Posted on 11/17/2005 9:25:39 PM PST by raj bhatia
A brilliant piece by Krauthammer, as usual. The punch line: "How ridiculous to make evolution the enemy of God. What could be more elegant, more simple, more brilliant, more economical, more creative, indeed more divine than a planet with millions of life forms, distinct and yet interactive, all ultimately derived from accumulated variations in a single double-stranded molecule, pliable and fecund enough to give us mollusks and mice, Newton and Einstein? Even if it did give us the Kansas State Board of Education, too."
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
[Devout Christians cannot be Darwinists, and vice versa.]
I know many devout Christians (who have an absolute faith in and a relationship with the God of the Bible) who are also Darwinists.
I can only assume you mean that only a person who is a devout Christian according to your own personal interpretation cannot be a Darwinist.
Yeah, that would be pretty weird, if was intended to be taken as a literal chronological fact. (Hint: allegory & imagery!!) Even weirder would be a God that created us but meticulously set up genetic, morphological, biogeographical and fossil evidence to trick us into drawing the inevitable conclusion of evolution.
There are obviously mutations and variety among species, but this is not evidence of a growth of genetic complexity.
This thread, like creatures suffering from inbreeding, has grown sterile.
I think you are misinterpreting Scripture. God says Adam will die the moment he eats from the tree, but after eating, Adam "lives," in a physical sense, but his work becomes toil (Gen 3:17). And yes, Adam then returns to the ground when he dies, separated from God. That doesn't mean literal death never happened before. It means Adam has chosen the fleshy over the spiritual, the earthly over the Godly -- and if he wants to live by the earth, then he will die by the earth, without God's presence in his life.
Well, is the answer that you are fallible and your interpretation of Scripture just MIGHT need retooling? Or are we starting from the assumption that you are infallible and your interpretation of Scripture must be correct no matter what anyone proves to the contrary?
There was a very large post that went through the harmonization of Genesis with Evolution, that I cannot recall the details.
Just one one of the many examples is that most people assume that life started here on earth and/or that the first "plants" were green plants --- neither necessarily true at all.(Some hypothezise the first plants were probably dependant on HEAT, not light, for growth (witness such life near the Marianas Trench at the bottom of the ocean. Similarly, there is good evidence that there may be non-planet-based clouds of organic material floating in the Galaxy, ripe for simple life --- and a good way to have plants before Sun.)
On a much more concrete level, there is greater and greater harmonization of the later parts of Genesis with the evolutionary theory -- for example, one of the big problems many have with evolution is the necessity for sin to enter by "one man." Well, evolutionary theory has CONFIRMED that there was, in fact, at least one common man and one common woman ancestor of all living humans (called "Y-Chromosome Adam" and "Mitochondrial Eve").
Other little nagging problems are working themselves out -- Genesis has birds before various land creatures -- not typical school of thought for evolution. Well, per evolutionary study, it turns out the closest living relative of Dinosaurs ARE BIRDS. Substitute the word "dinosaur" in place of birds in Genesis, and things begin to click along nicely.
There will be a time when this all works out and will be as obviously harmonious with the Bible as Copernicus' theory (which was equally heretical in its time).
www.biblegateway.com
Wow... Someone both ignorant and unfunny.
You might brush up on some basic science as well.
I love that line! LOL! :-)
ROFL!
This proliferation of ignorance, self-righteous, anti-science fools is going to reduce FR to a meaningless internet clowntown.
I know I have posted this before, but thought here would be a good place again since there seems to be lots of new folks on the thread and some slight misunderstandings:
Let me post my own example of gravity:
A little history here:
Newtons Law of Universal Gravitation
Every object in the universe attracts every other object with a force directed along the line of centers for the two objects that is proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the separation between the two objects.
F=Gm1m2/r2
Where:
F equals the gravitational force between two objects
m1 equals the mass of the first object
m2 equals the mass of the second object
R equals the distance between the objects
G equals the universal constant of gravitation = (6.6726 )* 10-11 N*m2/kg2 (which is still being refined and tested today)
(BTW this is a simple form of the equation and is only applied to point sources. Usually it is expressed as a vector equation)
Even though it works well for most practical purposes, this formulation has problems.
A few of the problems are:
It shows the change is gravitational force is transmitted instantaneously (Violates C), assumes an absolute space and time (this contradicts Special Relativity), etc.
Enter Einsteins General Theory of Relativity
In 1915 Einstein developed a new theory of gravity called General Relativity.
