What If...?

Creationism, Evolution, and other science issues

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theStudent
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What If...?

Post #1

Post by theStudent »

Currently, I am doing what was suggested by some on these forums.
I am researching information both for, and against evolution, and trust me - I am doing so objectively.
While I am still researching, I want to put this out, to hear the different views on it.

During my research I discovered that lately, just over the last decade or so, a lot of informations has been surfacing about fake fossils.
In fact it has now become common place for fossils sold at museums to be checked for genuineness.
I find this interesting.

Why now, is this happening?
Could it be that evidence as it always does, is now surfacing?

For example
Remember the dinosaur hoax - the one that was said to be put together using different bones?
It has recently been found out that it wasn't a hoax after all.
http://www.foxnews.com/science/2015/02/ ... ecies.html

That is quite interesting.

The fossils aren't the only things that were/are claimed to be fake.
There are the drawings, and pictures as well.
Right now, I am going through a very long document considered a case against some of Darwins picture illustrations.
But have you ever come across this one?

Pictures from the past powerfully shape current views of the world. In books, television programs, and websites, new images appear alongside others that have survived from decades ago. Among the most famous are drawings of embryos by the Darwinist Ernst Haeckel in which humans and other vertebrates begin identical, then diverge toward their adult forms. But these icons of evolution are notorious, too: soon after their publication in 1868, a colleague alleged fraud, and Haeckels many enemies have repeated the charge ever since. His embryos nevertheless became a textbook staple until, in 1997, a biologist accused him again, and creationist advocates of intelligent design forced his figures out. How could the most controversial pictures in the history of science have become some of the most widely seen?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernst_Haeckel
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Haec ... eks4-6.jpg
English: The pictures illustrate Ernst Haeckel's biogenetic law. In the beginning embryos of different species look remarkable similar, later different characteristics develop. The images initiated controversies and charges of fraud.

All of this lends to a possibility.
Consdering the fact that fossils can be faked, we must accept the fact that Darwin, and other scientists could have lied.

My question here, isn't whether he did lie or not, but rather, Does this not place evolutionists in the same position as the Christians they claim are believing in fables?

Consider:
Christians accept the Bible, as the word of God.
Here are just a few facts about the Bible.
With estimated total sales of over 5 billion copies, the Bible is widely considered to be the best-selling book of all time.
It has estimated annual sales of 100 million copies.
It has been a major influence on literature and history, especially in the West where the Gutenberg Bible was the first mass-printed book.
It was the first book ever printed using movable type.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bible

Archaeological findings of the Dead Sea Scrolls, also called the Qumran Caves https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Sea_Scrolls

The evidence is there however, that the book we hold in our hand today (the Bible), contains information written centuries ago.

Atheist call the book fables - the reason I have yet to find out.
Maybe one of the reasons is that they have not seen God, or seen him write any book - whatever.
So they claim that Christians' belief in them and what they present is blind faith, and belief in stories.

However, is this not the case with those who accept the theory of evolution, where all they have to go by, is what scientists claim to be evidence?

By the way...
No one, to this day have seen them recreate the theories.
Any data they give you on species, is usually what already existed (at least what I have come across so far).
As regards other claims, all we have are pictures, and claimed fossils, which could have been edited.

So evolutionists are really believing what men claim - without any substantial proof of their claim.
How is this different to believing a book?

And what if Darwin, and others lied?


I'm just interested in you different opinions and thoughts, on the above.
Here is a nice short video of someone's opinion. Reasonable too.
John 8:32
. . .the truth will set you free.

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Post #401

Post by theStudent »

[Replying to post 383 by Neatras]

So what does this prove?

Notice what the scientists conclude about their find.
Our data suggest that the endogenous elements were possibly involved in chromosomal rearrangements and retained a great deal of information from their active stage, most likely as a consequence of host interactions.
This study also contributes to the annotation effort of both human and chimpanzee genomes.
So how is that proof of evolution?
Is it something that has been shown to be irrefutable?
Is it not just another possible theory for the theory that somehow all life branched from one universal last common ancestor?
John 8:32
. . .the truth will set you free.

