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Within the Bible, "the creation story" and Jesus are completely segregated so I'm not sure what your question is there.oVo wrote:
Every culture on the planet has a creation story,
why did Jesus wait so long to show up?
So do birds have the exact same DNA as the dinosaurs you believe they came from?universalchiro wrote:Goran, it so sad to read how little you know about genetics and evolution, then be so confident that you won. Poor thing, here is a tip for you, for any change in eye color of offspring, or change in any hair color in offspring or change in blood type of offspring, or change in any external feature, it is all based on information already existing in the DNA code. It's the DNA code that has the information already. So a recessive eye color such as blue from two parents that both have recessive brown eyes, is exclusively based from the information already existing in the DNA from both parents via their chromosomes. This is in no way evolution. And the same for blood type.
I think you misunderstand my point of “Ridicule is not an argument.”TA1LGUNN3R wrote: He changed the subject because you clearly aren't listening and he probably doesn't wish to waste his time. There are hundreds of pages in this forum where myself and others with a scientific background have covered why evolution is a fact, and yet you creationists and I.D.ers refuse to acknowledge it and pretend you know better. Denial, denial, denial is the name of your game.
The argument of design is just plain false, a construct of a superficial mind. The argument of irreducible complexity is similarly ridiculous, a "logic" of the religious. Nobody once said that fully modern cells sprang into being and began to function normally, as you so mistakenly assert.
Nature does not follow logic any more than it follows mathematical models. These things can approximate and help to understand nature, but don't for a second believe they are absolute.
All of your arguments you prattle on about have been debunked multiple times. Get over it.
-TG
andTA1LGUNN3R wrote: “All of your arguments you prattle on about have been debunked multiple times.”
Is it not interesting that both sides can make this claim (and do)? Each side feels the evidence is on their side. No one seems to want to budge either way. And the world goes round and round.TA1LGUNN3R wrote: There are hundreds of pages in this forum where myself and others with a scientific background have covered why evolution is a fact, and yet you creationists and I.D.ers refuse to acknowledge it and pretend you know better. Denial, denial, denial is the name of your game.
anduniversalchiro wrote: Evolutionists always skip a step and jump to natural selection, the step they skip is you can't have natural selection , nor artificial selection w/o the information already existing in the DNA. and there is no reproduction w/o that information to replicate already existing in the DNA code.
So don't bother arguing evolution until you figure out where the information came from in the first place for replication and for natural selection . Every evolutionist has the cart before the horse.
So here we have two views. One says information theory is important before we discuss evolution and the other says it is not important. One assumes that information naturally happened in the past some way because we are here so deal with it and one assumes that it was an intelligence that created the information we see. Same evidence, different conclusions.DoomYoshi wrote: 2) . The p-value of life happening spontaneously is 1. It happened. Life exists. . Deal with it. What are the odds that I typed this sentence?
3) Proteins don't need to randomly come into existence for evolution to be truth. Evolution is the theory that life forms evolve into other ones. . The abiotic origins of life has nothing whatsoever to do with the topic at hand. .







Here you go.DoomYoshi wrote:Well, I'm pretty sure this is the fourth time I've answered in this thread, but here we go again:WidowMakers wrote:
The original post was that there is no evidence or naturalistic way that evolution, no matter the time given, has the ability to create the life we see today.
There are too many things inside even the simplest life form to haev happened by chance due to natural selection and random mutations.
Too many interdependent machines inside cells that only serve a purpose when used together with other parts.
- -Please explain how DNA came to be.
-Please explain how a cell with all its required parts, all happened at once.
-And if you claim it did not happen all at once, which functional parts were not needed and why?
Name one such machine.
“Today biology is revealing the importance of ‘molecular machines’ and of other highly organized molecular structures that carry out the complex physico-chemical processes on which life is based.” - Marco Piccolino, “Biological machines: from mills to molecules,” Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, Vol. 1:149-153 (November, 2000).
“[m]ost cellular functions are executed by protein complexes, acting like molecular machines.”- Thomas Köcher & Giulio Superti-Furga, "Mass spectrometry-based functional proteomics: from molecular machines to protein networks," Nature Methods, Vol. 4(10):807-815 (October, 2007).
A molecular machine is “an assemblage of parts that transmit forces, motion, or energy from one to another in a predetermined manner.” - Tinh-Alfredo V. Khuong, Jose E. Junez, Carlos E. Godinez, and Miguel A. Garcia-Garibay, "Crystalline Molecular Machines: A Quest Toward Solid-State Dynamics and Function," Accounts of Chemical Research, Vol. 39(6):413-422 (2006).
Shortly after 1950 science advanced to the point where it could determine the shapes and properties of a few of the molecules that make up living organisms. Slowly, painstakingly, the structures of more and more biological molecules were elucidated, and the way they work inferred from countless experiments. The cumulative results show with piercing clarity that life is based on machines--machines made of molecules! Molecular machines haul cargo from one place in the cell to another along "highways" made of other molecules, while still others act as cables, ropes, and pulleys to hold the cell in shape. Machines turn cellular switches on and off, sometimes killing the cell or causing it to grow. Solar-powered machines capture the energy of photons and store it in chemicals. Electrical machines allow current to flow through nerves. Manufacturing machines build other molecular machines, as well as themselves. Cells swim using machines, copy themselves with machinery, ingest food with machinery. In short, highly sophisticated molecular machines control every cellular process. Thus, the details of life are finely calibrated and the machinery of life enormously complex. - Michael Behe, Darwin’s Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution, pp. 4-5 (Free Press, 1996).
