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Evolution vs. Creation Debate in Tucson, Arizona May 10
Calvery Chapel Tucson and Fellowship of Christian Athletes ^ | May 10, 2003 | Fellowship of Christian Athletes

Posted on 05/06/2003 11:22:05 AM PDT by \/\/ayne

Click on the image below for a PDF flyer



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Saturday May 10, 2003

All Saturday meetings except the debate will be held at Calvary Tucson’s East Campus 8725 E. Speedway Blvd.

9:00 AM “Origins of Life and the Universe” . . . . .Hank Giesecke

10:00 AM “Fifty Facts Why Evolution Doesn’t Work” . . . .Russell Miller

11:00 AM Lunch

1:00 PM “Age of the Earth, and Intelligent Design” . . . .Hank Hiesecke

2:00 PM “Data from Mt. Saint Helens” . . . . .Russell Miller

3:00 PM Break

4:30 PM Dinner available at U of A’s McKale Center

6:00 PM Debate at University of Arizona McKale Center “Alternative World Views: Evolution and Creation”
Dr. Duane Gish and Professor Peter Sherman


Sunday May 11, 2003
Calvary Tucson East Campus
8:00 and 10:20 AM “Take Creation Captive”.......Hank Giesecke

Calvary Tucson West Campus
9:10 and 11:30 AM “Creation or Chaos”......Dr. John Meyer

Calvary Tucson East Campus
6:00 PM “Why 600 Scientists Reject Evolution” ......Dr. John Meyer


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: arizona; atheist; christian; creation; crevolist; evolution; science; tucson; university
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To: AndrewC
Well, what? Does the fact that eight years have passed magically make Duane Gish's comments truthful all of a sudden?
141 posted on 05/06/2003 8:48:56 PM PDT by Dimensio (Sometimes I doubt your committment to Sparkle Motion!)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
So, how long ago do you believe the Cambrian to have occured? And why?

The point here is that by scientific evidence agreed to by all scientists, and even by evolutionists themselves, the fossil record, there is no way to explain the in an evolutionary manner the tremendous explosion of new totally different organisms within a very short period of time. What my beliefs are, is therefore inconsequential and your attempt to turn this into a personal discussion shows quite well that my statement is correct and you cannot refute it.

142 posted on 05/06/2003 8:51:38 PM PDT by gore3000
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Comment #143 Removed by Moderator

To: Dimensio
Does the fact that eight years have passed magically make Duane Gish's comments truthful all of a sudden?

Actually, 15 years have passed since the debate, and the pamphlet was written 17 year before that. At any rate, whether 8, 15, or 32 old, perhaps Gish's opinions have "evolved" since then. Isn't that how it's supposed to work?

144 posted on 05/06/2003 8:53:28 PM PDT by Stop Legal Plunder ("When words are many, sin is not lacking." -- Proverbs 10:19a)
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To: gore3000
Non-responsive. How long ago do you feel that the Cambrian occurred? It's a simple question. It's not a trick question.
145 posted on 05/06/2003 8:53:57 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Dimensio
Does the fact that eight years have passed magically make Duane Gish's comments truthful all of a sudden?

Do you actually read the source for the links you post?

Addendum



Wesley Elsberry received the following letter from Larry Sites on March 7, 1994:

This is, I believe, the file that includes the Gish-Pilmer debate about the lack of truthfullness in Gish's "Brainwashed" comic book. If you can easily contact the appropiate author above, let him know that the ICR has FINALLY updated this booklet. Apparently all the flack about it on the information superfreeway has had an effect. The copy I got at the ICR's 2-25-94 has clarified their position on pre-cambrian fossils and eliminated unambigious claims of dino with man footprints at Paluxy. The new version is undated as near as I can tell, but must have been created within the last 6 months or so as the copy I got at the ICR office then was dated 1986 and still included the claim, "fine clear tracks of dinosaurs and man".

We're making progress! Now if only they would do some science instead of just responding to it.

146 posted on 05/06/2003 8:56:06 PM PDT by AndrewC
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To: KBtry4-11
Creationism is a sad joke...evolution is the scientific rule and law.

First ad hominem attack, then unsupported assertion. That's no way to have a rational debate. Shame on you.

