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Science vs. Creationism

I read a few of blogs written by atheistic feminists, and the bile they receive from other atheists regarding feminism is usually worse that what they get from religious people.

It would be nice if you could provide some links. It is sad that people who have made a life-changing decision could be so close-minded against some women who just want equalism.
 
It would be nice if you could provide some links. It is sad that people who have made a life-changing decision could be so close-minded against some women who just want equalism.

Half the bloggers at freethoughtblogs.com talk about it. Shakesville, skepchic, etc.
 
What a load of rubbish instead of simple answer to simple question.
Again... what happened to Aboriginal people, Natives of Americas, Inuits of Greenland and Japanese people after flood. How exactly the same people and cultures ended up inhabiting those areas again?


....ok, your the genius! So what happened to the Aborigines, the Native Americans, and the Japanese? I guess they all "evolved" separately on or in there native lands? From Biblical chronology the flood occurred in 2370*B.C.E

Noah and his family entered the ark in the 600th year of Noah’s life, the 2nd month (October-November), the 17th day. (Ge 7:11) One year later (a year consisting of 360 days) was the 17th day, 2nd month, 601st year. Ten days after that would be the 27th day of the 2nd month, when they came out; a total of 370 days, or parts of 371 separate days, spent in the ark. (Ge 8:13,*14) In the log that Noah kept, it appears he used months of 30 days each, 12 of them equaling 360 days. In this way he avoided all the complicated fractions involved had he used strictly lunar months consisting of slightly more than 29 1⁄2 days. That such calculations were used in the account is evident from the fact that a five-month period consisted of 150 days.—Ge 7:11,*24; 8:3,*4.

With the Deluge great changes came, for example, the life span of humans dropped very rapidly. Some have suggested that prior to the Flood the waters above the expanse shielded out some of the harmful radiation and that, with the waters gone, cosmic radiation genetically harmful to man increased. However, the Bible is silent on the matter. Incidentally, any change in radiation would have altered the rate of formation of radioactive carbon-14 to such an extent as to invalidate all radiocarbon dates prior to the Flood.
 
....ok, your the genius! So what happened to the Aborigines, the Native Americans, and the Japanese? I guess they all "evolved" separately on or in there native lands? From Biblical chronology the flood occurred in 2370*B.C.E

.[/B]

Can you please stop quoting that mythology book - it has no relationship to the answer I am asking.
So you guess all these nations evolved into what they were before the flood and what they are now from Noah's family and spread all over the world from Middle East in just a few years? We do have undeniable evidence of people activity in all continents way before " supposed" flood and after... how did that happen? Did your creator just "magically recreated and teleported" thousands of people all over the world? And changed their racial features, languages and general advancement levels at the same time?
Do you understand that you trying to sell magic fairies, trolls and unicorns here?
 
I read a few of blogs written by atheistic feminists, and the bile they receive from other atheists regarding feminism is usually worse that what they get from religious people.

To be sure, there are a lot of issues with new Feminists as well as New Athiests. I have no issues with feminists.

With the Deluge great changes came, for example, the life span of humans dropped very rapidly. Some have suggested that prior to the Flood the waters above the expanse shielded out some of the harmful radiation and that, with the waters gone, cosmic radiation genetically harmful to man increased. However, the Bible is silent on the matter. Incidentally, any change in radiation would have altered the rate of formation of radioactive carbon-14 to such an extent as to invalidate all radiocarbon dates prior to the Flood.

More Watchtower material. You don't think it's a big deal that you continue quoting sources without giving a citation?

https://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/1200001150?q=earth+day&p=par

ctrl+f the quoted statement.
 
To be sure, there are a lot of issues with new Feminists as well as New Athiests. I have no issues with feminists.

What the difference between the "new Feminists" and other feminists, or the New Atheists and other atheists?
 
More Watchtower material. You don't think it's a big deal that you continue quoting sources without giving a citation?

https://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/1200001150?q=earth+day&p=par

ctrl+f the quoted statement.

“I'm for truth, no matter who tells it." ...isn't that on the bottom of everyone of your posts? So what's the big deal? If I quote, copy and paste and otherwise use material to point out the "truth" then be happy you had the chance to read and absorb it!
 
“I'm for truth, no matter who tells it." ...isn't that on the bottom of everyone of your posts? So what's the big deal? If I quote, copy and paste and otherwise use material to point out the "truth" then be happy you had the chance to read and absorb it!

Proper attribution is a mark of honest debate.
 