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Post #402

Post by Blastcat »

[Replying to post 392 by theStudent]


"To the degree that one isn't comprehensible, there is no advancement in the discussion at hand."

- Blastcat, CE



theStudent wrote:The point should be clear.
Yeah, your points SHOULD be clear.
I agree.

The problem is that in too many cases, your points are not.

And to the degree that you don't make yourself comprehensible, there is no advancement in the discussion at hand.

In debates, or in good conversations, I would say one of the primary GOALS is clear points, and GOOD mutual understanding. CONFUSION is ... rather useless.
theStudent wrote:If you can't, or don't have the ability to understand everything, why question what you are unable to understand?
In order to debate something, I suppose that some people might want to write something that they would like others to understand.

BUT.. I suppose there are many possible motivations to post in a debate forum. Some people might just want to practice typing for example.
theStudent wrote:Would that not indeed make you god?
I don't have the bizarre conceit that I could EVER be a god. I don't even BELIEVE in the possibility of gods. To me, the concept "god" is just about MEANINGLESS....

So, I have NO idea what you mean by your rhetorical question.
And I see no PURPOSE of the rhetorical question.

So, that's why you aren't really going to get a "yes" or "no" answer.
it doesn't matter to me if it's "yes" or "no".

Either option, to me, is WRONG.

And who wants to be wrong?
Not I.

:)

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Post #403

Post by theStudent »

[Replying to post 395 by Kenisaw]
Kenisaw wrote:Fascinating. The fossils are imagined? The genetics? The geology? The biology? That's a borderline delusional statement on your part.
No. The theory that the fossils prove evolution theory is imagined. The fossils prove creation, according to the Bible.
No. The theory that the genetics prove evolution theory is imagined. Genetics prove creation, according to the Bible.
No. The theory that the geology proves evolution theory is imagined. Geology prove creation, according to the Bible.
No. Biological studies prove creation, in accordance with the Bible. To say that it proves evolution theory is merely imagined.

I know, and understanding the difference between theory and scientific theory.
I believe you do too. As regards understand me - for the millionth time - you don't.
Kenisaw wrote:Despite being explained over and over the difference between the Big Bang and evolution, you still dishonestly trot out this cultist staple of nonsense.
It's becoming clearer and clearer to me who don't understand the whole evolution story.
If evolution doesn't have a foundation - it cannot be.
You'll figure it out some day.
Kenisaw wrote:Not bones, fossils. Can you please make an effort to get your terminology correct if you are going to continue to engage in these discussions? By the way, do you know how many people would have to be "in" an effort to "deceive" the whole world? And for what purpose would such an effort be made for?
No. Please don't try to put words in my mouth.
Try first to understand what I say.
Not fossils. Bones.

The Pittman bones.
The ones that took only a handful of men to try to deceive the world.
And for what purpose?
That doesn't take a genius to figure out.
Kenisaw wrote:Let's make it simpler for you. Let's just ask about one. Is the theory of relativity a "magical and superstitious theory"?
Let me get back to you, on that.
Kenisaw wrote:You haven't produced one verifiable piece of data for your ID claims. We've yet to see proof for the god creature. Are we ever going to get the goods from you? Tijd om het bewijs te leveren! (That's Dutch for Time to produce the evidence)...
If what I have given you isn't enough, then that's the evidence B.

What do you want me to do now?
Get God, and put him in your hands?
What do you think he is, a genie in a bottle?
Or do you imagine he needs looking after, by puny humans?

On the contrary.
The apostle Paul, who personally was a witness that Jesus was raised from the dead, wrote: ...The God who made the world and all the things in it, being, as he is, Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in handmade temples;nor is he served by human hands as if he needed anything, because he himself gives to all people life and breath and all things. And he made out of one man every nation of men to dwell on the entire surface of the earth, and he decreed the appointed times and the set limits of where men would dwell, so that they would seek God, if they might grope for him and really find him, although, in fact, he is not far off from each one of us. For by him we have life and move and exist, even as some of your own poets have said, For we are also his children.
(Acts 17:24-28)

Can such an awesome, all powerful God, be confined by human hands, or their microscopic brains - of which most are empty?