147 posted on 05/06/2003 8:56:10 PM PDT by Stop Legal Plunder ("When words are many, sin is not lacking." -- Proverbs 10:19a)
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To: <1/1,000,000th%; KBtry4-11
Now I'll have to look it up...

Highly recommended.

148 posted on 05/06/2003 8:58:29 PM PDT by Stop Legal Plunder ("When words are many, sin is not lacking." -- Proverbs 10:19a)
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To: Dimensio
[Note here that Gish is saying that he knows now that there are precambrian fossils, and that he has known it for at least a couple of years.]

This comment by the author of the TalkOrigins article is just the kind of misrepresentation used by evolutionists all the time to attack opponents. Gish had just said that the age of the pre-Cambrian fossils was in dispute at the time and that the fossils themselves were very dubious. Sepcifically, their relevance to the discussion of the origin of the Cambrian fossils, is still in question since many of the fossils are undoubtedly of plants and the Cambrian discussion is of animals which could not have descended from plants.

149 posted on 05/06/2003 9:03:12 PM PDT by gore3000
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Non-responsive.

And I will continue to be non-responsive as long as you wish to discuss me instead of the facts.

My statement stands unrefuted - the Cambrian explosion totally disproves evolution.

150 posted on 05/06/2003 9:05:55 PM PDT by gore3000
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To: gore3000
And I will continue to be non-responsive as long as you wish to discuss me instead of the facts.

Thanks for doing your part to keep the discussion on an appropriate track.

151 posted on 05/06/2003 9:07:57 PM PDT by Stop Legal Plunder ("When words are many, sin is not lacking." -- Proverbs 10:19a)
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To: gore3000
Deliberate non-resonse is a typical Creationist-Post-Modern-Deconstructionist tactic. If you refuse to say how long ago you feel the Cambrian Explosion occurred, it is impossible to judge whether your comments about the period are meaningful. Do you feel that by responding your argument would lose value?
152 posted on 05/06/2003 9:13:06 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Deliberate non-resonse is a typical Creationist-Post-Modern-Deconstructionist tactic...

Name calling is a typical evolutionist, modern, non-constructionist non-debate tactic...

...If you refuse to say how long ago you feel...

Our colleague is trying very much to promote thinking, not feeling, rationality not emotions on this thread. I suspect that's one reason why he declines to express his feelings. That and keeping the debate depersonalized, as he already explained.

153 posted on 05/06/2003 9:20:30 PM PDT by Stop Legal Plunder ("When words are many, sin is not lacking." -- Proverbs 10:19a)
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To: <1/1,000,000th%; PatrickHenry
"Biblical Inerrancy" so named is certainly a post-reformation protestant invention. The point is that until the "reformers" decided that the only trustworthy part of Christian tradition was the canon of Scripture, no Christian, East or West, thought of using Holy Scripture as an axiom system.

Six-day literalists (the kind of creationist most readily lampooned and turned into a readily toppled straw-man as PatrickHenry did in his earlier post on this thread) grasp at straws when they try to find a Church Father who would support their idea of Scriptural exegesis. They usually point to St. Basil the Great's Hexameron, his commentary on the creation account in Genesis. The trouble is, in that very work he wrote, "it matters not whether you say 'aeon' or 'day' the thought is the same." St. Gregory of Nyssa, while maintaining their truth, plainly discounted the literal historicity of the first two chapters of Genesis, describing them as "doctrines in the guise of a narrative."

I am told by the webmaster of the newly revived Orthodox Christian publication The Christian Activist that the article "The Eternal Will" should soon be available on-line again. When it is I'll start a thread with it. The author (if I remember correctly, it was Alexander Kalimoros) argues that the Genesis account, when read in light of patristic commentaries, actually gives essentially the same chronology as modern scientific accounts (both cosmological and evolutionary).

That being said, I have come to the conclusion that the evolution/creation debate is viscious and heated primarily because the most vocal proponents of the two sides (committed pious protestants on the one and atheistic proponents of scientism on the other) both share a common misconception of the relationship between stochastic processes and intent or purpose. Both believe that a stochastic element in the description of the origin of biological diversity and humankind precludes there being any intent behind those events. The former therefore, believing firmly in God, hotly deny the theory of evolution. The latter rejoicing in using it as an iron with which to brand theists as obscurantist, retrograde, and anti-scientific.

