that, and I didn’t mean to say that that isn’t true. I just know that evolution (as in humans coming from monkeys) is still considered a theory, there is still missing links that makes the theory incomplete, and that there is a chance that it is false. That’s all that I need to hear to know by knowledge that the bible COULD be true. And from there, I know by faith that the bible IS true. |
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So the dating processes used by scientists are all incorrect? Quote:
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Fair enough you don't know much on evolution of bacteria. I mentioned it because it's one of the quickest and reliable ways to observe evolution happening in front of you. It can be done with fruit flies and such because their lifespan is brief, whereas for, say, a cow or a monkey, it'd take extremely long. It is false, the theory does not say humans came from monkeys. That is a misunderstanding echoed from people who do not have a partial grasp on the concept of biological evolution pertaining to humans. Either the source(s) you read are complete bullshit or they're correct but you don't have a partial grasp on it, doesn't matter to me which is the case. Instead, it says humans came from a monkey-looking ancestor but humans and monkeys evolved separately. For example, one proposed taxonomy idea is that Euarchontoglires clade were common ancestors for various animals, ranging from rabbits to rats to humans. As this group evolved, it branched and eventually formed the family Hominidae. From this family, humans evolved parallel to monkeys, that is, they evolved from a common ancestor but not from each other. Later, this led to the genus Homo and you had Homo erectus, Homo neandrethalis and so forth. It's not a detailed answer but here are 2 diagrams because pictures are worth a thousand words. First is from Wikipedia the second is from Nature (very large, well-respected scientific journal) http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi.../Hominidae.PNG http://www.nature.com/nature/journal...28475a_F2.html If you want to go back further, you'll eventually discuss evolution of fish, reptiles and so forth. I'm not going to explain that because it's far too long and uses far too many terms, I'd be giving half a page of terms before starting any explanation. Evidence from this also involves molecular genetics, some of which I know although it involves discussion of many other animals, although you'd be better off finding someone else to discuss with for that as I only know of some of the molecular processes. Yes there is a chance it is not correct, it's redundant to keep saying it. No explanations in science will be considered factual. Evolution is sometimes said to be a "fact" for the reason it has not encountered strong scientific opposition and there's more and more evidence being added to the books of evidence that already exists. I were to go to a science conference or guest lecture and say to the person "well that's good and all but ____ theory is just a theory, it's may be wrong", just about everyone in the room would immediately think something along the lines of "who the fuck is this moron?". |
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You're using the term "theory" in a negative connotation, as if it degrades the validity of evolution. This is taken from a Wikipedia article, and hopefully can shed some light: Quote:
You're thinking of the term "theory" as it applies to the everyday connotation, something that is simply a speculation. When scientists refer to the "theory" of evolution, they're alluding to something that is well substantiated. You need to discern between the two variations. |
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I'm sorry, but you can't actually believe this is a realistic argument? I'm all for religious texts being looked into as history books, but this is just completely off base. As someone said before, you completely call the dating process incorrect here, and that just simply isn't true. |
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Demanding evidence doesn't mean that you automatically believe something is false until proven true; in fact declaring that something is definitely false also requires evidence. The rational viewpoint concerning things about which we have yet to find evidence is to admit that you don't know. In short: what you've said actually shows that you agree with me. Well done. :p Quote:
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[/quote=Megan1]If the muslims/jews/greeks/etc. were right......that's honestly not something that I think about because I know that they aren't. I know that's no debate, but I really have nothing else to say. [/quote] No; you believe that you are right. Humility is called a virtue in Christianity, is it not? Humility means accepting that you might be wrong. Saying that you know for a fact that you are right is called arrogance. You are free to believe what you want to believe of course, but be aware that this certainty you have is caused by your refusal to challenge your own beliefs, not be your holding any special knowledge. [/quote=Megan1]God doesn't do those things any more. He did them in the old testament, but then He sent Jesus to take that punishment for us because He didn't want to punish us like that. So yes, I am willing and joyful to spend the rest of eternity with Him. [/quote] Then frankly, you terrify me. [/quote=Megan1]There is going to be no torture/death/sadness/anything negative in Heaven.[/quote] Is there free will in heaven? |
Re: Science, religion...thoughts
Sorry to everyone for misusing the word "theory". However, it is still also a theory as in hypothesis since it can't be proven. A lot of things in this world are.