2 Examples: These serve a purpose on the cellular level and other machines need them (and vice versa)The entire cell can be viewed as a factory that contains an elaborate network of interlocking assembly lines, each of which is composed of a set of large protein machines. . . . Why do we call the large protein assemblies that underlie cell function protein machines? Precisely because, like machines invented by humans to deal efficiently with the macroscopic world, these protein assemblies contain highly coordinated moving parts. - Bruce Alberts, "The Cell as a Collection of Protein Machines: Preparing the Next Generation of Molecular Biologists," Cell, Vol. 92:291 (February 6, 1998).

Yes: these other "laws" and "facts" aren't threatening to your worldview, to the answers you previously decided had to be true without examining anything about the world. If the Bible said that water is made of hydrogen and fluorine, you can bet there'd be creationists telling us physicists and chemists are wrong. Creationism is the stance that we are allowed to use logical inference and induction based on available data to study the world and determine how it works, except in those instances where the Bible tells us how the world works. Those areas are off limits to critical thinking. Any time you say "the answer has to be this way because someone said so," you are being fundamentally anti-science. You don't get to wear the cover of science if you don't even believe in the fundamental primacy of the scientific method. Science is a process, a way of knowing -- not a collection of facts and theories.WidowMakers wrote: If creationists (young/old) were really anti-science as it is often asserted during these discussions, can you explain why we don’t dismiss there laws and facts as well?
I'll Ignore the fact that there is wide, undeniable scientific consensus on the question of evolution because there's a more relevant point here. If you went to an archaeological dig and found some teacups deep under the soil, would you assert that we can only be sure an ancient civilization lived there by starting the Universe over and watching?So now back to the OP topic….If the mechanism, functions, predictive ability and origins or naturalistic evolution/information origin/specie differentiation/etc could be presented in a way with data similar to the above topics, there would be no debate.
It is for this specific reason that there is not consensus. The data is not there that proves it as FACT or a LAW.
It seems pretty clear to me who is using ridicule as an argument.For all of you who may still deny purposed arrangement in the natural world, do you deny you would see purposed arrangement in scenario #5 if it was found in your house?
Would you question who arranged the coins on your floor but still deny there is an arranger of the HUGE amount of information in reality?
Yes: these other "laws" and "facts" aren't threatening to your worldview, to the answers you previously decided had to be true without examining anything about the world. If the Bible said that water is made of hydrogen and fluorine, you can bet there'd be creationists telling us physicists and chemists are wrong. Creationism is the stance that we are allowed to use logical inference and induction to study the world and determine how it works, except in those instances where the Bible tells us how the world works. Those areas are off limits to critical thinking. Any time you say "the answer has to be this way because someone said so," you are being fundamentally anti-science. You don't get to wear the cover of science if you don't even believe in the fundamental primacy of the scientific method. Science is a process, a way of knowing -- not a collection of facts and theories.WidowMakers wrote: If creationists (young/old) were really anti-science as it is often asserted during these discussions, can you explain why we don’t dismiss there laws and facts as well?
I'll Ignore the fact that there is wide, undeniable scientific consensus on the question of evolution because there's a more relevant point here. If you went to an archaeological dig and found some teacups deep under the soil, would you assert that we can only be sure an ancient civilization lived there by starting the Universe over and watching?So now back to the OP topic….If the mechanism, functions, predictive ability and origins or naturalistic evolution/information origin/specie differentiation/etc could be presented in a way with data similar to the above topics, there would be no debate.
It is for this specific reason that there is not consensus. The data is not there that proves it as FACT or a LAW.

Incorrect. Headless servers are common as dirt. The CPU is the only required part of the computer. And even a CPU can be as simple as a simple microcontroller.WidowMakers wrote: Here you go.
Any complex machine system has components that are there because another component depends on them.
Look at a computer. Without a CPU, a mouse and keyboard and monitor would be not function.
Likewise a computer with no input devices would also not work well.
Well in the first place it's fallacious to compare computers (a man-made, designed object) to living organisms. However, consider this:If there was all the componets needed except the power distribution system, it would not work.
And there are many other examples of things humans have made that can follow this.
If you teak out even a very simple part to a complex machine system, the entire system functions poorly if at all.
Because these are not threatening to the religious views of certain fundamentalists. Be honest: If the bible didn't have the creation story which conflicts with evolution, do you think anyone would go to the lengths they go to try to deny evolution? The bible and fundamentalist christian religious views are the only reasons why people try to "debunk" (in the most generous sense of the word) evolution...WidowMakers wrote:Is it not interesting that both sides can make this claim (and do)? Each side feels the evidence is on their side. No one seems to want to budge either way. And the world goes round and round.
But what I also find interesting, specifically as it pertains to subjects of science, is that there are no threads about:
1) Why chemistry is wrong
2) Why there is no gravity
3) Why the 2nd law of thermodynamics is not always true
4) Why photosynthesis (plants generating energy) is wrong
WidowMakers wrote:Now can this be random? Yes it could. But there seems to be an even more distinct pattern. Is this result really due to a random fall or to an agent that arranged the coins?
Every single scenario has 20 coins with 2 sides each and 100 spaces in a grid.
All of these events happened which means the likely hood they did happen =1.
All of them have the same possibility of happening again 200^20.