I completely agree with Paul's words.
He wrote: ...they became empty-headed in their reasonings and their senseless hearts became darkened.
(Romans 1:21)

Why not ask the scientists to bring dark matter, and whatever else is out there, that they are unaware of, and place it before you?
And since they haven't been able to provide any evidence of common ancestor, why not ask them to bring that and show you?

Although that may prove fatal to them, since they would have o open their brains, and retrieve the idea that's lodged deep in the recesses of their thoughts.
Perhaps the safest procedure, would be to use holographic projection.

I mean, how much more illogical can a human get, to see evidence before them, that there are possibilities far beyond their understanding, and still continue on a quest, that every reasonable person can see only leads to endless theories and speculations?

Many scientists are already admitting that their understanding is limited.
Watch - From 1:13:00
TOP Secrets about the Human Brain - Full Documentary

What's wrong with the minds of the others?
Could there be a force that's out of their scope, which is driving them against reason, and toward irrational thinking?
John 8:32
. . .the truth will set you free.

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Post #404

Post by rikuoamero »

[Replying to post 400 by theStudent]
Genetics prove creation, according to the Bible.
How can genetics prove the Bible, when the Bible was written between 3 and 2 thousand years ago, and genetics were only discovered in 1866?
Genetics DISPROVE certain Bible tales like Noah's Flood (no genetic bottleneck, like what would happen if all species were reduced to 2 or 7 pairs of individuals).
I know, and understanding the difference between theory and scientific theory.
Which totally explains why you brought up the old creationist chestnut of "it's just a theory!"
Image

Your life is your own. Rise up and live it - Richard Rahl, Sword of Truth Book 6 "Faith of the Fallen"

I condemn all gods who dare demand my fealty, who won't look me in the face so's I know who it is I gotta fealty to. -- JoeyKnotHead

Some force seems to restrict me from buying into the apparent nonsense that others find so easy to buy into. Having no religious or supernatural beliefs of my own, I just call that force reason. -- Tired of the Nonsense

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Post #405

Post by Neatras »

[Replying to post 398 by theStudent]

It's a collection of facts. Common ancestry is the single credible theory that explains the relationship between the facts of human and chimpanzee genomes. I've already outlined not only a prediction of scientific inquiry, I've laid it out in a way that it can be verified or disproven without knowing the answer in advance.

That is what makes science special, and is why creationism is faulty and useless. You can't supply any predictions based on your unscientific ideas that explain the facts available to us, for fear of having it demolished.

Those who attempt to steal the spotlight of scientific discourse without performing the rigors of the process are doomed to cowardly verbal gymnastics to disguise the failure of dismissing evidence-based reasoning.

If my prediction successfully pulls through, that's another point for the prevailing scientific theory. And you wouldn't accept it even then.

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Post #406

Post by theStudent »

[Replying to Neatras]
Neatras wrote:1. ERV's randomly target the genetic code for insertion.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endogenous_retrovirus
Endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) are endogenous viral elements in the genome that closely resemble and can be derived from retroviruses.
Can scientists prove that ERVs came from retroviruses?
Also, can ERVs be mutations in the genes?
Neatras wrote:2. An ancestor to any descendant who has their genetic code altered by ERV's will have passed on this alteration.
What ancestor is/was the original carrier?
Which decendants would have been affected?
Neatras wrote:3. Individuals who are closely related to an ancestor will share more ERV's in the appropriate location with each other, than they would with individuals who are more distantly related.
Why would this be the case?
Neatras wrote:Therefore, for any ERV match between macaques (or other primates more distantly related) and humans, we should expect to see a similar match between human and chimpanzee, due to the reasons stated above; macaques are reportedly more distant in common ancestry to humans than chimpanzees are (to humans).