John Angus Campbell on Philip Johnson, author of Darwin on Trial:
I’m impressed with Philip Johnson, not only by his works, but by his words. That is to say his personal conduct. I had a meeting of some colleagues of mine at the university dinner meeting at a local restaurant and these are colleagues I respected and continue to respect. But I was very much informed by their treatment of him. These very competent, highly trained intellectuals spent an hour or so making it impossible for Johnson to get to first base. He must be defeated in advance. And that little experience, as much as anything Phil had written, dropped the scales from my eyes. There really is such a thing as scientific naturalism. It really is an ideology. It really does want to cover the entire intellectual framework. And many of my colleagues and friends at the university really do want to keep other points of view out. I say that as a confession of personal experience, and I’m sorry to report it, but I do believe it is true. And it is my fidelity to that truth, perhaps more than any positive conviction about the ultimate outcome of this debate that makes me put my energy on the side of questioning this prevailing paradigm. Because I do think it is a dogma. I do think this dogma is uncritical. And I do think that believing in it unreflectively is a sin against the intellect. And indeed it is a great obstacle to liberal education and liberal thought if we are, prior to all discussion, to limit thought only to certain predetermined avenues.

From an interview with him on the rhetoric of Darwin.
https://www.understandingorigins.org/the_rhetoric_of_darwin.html
 
These very competent, highly trained intellectuals spent an hour or so making it impossible for Johnson to get to first base. He must be defeated in advance.

Johnson spoke at lenght in his book, and produced horrible arguments with no appreciable truth. It's very easy, almost ridiculously so, to rebut his arguments. It's much more likely that Campbell witness people correcting Johnson on lies right from the start.
 
[size/HUGE] fixed [/size];821817 said:
so Science is an ideology-free grasp of things?

#Amazing

Science is supposed to be an observation based grasp of things, despite your ideological framework.

In fact, prior to Darwinian insistence that the pursuit of scientific knowledge require the exclusion of God, THE reason to pursue science was to understand God.

As Louis Pasteur said, "Science brings men nearer to God."

Karl Popper (philosopher of science): Darwinism is not a testable scientific theory, but a metaphysical [religious] research programme . . .

Michael Ruse (philosopher of science): Evolution is a religion. This was true of evolution in the beginning, and it is true of evolution still today.

Dr. David Berlinski (atheist mathematician): Darwin's theory of evolution is the last of the great nineteenth-century mystery religions.
 
Karl Popper (philosopher of science): Darwinism is not a testable scientific theory, but a metaphysical [religious] research programme . . .

Just went with the first one...

Why not state that the bracketed religion is something you put in?

Indeed, the recent vogue of historicism might be regarded as merely part of the vogue of evolutionism—a philosophy that owes its influence largely to the somewhat sensational clash between a brilliant scientific hypothesis concerning the history of the various species of animals and plants on earth, and an older metaphysical theory which, incidentally, happened to be part of an established religious belief.

What we call the evolutionary hypothesis is an explanation of a host of biological and paleontological observations—for instance, of certain similarities between various species and genera—by the assumption of common ancestry of related forms.

. . . I see in modern Darwinism the most successful explanation of the relevant facts. [Popper, 1957, p. 106; emphasis added]

There exists no law of evolution, only the historical fact that plants and animals change, or more precisely, that they have changed. [Popper, 1963b, p. 340; emphasis added]

I have always been extremely interested in the theory of evolution and very ready to accept evolution as a fact. [Popper, 1976, p. 167; emphasis added]

The Mendelian underpinning of modern Darwinism has been well tested and so has the theory of evolution which says that all terrestrial life has evolved from a few primitive unicellular organisms, possibly even from one single organism. [Popper, 1978, p. 344; emphasis added]

Even more...

The fact that the theory of natural selection is difficult to test has led some people, anti-Darwinists and even some great Darwinists, to claim that it is a tautology. . . . I mention this problem because I too belong among the culprits. Influenced by what these authorities say, I have in the past described the theory as "almost tautological," and I have tried to explain how the theory of natural selection could be untestable (as is a tautology) and yet of great scientific interest. My solution was that the doctrine of natural selection is a most successful metaphysical research programme. . . . [Popper, 1978, p. 344]

I have changed my mind about the testability and logical status of the theory of natural selection; and I am glad to have an opportunity to make a recantation. . . . [p. 345]

The theory of natural selection may be so formulated that it is far from tautological. In this case it is not only testable, but it turns out to be not strictly universally true. There seem to be exceptions, as with so many biological theories; and considering the random character of the variations on which natural selection operates, the occurrence of exceptions is not surprising. [p. 346]
 
In fact, prior to Darwinian insistence that the pursuit of scientific knowledge require the exclusion of God, THE reason to pursue science was to understand God.