But....What would you think if you walked into a room and saw this? Would you honestly believe it happened by chance or that an agent arranged the coins?
Is there anyone here who for a moment, if confronted with this situation would think “huh random chance.“ I do not think so.

Because creationists tend to be logically inconsistent. Issues like the law of gravity don't threaten a creationists' fringe religious worldview, thus the creationists' faith doesn't interrupt the analysis. Nevertheless, evolutionary biology and evolution in general do threaten their worldview, so their faith ruptures their ability to understand.WidowMakers wrote:But what I also find interesting, specifically as it pertains to subjects of science, is that there are no threads about:
1) Why chemistry is wrong
2) Why there is no gravity
3) Why the 2nd law of thermodynamics is not always true
4) Why photosynthesis (plants generating energy) is wrong
Do you know why there are no thread topics on these, because they can be validated and have been via scientific experiments. They are predictive, repeatable and consistent.
1) We know that Oxygen and Hydrogen make water. There have been studies and tests. We can use this info to predict and know what will and will not happen next time elements interact.
2) We know there is gravity. Studies have been shown and equations made to help us predict what happens when we drop things or how large objects interact with each other in the universe (planets/stars/etc)
3) We know that all systems run down. They lose energy (in a closed system) until they reach equilibrium. Again many tests have been done and that is why this is called a LAW. It is how things behave.
4) After analyzing plants and how they work, we can see that the intricate systems setup (however they arrived to be: natural evolution, creation, Theistic evolution, etc) they work in a particular way.
If creationists (young/old) were really anti-science as it is often asserted during these discussions, can you explain why we don’t dismiss there laws and facts as well?
I find it interesting that your example supports my view point.natty dread wrote:
Well in the first place it's fallacious to compare computers (a man-made, designed object) to living organisms. However, consider this:
You have a computer. A basic "pc" computer, with a generic motherboard, CPU, GPU, optical drive maybe, standard ATX case... Maybe you bought the computer as a package or assembled it yourself from various parts, doesn't matter.
Say, your computer is getting sluggish and doesn't run the latest FPS games smoothly anymore. You take out the 2GB DDR2 module and replace it with a larger RAM module, maybe with a lower latency too. Now you just replaced a very simple and small part of the computer with a completely different part - maybe one made by a completely different manufacturer. And as a result, your computer works better. That's basically evolution!
And RAM is just a simple small piece - although crucial. You can as well take out the GPU/video card, and replace it with a newer model. But wait, there's more: maybe your video card breaks, and you need to use the computer while you wait for the new one to be delivered in 4-6 weeks. But don't worry! Your computer has a vestigial integrated GPU which fills in and provides basic GPU functionality so your computer stays alive, until it can evolve itself a new organ to replace the old one. Wow!

You have evolved to find it interesting.WidowMakers wrote:I find it interesting that your example supports my view point.
Yes it is too, because you are evolution in this analogy! You're completely moving the goalposts by reinterpreting the analogy to suit your own rhetoric.Then you say that is basically evolution?????
- My computer gets sluggish....
I take out the RAM....
I replace a very simple piece.....
No it is not.
Which you ignored! Like you ignored all the other parts of my post that you found inconvenient. You are behaving in an intellectually dishonest way!!!Well in the first place it's fallacious to compare computers (a man-made, designed object) to living organisms.
Again, the analogy loses all meaning if you start literally comparing a man-made object with a living organism.That is intelligent design!!
That was a guided, informed, intelligent procedural order of events that I chose to do to fix or enhance my computer.
- I knew about what the computer was for.
I knew how it worked.
I recognized issues or needs.
I set forth to improve or correct knowing the desired outcome.
Evolution is far from blind. It's a very simple set of rules that amounts to a very complex system of trial and error. It isn't blind - it just follows the rule of natural selection, which is a very logical set of rules that crops out bad changes and allows good changes to float atop.180 degrees in the opposite direction that naturalistic unguided blind evolution.

Sorry, I agree with what you said if I had said that the parts cease to function. That is not what I meant. They can still function. But the cell as a whole, depends on each of them to do a specific task.Metsfanmax wrote:DoomYoshi wasn't questioning your description of parts of the cell as machines -- he knows that this is a well-used rhetorical device. He was asking which one of these "machines" ceases to have a function outside of a cell. You failed to provide a single example of that. I'm not sure that there are any. A protein doesn't need to be in a cell to catalyze a chemical reaction. A spliceosome would still splice a RNA strand if it were outside of a cell. A ribosome could still synthesize proteins outside a cell. It is widely thought that the mitochondrion was originally its own bacterium, doing things that eukaryotic cells could not do, and was essentially enveloped in the eukaryotic cells that formed the basis of organisms such as us. This is why your analogy to a computer is inappropriate: a computer mouse wouldn't do anything without the CPU. A protein can still catalyze a reaction even if it doesn't have a nucleus "telling it what to do."
but it should have been written to express my thoughts asWidowMakers wrote:Too many interdependent machines inside cells that only serve a purpose when used together with other parts.
Plus I still don't understand how people can ignore the design argument. All of these machines and systems work to do a purpose.WidowMakers wrote:Many interdependent machines inside cells must be used together in order for the cell to function (i.e. each machine has a purpose in the cell)


The problem is that this exact argument has been presented many times and it has been answered many times. There's nothing in your argument that disproves or even discredits any of evolution.WidowMakers wrote:Sorry, I agree with what you said if I had said that the parts cease to function. That is not what I meant. They can still function. But the cell as a whole, depends on each of them to do a specific task.
