1756131975
1756131975 Conquer Club • View topic - Proofs For Creationism - As Requested
Conquer Club

Proofs For Creationism - As Requested

\\OFF-TOPIC// conversations about everything that has nothing to do with Conquer Club.

Moderator: Community Team

Forum rules
Please read the Community Guidelines before posting.

Which came first, the chicken or the egg?

Postby nunz on Thu Apr 26, 2007 1:56 am

Guilty_Biscuit wrote:So you defend the belief in Creationism by saying Science has not and can not disprove God so Creationism is an acceptable belief. This is not the case because there is a lot of evidence backing an alternate theory called Evolution, hence, in the absence of evidence for Creationism one is compelled to accept Evolution. To disregard the evidence and instead will yourself to believe in the Creator is possible but it is not a defendable position.


So far we seem agreed that we cannot disprove god / a creator so both random evolution and creationism can be left on the table as theories of how it all happened (at least as far as life on earth goes).

It is also important to note that evolution doesn't disprove the roll of a creator, it just shows a possible mechanism for the 'evolution' of life forms either after a random accident made life or else a creator started life.

I would also venture to say there don't seem to be many other theories we can currently explore as alternatives to these two. Either life on earth is the result of random chance causing chemicals to attain some form of life or else a creative force was the origin of life. From there things either remained static, showed some forms of adaptation or they evolved to form new species (depending on your theory).

If we can disprove either theory then that leaves only one theory on the table (at least until we come up with another theory or a modification to the disproved theory). According to Occums Razor and scientific method, if we disprove a theory at one point then the theory needs to be scrapped or else re-worked to include viable answers to cover the disproved area.

So ... the chicken and the egg. It is an old riddle or conundrum but a good one to talk about.

If there was a creator, it is possible that an egg was created before a chicken, or a chicken created to lay an egg. Either way works. Using a creator to explain how it could have happened is simple, logical (if we presume there was a creator or could have been a creator - and after all that was premise one wasn't it.) and just leaves the unanswerable question (unless the creator told us) of which exactly was first. It also reduces the conundrum to a, "Who cares ... it doesn't matter anyway" type question, much the same as asking which side of the hamburger did the first Macdonalds hamburger grill on? Left or right, top or bottom? Who cares. It got grilled.

However, under evolution, this question is completely unanswerable because which ever way you dice it, it cannot work.

Lets start by scrapping the idea that an egg was laid without a chicken. That is a patently stupid thing to believe in unless we want to acknowledge a metaphysical creator (thus blowing pure random evolution out of the water).

So a chicken came first, or at least in evolutionary terms, a chicken evolved out of something else first. And then one day it changed enough to decide it wanted to lay an egg (or one week, year, millenium, million years ...).

So the question becomes, is it evolutionarily possible for a chicken to evolve enough to lay an egg? Already I can hear someone going, Wrong!!! the chicken was an egg laying animal that evolved into a chicken so it always laid eggs. I'm happy to concede that might have happened - for a chicken. But, at some point, some animal had to be the first animal to lay an egg. There had to, according to evolutionary theory, be some point where cell groups stopped splitting to form new versions of what ever animal they were and got it together long enough to lay the first egg.

So for the sake of simplicity, lets pretend it was a chicken (after all science has to make some assumptions somewhere :-) ). The assumption it was a chicken is wrong but the analogy of a chicken laying its first egg stands as a useful tool to provide a shared common metaphor to discuss how the first egg got laid.

So the first chicken (or what ever) decided to lay the first egg. Great.
It grunts, it groans and out its rear end (or what ever it used) pops an embryo. Bugger!!! The embryo (which is the fertilised yolk part of the egg) promptly goes splot on the ground, breaks apart, gets stepped on, dehydrates and generally fails to survive.

OK .. thinks the chicken (via the mechanism of evolution) I need something to protect my baby yolk. And so the chicken evolves an egg shell making mechanism inside itself. To cut a long story shorter I am not even going to try to figure out how it got the yolk to be inside the shell when it was first made by the chicken - I'll just presume it was.

So the chicken grunts, it groans and out its rear end drops a yolk neatly packaged in an egg shell. Unfortunately for the yolk the egg shell was hard. The yolk bounced and jostled inside the shell and eventually ... bugger ... it was nothing but omelet again.

By now you get the drift or where i am headed with this. To cut this story shorter let me describe the rest more succinctly.