The majority of biologists believe in God; there is no requirement to exclude him.

Karl Popper (philosopher of science): Darwinism is not a testable scientific theory, but a metaphysical [religious] research programme . . .

Metaphysics is not religion.

Michael Ruse (philosopher of science): Evolution is a religion. This was true of evolution in the beginning, and it is true of evolution still today.

Ruse wrote an entire column explaining that evolution theory was not a religion and that his statement was being taken out of context.

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-ruse/is-darwinism-a-religion_b_904828.html

Dr. David Berlinski (atheist mathematician): Darwin's theory of evolution is the last of the great nineteenth-century mystery religions.

Berlinski is not an atheist, and his opinions have always been demonstrated to be ill-founded.
 
"There exists no law of evolution, only the historical fact that plants and animals change, or more precisely, that they have changed. [Popper, 1963b, p. 340; emphasis added]"

......I would like to address or discuss that statement! It is true, that plants and animals change. BUT within boundaries! I have noticed that in recent years, the media, sports writers, just about everyone that points out someone or some team has "changed" uses the expression that they have "evolved" thus perpetuating the bogus theory of Darwin......when what has really happened is a ball player has improved, changed his game, changed his wicked ways, etc. etc. etc. When a "team" makes a change in style of play or the system they were running, have they organically "evolved" or just made changes in the team chemistry or in there decision making? The ball player is still "human" and still plays the sport! The team still plays basketball or football or baseball, they haven't really "evolved" into a team of roller skaters or volleyball players or tennis players. Do you follow my reasoning here?
 
What are the boundaries?

WHAT IS EVOLUTION? One definition of “evolution” is: “A process of change in a certain direction.” However, the term is used in several ways. For example, it is used to describe big changes in inanimate things—the development of the universe. In addition, the term is used to describe small changes in living things—the way plants and animals adapt to their environment. The word is most commonly used, though, to describe the theory that life arose from inanimate chemicals, formed into self-replicating cells, and slowly developed into more and more complex creatures, with man being the most intelligent of its productions. This third notion is what is meant by the term “evolution” as used in the context of our discussions!

So we need to clear up something. Many scientists have noted that over time, the descendants of living things may change slightly. For example, humans can selectively breed dogs so that eventually the descendants have shorter legs or longer hair than their forebears. Some scientists attach to such slight changes the term “microevolution.”

However, evolutionists teach that small changes accumulated slowly over billions of years and produced the big changes needed to make fish into amphibians and apelike creatures into men. These proposed big changes are defined as “macroevolution.”

The teaching of macroevolution is built on the claim that mutations—random changes in the genetic code of plants and animals—can produce not only new species but also entirely new families of plants and animals.

However, the facts are this: There are many characteristics of a plant or an animal that are determined by the instructions contained in its genetic code, the blueprints that are wrapped up in the nucleus of each cell. Researchers have discovered that mutations can produce alterations in the descendants of plants and animals. But do mutations really produce entirely new species?

What has a century of study in the field of genetic research revealed?

After more than 40 years of intensive research, what were the results? “In spite of an enormous financial expenditure,” says researcher Peter von Sengbusch, “the attempt to cultivate increasingly productive varieties by irradiation [to cause mutations], widely proved to be a failure.” And Lönnig said: “By the 1980’s, the hopes and euphoria among scientists had ended in worldwide failure. Mutation breeding as a separate branch of research was abandoned in Western countries. Almost all the mutants . . . died or were weaker than wild varieties.”

And the data now gathered from some 100 years of mutation research in general and 70 years of mutation breeding in particular enable scientists to draw conclusions regarding the ability of mutations to produce new species. After examining the evidence, Lönnig concluded: “Mutations cannot transform an original species [of plant or animal] into an entirely new one. This conclusion agrees with all the experiences and results of mutation research of the 20th century taken together as well as with the laws of probability.”

So, can mutations cause one species to evolve into a completely new kind of creature? The evidence answers no! Lönnig’s research has led him to the conclusion that “properly defined species have real boundaries that cannot be abolished or transgressed by accidental mutations.”
 
It would be nice if you could provide some links. It is sad that people who have made a life-changing decision could be so close-minded against some women who just want equalism.

It makes sense in that the "life-changing decision" they made was to reject consensus morality. Why would they be open to anyone else's values but those of their own liking?
 
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