Fantasywriter quoting BJK: " 'natural explanations for natural processes.' "That is your presupposition in a nutshell."
No, not my presupposition, that is the first rule of science itself.
It's the reason why there can be no conversation between science and anything outside the scientific realm of "natural explanations for natural processes".
Fantasywriter: "God says He created the world by His command.
You are applying a natural explanation for what God says is supernatural."
Of course, since that is the very definition of the scientific enterprise: natural explanations for natural processes.
The philosophical term for this is methodological naturalism.
That's what the word "science" means, and as soon as you inject it with the supernatural, then it is no longer real "science".
But, to be precise, if you read Genesis carefully, you'll notice that not everything God created came into being on His word alone.
For examples:
So note all those verbs: separated, made, created, finished the work, formed a man, planted a garden.
These verbs and many other descriptions of God's actions imply physical actions, and where there is something physical, there science can attempt to explain how and when it all happened.
Fantasywriter: "As to God creating evolution, where do you get that?
Where is there a hint in the Bible that God created evolution? [Im referring to macroevolution.]"
Since the Bible says nothing about how God made, created or formed the Universe, there can not possibly be a scientific hypothesis or theory which contradicts the biblical account.
But here is the more important question: if God did not intend for us to see evolution as His creative process, then why did He make the earth to appear as if that's just what evolution is?
Fantasywriter: "Are you saying, in effect, Of course theres no hint of God creating evolution in the Bible, but I believe He did it anyway.
Is that your bottom line?"
First of all, Genesis does not say how God created, formed, made or planted those things, and so science is free to investigate and report its findings.
And more to your point: there are many modern scientific understandings which are not mentioned in the Bible.
Does that fact make any of those other scientific ideas invalid?
Fantasywriter: "Look at it like this: if God used evolution, the Genesis acct wd read quite differently."
Not necessarily.
Fantasywriter: "I.e.: when it came to man, it wd say that God took a semian-likie creature and formed it into a man.
Subsequently the Bible wd not refer to man as made in Gods image but rather in the image of whatever ape-like creature He has used."
I don't see your problem with the Genesis 2 account:
Evolution hypothesizes that life did begin, in effect, "from the dust of the ground" and clearly God's breath was necessary to create a fully living human being.
As for creating man in the image of a simian...
Do you suppose that somehow God did not know on Day One what He intended to create on Day Six?
Bottom line is: I don't criticize the Bible for what it doesn't say, and am always pleased to find where it does help confirm scientific ideas.
Fantasywriter: "Did you know, btw, that the Bible actually does speak of evolution?
It does, in so many words.
Heres the passage (2 Peter 3)...
Its all right there in that passage.
Evolutions faulty assumption:"
In fact, that passage contradicts nothing of science in general, or evolution in specific.
It mentions creation, flood and fire all of which are confirmed scientifically as happening in the past, and likely in the future.
Fantasywriter: "Christian evolutionists have to make one further assumption: that there is something divine about the animal-type that gave rise to man.
How else cd man be both descended from animals & reflect Gods divine image?"
I don't see your problem.
That mankind is created in God's image simply refers to our physical form, of which any number of other biblical creatures share a likeness -- giants and some angels come to mind.
But the key action we find in 2:7 where God "breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.".
I think that is the moment when pre-humans of whatever physical appearance became fully human beings.
If that doesn't satisfy you, then I can certainly sympathize, but don't share your concerns.
Fantasywriter: "Oh, & before you all rush in & claim that man & apes evolved along different lines, here are the words of Darwin himiself:"
First of all, Darwin's basic ideas of evolution -- descent with modifications and natural selection -- are indisputable, even by today's anti-evolutionists.
But, Darwin was wrong about other things -- for example, he knew nothing of genetics or DNA -- and in this example was speculating about which branch of monkeys humans descended from.
It turns out: fossil and DNA evidence suggest that ancestors of today's Old World monkeys split from Great Ape ancestors around 20 million years ago, and pre-humans split from our ancestors common to chimpanzees around four million years ago.
Those millions of years of separation are enough to guarantee no possible interbreeding, however certain pre-humans like Neanderthals, separated by just hundreds of thousands of years are, it seems, a very different matter.
Okay, BJK, IF you wd like me to reply to this post, something’s going to happen first. Namely, an apology. Am apology for post 174.
First, you claim to be a Christian but you gossiped behind my back. I’m going to assume you have at least a passing enough familiarity w your Bible to know what’s wrong w that.
Second, the underlying issue. I’ve posted here a lot. Never once in all that time has anyone ever said to me, ‘That’s it. First reason x, I will not read anything more you say, period’. I’ve seen it happen to many others, but it’s never happened to me.
If, however, it did happen, I can tell you some things straight out of the gate. First & foremost, I wd not post to that person again.
Why?
Primarily because I am an honest person. If I tell somebody I’m going to do something, I mean it. Therefore, my default mode is to assume the same of others. I.e.: I don’t assume they’re lying because in their place, I wouldn’t lie.
So since the person wd not be reading any more of my posts, why waste my valuable time writing to them? I don’t engage in futile efforts, for one thing, and more importantly, I have v little discretionary time to begin w. My schedule is, in fact, so full that it’s all I can do to post to a few threads in the course of any given day. Why I wd waste any of that precious time posting to a person who doesn’t want to hear what I have to say is beyond me.
Which ties into the second point. Why wd I attempt to force my words onto a party that desn’t want to hear them? That is disrespectful at best & neurotic at worst. Have you ever witnessed a person trying to force an unwilling party to listen to them? It’s an ugly, disquieting sight. Why is it any different if it happens on the Net? It’s still weird, & not something I want any part of.
If the above considerations were not enough [they’d be more than enough, obviously] there is a third. Namely, I’d be afraid of looking like a pathetic loser. I.e.: the kind of person who simply cannot let it go, has nothing better to do, and will continue to try to be heard long past the point when they’ve been tuned out. Who wants to look that way in public? It has LOSER spelled all over it.
So now to the specific situation. I informed a party on this thread I wd no longer read their posts. I said it & I meant it. Somehow you interpreted that as “projecting my behavior onto others”. & you did it in a snide, underhanded way. [I.e.: you discussed me publicly, by name, w’out pinging me, & you did it in the classic nasty-gossip mode.]
So you can just apologize.
Or not. It’s up to you. However, if no sincere apology is forthcoming, you’ll hear no more from me. The choice is yours.
[Oh, & by the way, what behavior of mine am I projecting? Honesty? The party in question has been blatantly dishonest, so no, that’s not the one in play. Why don’t you spell it out, BJK—or are you too gutless?]