The egg needed to evolve a form of cushioning inside it to protect the yolk.
To stop the yolk from starving the the egg needed to include a food source built into it. To stop the yolk from running out of air the shell had to be porous enough to permit air in, water tight enough to stop dehydration killing the yolk, strong enough not to break and flexible enough to let the chickens rear end extrude the egg without it getting a hernia in the process.

Now that the yolk has air, food, shelter and is water proof there are a few other problems.

Once the yolk has grown to a certain size it needs to grow an egg tooth to let it break out of the shell. It then needs to loose that egg tooth so it can dig in the ground with its beak for worms and other food.

The chicken needs to learn to turn the egg, warm the egg and protect the egg - all by trial and error as it had no inborn knowledge to teach it how to do that and no creator to code the knowledge in it and no previous egg laying chicken to learn from.

I'll stop here, although there are a number of other things we would need to get in order for the egg making thing to work correctly.

According to evolution, the first egg layer slowly adapted / mutated from another species or else was a sudden mutation from one species into another (which could lay eggs).

For the first egg to happen a significant number of mutations needed to happen simultaeneously. While there is the possibilty that maybe one or two of the above adaptations or evolutionary happenings might have been able to happen in some order the reality is that the majority had to happen at exactly the same time for the first egg laying animal to have had a chance of surviving.

These mutations would have to be in the internal body of the existing species in order to allow egg laying to happen (as well as fertilization and the carrying of an egg internally). Mutations would also have to happen in the body of the first egg born off spring to allow it to survive in the egg long enough to hatch, to allow it to break out and hatch.

Mutations or significant changes in the behaviors of the first egg-laying parent would also have to be present (turning an egg, protecting an egg, warming an egg, not stepping on an egg...)

Evolution tells us change happens slowly, over time and that change happens incrementally. For the first egg to be successfully laid these changes would have had to happen all at once, inside of one generation.

So if they happened at once in one generation we are looking at a huge mutation of a single animal. That animal, the new egg laying species, would be completely incompatible for breeding purposes with any other animal of its old species. It would die out for lack of mates.

Furthermore the behaviors exhibited by egg laying species rely on changes in behavior (such as nesting in one spot making it easier prey, not walking away to get food for long periods of time else the egg would get cold...) which would be counter productive to the survival of the species unless all the knowledge and behaviors allowing it to survive were picked up in one go.

Any one of the behaviors on its own (denial of food, loss of mobility...) would most likely cause the animal to die or get picked off by predators. They, on their own without a group social structure supporting them, are behaviors away from survival ... which goes against evolutionary theory.

To believe that the first egg could be laid would happen by random chance requires the belief that a massive amount of mutations happened simultaneously to more than one individual of the parent species and along with those physical / genetic changes came radical behavioral changes and along with the behavioral changes came changes in the off spring allowing it to survive as a member of the new egg laying species.

I haven't mentioned the changes in diet which are required for egg laying, the changes in home building, mating behaviors and a number of other things which would all need to happen simultaneously for the first egg to happen.

In science the simplest explanation should normally be held as the true explanation. According to the razor, if a theory is flawed at any one point it must be reworked or discarded.

Unless there is a terribly self evident truth as to how all the above happened in one hit, the most likely (statistically speaking) is that some outside force / intelligence (whom I refer to as a creator) must have guided or designed the first egg laying animal, both in its internal physiology, parenting behaviors, social habits, diet, environment and in-egg physiology / behaviors.

Any other explanation is far less logical. Taking a creative force out of the equation, the first egg laying scenario cannot be supported by evolutionary theory as it stands. Slow mutation or adaptation over time is not viable. It was either an all or nothing effort.

I know the first egg was probably not a shelled chickens egg (or birds egg) but even a less complex egg such as a frogs egg, fish egg, repltiles egg still requires most of the things mentioned above to happen and where it doesn't require one of the above requirements, it has a few more requirements of its own.

Some examples include:
- The anchoring of water born eggs so they don't wash away.
- Fish fertilisation habits had to change (unless the first onanist was a fish who happened to spray where a female onanist had already dropped her eggs :-) .
- Reptiles learning to bury eggs in warm places and not eating their off spring

In short, evolution cannot explain how an egg laying animal could have successfully evolved. The most simple and logical answer has to be an outside guiding force or influence. Either that or has someone else got a new theory of evolution that can explain all this?

Summary - Two major theories exist, evolution and creationism (as well as combos of them both such as ID). One can explain simply the chicken and the egg theory, the other cannot in its present form. So far this scientific proof seems to favour creationism as a theory of how it might have started.
Cook nunz
 
Posts: 102
Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 6:56 am

One out of two aint bad

Postby nunz on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:09 am

vtmarik wrote:Yes, there is a possibility that we were created by some kind of being(s) or force in the universe. it is equally possible that we were came out of eons of slow genetic mutation and adaptation.

