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got tonkaed wrote:i do feel the resentment is much more likely from the more conservative examples of religious faith, which do still hold very hostile stances toward science. I would defintly argue the resentment today is very much more entrenched in the seemingly unnecesary debates with conservatives over the use of the word theory and the general efforts to discredit many different pieces of scientific research.
got tonkaed wrote:I do feel that if you are anti-evolution, you are more likely to lean anti-science. Certainly this isnt true in every instance and i dont mean to speak ill of all religious people, but in the more conservative sectors...the sectors which are growing very quickly in the US currently, i do feel anti-evolution = anti-science.
got tonkaed wrote:And lastly of course...i do feel that bigtory exists today. I went to a few different churches (across denomonations - though admittedly more conservative)
b.k. barunt wrote:One thing you might want to consider luns, is how much your political views color the main message you want to get across. Aren't you supposed to be an ambassador? How would it strike you if the chinese ambassador started waving the american flag and avidly supporting Bush? Kinda weird right? Your conservative view of the scripture is going to be equated with your politics by reason of that one little word, and so the true nature of your scriptural conservatism will go unnoticed.
luns101 wrote:All we want is for both models to be taught and let students make up their own mind. Christians & creationists pay taxes that support public education as well, why can't we have our views represented in the classroom along with the evolutionists?
luns101 wrote:The main intention of my previous posts was to discredit those who would label Christians as "unreasonable and unscientific". They have still not addressed the quotes that I have posted, but instead volley the usual questions, which shows they are not listening.
Backglass wrote:You speak as if science is a religion...it is not. Why must your religious beliefs be taught in public schools? There are thousands of religions in the world. Should we teach the beliefs and "models" of all of them as fact as well? I think you would be very opposed to the Wiccan "model" being taught to your children...as would I.
Backglass wrote:You are perfectly free to home school your children as many do or send your children to a private religious school. I don't WANT my kids being taught that a man in the sky clapped his hands and created the universe...and I certainly don't want to pay for it.
Backglass wrote:I am not sure whom you feel you are discrediting, but you also have refused to answer direct questions. What of the dinosaurs? Exactly how old are they? I find it comical that you take the high ground when your entire argument is based on stories of old.
Did you not read my previous post? I answered your questions on dinosaurs, but you did not answer mine so I'll ask it again. How do you feel the dinosaurs became extinct?
beezer wrote:heavycola wrote:OK how about putting it this way - the story of creation in genesis is no more or less valid than any other creation myth from any other culture. Every culture has myths that explain the world around them and their place in it.
Except that's not where the story ends. The Bible also goes on to predict the future. I always wondered how the antichrist as described in the Bible would get away with his lies when they are exposed in Scripture. I guess the answer is that by people refusing to read the Bible in the first place, he can pretty much blaspheme God and get the majority of the world on his side with no accountability.heavycola wrote:i woudl also suggest that evolution by natural selection has been a far more successful set of beliefs than christianity:
Imagine how much opposition Darwin's theories came up against - they were blasphemous, revolutionary, and suggested that man had not been created from dust in god's image but had evolved from lesser animals. I have heard it said that it was nigh impossible to be an atheist before Darwin came along.
Atheism existed before Darwin. Darwin just formalized it. Karl Marx and Darwin corresponded with each other after the Origin of Species came out. Atheists felt more emboldened after Darwin put out his theories.heavycola wrote:Nowadays, however, natural selection is accepted by the vast majority of scientists and laypeople as the truth behind our origins on this planet (although there is still much disagreement over the details, as you piointed out).
Christianity, by comparison, is on the wane. In the UK church attendance has halved since 1985. Xianity is on the way out - how can what HP Lovecraft called 'the keeping alive as literal fact the outgrown fears and guesses of a primal race confronting the unknown' survive in the face of what we know now?
Sheer numbers don't prove something is correct. You are taking UK church attendance and applying it to all of Christianity. Here in the US, people are accepting Jesus Christ at record levels. It's not just here in the US. Christianity is spreading so fast in China that the government there is having problems tracking all the "underground" churches. I'm sure that if 99.99999% of the world became Christian you wouldn't say that that is absolute proof that we're right and you're wrong.
luns101 wrote:The Bible's predictions came true with 100% accuracy. Which fortunetellers are you referring to...Jean Dixon and Nostradamus? Which religions are you referring to that have 100% accuracy with their prediction of future events?
luns101 wrote:Backglass wrote:You speak as if science is a religion...it is not. Why must your religious beliefs be taught in public schools? There are thousands of religions in the world. Should we teach the beliefs and "models" of all of them as fact as well? I think you would be very opposed to the Wiccan "model" being taught to your children...as would I.
This where we just won't agree. I do believe that evolution is a religion. Since the evolutionary model is the one that is given more time in public schools, religion is already being taught in school. It is widely assumed as if it were fact. I know what "Wiccan" is....what is the Wiccan model, or are you just throwing up another cute hypothetical again?
b.k. barunt wrote:In 1973, a japanese fishing boat pulled up the rotting carcass of a pleiosaur off the coast of Japan. Japan made a postage stamp in commemoration of it, but "scientists" the world over kind of swept it under the rug. WTF? You would think that this would hit the front pages of every newspaper in the world, and scientists would be fighting each other to examine it. Why is it that none of you have even heard of this? As luns said, evolution is a religion and its adherents are more than willing to set aside scientific methodology to preserve their sacred cow. Anyone for a piltdown man?
b.k. barunt wrote:If you're looking for me to defend catholics, you might also ask John Wayne Gacy to babysit for you tonight. I know that the sun is a burning star because that is a proven fact. Since you say that you view evolution in the same way that i view the sun as a star, you have admitted that you view it as fact, not theory. Therefore you have rejected the scientific estimation of evolution itself, and you embrace it as a religion. Btw, that was 1977 (i'm learning how to google), it was a plesiosaur ("extinct for 60 million years"), and it was off the coast of New Zealand. In spite of clear pictures (i typed in japanese plesiosaur on google), scientists other than the japanese insist to this day that it was "probably" a whale or other large animal. Now if one of you could explain this to me in the light of "scientific objectivity"?
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