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Yes, a lot of the dating processes used by scientists are wrong. If it says what the priest should do, it sounds like it was probably a ritual that involved God’s healing as well-not just the blood. So if evolution isn’t that humans came from monkeys and only that our ancestors looked like monkeys…..how does that disprove Adam and Eve? The bible doesn’t say that humans looked the same then as they do now. Maybe Adam and Eve did look like monkeys. Who cares if humans looked differently back then? They were still humans. I don’t believe that theory in the chart that you posted at all, but I believe it’s possible that humans looked like monkeys before. Quote:
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Re: Science, religion...thoughts
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Then how can you not understand what science is if you're studying it in high-school? I have to wonder, are you passing science because it seems to me you aren't. Quote:
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I never mentioned Adam and Eve but that aside, the Adam and Eve story implies immense in-breeding, not to mention Eve was made from a bone from Adam. During fetal development, sex determination occurs using hormones to influence the subsequent genital structures. That cannot be done from a mere bone. Quote:
Is there a point you're getting at? I fail to see one. Quote:
If you're going to discuss and debate evolution, know what it is, hardly a difficult request on my part. Quit being so ignorant, pull your nose out of your bible and learn of evolution, even the most basic aspects of it. That's hard for you but I'm going to challenge you and make it very difficult by saying once you've learned basic aspects of evolution, don't fuck it all up by throwing your bible at it. After all, that is what you're doing, fucking it all up, fucking science all up by ignorance and keeping your nose in the air stomping on science while chanting from your bible. I really think there should be a section of the forum for science only or at least threads for only people engaged in science, so people don't fuck it all up by their religion-driven ignorance. On a personal note, I'm wondering why you're even bothering to take a science class. |
Re: Science, religion...thoughts
I’m not studying evolution in high school, never have. My science classes don’t teach it. I’m currently learning things like PH levels, amino acids, etc. And I have a B in science.
I just explained why the timing that scientists use is wrong. Read the last post of mine that you quoted. The person who originally brought up evolution in this thread was talking about Adam and Eve and why evolution supposedly disproves them. I know that wasn’t you. And the bible doesn’t say that the rib bone is what determined Eve’s gender, it just said that God used it to make her. It doesn’t say how her gender was determined. Plus, it doesn’t try to say that all humans are made that way. That’s just how the first 2 humans were, and from there God set up the system of reproduction. I understand more of what evolution is now from your posts and reading those links that you posted. I understand that it is scientifically possible. I understand that both the bible and evolution can’t be proven or disproven, and that you can't really believe both.....so you have to choose which one to believe. I chose God. And why am I bothering to take a science class? Because my school requires it and I would prefer to graduate and get to go to college…. |
Re: Science, religion...thoughts
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Google "theistic evolution;" Wikipedia has a good article on it. |
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Why do you think they are mutually exclusive? Is it because one is science and one is religion? Charles Darwin was religious (or agnostic), assisted local churches and obtained a Bachelor's degree in theology. He once said: "Science has nothing to do with Christ, except insofar as the habit of scientific research makes a man cautious in admitting evidence. For myself, I do not believe that there ever has been any revelation. As for a future life, every man must judge for himself between conflicting vague probabilities" |
Re: Science, religion...thoughts
This is going to be my last reply in this thread, because I hate debating and only start doing it when I think it is going to help someone…..which I thought it could here since I was promoting “walk by faith, not by sight”. However, after saying all that I can say, I know that saying any more is just going to annoy people or make them want to keep debating, and I don’t want to do either of those things. :)
I learned the original false information that I posted about evolution from people telling me, from random things on tv, and from a little bit of Googling. There isn’t a scientific explanation for why scientists’ idea of timing is wrong and I never said that there was. There is only a God-based explanation that doesn’t involve science. That’s all that I can give you and I never claimed to have more than that. God made Adam and Eve's reproductive systems when He formed them. The original 2 people were made straight from God’s hands, and the rest of the people were made from reproduction…..still from God’s hands, but also involving fetuses, eggs, etc. (and yes I know how that all works, I’m just not getting into detail here lol). You can believe in a God and still believe in evolution, I know that. However, you can’t believe in the whole bible as fact and still believe in evolution (which is what I said). Even theistic evolution goes against the bible, even though it suggests that there is a God. |
Re: Science, religion...thoughts
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