A possibility among an infinite number of others is no cause for building dogma.


But there is not an infinite number of other possibilities - as far as I can see we are either a random accident of chemicals or we were created. How intelligent the creation might have been is another argument again (more philosophical than scientific I would guess) but here we are faced with only two choices:
1 - Created
2 - Random accident causing life

Therefore, 1 possibility out a probable two possibilities is an excellent platform to form dogma from. Now it all comes down to knocking one off the table (or at least giving it a good shove).
Cook nunz
 
Posts: 102
Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 6:56 am

Postby Skittles! on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:12 am

Okay, EAT a buiscuit and watch some Pokemon S&M Bondage. That might settle things down.
KraphtOne wrote:when you sign up a new account one of the check boxes should be "do you want to foe colton24 (it is highly recommended) "
User avatar
Private Skittles!
 
Posts: 14575
Joined: Wed Jan 03, 2007 2:18 am

Whew .. I got lucky ... errr blessed.

Postby nunz on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:15 am

I went to put my piece on chicken and egg up and found I had timed out.

The page I had written returned blank. Lucky for me I was paranoid enough to copy it to wordpad before pushing the post button.

now the question becomes, does God not want that post up there and tried to stop it going up or else does God want it there and reminded me to save before posting.

Probably the latter as we all know Jesus saves, and as a good Christian I want to be like Him :-).
Cook nunz
 
Posts: 102
Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 6:56 am

Re: Which came first, the chicken or the egg?

Postby Neutrino on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:32 am

nunz wrote:So if they happened at once in one generation we are looking at a huge mutation of a single animal. That animal, the new egg laying species, would be completely incompatible for breeding purposes with any other animal of its old species. It would die out for lack of mates.


Firstly, I congradulate you for typing all of that and for not using the tired old eye thing.

Ill leave the rest to those better able to sacrifice a few hours of their lives than I

Now:
The actual difference between the first chicken and the first proto-chicken would have been absolutly tiny. Really no more than the difference than that between individuals of a species. All the other chickens would have been laying eggs, its just its eggs would have been slightly superior. It really would have had no problem getting a mate.
Last edited by Neutrino on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:36 am, edited 1 time in total.
We own all your helmets, we own all your shoes, we own all your generals. Touch us and you loooose...

The Rogue State!
User avatar
Corporal Neutrino
 
Posts: 2693
Joined: Wed Sep 20, 2006 2:53 am
Location: Combating the threat of dihydrogen monoxide.

Re: Whew .. I got lucky ... errr blessed.

Postby Skittles! on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:34 am

nunz wrote:I went to put my piece on chicken and egg up and found I had timed out.

The page I had written returned blank. Lucky for me I was paranoid enough to copy it to wordpad before pushing the post button.

now the question becomes, does God not want that post up there and tried to stop it going up or else does God want it there and reminded me to save before posting.

Probably the latter as we all know Jesus saves, and as a good Christian I want to be like Him :-).


I think you're delusional.
KraphtOne wrote:when you sign up a new account one of the check boxes should be "do you want to foe colton24 (it is highly recommended) "
User avatar
Private Skittles!
 
Posts: 14575
Joined: Wed Jan 03, 2007 2:18 am

Re: Which came first, the chicken or the egg?

Postby nunz on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:41 am

Neutrino wrote:
nunz wrote:So if they happened at once in one generation we are looking at a huge mutation of a single animal. That animal, the new egg laying species, would be completely incompatible for breeding purposes with any other animal of its old species. It would die out for lack of mates.


Firstly, I congradulate you for typing all of that and for not using the tired old eye thing.

I....
Now:
The actual difference between the first chicken and the first proto-chicken would have been absolutly tiny. Really no more than the difference than that between individuals of a species. It really would have had no problem getting a mate.

Thanks for the compliment .. although I am not up with the eye thing ... other than my tired old eyes :lol:

However, your comment about the first chicken and proto-chicken adds weight to why evolution cant support the chicken and egg thing. Evolution is about small changes and the egg is an all or nothing proposition. Small changes wouldn't cut it.

Again my thanks.
Cook nunz
 
Posts: 102
Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 6:56 am

Re: Whew .. I got lucky ... errr blessed.

Postby nunz on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:44 am

Skittles! wrote:
I think you're delusional.