The cell has interdependent pieces.
Where did it come from... who knows? That's getting into the ultimate origin of "life, universe and everything". We know the universe was (probably) born in the "big bang". We have no idea what, if anything, caused the big bang. Maybe someday we do, but we don't now.WidowMakers wrote:Plus I still don't understand how people can ignore the design argument. All of these machines and systems work to do a purpose.
They all function and have rules. In some cases they work together and in some cases by themselves.
Where did the information come from that setup the rules and processes?
Less advanced. Not necessarily inherently inferior.We have all agreed that our computers are vastly inferior to the biological technology we see in nature.
Actually no. See: genetic algorithms.Computers:
-intelligence is required develop code (language)
Well, looking at Windows 8, I find it hard to imagine that any intelligence was used in making it...-Intelligence is required to design, build and distribute the hardware needed to use the software
Let's backup a bit here. We don't actually know what happened to make the "language" (ie. the rules and laws of physics) that governs the universe. That's getting again to the "original cause" question, which we can just ignore for now - because it really is a separate question.But now we get to the natural world:
-chance happened to make the code (language) that biological machines use
Describing this all as "chance" is overly simplistic. Firstly: If we subscribe to the idea of a deterministic universe (something that you should be totally on board with, what with "god's will" and all that jazz), then there is no such thing as chance. Initial variables were set (big bang, again: see "separate argument") and then the universe basically just plays out accordingly - like it's on rails, or a hugely complex program executing itself.-chance happened to make a process to compile and process the language
-chance happened to place the code in the correct place to be used
-chance happened to setup networks and information transmission between the machines
-chance happened to setup processes to correct issues withing the system
-chance happened to design, build and distribute the hardware (molecular machines) needed to use the code
-chance...
The problem is that you're asking but you're not listening to the answer. If you honestly ask something, you shouldn't be like "well this answer doesn't match with my expectations so I'ma just gonna discard it and pretend I didn't hear it".So computers need intelligence to exist but vastly more complex, intricate, detailed systems in nature just can happen by chance.
And please don't go back to Natural selection did it. I know, natural selection works and does stuff.
I am still asking where the stuff that natural selection uses came from.

Sure. Evolution is very good at coming up with things that work. Cells that don't function would be discarded by natural selection.WidowMakers wrote:Many interdependent machines inside cells must be used together in order for the cell to function
What is this "information" you speak of? The whole point of evolution is that you don't need to have the entire specification for a human genome when you start off 4 billion years ago. That will develop as organisms get better and better at adapting to their surroundings. No one is saying that when evolution started, all the information was there so that a human could have popped out, if just the right set of random circumstances popped up. That's not how it works, because evolution is a bottom-up process, not a top-down process. The beauty of it is that you don't need to have any rules, or guidance. The only fact that matters is that organisms that are better at adapting to their surroundings are more likely to reproduce and produce more organisms like them. (Roughly.)WidowMakers wrote: Where did the information come from that setup the rules and processes?
You can't mutate nothing into something.
You can't naturally select something from nothing.
Where did the information come from.
This is the most important point here. The abiotic origin of life IS NOT A PREREQUISITE FOR EVOLUTION.natty dread wrote: Evolution is an undeniable fact. It says nothing about the origin of the universe, or whether some entity "kickstarted" the whole process - if you want to believe such things, that's fine from the POV of evolution - evolution doesn't address those questions and is entirely compatible with them if you so wish. All it really is is a set of rules, an algorithm, for optimizing LIFE.
It is like arguing that all of modern cosmology is incorrect because we can't understand what caused the Big Bang.DoomYoshi wrote:This is the most important point here. The abiotic origin of life IS NOT A PREREQUISITE FOR EVOLUTION.natty dread wrote: Evolution is an undeniable fact. It says nothing about the origin of the universe, or whether some entity "kickstarted" the whole process - if you want to believe such things, that's fine from the POV of evolution - evolution doesn't address those questions and is entirely compatible with them if you so wish. All it really is is a set of rules, an algorithm, for optimizing LIFE.
If you left a room that was infinitely large? Well if this is suppose to represent time, your doctrine doesn't allow for infinite time, you currently have 4.5 billion years on earth or 14 billion years of the universe. Maybe wait a few years and evolutionary cosmologist will readjust the time, again.WILLIAMS5232 wrote:if i left a room that had a jar of coins on it, and came back the next day to observe the coins laid out as in scenario 5, i would automatically assume someone came in and arranged them.
but, if i had left a room (infinitely large) that housed gazillions of jars of pennies and grids and tables that where tipped over, and found one, way over there somewhere in the middle, where the coins where arranged in the order like scenario 5, i would assume it happened by chance....for me, i can't wrap my head around a vacant space always existing, i can only imagine a beginning of something, but i'm probably wrong with that.
So what would you say to a flat-earther? Somebody who denies that gravity or the 2nd law of TD exists? That they are obviously mistaken and in denial. What would you say when they post hundreds of posts on the topic saying the same thing, and that everybody who studies such things are either untruthful or dumber than the person who has never studied those things?WidowMaker wrote:Is it not interesting that both sides can make this claim (and do)? Each side feels the evidence is on their side. No one seems to want to budge either way. And the world goes round and round.