Based on my best evaluation of evidence provided, and despite my lack of full education on the matter, I'm courageous enough to make this prediction. That in order for ERV's to be discarded from the evidence for evolutionary common ancestry, a match between distantly "related" species must be found in ERV's that is not also found between closely "related" species.
What if chimps are more distant than other primates?
Would that not prove the theory false.
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg ... ys-and-us/
http://www.scientificamerican.com/artic ... he-genome/
Neatras wrote:Of the roughly 98,000 endogenous retroviruses in the human genome, I urge anyone to find evidence of a single one that is in the correct location as another primate species', without having it also appear in chimpanzees. The odds of a single ERV appearing randomly in the same location as another species' is roughly 1 in 3 billion. Finding more than that would put the nail in the coffin, if you ask me.

However, if common ancestry is true, the odds of matches appearing between related species is 1.
Another question I have is based on this item:

According to the American Journal of Tropical Medical Hygiene, the presently leading causes of death among American missionaries in Africa are motor accidents, malignancy, and atherosclerosis. Among infectious diseases, the biggest killer is viral hepatitis, followed by such diseases as malaria, rabies, typhoid, Lassa fever, and retroviral infections.

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script= ... 3000400013
https://africacheck.org/factsheets/fact ... in-africa/
http://www.ajtmh.org/content/73/3/560.full

Given the deadly nature of these viruses, how could it now be found in one location of an organism, if passed on by a carrier ancestor over millions of years?
Shouldn't it have killed off the descendants, if not an ancestor?



Neatras wrote:It's a collection of facts. Common ancestry is the single credible theory that explains the relationship between the facts of human and chimpanzee genomes. I've already outlined not only a prediction of scientific inquiry, I've laid it out in a way that it can be verified or disproven without knowing the answer in advance.

That is what makes science special, and is why creationism is faulty and useless. You can't supply any predictions based on your unscientific ideas that explain the facts available to us, for fear of having it demolished.

Those who attempt to steal the spotlight of scientific discourse without performing the rigors of the process are doomed to cowardly verbal gymnastics to disguise the failure of dismissing evidence-based reasoning.

If my prediction successfully pulls through, that's another point for the prevailing scientific theory. And you wouldn't accept it even then.
Scientific theories are special - you got that right.
The vast difference between scientific theories and creation evidence, can be seen at every turn.
The difference is like east and west, sunrise and sunset.
  1. At every turn, scientific theories are always changing - It goes like a song - "We thought this, but we were wrong. This is the way it is. No. we were wrong again. It's not as we thought."
    And that at times becomes a repeat chorus.
  2. Scientific theories is both the evidence and the proof, so when it is wrong, it's still evidence but adjusted to fit new evidence, so it still remains proof - but never proven. If you get my drift.
Creation evidence never change - it's constant.
Why? Because it's always based on solid evidence.
1+1=2 - never will change.

Creation evidence is demonstrated.
  • We see it demonstrated that purpose requires intelect.
    • For example
      What is responsible for the universe, and life?
      Evidence shows energy is required.
      Evidence shows that energy needed to be controlled precisely (Mathematically precise) in order for it to work.
    • Evidence shows that precise instructions in the DNA were needed for life to work.
  • We see it demonstrated that the ability to reason requires an intelectual mind, which gives evidence of the above.
  • We see it demonstrated that for laws to exist, a lawmaker is required.
    • For example
      How can we have laws of nature, laws of physics, laws of anything else, without an intelligent lawmaker?
  • We see it demonstrated that everything produces according to their kind, nothing evolves into another organism, everything remains unchanged.
Of course, there is a lot more demonstrative evidence, but one very strong evidence, is the greatest textbook ever writen - the Bible.
It provides truthful information on any subject it touches on - whether it be science, ethics, life itself...

The special thing about the Bible too is this:
It has never been proven wrong, despite it has countless enemies.

So the evidence, to me is clear.
That's why it is reasonable to go with the Bible, and creation.
John 8:32
. . .the truth will set you free.

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Post #407

Post by Neatras »

theStudent wrote: [Replying to Neatras]
Neatras wrote:1. ERV's randomly target the genetic code for insertion.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endogenous_retrovirus
Nothing about this article goes against my statement about random insertion into the genome. Unless you're arguing there's a special mechanism hidden in primitive, RNA-based retroviruses that discriminate based on location in the genome. If you could demonstrate this mechanism, that'd be neat.

Endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) are endogenous viral elements in the genome that closely resemble and can be derived from retroviruses.
Can scientists prove that ERVs came from retroviruses?
Also, can ERVs be mutations in the genes?
To quote the wikipedia article you posted (literally the first line):
Endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) are endogenous viral elements in the genome that closely resemble and can be derived from retroviruses.
To state it more fairly, we have evidence of retroviruses that exist in the modern world, and by analyzing their methods, and analyzing the data available, we can find that retroviruses existed in the past. Unless you'd like to contest this by arguing spontaneous emergence of retroviruses sometime in the last few thousand years, I assume you'll go along with this train of thought. By all means, if you want to make the above claim, go ahead and provide evidence.
Neatras wrote:2. An ancestor to any descendant who has their genetic code altered by ERV's will have passed on this alteration.
What ancestor is/was the original carrier?
Which decendants would have been affected?
I'm not sure I follow the question. It is grammatically valid, and has a clearly defined interrogative content, but it should be a question already answered: the ancestors to living creatures who inherited the ERV's.

Any event that causes a retrovirus to inject its genetic code into a sperm/egg cell would, as a result, create a relic of its genome that persisted throughout all generations following the original host. However, it should be argued that mutations to the genome occur regularly, and even ERV's are not exempt. Addition, subtraction, and substitution of different base chemicals and alleles can affect the ERV and provide variance among subjects. However, it only takes a cursory glance at the genome to recognize where these ERV matches are, and to note the differences due to mutation. For all intents and purposes, an ERV is as much a part of the human genome as any other gene expression, even if it was forcibly injected; evolutionary theory recognizes this entirely.
Neatras wrote:3. Individuals who are closely related to an ancestor will share more ERV's in the appropriate location with each other, than they would with individuals who are more distantly related.
Why would this be the case?
I'll let these handy images demonstrate this.

Image

Image

As you can clearly see, ERV's that are introduced further along any one branch will affect all progeny among those branches, while not affecting branches that are not among the ones that are produced from the common ancestor in question. If an even further ancestor that was the progenitor of more species had the ERV insertion, then they would pass it along to more species.
Neatras wrote:Therefore, for any ERV match between macaques (or other primates more distantly related) and humans, we should expect to see a similar match between human and chimpanzee, due to the reasons stated above; macaques are reportedly more distant in common ancestry to humans than chimpanzees are (to humans).

Based on my best evaluation of evidence provided, and despite my lack of full education on the matter, I'm courageous enough to make this prediction. That in order for ERV's to be discarded from the evidence for evolutionary common ancestry, a match between distantly "related" species must be found in ERV's that is not also found between closely "related" species.
What if chimps are more distant than other primates?
Would that not prove the theory false.
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg ... ys-and-us/
http://www.scientificamerican.com/artic ... he-genome/
Well, see, there are lots of primates, I'm sure. I simply used chimpanzees and humans as a reference, or example. I stated, for instance, that macaques are more distantly related to humans than chimpanzees are (to humans) to make a more concrete example. The point stands.
Neatras wrote:Of the roughly 98,000 endogenous retroviruses in the human genome, I urge anyone to find evidence of a single one that is in the correct location as another primate species', without having it also appear in chimpanzees. The odds of a single ERV appearing randomly in the same location as another species' is roughly 1 in 3 billion. Finding more than that would put the nail in the coffin, if you ask me.

However, if common ancestry is true, the odds of matches appearing between related species is 1.
Another question I have is based on this item:

According to the American Journal of Tropical Medical Hygiene, the presently leading causes of death among American missionaries in Africa are motor accidents, malignancy, and atherosclerosis. Among infectious diseases, the biggest killer is viral hepatitis, followed by such diseases as malaria, rabies, typhoid, Lassa fever, and retroviral infections.