What? Where? Huh? Who said that? Must be that pesky reality coming back to haunt me. After all skittles knows for sure there is no god
=;
Cook nunz
 
Posts: 102
Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 6:56 am

Re: Whew .. I got lucky ... errr blessed.

Postby Skittles! on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:47 am

nunz wrote:
Skittles! wrote:
I think you're delusional.


What? Where? Huh? Who said that? Must be that pesky reality coming back to haunt me. After all skittles knows for sure there is no god
=;


In the bold, are you saying what you believe in is NOT reality, but what Atheists believe in IS reality?
KraphtOne wrote:when you sign up a new account one of the check boxes should be "do you want to foe colton24 (it is highly recommended) "
User avatar
Private Skittles!
 
Posts: 14575
Joined: Wed Jan 03, 2007 2:18 am

Re: Which came first, the chicken or the egg?

Postby nunz on Thu Apr 26, 2007 3:08 am

Neutrino wrote:
Firstly, I congradulate you for typing all of that and for not using the tired old eye thing.
...


I went and looked up the eye thing ... and found a couple of interesting quotes by Darwin ... just to put the cat amongst the chickens ...

Charles Darwin admitted,

QUOTE

"If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous,succesive,slight modifications,my theory would absolutely break down"


QUOTE

"To suppose that the eye could have been formed by natural selection seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest degree"
Cook nunz
 
Posts: 102
Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 6:56 am

Re: Which came first, the chicken or the egg?

Postby Neutrino on Thu Apr 26, 2007 3:41 am

nunz wrote:
Neutrino wrote:
Firstly, I congradulate you for typing all of that and for not using the tired old eye thing.
...


I went and looked up the eye thing ... and found a couple of interesting quotes by Darwin ... just to put the cat amongst the chickens ...

Charles Darwin admitted,

QUOTE

"If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous,succesive,slight modifications,my theory would absolutely break down"


QUOTE

"To suppose that the eye could have been formed by natural selection seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest degree"


Aha! So we are bringing they eye into this.

Well: Most opponents say that there is no purpose for an animal to evolve an eye, if halfway through this evolution, the animal would have half an eye, and whats the use in that?

What would actually happen is that the animal, rather than growing half a normal, modern eye, would have a patch of skin that is half as efficient at collecting light as a modern eye.
We own all your helmets, we own all your shoes, we own all your generals. Touch us and you loooose...

The Rogue State!
User avatar
Corporal Neutrino
 
Posts: 2693
Joined: Wed Sep 20, 2006 2:53 am
Location: Combating the threat of dihydrogen monoxide.

Postby Skittles! on Thu Apr 26, 2007 3:47 am

He hasn't replied to me =(
KraphtOne wrote:when you sign up a new account one of the check boxes should be "do you want to foe colton24 (it is highly recommended) "
User avatar
Private Skittles!
 
Posts: 14575
Joined: Wed Jan 03, 2007 2:18 am

Postby heavycola on Thu Apr 26, 2007 4:30 am

Colossus wrote:But these theories do not preclude the existence or the potential role of a God. This is the trouble with arguments absolutely one way or the other. The two ideas are simply NOT mutually exclusive. I think the people that believe that the Earth was created in six days are patently wrong because that idea has been disproven by a preponderance of evidence. However, all cosmological theories fail to connect all of the dots between the 'beginning' and now. Therefore there remains room for a reasonable person be believe in the existence, presence, and roll of God. That's what I'm saying, is it clear now?


I couldn't agree more. But there is, then, a difference between theism and christianity. Whether a cosmic creator set the controls and flipped the switch is obviously outside science because it is unobservable. I don't believe there was but i have to be agnostic. Theism is a reasonable position to hold, really, although the probabilities, based on what we no know, make the pre-existence of a creator unlikely.

nunz wrote:"If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous,succesive,slight modifications,my theory would absolutely break down"


QUOTE

"To suppose that the eye could have been formed by natural selection seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest degree"


And i bet you found those on a creationist website... they are obviously so out of context. I think all biologists would agree with the first premise.
As for the eye, its evolved existence does seem absurd - but as dawkins puts it so well in The Blind Watchmaker, it can be explained as a series of steps. 5% of an eye is infinitely better than no eye. Ours have evolved from light-receptive cells, and if you think about it as a series of tiny steps it becomes quite imaginable.
The cells that pick up the light from our retinas are backwards - i.e. the light-receptive bits are pointing towards our brain, teh machinery si to teh fore. Not what a perfect creator would have designed, surely, but easily understood in terms of gradual evolution.
Image
User avatar
Corporal 1st Class heavycola
 
Posts: 2925
Joined: Thu Jun 01, 2006 10:22 am
Location: Maailmanvalloittajat

Postby Kugelblitz22 on Thu Apr 26, 2007 6:31 am

heavycola wrote:I bet you found those on a creationist website.