But what I also find interesting, specifically as it pertains to subjects of science, is that there are no threads about:
1) Why chemistry is wrong
2) Why there is no gravity
3) Why the 2nd law of thermodynamics is not always true
4) Why photosynthesis (plants generating energy) is wrong
Do you know why there are no thread topics on these, because they can be validated and have been via scientific experiments. They are predictive, repeatable and consistent.
1) We know that Oxygen and Hydrogen make water. There have been studies and tests. We can use this info to predict and know what will and will not happen next time elements interact.
2) We know there is gravity. Studies have been shown and equations made to help us predict what happens when we drop things or how large objects interact with each other in the universe (planets/stars/etc)
3) We know that all systems run down. They lose energy (in a closed system) until they reach equilibrium. Again many tests have been done and that is why this is called a LAW. It is how things behave.
4) After analyzing plants and how they work, we can see that the intricate systems setup (however they arrived to be: natural evolution, creation, Theistic evolution, etc) they work in a particular way.
If creationists (young/old) were really anti-science as it is often asserted during these discussions, can you explain why we don’t dismiss there laws and facts as well? But why do people (atheists/theists) accept and agree on the topics I listed above (and many others). It is because both of us as an inclusive group are not anti-science.
There really isn't any debate. There are only deniers who have a religious agenda. It IS a fact. A theory's abstractness or time table does invalidate the truth. Sorry.So now back to the OP topic….If the mechanism, functions, predictive ability and origins or naturalistic evolution/information origin/specie differentiation/etc could be presented in a way with data similar to the above topics, there would be no debate.
It is for this specific reason that there is not consensus. The data is not there that proves it as FACT or a LAW.
Several Agreed to aspects of the discussion:
• Life requires genetic information to work. = 100% agree Life as we define it requires genetic information.
• Natural selection is the process in which that said information is passed onto the next generation = 100% agree Cellular division, whether mitotic or meiotic, is the process whereby genetic info is passes on. Natural selection is simply the tendencies of traits to prevail over others within a generation under selective pressures.
• Genetic Mutations, Duplications, etc are ways that new information can be made from the old information already there = 100% agree (but whether that is beneficial is another subject) Don't forget horizontal gene transfers!
• Variation within a species (dogs, finches, humans, etc) can be shown to happen over time = 100% agree
Several NOT-Agreed to aspects of the discussion:
• The origin of the genetic information – MUCH Disagreement
o Intelligence
o Natural process
• Development or NON-Development of new species – MUCH Disagreement
o Orchard style - Multiple trees with variation in those trees.
o Single tree – All life stems from an earlier form up the tree.
In the words of the beebs, "define information."The debate many times gets to this point. “Evolution is not about information origin, it is about how information is used and transferred from next generation to next, eventually developing new systems, etc, etc, etc. We don’t need to talk about where the information came from since that is not part of evolution.”
And I would say that is partially true. Evolution is about how information is used and passed on (whether it be macro or micro).
But it is still very important to answer the question “Where did the information come from?”
For if the information came from nothing and was randomly generated over millions of years and by a purely naturalistic process (i.e. no intelligence) the implications of how evolution might or could work (macro/micro) would be drastically different that if we found that the information used needed to come from an intelligent source.
BUHAHAuniversalchiro wrote:Goran, it so sad to read how little you know about genetics and evolution, then be so confident that you won.
If there is no evolution and there is only adaptation why AB blood type can be deadly for person who has O blood type when they have the same genes?universalchiro wrote:Poor thing, here is a tip for you, for any change in eye color of offspring, or change in any hair color in offspring or change in blood type of offspring, or change in any external feature, it is all based on information already existing in the DNA code. It's the DNA code that has the information already. So a recessive eye color such as blue from two parents that both have recessive brown eyes, is exclusively based from the information already existing in the DNA from both parents via their chromosomes. This is in no way evolution. And the same for blood type.
Evolution requires new information not existent in both parents for a new function and new information for a new kind.
Adaptation already has the information embedded in the DNA code. So again, your alleged self proclaimed victory, is short lived. I would recommend doing more reading and more research before you try convincing others that your belief system is correct. Because each time you post, you reveal more and more of what you really don't know.
You are not software developer... why are you wasting your time to explain how a software is made when you dont have no clue?WidowMakers wrote: We have all agreed that our computers are vastly inferior to the biological technology we see in nature.
Computers:Do you see a pattern.
- -intelligence is required develop code (language)
-intelligence is required to compile and process the language
-intelligence is required to input code
-intelligence is required to determine how to setup networks and information transmission
-Intelligence is required to fix or setup processes to correct issues withing the system
-Intelligence is required to design, build and distribute the hardware needed to use the software
-intelligence...
But now we get to the natural world:
- -chance happened to make the code (language) that biological machines use
-chance happened to make a process to compile and process the language
-chance happened to place the code in the correct place to be used
-chance happened to setup networks and information transmission between the machines
-chance happened to setup processes to correct issues withing the system
-chance happened to design, build and distribute the hardware (molecular machines) needed to use the code
-chance...
Interesting fact, IF you travel around the world, saving & dating hair samples and nail clippings regularly during your travels, years later your location on the planet by date can be identified by their carbon content and this information originates with grasses. It's not just a bovine equation.universalchiro wrote: All cows eat grass
Does there have to be a knowledgeable guide to explain the existence of anything? If the chicken existed before the egg, where did the chicken come from? If someone "created" the initial chicken that laid the first egg, how can the source of the original chicken be rationally explained?natty wrote:...the opposite direction that naturalistic unguided blind evolution.