This common assumption, however, is wrong, as two examples suffice to show:

First, there is a well-known physical system in which thermal (and thus random) effects produce an increase in the order of the system. (It is an open system, in the process energy is added and removed from the system, so the creationists can shut up about violations of the second law of thermodynamics.) The system is the hardening of metal: by a suitable sequence of heating and quenching, a metal is made harder by increasing the average size of the crystals in the metal, that is increasing the order of the system.

Now, the curious thing about this system is this: any archeologist upon finding a shard of hardened metal will immediately conclude that it is a fragment of an artifact, something made intentionally.

From this example, we see that the fact that a random process is involved in a material change most assuredly does not show that it is not an intentional or willed change. Rather, in this example (which like the evolutionary description biological diversity involves an increase in the order in an open system via stochastic effects) the natural conclusion is the opposite: the state of the system is intentional. This observation is absolutely contrary to the common assumption of the polemicists on both sides.

A second example is that of options markets. The best predictor of the behavior of options markets is a stochastic differential equation, the Black-Scholes Option Pricing Formula. Now, we all know that options markets function by the interaction of intentional actors, traders, buyers, sellers (of the options and the products or securities they are options on), all of whom are seeking to maximize their profits, and act with intent. Nonetheless, the best model of this activity is stochastic, and not because it is accounting for extraneous influences, but rather because market dynamics when the actors do not have complete information share some features with Brownian motion.

Here, the stochastic element is epistemological only and not ontological at all: it gives a good model, even though a microscopic model in which the actors willingness to make certain trades was known could be completely law-driven, deterministic, and based on intentional actions. There is good reason to argue that much of the randomness incorporated into evolutionary theory is epistemological and not ontological. Again a fact which tells against the common assumption of the most vociferous debaters on both sides.

154 posted on 05/06/2003 9:21:08 PM PDT by The_Reader_David
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To: Aric2000
a2 ...

Sorry, if I wrote a book today, and told you that it was divinely inspired by god, and therefore was to be taken on faith, you would laugh in my face. The people that wrote the books in the bible are all dead, at least you could look at me and see if I was crazy, but you haven't got a clue what those guys were like. That takes HUGE amounts of faith as far as I am concerned, HUGE amounts.

fC ...


before you dropped out of school (( life )) ...

how many times did you repeat 3rd grade !
155 posted on 05/06/2003 9:23:16 PM PDT by f.Christian (( With Rights ... comes Responsibilities --- irresponsibility --- whacks // criminals - psychos ! ))
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To: Stop Legal Plunder
Our colleague is trying very much .....

You may consider "G3k" to be your colleague, but just to set the record straight, he surely isn't one of mine.

156 posted on 05/06/2003 9:24:36 PM PDT by longshadow
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To: Aric2000
<< Evolution is a SCIENTIFIC theory, based on scientific evidence, facts, and logic. >>

Okay, give me a FACT that shows one kind of creature evolvng into another kind. Give me a FACT that shows inanimate matter becoming alive all by itself.

Is science about finding the TRUTH, or is science about eliminating God from all explanations?
157 posted on 05/06/2003 9:27:59 PM PDT by Con X-Poser
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To: The_Reader_David
any archeologist upon finding a shard of hardened metal will immediately conclude that it is a fragment of an artifact, something made intentionally.

Why?

158 posted on 05/06/2003 9:28:32 PM PDT by AndrewC
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To: longshadow
You may consider "G3k" to be your colleague, but just to set the record straight, he surely isn't one of mine.

To set the record straight, I only spoke for myself and to Dr. Stochastic...are you his alter ego? If so, I stand corrected; perhaps I was using the term too loosely.

159 posted on 05/06/2003 9:28:44 PM PDT by Stop Legal Plunder ("When words are many, sin is not lacking." -- Proverbs 10:19a)
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To: AndrewC
Why?

The sequence of heating and cooling needed to harden a metal happens with vanishingly small probability in the absence of a craftsman.

Actually, the 'coincidences' pointed to in anthropic cosmology suggest that one might do well to consider the hardened shard as an excellent analogy for the earth's ecosystem (and a better analogy than a watch to an organism at that). If one does, and chases off any six-day literalists hanging about, the debate can be quited down very quickly.

160 posted on 05/06/2003 9:33:17 PM PDT by The_Reader_David
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