Lol, ya think?
User avatar
Sergeant 1st Class Kugelblitz22
 
Posts: 496
Joined: Fri Dec 29, 2006 9:36 pm
Location: Canton

Postby Guiscard on Thu Apr 26, 2007 7:04 am

Colossus wrote:But these theories do not preclude the existence or the potential role of a God. This is the trouble with arguments absolutely one way or the other. The two ideas are simply NOT mutually exclusive... herefore there remains room for a reasonable person be believe in the existence, presence, and roll of God. That's what I'm saying, is it clear now?


I'd like to address the above point. I do not, and cannot, argue that science disproves God entirely. It doesn't. BUT surely as a scientist you know that in the absence of solid proof one should go with the option which seems most likely and go from there.

Would you dispute the fact that if there is room a for a God who started off the whole process, there is also room for many Gods, or for a monotheistic Monkey or a tiny pink horse... None of those concepts seem any more or less likely to me, and the fact that they are so ridiculous points me towards the sensible answer of NO God being present.

What I want to ask in this badly argued post is this: How have you decided that you accept the Abrahamic Christian God over the little pink horse? What is the deciding factor?
qwert wrote:Can i ask you something?What is porpose for you to open these Political topic in ConquerClub? Why you mix politic with Risk? Why you not open topic like HOT AND SEXY,or something like that.
User avatar
Private 1st Class Guiscard
 
Posts: 4103
Joined: Fri Dec 08, 2006 7:27 pm
Location: In the bar... With my head on the bar

Postby Skittles! on Thu Apr 26, 2007 7:07 am

Guiscard wrote:What I want to ask in this badly argued post is this: How have you decided that you accept the Abrahamic Christian God over the little pink horse? What is the deciding factor?


The little pink horse is pretty. That's the difference. We can also draw pictures of little pink horses because we have an idea of what a horse looks like, whilst we don't have any idea of what the Christian God looks like..

I like the little pink horse.
KraphtOne wrote:when you sign up a new account one of the check boxes should be "do you want to foe colton24 (it is highly recommended) "
User avatar
Private Skittles!
 
Posts: 14575
Joined: Wed Jan 03, 2007 2:18 am

Postby Colossus on Thu Apr 26, 2007 8:45 am

Okay, first of all, nunz, your chicken and egg argument is so absurd as to be laughable. Have you ever studied evolutionary theory at all? Your all-or-nothing argument for the egg or the eye or any other evolved trait completely falls down because you are casually ignoring the fact that life has had a mind-bogglingly large number of generations to go through all of these changes. For the egg or the eye (and these are two very well-studied examples) there are so many gradients between no egg or no eye and the chicken's egg or our eye. There is no reason that evolution had to have all or nothing changes at any point. That is not to say that such changes never took place. When one examines the molecular evolution of genomes, one sees clear evidence that there were periods of rapid change. For example, did you ever wonder why we have 2 copies of each chromosome when 1 should serve just fine? That boils down the evolution of sexual reproduction, and the fact that multiple copies of genes help organisms that are multiploid (i.e. have more than one copy of each chromosome) survive because it makes them less susceptible to death from a single mutation. In fact, did you know that most fish are quadruploid? Or that many plants or octoploid? They are quadruploid or octoploid because somewhere in their ancestry one of their predecessors accidentally made an extra copy of everything....and it was helpful! These are good examples of how one organism could have had a massive genetic error that gave them (and their offspring) a major competitive advantage. You simply cannot argue for the Creationist viewpoint or against the validity of evolution based on this kind of argument because this kind of argument vastly oversimplifies the evolutionary process and turns a blind eye to the majority of the evidence that exists in support of evolutionary theory. I strongly suggest you go study some basic example organisms like the hydra, the coelacanth, the hagfish, lungfish, yeast, etc. before making absurd arguments like this one in public forums. Seriously, if you're going to talk about the validity or invalidity of evolutionary theory, please at least be well informed.