Okay here you go:GoranZ wrote:Interesting but you guys cant explain a single event from your Gods books and you want we to explain everything. Well we will some day but not today, and the reason for that is YOU, guys like you were blocking knowledge for so long. You dont have to look for loops in what I wrote, you simply have to explain with scientific evidence a single event from your Gods books. 1 will be enough
Since Noah's Ark landed in the mountains of Ararat (the mountains rose at the close of the Flood), it is not surprising that Noah's progeny migrated down the new Tigris River valley from the mountains to found the earliest post-Flood civilizations such as Sumer, Akkad, Uruk, and Nimrud (which later became Babylon), Haran, Jericho, and Sidon (Phoenicia), and more distantly, Egypt and the Indus Valley of N.W. India. (The Tigris and the Euphrates rivers were named after two of the four pre-Flood rivers mentioned in the Bible that flowed from the Garden of Eden.)
Ancient Babylonian legend speaks of a pre-Flood series of ten kings, the ancient Hindus (N.W India) spoke about a series of Ten Pitris who ruled before the global Flood, and the ancient Egyptians described Ten Shining Ones who ruled consecutively before the Deluge.
Like the Bible also says, these pre-Flood patriarchs lived much longer than we do, and this was confirmed by the ancient historians Berosus, Nicolaus of Damascus, Hesiod, Plato, Hecataeus, Mochus, Hieronymus, and Manetho.
The last of these kings in the aforementioned lists was the hero who led seven others aboard a vessel in which they survived the global Flood. In ancient Babylon, the hero's name was Zisudra who spear-headed the survival on the Ark of seven other humans, the Seven Apkallu. In ancient Egypt, the Flood hero was Toth who survived the Deluge along with the Seven Sages. In ancient N.W. India, the hero was Manu who survived the global-Flood "pralaya" with the Seven Rishis. The odds are astronomically long that these supposedly distinct civilizations would have the same legend of a global Flood with eight people surviving from the pre-Flood population that was led by a series of ten kings if it were not real history that happens to corroborate the Genesis account.
And the odds become even longer that Noah's Flood is not an historical fact when one considers the hundreds of tribes from around the world that have ancestral knowledge of the global Flood. And yet, we are expected to ignore this overwhelming evidence because it contradicts current mainstream science and archaeology. We are also expected to ignore the many ancient legends from various people-groups that corroborate the Biblical account of the confusion of language at the Tower of Babel where Nimrod (also known as Menrot, Marduk, Merodach, Ninus, Sargon, Shun, Bacchus, and Zarathustra) led an act of defiance against God about 150 years after the Flood which devastated the earth around 2400 B.C.
There are many other ancient historical factors, as well as a plethora of geophysical, biological and anthropological indications that support the Genesis rendering of ancient history which can be gleaned from a variety of resources, such as my book Old Earth? Why Not! The accuracy of Genesis is further attested to therein by an analysis of the ancient Biblical names that were thought to be mythological until modern archaeology confirmed their historicity, names such as Haran, Ur, Nahor, Serug, and the Hittites.
Thanks to modern archaeology, these Biblical Hittites were confirmed to be non-mythological, and were discovered to have also had a legend about the global Flood, the same Deluge recounted in a legend from the Tamils of southern India which was survived by, again, eight people, Satyavrata (Noah), Sharma (Shem), Charma (Ham), Japati (Japheth), and their wives.
The Tamils apparently migrated from the Indus River valley to the south around 1500 B.C. when the Ice Age ice-pack melted because of climatic changes at that time which caused the sea-level to rise about 300 feet, with both inducing migrations of people-groups (such as the Aryans from the north, who moved into the Indus Valley and displaced the Tamil people who already were losing ground to the encroaching ocean at that time).
Warmer ocean-water than today's ocean-water must have been the evaporation source for the dense cloud-cover that caused the Ice Age, and the source of that warmer ocean-water was the "fountains of the deep" for Noah's Flood. Many ancient Flood legends do speak of water and magma hissing and venting-up through fissures in the earth's crust to cause the Flood, like described in Genesis. This hot-water from below mixed with the pre-Flood ocean-water to inundate the continents (as indicated by the sedimentary strata on the continents), and thereafter settled in the deepened post-Flood basins.
Reasonable explanations for the cause of the Ice Age are not forthcoming from old-earth-believing scientists because they do not realize that significantly warmer ocean-water (which caused dense cloud-cover from higher ocean-evaporation rates) must have been the cause of the Ice Age, there is no other viable mechanism that could have resulted in the dense cloud-cover necessitated. When the post-Flood ocean cooled sufficiently, the Ice Age ended around 1500 B.C., which is confirmed by submerged megalithic structures off N.W. India, S. India, and S.W. Japan that were engulfed by the sea when the Ice Age ice-pack melted.
Hundreds of tribal legends and ancient accounts from Egypt, Babylon, and the Indus confirm the account of Noah's Flood from the book of Genesis. These tribes and ancient cultures obviously had no interest in copying a Hebrew account about a global Flood, therefore, all of these accounts must have been independently derived by the various people-groups' ancestors from the eight who were on the vessel that endured the global Flood. When the eight reproduced and spread out across the Middle East, and soon thereafter, much of the world (as some were demonstrably great mariners), the memory of the great Flood was retained, and to a not-surprisingly great degree.
