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... Oh lord, where do I start.

Yog Sothoth said interesting post, but it won't matter, atheism will be gone in about fifty years


Evolution =/= Atheism. One is a scientific theory and the other is a personal belief about deities. Nice try though.

Yog Sothoth said when the populations shift and Africa and the middle east become the dominant powers.


Africa has never been a dominant power and the middle east will never be a dominant power in the near future. In fact, they are quite probably the most war torn, shitty places to live right now. There is no way in hell they'll make any kind of comeback in comparison to the western world. Just the United States alone could go toe to toe with all of them and win without having to land a single soldier on their lands. The European Union could do it without even having a noticeable impact on their own economy.

I have no idea where you think the middle east and Africa are even remotely credible. If you want to make population-based doomsaying nonsense, India and China kick the shit out the middle east and Africa, and they both will have serious old age problems in the next thirty years or so. Atop this, India's massive population is a massive problem for its ability to sustain itself.

So... Yeah. No. Not even close.

Yog Sothoth said religion has seen worse than most people can imagine and it's still here, so regardless of how much atheists insult or argue, faith and belief come naturally to us, it has been proven.


This is not a thread arguing about the validity of religion. It's a thread about two theories on the origins of life and how it works.

Yog Sothoth said also since when does something always have to be fact to be the right course of action?


...Since forever? You don't do something and call it right if you don't know it to be the right course of action... That's insane.

Yog Sothoth said no one can make an absolute prediction,


No one is trying.

Yog Sothoth said also science is mostly guess work and not always correct.


Science is based on the scientific theory. If you read some other posts of mine in this thread, you will find where I describe it in great detail. It is the closest method we have to identifying the truth of something.

Yog Sothoth said religion is asking for people to trust in it and have belief in it.


Faith, yes, which I already said you can't argue against the fortress of faith, but creationism isn't arguing as a faith-based argument: It's arguing as a science based argument and failing at it because it's not science.

Yog Sothoth said we as a species put faith in each other to do the right thing and are never always sure what the outcome of a decision is.


Trust. Yes. Blind trust though, will usually end with a dagger in your back. A certain amount of faith in others is healthy but total, blind faith is just as unhealthy as having none at all.

Yog Sothoth said my opinion, evolution is still believed because it has yet to be disproved, but for all we know it could be disproved in the next ten years.


Evolution is followed because it has the most evidence supporting it by and far and has for... Over a hundred years. As I said before the only theory I can think of more airtight than evolution at this point is the theory of gravity. Yes, we could find new information that totally shatters it in ten years. Unlikely, but totally possible, and science would adjust for that if it did occur, as it it is designed to do.

It's out to seek the truth. To find fact, not create things to be "worshiped". It dines on questions like fine cuisine to seek out answers. That is what it does. Because it does that we have things like airplanes and modern medicine and the Internet, so... Yeah. Go science!

Yog Sothoth said before you guys jump on me and call me a religious moron like many atheist jerks do,


Nobody in this thread called religious people "morons" or other derogatory terminology. You're the only one throwing dehumanizing shit on the wall mate.

Yog Sothoth said I'm not religious, I'm a philosopher


Philosophy and religion are not mutually exclusive by any stretch of the imagination and to state that they are is uh... Well... It's just plain wrong. There have been religious philosophers, non-religious philosophers, philosophers with no particularly strong feelings about religion one way or the other, and so on... So... This statement is really... Yeah.

Yog Sothoth said and i laugh at how hypocritical atheists are nowadays


Whee dehumanization and generalization train taking this thread way off the wheels and into candyland, wheeee~

Yog Sothoth said by calling people stupid and retarded.


Nobody did that in this thread. That you totally didn't read. Like the enlightened person that you are.

Yog Sothoth said it proves how hateful human beings who don't truly understand knowledge are and just use it to feel superior.


If you were truly a philosopher, you would know that knowledge, save that which is physically derived and experienced, is subjective. There is no universal truth to a true philosopher... Not that it'll stop you from self-labeling yourself and doing the very thing you look down upon.

In the future, please read threads before posting in them. Thank you.
ActRaiserTheReturned said
Kitties don't masturbate.


All mammals do actually.
Gwazi, Creationism doesn't have a hell. Creationism is a theory of the origins and state of life. Christianity has a hell.

The two are not the same thing. Treating them as the same thing just renders your arguments inane and incomprehensible. They are related to each other in that Creationism postulates its theory on the Bible mainly, but it has nothing to do with hell in the same way that you don't hold a firefighter responsible for the actions of the military. They both work for the government, but service entirely separate functions. Creationism and Christianity are part of the same ideological spectrum but service entirely different functions.

I hope that makes it clear to you in the future.
Heh... Ironically I think Star Trek portrayed the most realistic depiction of super humans. Ever heard of Khan? Genetically bred to be smarter, faster, stronger, and just better than the average human being... However, the same chemicals and attributes that accelerated growth, strength, and intelligence, also accentuated unwanted characteristics: Ambition, pride, cold logic. The more powerful Khan became physically, the less empathy he felt for his fellow man: After all, they were beneath him, intellectually, physically--in every way, beneath him, like an ant.