WARNING: off-topic stuff in response to questions asked of me -->

Secondly, where in any of my posts have I professed belief in a single Christian God? I love how a person says that they believe in a God, and the instant assumption is that they are a card-carrying charismatic Christian.

heavycola has it right on...there is a difference between theism and religion. Personally, I look at religion as a social institution that throughout history has served a very important and useful social purpose, a purpose that science is largely taking over in modern society, that purpose being to provide the general populace with a handle on their world. Throughout history the vast majority of citizens haven't had the time or the luxury of pondering their place in the world, so having the local priest, rabbi, imam, whatever tell them what that role was gave them and gave society stability. Though many people still get this from religion, many of us no longer look to religion for these answers but rather to science. In modern society we (and this includes anyone with the time, energy, and resources to be reading this right now) are spoiled! We have the time, energy, and inclination to think about this stuff and question more than ever before in history. Scientific investigation has, particularly over the past 200 years, allowed society to develop explanations for things that, for the first time, don't come from a Holy Book. So, as I see it, the role of religion is changing in modern society, and that's a difficult process. Personally, I draw a major line between faith and religion. I think vtmarik said it well when he posted that 'A possibility among an infinite number of others is no cause for building dogma.' I'm not a big subscriber to dogma, period, because I think dogma has more of a social role than a spiritual one. Faith is spiritual. Religion can aid spirituality, but spirituality cannot be garnered from simply following a set of dogmatic rules. 'Truth' is different for everyone.

I do think and feel that there is a higher power in this world than me. The main reason for that belief is simply that, from what I've learned and from the work that I do, I am constantly faced with the awesome complexity and enormity of natural processes. This enormity and complexity is so far beyond human ability to truly grasp, in my opinion, that it must imply a higher order. That higher order, from my perspective, is God. We are all a part of it and it is a part of us. The argument that it is illogical to assume that a higher power exists carries with it the implicit assumption that we are the highest sentience in the universe until proven otherwise. This idea is so homo- and ego-centric that my mind rejects it. The awesome, seemingly infinite complexity of existence makes me believe that we can't be the highest intellect out there and makes me sure that there is purpose behind it all. It's simple too beautiful and awesome for there not to be. I know that's not an argument based on evidence and logic. That's where the faith part comes in.

To answer your question, Guiscard, I was raised in Roman Catholic tradition. I still attend Mass on a fairly regular basis. I do not believe in all of the dogmatic laws that the Catholic Church has put forth, but attend Mass rather because there is evidence that ritual serves a very real purpose, physiologically, in spiritual experience (see that book I keep mentioning, Why God Won't Go Away). I have had excellent spiritual experiences in other churches when attending with family or friends of other religions. I refuse to limit God to the rules and descriptions that the Catholic Church or any other faith imposes. See, I'm one of those rare people of faith that tries very hard to maintain an open mind. I read the Gospel of Thomas and the Tao Te Ching and the writings of people like Thich Nhat Hahn. Again, I think the path to understanding, connection, and faith is unique to each individual.

Sorry this was so long.
Chance favors only the prepared mind.
-Louis Pasteur
User avatar
Lieutenant Colossus
 
Posts: 448
Joined: Fri Jan 26, 2007 6:04 pm
Location: Philly

Re: Which came first, the chicken or the egg?

Postby Guilty_Biscuit on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:14 pm

nunz wrote:So far we seem agreed that we cannot disprove god / a creator so both random evolution and creationism can be left on the table as theories of how it all happened (at least as far as life on earth goes).


Please Nunz, don't call creationism a theory especially in response to one of my posts. I've already been through why creationism is not a theory.

Following that I was going to discuss the chicken and the egg but Collossus beat me to it and argued it far better than I could have.

On the subject of chickens specifically I found this which I thought was interesting as a side note:

Posted By: Michael Onken, Admin, MadSci Network
Area of science: Evolution

The chicken (Gallus domesticus) didn't exist until its domestication around 2000 BC in Indochina. The first chicken came from the first chicken egg, which was laid by a red junglefowl (Gallus gallus). Whether you argue creation or evolution, the fact that humanity predates and is responsible for the speciation of chickens from red junglefowl should lay the "chicken or the egg" question to rest. From an evolutionary perspective, this answer holds for all species: the first member(s) of any species were the offspring of another very similar species, i.e. evolution argues that the egg always comes first. From a creationist perspective, this answer is anomalous, since all species that predate humanity originated as adults around 4004 BCE, i.e. creationism argues that the red junglefowl came before the red junglefowl egg.

http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/jun2000/960571926.Ev.r.html

Back to my own words - This also demonstrates the enormous power of sexual selection - a factor many opponents to evoloution often overlook when they ask questions suck as 'how can such and such evolved in such a short space of time?'
User avatar
Sergeant 1st Class Guilty_Biscuit
 