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script= ... 3000400013
https://africacheck.org/factsheets/fact ... in-africa/
http://www.ajtmh.org/content/73/3/560.full

Given the deadly nature of these viruses, how could it now be found in one location of an organism, if passed on by a carrier ancestor over millions of years?
Shouldn't it have killed off the descendants, if not an ancestor?
This comes from a very limited and creationist view of what a virus actually is. The sheer variety of life is astounding, isn't it? Parasitic life forms don't always have to result in the death of an individual, and in fact this is usually just a byproduct to create a vector for transmission of the virus; weakening of the immune system, or triggering responses in the body that facilitate spreading of the virus will evolve as basic effects of viruses due to reproductive success, but isn't a required trait for viruses to pass on their genes. These other retroviruses are different because they use RNA-based strands of genetic code to splice into cells directly. Once they do so, they can do things such as force the nucleus of the cell to manually produce new strands of this spliced in code; like telling a factory to use one of its assembly lines to build a foreign model of car. Since everything is automated, it happens whether the original intent of the factory was to make domestic cars or not.



Neatras wrote:It's a collection of facts. Common ancestry is the single credible theory that explains the relationship between the facts of human and chimpanzee genomes. I've already outlined not only a prediction of scientific inquiry, I've laid it out in a way that it can be verified or disproven without knowing the answer in advance.

That is what makes science special, and is why creationism is faulty and useless. You can't supply any predictions based on your unscientific ideas that explain the facts available to us, for fear of having it demolished.

Those who attempt to steal the spotlight of scientific discourse without performing the rigors of the process are doomed to cowardly verbal gymnastics to disguise the failure of dismissing evidence-based reasoning.

If my prediction successfully pulls through, that's another point for the prevailing scientific theory. And you wouldn't accept it even then.
Scientific theories are special - you got that right.
The vast difference between scientific theories and creation evidence, can be seen at every turn.
The difference is like east and west, sunrise and sunset.
Oh, this is rich.
  1. At every turn, scientific theories are always changing - It goes like a song - "We thought this, but we were wrong. This is the way it is. No. we were wrong again. It's not as we thought."
    And that at times becomes a repeat chorus.
  2. Scientific theories is both the evidence and the proof, so when it is wrong, it's still evidence but adjusted to fit new evidence, so it still remains proof - but never proven. If you get my drift.
1. You walk into a scientific discussion, and try to act as if the flexibility of scientific theories and processes are worth dismissing evidence? That's laughable, and I urge you to find one person who buys into your cheap attack on reason. No theory is set in stone, because nobody has perfect knowledge, least of all you.

2. False, entirely. Scientific theories explain the evidence as we see them. If evidence doesn't support a theory, the theory is either changed or discarded. This is what you're getting at in your first point, and yet you decry it as some kind of negative trait. Tell me, should we go with the idea of Lamarckian evolution simply because it was the first theory we came up with? Is there supposed to be some reverence for ancient ideas, regardless of how tenable or evidence-based they are? Ludicrous.

But if you're going to make up nonsense about how a theory will always "change" to completely new forms, then you're not worth having this discussion with. Scientific inquiry is still a fledgling process, and not only is it making leaps and bounds in terms of discoveries, it's also shedding the oppressive coat of religious indoctrination and meddling that keeps us from making the appropriate statements about the natural world around us.

Are you going to argue that germ theory has changed again and again? "We thought this, but we were wrong. This is the way it is..." Except we've successfully mapped out germ theory, using the evidence available to make a reasoned argument. It helps that we also use the facts of evolution to make judgments about how we treat germs and viruses, otherwise medical sciences would be set back hundreds of years.
Creation evidence never change - it's constant.

