Posted on 01/17/2008 10:27:05 AM PST by neverdem
Still defended by the most ardent Evolutionist Zealots
Not correct. Many researchers recognized early on that Piltdown didn't fit. The geology was picked on by about 1915. Friedrichs and Weidenreich had both, by about 1932, published their research suggesting the lower jaws and molars were that of an orang (they were correct). By then most scholars were ignoring Piltdown entirely because it didn't fit with the newer South African finds. Only a few British anthropologists (likely for reasons of national pride) still bought into Piltdown at that time.
But if you have evidence that some "ardent Evolutionist Zealots" are still defending Piltdown, I am sure you would be willing to post it for us.
But i guess facts don’t matter when you’ve created your own reality.
Unfortunate mutations that don't reproduce, at least not normally.
ML/NJ
Gee, I thought this was about the Darwin awards, the person doing the most absolutely lame and dumb thing to get themselves killed last year
Mines a better subject to argue over.
:-)
The argument is over, Darwinism has been falsified. Now it’s just a matter of dismantling the Darwin machine, which seems to have developed a momentum that is quite independent of the fact that it has been thoroughly discredited.
Dittos on that line of thinking. Its indisputable that God uses natural processes throughout the entirety of the universe. From the forces that hold atoms together, to the chemical interchange that occurs as sperm fertilizes eggs to make new life, to gravity holding galaxies together, they all are non-mystical processes that if you believe in God, you thereby believe he saw fit to use them to run this world he created.
Following that reasoning, that He would use a process arising from inside the physical rules of this universe He created seems more likely to me than not.
Because people still argue that natural selection “proves” that God doesn’t exist.
Check the second link in comment# 1 for an update on genetics/genomics. It's pretty good.
The Bible says that God created the sun. We look out into the universe and we see that stars are being created by natural processes. To me this means that God created OUR sun through natural processes. Why would God need to ‘poof’ our sun into existence, and why would God, when there was already a mechanism in place to do so.
The Bible says that God created man. We look out into nature and we see that living things are shaped by natural processes and the programming that runs their biology is subject to change. To me this means that God didn’t ‘poof’ man into existence, he created us ‘from dust’ i.e. particles too small to see, using the natural grandeur of the universe that HE made.
The small minded see all this and conclude that it holds no place for God. It is like saying that because the creator of the game of football and the designer of the stadium didn’t show up on game day that they were somehow not needed at all.
==Actually we have some on this website arguing for a geocentric view (i.e., denying the Copernican heliocentric view).
Actually, there is no contradiction between embracing Copernicus and the new evidence that suggests that the earth is at or near the center of the universe.
Yes, Virginia, there are Creationist FReepers who hold with Geocentricism; how they don’t think this discredits themselves or their compatriots I cannot fathom; but scratch a Creationist and you will often find that they have equally preposterous and absolutely unsupported beliefs.
Evidence GGG? Or are you going to post another ‘data chart’ without any data and the lines drawn in?
Somethings is in action, at action, for action, something produces the results! That's for sure. But what is it? Design evolution or designer-free evolution. Occam's razor suggests that because we clearly see design and design evolution -- we easily infer a designer!
Just as we see two lines parallel at one point and also parallel at all other observable points -- we easily infer that space is Euclidian, or "flat", and not hyperbolic, not elliptic or spherical.
Yet observation is not just about appearances. Appearances are just one side of the coin -- the other side of the coin is intellectual perceptions. What is in our mind?
Zealot hyperbolians claim space is hyperbolic, and that we can observe only a infintesimally small part of it, that all our ideations of "flatness" are false. And what argument can be made with them? Nothing about the obvious flatness of space (yet subject we now know to local gravity pinches and warpings) can convince them!
Fundamentalism, as such, did not exist in the time of Copernicus and Galileo...as it was a theological movement originating in late 19th century Protestantism. Copernicus and Galileo lived in the milieu of a very different theology within the largest Christian body at the time and now--the Catholic Church.