Posts: 825
Joined: Thu Feb 15, 2007 10:33 am
Location: N53:32 W02:39 Top Biscuits: Bourbon, HobNob, Tunnocks Wafer, Ginger Nut Evil_Biscuit: Malted Milk

Postby Guiscard on Thu Apr 26, 2007 2:35 pm

Colossus wrote:I do think and feel that there is a higher power in this world than me. The main reason for that belief is simply that, from what I've learned and from the work that I do, I am constantly faced with the awesome complexity and enormity of natural processes. This enormity and complexity is so far beyond human ability to truly grasp, in my opinion, that it must imply a higher order. That higher order, from my perspective, is God.


This is a very well argued post, and I have a great deal of respect for those who keep an open mind. You obviously have a far greater scientific knowledge than me, and have no doubt come across more things of far greater complexity than I have, but it does strike me as slightly hypocritical that you dismiss Nunz argument for design through complexity so easily in favour of another argument for design through complexity. Your complexity just occurs at an earlier stage, as it were...

Science gives us the answers to the question of evolution, and how the eye formed, and as a scientist does it not seem a more obvious conclusion that we will gradually discover the reasoning behind things which seem so infinitely complex today? In the Middle Ages, scientists could have said 'We have discovered so much through scientific process, and disproved what has previously been explained by religion, but how can we live on a world suspended in space? How does it move through the universe? That is so complex a system that there must be a God who created it, and created the scientific processes ON Earth that we have discovered...' Now, however, we know the answers to these questions.

What makes you think that the vast complexity of the universe will not be explained by Science as time progresses? And how does the enormity of a system specifically suggest a creator? If somehow it had been a 'smaller' system would a creator have been the assumption then too? At what stage does complexity and enormity stop being scientific and start being spiritual?
qwert wrote:Can i ask you something?What is porpose for you to open these Political topic in ConquerClub? Why you mix politic with Risk? Why you not open topic like HOT AND SEXY,or something like that.
User avatar
Private 1st Class Guiscard
 
Posts: 4103
Joined: Fri Dec 08, 2006 7:27 pm
Location: In the bar... With my head on the bar

Postby unriggable on Thu Apr 26, 2007 3:52 pm

Well if we were created, then why do some people have appendices and some don't? Or is that just the process of natural selection?
Image
User avatar
Cook unriggable
 
Posts: 8037
Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 9:49 pm

Postby Colossus on Thu Apr 26, 2007 4:49 pm

Guiscard wrote:
Colossus wrote:
Science gives us the answers to the question of evolution, and how the eye formed, and as a scientist does it not seem a more obvious conclusion that we will gradually discover the reasoning behind things which seem so infinitely complex today?



I'm glad you asked. In my studies, I've read a bit about non-linear systems dynamics and I've learned a bit about quantum mechanics. These two concepts have demonstrated to me that existence isn't really predictable. Incredibly complex systems behave in ways that are impossible to predict mathematically (i.e. they are not necessarily deterministic, one of the center points of the much-talked-about chaos theory) as far as we can tell. And the uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics says that position and momentum of quantum bodies like electrons are not defined at the same time... not just that they can't be measured at the same time, but that they are not defined, which is an important distinction. What this means to me is that the stuff of existence is intertwined and interacting in ways that are so complex that we cannot completely understand them ever, and based on what I've read and learned (and I'm admittedly no expert in either non-linear dynamical systems or in quantum theory so I welcome correction from anyone who really knows better), we've basically proven to ourselves that we can never fully understand nature ever. By 'understand', I mean be able to predict. We may learn the rules as best we can, but it seems that nature has a set of rules that refuse to be deterministic. Thus, while we may be able to make calculations that get very very close to reality, we can never really get the right answer. Nature doesn't require real numbers, whereas our answers do. Or another way, nature doesn't have to round off. So, in answer to your question, no I really don't think we will discover a hidden secret to these problems that allows us to fully understand life, the universe, and everything (that's why 42 is probably as good an answer as any ;-) )....unless most of what science believes to be true is ultimately disproven and replaced by a different model that does not have these hang-ups. Quantum theory is supported by so very much data that I think it's probably right. Thus I'm left with the conclusion that we probably have to be happy with a finite understanding of a universe with nfinite complexity.