A number of experiments showed this theory explained some of the problems with the classical Newtonian model. However, this theory like all others is still being explored and tested.
From an NSF abstract:
As with all scientific knowledge, a theory can be refined or even replaced by an alternative theory in light of new and compelling evidence. The geocentric theory that the sun revolves around the earth was replaced by the heliocentric theory of the earth's rotation on its axis and revolution around the sun. However, ideas are not referred to as "theories" in science unless they are supported by bodies of evidence that make their subsequent abandonment very unlikely. When a theory is supported by as much evidence as evolution, it is held with a very high degree of confidence.
In science, the word "hypothesis" conveys the tentativeness inherent in the common use of the word "theory.' A hypothesis is a testable statement about the natural world. Through experiment and observation, hypotheses can be supported or rejected. At the earliest level of understanding, hypotheses can be used to construct more complex inferences and explanations. Like "theory," the word "fact" has a different meaning in science than it does in common usage. A scientific fact is an observation that has been confirmed over and over. However, observations are gathered by our senses, which can never be trusted entirely. Observations also can change with better technologies or with better ways of looking at data. For example, it was held as a scientific fact for many years that human cells have 24 pairs of chromosomes, until improved techniques of microscopy revealed that they actually have 23. Ironically, facts in science often are more susceptible to change than theories, which is one reason why the word "fact" is not much used in science.
Finally, "laws" in science are typically descriptions of how the physical world behaves under certain circumstances. For example, the laws of motion describe how objects move when subjected to certain forces. These laws can be very useful in supporting hypotheses and theories, but like all elements of science they can be altered with new information and observations.
Those who oppose the teaching of evolution often say that evolution should be taught as a "theory, not as a fact." This statement confuses the common use of these words with the scientific use. In science, theories do not turn into facts through the accumulation of evidence. Rather, theories are the end points of science. They are understandings that develop from extensive observation, experimentation, and creative reflection. They incorporate a large body of scientific facts, laws, tested hypotheses, and logical inferences. In this sense, evolution is one of the strongest and most useful scientific theories we have.
Here is another nice page of what a theory is:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory
"In common usage a theory is often viewed as little more than a guess or a hypothesis. But in science and generally in academic usage, a theory is much more than that. A theory is an established paradigm that explains all or many of the data we have and offers valid predictions that can be tested. In science, a theory can never be proven true, because we can never assume we know all there is to know. Instead, theories remain standing until they are disproven, at which point they are thrown out altogether or modified slightly.
Theories start out with empirical observations such as sometimes water turns into ice. At some point, there is a need or curiosity to find out why this is, which leads to a theoretical/scientific phase. In scientific theories, this then leads to research, in combination with auxiliary and other hypotheses (see scientific method), which may then eventually lead to a theory. Some scientific theories (such as the theory of gravity) are so widely accepted that they are often seen as laws. This, however, rests on a mistaken assumption of what theories and laws are. Theories and laws are not rungs in a ladder of truth, but different sets of data. A law is a general statement based on observations."
For Laws:
"A well-known example is that of Newton's law of gravity: while it describes the world accurately for most pertinent observations, such as of the movements of astronomical objects in the solar system, it was found to be inaccurate when applied to extremely large masses or velocities. Einstein's theory of general relativity, however, accurately handles gravitational interactions at those extreme conditions, in addition to the range covered by Newton's law. Newton's formula for gravity is still used in most circumstances, as an easier-to-calculate approximation of gravitational law. A similar relationship exists between Maxwell's equations and the theory of quantum electrodynamics; there are several such cases. This suggests the (unanswered) question of whether there are any ultimately true physical laws, or whether they are all just cases where our sensory and rational apparatus have generated mathematically simple approximations, valid within the range of normal human experience, to unobtainable true formulas."
You just strectched my brain. I knew, of course, that the "God ofthe gaps" notion was wrong, but I had never articulated why.
Thanks
It's one of mine as well. :-)
However, ummm... wasn't Einstein, it was Newton.
"If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants." from Sir Isaac Newton to Robert Hooke in a letter during the year 1675.
Amen to that!
Nothing new there my friend. All thru history.
The Bible says that one man brought sin and death into this world; Evolution says that death brought man into the world. In evolution, Adam would have developed from the deaths of millenia of dead ancestors. It creates a real problem for those who want to say that God used evolution to create Adam and Eve!
I haven't got that far yet.
:O)
P
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.