Why? Because it's always based on solid evidence.
1+1=2 - never will change.
Well, I'm sorry, but no. You don't get to lay claim to evidence without a theory that explains it appropriately. Hand-waving it and saying "God did it" is no more an answer than making something up. You have not demonstrated the rigors of the scientific process, and so, as it has been expertly put: "What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence." Creationists will NEVER supplant their bogus claims with predictions, statements about how the universe is, etc. without having their falsehoods cracked wide open under peer review.
Creation evidence is demonstrated.
  • We see it demonstrated that purpose requires intelect.
    • For example
      What is responsible for the universe, and life?
      Evidence shows energy is required.
      Evidence shows that energy needed to be controlled precisely (Mathematically precise) in order for it to work.
    • Evidence shows that precise instructions in the DNA were needed for life to work.
  • We see it demonstrated that the ability to reason requires an intelectual mind, which gives evidence of the above.
  • We see it demonstrated that for laws to exist, a lawmaker is required.
    • For example
      How can we have laws of nature, laws of physics, laws of anything else, without an intelligent lawmaker?
  • We see it demonstrated that everything produces according to their kind, nothing evolves into another organism, everything remains unchanged.
Purpose? Reasoning minds? What does that have to do with evolution? What purpose are you talking about? You're throwing a gish gallop my way because you can't actually come up with anything about creationism that evolutionary theory can't handily debunk.
Of course, there is a lot more demonstrative evidence, but one very strong evidence, is the greatest textbook ever writen - the Bible.
It provides truthful information on any subject it touches on - whether it be science, ethics, life itself...

The special thing about the Bible too is this:
It has never been proven wrong, despite it has countless enemies.

So the evidence, to me is clear.
That's why it is reasonable to go with the Bible, and creation.
I wonder if I could get away with flagging this as preaching, since that's all this post amounts to. Subversively hiding behind "axiomatic proofs" that ultimately just make the repeated claim "GOD DID IT". It's dishonest, what you're doing.

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Post #408

Post by theStudent »

[Replying to post 404 by Neatras]

The article says:
Endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) are endogenous viral elements in the genome that closely resemble and can be derived from retroviruses.
The article did not say:
Endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) are endogenous viral elements in the genome that is derived from retroviruses.

Scientists would need to provide the proof that they are.
Neatras wrote:To state it more fairly, we have evidence of retroviruses that exist in the modern world, and by analyzing their methods, and analyzing the data available, we can find that retroviruses existed in the past. Unless you'd like to contest this by arguing spontaneous emergence of retroviruses sometime in the last few thousand years, I assume you'll go along with this train of thought. By all means, if you want to make the above claim, go ahead and provide evidence.
As I said above, I'm not the one to provide the evidence.
I haven't discovered any viral infection.
I haven't done any experiment.
I am not a scientist.

The scientists are required to provide the proof.
Neatras wrote:I'm not sure I follow the question. It is grammatically valid, and has a clearly defined interrogative content, but it should be a question already answered: the ancestors to living creatures who inherited the ERV's.

Any event that causes a retrovirus to inject its genetic code into a sperm/egg cell would, as a result, create a relic of its genome that persisted throughout all generations following the original host. However, it should be argued that mutations to the genome occur regularly, and even ERV's are not exempt. Addition, subtraction, and substitution of different base chemicals and alleles can affect the ERV and provide variance among subjects. However, it only takes a cursory glance at the genome to recognize where these ERV matches are, and to note the differences due to mutation. For all intents and purposes, an ERV is as much a part of the human genome as any other gene expression, even if it was forcibly injected; evolutionary theory recognizes this entirely.
I'm not sure you answered my questions.
Which part of the questions don't you understand?
Neatras wrote:As you can clearly see, ERV's that are introduced further along any one branch will affect all progeny among those branches, while not affecting branches that are not among the ones that are produced from the common ancestor in question. If an even further ancestor that was the progenitor of more species had the ERV insertion, then they would pass it along to more species.
Why is the viral infection started at that point, and not lower in the tree?
Is it because of the organisms that were affected?
Neatras wrote:Well, see, there are lots of primates, I'm sure. I simply used chimpanzees and humans as a reference, or example. I stated, for instance, that macaques are more distantly related to humans than chimpanzees are (to humans) to make a more concrete example. The point stands.
The article you posted specifically mentioned chimps and humans.
If chimps are more distant to humans than gorillas are, then, the gorilla should have the ERV. How could your point stand in this case?
Neatras wrote:This comes from a very limited and creationist view of what a virus actually is. The sheer variety of life is astounding, isn't it? Parasitic life forms don't always have to result in the death of an individual, and in fact this is usually just a byproduct to create a vector for transmission of the virus; weakening of the immune system, or triggering responses in the body that facilitate spreading of the virus will evolve as basic effects of viruses due to reproductive success, but isn't a required trait for viruses to pass on their genes. These other retroviruses are different because they use RNA-based strands of genetic code to splice into cells directly. Once they do so, they can do things such as force the nucleus of the cell to manually produce new strands of this spliced in code; like telling a factory to use one of its assembly lines to build a foreign model of car. Since everything is automated, it happens whether the original intent of the factory was to make domestic cars or not.
According to what I understand, DNA is affected.