(A lot of this is related to the fact that we are time-dimensional beings, so we cannot see our universe from outside of the time dimension. We are stuck in time, so to speak. That's a discussion for another thread, I think. But anyone who has read Flatland has an idea what I'm talking about.)
Chance favors only the prepared mind.
-Louis Pasteur
User avatar
Lieutenant Colossus
 
Posts: 448
Joined: Fri Jan 26, 2007 6:04 pm
Location: Philly

Postby heavycola on Thu Apr 26, 2007 5:51 pm

Guiscard wrote:
Colossus wrote:I do think and feel that there is a higher power in this world than me. The main reason for that belief is simply that, from what I've learned and from the work that I do, I am constantly faced with the awesome complexity and enormity of natural processes. This enormity and complexity is so far beyond human ability to truly grasp, in my opinion, that it must imply a higher order. That higher order, from my perspective, is God.


This is a very well argued post, and I have a great deal of respect for those who keep an open mind. You obviously have a far greater scientific knowledge than me, and have no doubt come across more things of far greater complexity than I have, but it does strike me as slightly hypocritical that you dismiss Nunz argument for design through complexity so easily in favour of another argument for design through complexity. Your complexity just occurs at an earlier stage, as it were...


Well evolution provides us with an argument against the existence of god - in that, as far as we can observe, configurations of matter as complex as us can only occur hundreds of millions of years after the universe began - so to postulate the existence of an infintely more complex being before the universe came into being...
If god is eternal - how is he so complex? Is complexity simply 'there'?
Image
User avatar
Corporal 1st Class heavycola
 
Posts: 2925
Joined: Thu Jun 01, 2006 10:22 am
Location: Maailmanvalloittajat

Postby vtmarik on Thu Apr 26, 2007 6:30 pm

heavycola wrote:Well evolution provides us with an argument against the existence of god - in that, as far as we can observe, configurations of matter as complex as us can only occur hundreds of millions of years after the universe began - so to postulate the existence of an infintely more complex being before the universe came into being...
If god is eternal - how is he so complex? Is complexity simply 'there'?


Not necessarily, if I may paraphrase Galileo:
'Evolution was the instrument with which God created life.'

Perhaps God evolved from another type of being? Ever consider that?

Early man, knowing nothing of evolution or science, would think of a being that powerful as a god. They would not be able to extrapolate the possibility that the world was created from existing materials by a being of immense power, and would think of that being as a God who created life and the world from nothing.
Initiate discovery! Fire the Machines! Throw the switch Igor! THROW THE F***ING SWITCH!
User avatar
Cadet vtmarik
 
Posts: 3863
Joined: Mon May 15, 2006 9:51 am
Location: Riding on the waves of fear and loathing.

Postby Colossus on Thu Apr 26, 2007 6:55 pm

^ right on. A principle very excellently communicated in 'Flatland'. If any of you haven't read it, I highly recommend it. It's a very short, quick read, and it's cheap at your local bookstore. And it's not a book about God per se, it's more about perspective. In response to heavycola's question, I would say that if we define God simply as the infinite being (which is kind of how I think of God), then he is beyond our concept of complexity. I think of God in terms of the mathematical concept of Unity. Unity is everything and it is one. By trying to describe the complexity of God or trying to explain it, we necessarily limit the infinite. Descriptions or explanations of God are always wrong because God is always beyond our finite explanations.

And evolutionary theory only provides us with an argument against the literal Biblical God of the Old Testament. The God that Jesus talks about is not a God of heaven and hell, not a God of judgment; he is a God of now and forever, of everything and of one, of you, of me, of all. He is all and he is in all, and all is in him (sounds paradoxical, but it's metaphorical and that's the only way we can even try to give a notion of what God is). All the stuff about judgment and rapture and all that business is not from the words of Jesus. It is from the words of his followers. Again the trouble with the difference between religion and faith. So, while I agree that evolutionary theory and all of its evidence provides a very strong argument against the dogmatic Creationists out there, it says nothing about the existence of intent in natural processes (i.e. God).
Chance favors only the prepared mind.
-Louis Pasteur
User avatar
Lieutenant Colossus
 
Posts: 448
Joined: Fri Jan 26, 2007 6:04 pm
Location: Philly

Postby Backglass on Thu Apr 26, 2007 7:58 pm

unriggable wrote:Well if we were created, then why do some people have appendices and some don't? Or is that just the process of natural selection?


Some people dont have appendixes? :?
Image
The Pro-Tip®, SkyDaddy® and Image are registered trademarks of Backglass Heavy Industries.
User avatar
Corporal 1st Class Backglass
 
Posts: 2212
Joined: Wed Aug 23, 2006 5:48 pm
Location: New York

PreviousNext

Return to Acceptable Content

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users