There's some evidence for a world wide flood.by Eric Lyons, M.Min. and Kyle Butt, M.A.
This item is available on the Apologetics Press website at: http://www.apologeticspress.org/articles/40 - it was originally published in Reason & Revelation, issue 23[11]:102-103
Anthropologists who study legends and folktales from different geographical locations and cultures consistently have reported one particular group of legends that is common to practically every civilization. Legends have surfaced in hundreds of cultures throughout the world that tell of a huge, catastrophic flood that destroyed most of mankind, and that was survived by only a few individuals and animals. Although most historians who have studied this matter estimate that these legends number into the 200s, according to evolutionary geologist Robert Schoch, “Noah is but one tale in a worldwide collection of at least 500 flood myths, which are the most widespread of all ancient myths and therefore can be considered among the oldest” (2003, p. 249, emp. added). Schoch went on to observe:
Narratives of a massive inundation are found all over the world.... Stories of a great deluge are found on every inhabited continent and among a great many different language and culture groups (pp. 103,249).
Over a century ago, the famous Canadian geologist, Sir William Dawson, wrote about how the record of the Flood
is preserved in some of the oldest historical documents of several distinct races of men, and is indirectly corroborated by the whole tenor of the early history of most of the civilized races (1895, pp. 4ff.).
Legends have been reported from nations such as China, Babylon, Mexico, Egypt, Sudan, Syria, Persia, India, Norway, Wales, Ireland, Indonesia, Romania, etc.—composing a list that could go on for many pages (see Perloff, 1999, p. 167). Although the vast number of such legends is surprising, the similarity between much of their content is equally amazing. James Perloff noted:
In 95 percent of the more than two hundred flood legends, the flood was worldwide; in 88 percent, a certain family was favored; in 70 percent, survival was by means of a boat; in 67 percent, animals were also saved; in 66 percent, the flood was due to the wickedness of man; in 66 percent, the survivors had been forewarned; in 57 percent, they ended up on a mountain; in 35 percent, birds were sent out from the boat; and in 9 percent, exactly eight people were spared (p. 168).
AMERICAN INDIAN LEGENDS
The Aztecs tell of a worldwide global flood in a story with striking parallels to the biblical deluge. “Only two people, the hero Coxcox and his wife, survived the flood by floating in a boat that came to rest on a mountain” (Schoch, p. 103). Then, soon after the flood, giants constructed a great pyramid in an endeavor to reach the clouds. Such ambition is said to have angered the gods, who scattered the giants with fire sent from the heavens (cf. Genesis 11:1-9).
In the ancient land we now refer to as Mexico, one tribe of Indians, known as the Toltecs, told of a great flood. In their legend, a deluge destroyed the “first world” 1,716 years after it was created. Only a few people escaped this worldwide flood, and did so in a “toptlipetlocali” (a word that means “closed chest”). After these few people exited the closed chest, they wandered about the Earth, and found a place where they built a “zacuali” (a high tower) in case another flood came upon the Earth. At the time of the “zacuali,” the Toltecs’ languages were confused and they separated to different parts of the Earth.
Another ancient tribe of Mexico told the story of a man named Tezpi who escaped the deluge in a boat that was filled with animals. Similar to Noah, who sent out a raven (a scavenger bird) that never returned, and a dove that came back with an olive leaf, “Tezpi released a vulture, which stayed away, gorging on cadavers. Then he let a hummingbird go, and it returned to him bearing a twig” (Schoch, p. 104).
ANCIENT GREEK MYTHOLOGY
According to the Greek legend of the deluge, humans became very wicked. Zeus, the leader of the many gods in Greek mythology, wanted to destroy humans by a flood, and then raise up another group. However, before he could do this, a man by the name of Deucalion, and his wife Pyrrha, were warned of the impending disaster. This fortunate couple was placed in a large wooden chest by one of the immortals named Prometheus. For nine days and nights, the floodwaters covered almost all of the Earth. Only a few mountain peaks remained. The wooden chest came to rest on the peak of Mount Parnassus. Later, after leaving the wooden chest, Deucalion sacrificed to Zeus.
CHINESE AND ASIAN LEGENDS
In the land of China, there are many legends about a great flood. One of those comes from a group of people known as the Nosu. According to their legend, God sent a personal messenger to Earth to warn three sons that a flood was coming. Only the youngest son, Dum, heeded the messenger. He constructed a wooden boat to prepare for the coming flood. When the waters arrived, Dum entered his boat, and was saved. After the waters began to recede, the boat landed on the mountains of Tibet, where Dum had three sons who repopulated the Earth. Interestingly, even the Chinese character for “boat” possibly reveals the story of Noah and the other seven people on the ark. The three elements used to symbolize a boat are:
The Iban people of Sarawak tell of a hero named Trow, who floated around in an ark with his wife and numerous domestic animals (Schoch, p. 252). Natives from India tell a story about a man named Manu who built an ark after being warned of a flood. Later, the waters receded, and he landed on a mountain (Schoch, p. 250).