Retroviral
Any of a group of viruses that contain two single-strand linear RNA molecules per virion and reverse transcriptase (RNA to DNA); the virus transcribes its RNA into a cDNA provirus that is then incorporated into the host cell

If over a slow process of evolution, the genes are carrying destructive data, it will either be repaired, or become more destructive.
One leads to healing. One leads to death.
Neatras wrote:Well, I'm sorry, but no. You don't get to lay claim to evidence without a theory that explains it appropriately.
What would be considered an acceptable theory to you?
Neatras wrote:You have not demonstrated the rigors of the scientific process, and so, as it has been expertly put: "What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence."
How can we
demonstrated the rigors of the scientific process
on all things? If that has been done, then they have reached ToE - which they haven't.
Neatras wrote:Creationists will NEVER supplant their bogus claims with predictions, statements about how the universe is, etc. without having their falsehoods cracked wide open under peer review.
Well of course they can't do so, with individuals who reject all the evidence for their own beliefs.
Which is the same thing said of Theist.
Under peer review the falsehoods of the theory of evolution has not only been cracked, but crumbles - especially with no foundation to support it.
Neatras wrote:Purpose? Reasoning minds? What does that have to do with evolution? What purpose are you talking about? You're throwing a gish gallop my way because you can't actually come up with anything about creationism that evolutionary theory can't handily debunk.
Why don't you go ahead then.
How many debates continue to this day?
So which has really been debunked?
I don't see it being creation.
Neatras wrote:]I wonder if I could get away with flagging this as preaching, since that's all this post amounts to. Subversively hiding behind "axiomatic proofs" that ultimately just make the repeated claim "GOD DID IT". It's dishonest, what you're doing.
Because it isn't preaching, you decide that it is appropriate to throw a personal attack?
John 8:32
. . .the truth will set you free.

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Post #409

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theStudent wrote: [Replying to post 387 by Blastcat]

The point should be clear.

If you can't, or don't have the ability to understand everything, why question what you are unable to understand?
Would that not indeed make you god?
Please read what you said in bold and try to understand how little man would have advanced over the years if everyone thought like you. "I don't understand this thing, I better not question it".

You would make a great Muslim because there probably things from that religion that would make you go "hmmm". Don't question them nor try to understand them though!
#-o
You can give a man a fish and he will be fed for a day, or you can teach a man to pray for fish and he will starve to death.

I blame man for codifying those rules into a book which allowed superstitious people to perpetuate a barbaric practice. Rules that must be followed or face an invisible beings wrath. - KenRU

It is sad that in an age of freedom some people are enslaved by the nomads of old. - Marco

If you are unable to demonstrate that what you believe is true and you absolve yourself of the burden of proof, then what is the purpose of your arguments? - brunumb

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TheStudent wrote:The special thing about the Bible too is this:
It has never been proven wrong, despite it has countless enemies.
You are once again in error.
I was a born again, spirit filled, tongue talking street evangelizing Christian for 2 decades.

It was a process that took lots of time, effort and research, but the Bible eventually was proven wrong. Not only was it proven wrong to me, but I was a faithful follower and not some enemy like you would like to imagine.

Thankfully I have been set free!
There may be hope for you.
You can give a man a fish and he will be fed for a day, or you can teach a man to pray for fish and he will starve to death.

I blame man for codifying those rules into a book which allowed superstitious people to perpetuate a barbaric practice. Rules that must be followed or face an invisible beings wrath. - KenRU

It is sad that in an age of freedom some people are enslaved by the nomads of old. - Marco

If you are unable to demonstrate that what you believe is true and you absolve yourself of the burden of proof, then what is the purpose of your arguments? - brunumb

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