To: pby
Science does not ignore the supernatural. It attacks it...especially on these threads (as evidence of this, please note a previous post on this thread in which the poster mentions the flying spaghetti monster in opposition to the God of the Bible.Oh, brother. If you don't recognize sarcasm on these boards, you can't enjoy them very much.
There is not "plenty of evidence to support natural explanation" for science's theories of abiogenesis (aliens and chance).
Reminder: the origins of life have absolutely nothing to do with the Theory of Evolution, any more than Gravitational Theory requires exploring the origin of matter. It's a transparent attempt to muddy the waters.
164 posted on
01/03/2006 4:16:53 PM PST by
highball
("I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have." -- Thomas Jefferson)
To: highball; pby
Sorry, that third paragraph should be italicized (I was quoting you).
165 posted on
01/03/2006 4:17:29 PM PST by
highball
("I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have." -- Thomas Jefferson)
To: highball
That there is stated belief and honest opinion in the midst of the poster's sarcasm, which I appreciate by the way (sarcasm, that is), is intuitively obvious to the most casual of observers.
I don't need your reminder that abiogenesis is different from the TOE...I am acutely aware and have been reminded by many members of Darwin Central.
The topic, however, that was being addressed was "science's" faith-based assumptions and also it's judgements on issues related to the supernatural (which it allegedly ignores or doesn't address).
175 posted on
01/03/2006 4:42:01 PM PST by
pby
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