ANCIENT BABYLONIAN MYTHOLOGY
Possibly the most famous flood account (aside from the biblical record of Noah and the Flood) comes from the ancient Babylonian empire. The Gilgamesh Epic, written on twelve clay tablets that date back to the seventh century B.C., tells of a hero named Gilgamesh. In his search for eternal life, Gilgamesh sought out Utnapishtim, a person who was granted eternal life because he saved a boatload of animals and humans during a great flood. On the eleventh tablet of this epic, a flood account is recorded that parallels the Genesis account in many areas. According to the story, the gods instructed Utnapishtim to build a boat because a terrible flood was coming. Utnapishtim built the boat, covered it with pitch, and put animals of all kinds on it, as well as certain provisions. After Utnapishtim entered the boat with his family, it rained for six days and nights. When the flood ended, the boat rested on Mount Niser. After seven days, Utnapishtim sent out a dove to see if the waters had receded. The dove came back, so he sent a swallow, which also returned. Finally, he sent out a raven—which never returned. Utnapishtim and his family finally exited the boat and sacrificed to their gods (see Roth, 1988, pp. 303-304).
What is the significance of the various flood legends? The answer seems obvious: (a) we have well over 200 flood legends that tell of a great flood (and possibly more than 500—Schoch, p. 249); (b) many of the legends come from different ages and civilizations that could not possibly have copied any of the similar legends; (c) the legends were recorded long before any missionaries arrived to relate to them the Genesis account of Noah; and (d) almost all civilizations have some sort of flood legend. The conclusion to be drawn from such facts is that in the distant past, there was a colossal flood that forever affected the history of all civilizations.
Those living soon after the Flood did not have the book of Genesis to read to their descendants. (Genesis was not written until several hundred years after the Flood.) The account of the Flood was passed from one generation to the next. Many parents and grandparents told their children and grandchildren about the huge ark, the wonderful animals, and the devastating Flood, long before the Genesis record ever existed. Over the years, the details of the story were altered, but many of the actual details remained the same. Alfred Rehwinkel wrote:
Traditions similar to this record are found among nearly all the nations and tribes of the human race. And this is as one would expect it to be. If that awful world catastrophe, as described in the Bible, actually happened, the existence of the Flood traditions among the widely separated and primitive people is just what is to be expected. It is only natural that the memory of such an event was rehearsed in the ears of the children of the survivors again and again, and possibly made the basis of some religious observances (1951, pp. 127-128).
Harold W. Clark, in his volume, Fossils, Flood and Fire, commented:
Preserved in the myths and legends of almost every people on the face of the globe is the memory of the great catastrophe. While myths may not have any scientific value, yet they are significant in indicating the fact that an impression was left in the minds of the races of mankind that could not be erased (1968, p. 45).
After the “trappings” are stripped away from the kernel of truth in the various stories, there is almost complete agreement among practically all flood accounts: (a) a universal destruction by water of the human race and all other living things occurred; (b) an ark, or boat, was provided as the means of escape for some; and (c) a seed of mankind was provided to perpetuate humanity. As Furman Kearley once observed: “These traditions agree in too many vital points not to have originated from the same factual event” (1979, p. 11). In volume three of his multi-volume set, The Native Races of the Pacific Slope—Mythology, H.H. Bancroft wrote: “There never was a myth without a meaning; ...there is not one of these stories, no matter how silly or absurd, which was not founded on fact” (1883).
Among the noted scholars of days gone by who have studied these matters in detail are such men as James G. Frazer (Folklore in the Old Testament) and William Wundt (Elements of Folk Psychology). Wundt, who did his utmost to find some kind of reasonable case for independent origins of the various flood sagas (and who had no great love for the biblical evidence), was forced to admit:
Of the combination of all these elements into a whole (the destruction of the earth by water, the rescue of a single man and seed of animals by means of a boat, etc.), however, we may say without hesitation, it could not have arisen twice independently (1916, p. 392, parenthetical comment in orig.).
Or, as Dawson concluded more than a century ago:
[W]e know now that the Deluge of Noah is not mere myth or fancy of primitive man or solely a doctrine of the Hebrew Scriptures. ...[N]o historical event, ancient or modern, can be more firmly established as matter of fact than this (1895, pp. 4ff.).
REFERENCES
Bancroft, H.H. (1883), Works: The Native Races of the Pacific Slope—Mythology (San Francisco, CA: A.L. Bancroft).
Clark, Harold W. (1968), Fossils, Flood and Fire (Escondido, CA: Outdoor Pictures).
Dawson, John William (1895), The Historical Deluge in Relation to Scientific Discovery (Chicago, IL: Revell).
Kearley, F. Furman (1979), “The Significance of the Genesis Flood,” Sound Doctrine, March/April.
Perloff, James (1999), Tornado in a Junkyard: The Relentless Myth of Darwinism (Arlington, MA: Refuge Books).
Rehwinkel, Alfred M. (1951), The Flood (St. Louis, MO: Concordia).
Roth, Ariel (1988), Origins: Linking Science and Scripture (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald Publishing).
Schoch, Robert M. (2003), Voyages of the Pyramid Builders (New York: Jeremy P. Parcher/Putnam).
Wundt, William (1916), Elements of Folk Psychology, trans. Edward L. Schaub (New York: Macmillan).
Metsfanmax wrote:It is like arguing that all of modern cosmology is incorrect because we can't understand what caused the Big Bang.DoomYoshi wrote:This is the most important point here. The abiotic origin of life IS NOT A PREREQUISITE FOR EVOLUTION.natty dread wrote: Evolution is an undeniable fact. It says nothing about the origin of the universe, or whether some entity "kickstarted" the whole process - if you want to believe such things, that's fine from the POV of evolution - evolution doesn't address those questions and is entirely compatible with them if you so wish. All it really is is a set of rules, an algorithm, for optimizing LIFE.