Unlike Fundamentalism, the Catholic Church believes that it and it alone is the last word on Scriptural interpretation--and despite placing some books on the Index of Forbidden Books, it never really dogmatically pronounced on heliocentrism one way or the other. People held different positions, and in the 1500s when Copernicus's theory first came out there was debate about it within even the halls of the Church. Later on, as the REformation heated up, positions hardened. Nonetheless, Cardinal Bellarmine famously said as follows during the Galileo affair:
I say that if a real proof be found that the sun is fixed and does not revolve round the earth, but the earth round the sun, then it will be necessary, very carefully, to proceed to the explanation of the passages of Scripture which appear to be contrary, and we should rather say that we have misunderstood these than pronounce that to be false which is demonstrated.That's not really fundamentalism as you can see. And I would also point out that most Christian bodies haven't officially come down either way on evolution, save to say let's see where the evidence goes and avoid hasty conclusions. Folks tend to hold up the Fundamentalist viewpoint as *the* Christian one, and it really isn't.
I'm an old bio major, and a devout Catholic, so I'm sensitive to such things. :)
Yet that is not so! Our G-d is continuous, and continously acting. How delicate the very existence of physics -- of the equations and constants as we know them. Even they are balanced, continuously balanced all the time, or -- so it seems to me -- chaos of unimaginable order.
Here -- what happens in a black hole? Here -- what happens in the pico-pico micro dimensions of the quantum flux? Where is the edge of universe, where it's center? Perhaps we can learn them, perhaps not. We may strive to, and good for that effort. Yet what have we seen throughout human existence should we be honest? Is it not that every advancement in knowledge brings on yet more unknowables, and each deeper?
Where is comfort? And why is there something called comfort, which we all seek, all the time?
Dude, do you even know who Copernicus was? He was a Catholic cleric.
I suspect you are referring to the age-old canard about Galileo. Galileo was in trouble with the Church for taking the heliocentric theory one step too far... to saying that the Bible is wrong. The Bible is fully compatible with heliocentrism or it would have gone away centuries ago having been proved false.
Hey, dude. Wow, dude. Like wow, man. Let’s hey, you know, rap about, hey dude, the history of science.
Wow. Cool. Groovy. Dude.
Hey, Dude, like some really cool stuff, ya know. Copernicus was the FIRST non-Greek astronomer to formulate a scientifically based heliocentric cosmology that displaced the Earth from the center of the universe.
Wow. Hey. I’m rappin to THAT beat! How bout you, dude?
Copernicus, N., De Revolutionibus Orbium Caelestium, Johannes Petreius, Nuremberg, Book I, Chapter 10, 1543. We therefore assert that the center of the Earth, carrying the Moons path, passes in a great circuit among the other planets in an annual revolution around the Sun; that near the Sun is the center of the Universe; and that whereas the Sun is at rest, any apparent motion of the Sun can be better explained by motion of the Earth.
According to Copernicus, our universe should look something like this.
For modern evidence that supports the same, you might want to start HERE
I’ll go even further...it doesn’t say that God “created” (Lat. creavit) the sun ex nihilo...it says God “made” (Lat. fecit) the sun and the moon. Biblical scholars going back 2000 years have always seen in these two distinct processes...one from the Hebrew “bara” meaning to create from nothing, and one meaning to fashion from pre-existing matter.
And of course you are right about Adam being made from the dust, and there’s also the fact that God said “let the waters produce” reptiles and birds...definitely indicating a secondary natural cause. It does talk about God “creating” man also, but perhaps this could be understood as the soul, which being immaterial, could not arise through evolutionary process and needs to be created immediately from nothing.
And I am sure it will stand the test of time just as Nebraska man, Piltdown man, and the Archaeoptrix finds did (they didn’t). People will write papers for dozens of years and stake their whole scientific careers on it, only to down the road be proven to have based their whole careers on a fraud.
Just chalk coyoteman up there with Nebraska man as far as I’m concerned.
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