The auspicious part is, he didn't hate his fellow superhumans. He cared about them, but that didn't stop infighting from occurring between them, and in the historical depiction of Earth when they took over, their infighting led to the deaths of millions of the non-enhanced.

Increasing our biological capacity, intellectually or physically, also has the repercussion of enhancing the capability to do wrong as well as right. If you increase testosterone to make someone stronger, you also make them more aggressive. If you make someone more intellectually superior without increasing their empathy and sympathy, you make them sociopaths, but if you ramp up their empathy and sympathy, the rest of their emotions will follow as well, leading to extreme bipolar disorder instead.

This is not the kind of thing we squishy primates are really aptly evolved to handle. I'm sure there are good purposes for it, slight enhancements here or there, curing genetic diseases, eradicating vulnerabilities (like the pancreas), curing Alzheimer's , and so on. There are good purposes to this... But to straight up improve the human form in any way that could be construed as a real, serious improvement, you hit Khan. Even then, if we developed a society of minor improvements, muscle stimulus, achieving the perfect height and weight paradigms through genetics, etc, we hit a GATTACA future instead.

Oioioi. This whole business is depressing to think about. It's probably best to tackle it with the same kind of extreme care and caution that we do bio weapons... Because in the wrong hands, that's what this is: A Bioweapon.

EDIT

Basically, whether in pill format or genetics, messing with the human body is a very big shadow zone with a lot of potential problems. Leave alone the human brain. An organ we still don't understand all that well.
ActRaiserTheReturned said
Chinese history cannot be damning towards the Creation hypothesis. The Chinese don't exactly like to share their mythology/religions and the entirety of their culture with the rest of the world.


Irrelevant in the modern era. There's little that the world cannot learn if it chooses to at this point. Even from China.

Plus, ignoring China, there's still... The rest of the world. North America, Central America, South America, Europe at the time (ancient tribes), Africa, the rest of Asia, India, the Slavs, Mongols, Egypt...

The list could quite literally go on for hundreds of examples of histories that do not include a world-wide flood, leave alone one within the same time frame as the Biblical account. There's no geological evidence that it occurred. No sign of Noah's Ark, if it could even feasible exist in the first place...

To say that the Biblical account is in any way comparable or equal to the accounts of the rest of the planet is... Simply incorrect.

If it was -just- China versus the Biblical account, sure, I could totally see your argument, but it's not, when one looks at it.

Magic Magnum said
China in history was actually a big lead in science. Largely with the how well the kept records of discoveries and observations. Places like China and Arabia although not scientific power houses today were the ones to set the ground work for places like Europe to pick up from later.


Science =/= History.

ActRaiserTheReturned said
That's not what I said. I said they don't like to share some of their cultural traditions with the outside world.


^ That he did, but, then, cultural traditions doesn't always equal history either...

Magic Magnum said You said they shouldn't be attacking the creationism theory because of their currently bad culture.


...Whaaat? He said that nowhere... At all, in this thread. Uhm... Are you okay, Gwazi?

Magic Magnum said I highlighted their skill bin science in the past gives then that right.


Okay. Even if we did argue that science always equates to accurate history (two different subjects) it's still over like, what, three thousand years old and, at best, recorded on paper? It's a valid argument to say that it may not be 100% accurate. The Biblical account is invalidated when you take into account the entire planet basically going "no that didn't happen", if it was just China, then yes, one could argue it otherwise.

Magic Magnum said But I probably should of argued the culture comment instead of showing their scientific skill.


Joy.

Magic Magnum said First off, each country is a vast collection of individuals. Just because they're country is not doing well is no reason to claim they cannot have a mind of their own.


He still didn't claim this...

Magic Magnum said By that logic no american should question what they're told because their country is terrible for debt and starting wars over oil.


... No really, he didn't. Why is America now in this conversation? They didn't exist yet.

Magic Magnum said If instead you meant China doesn't try converting people there for they shouldn't question the creationism theory I'd say its in fact the reverse. They are humble/respectful enough to not by trying to make others think like they do.


China is to humble what murder is to preschool. Their philosophy in their country was "see it our way or die." They had several civil wars over this shit. It's one of the leading reasons why they didn't remain a superpower and ended up falling from grace before their recent return to power through industrialism.

But, again, one would know that if they knew their world history... ;)

Magic Magnum said Which the opposite of creationism which threatens people with eternal torture if they don't agree.


Creationism, while it is many stupid things, doesn't threaten people. Okay? Okay.
You're both being really silly right now. One of you is arguing that a single piece of wheat isn't enough to disprove something in a whole field of wheat, and the other one is saying to stop discriminating against apples. Just uh... Just stop. While you're ahead. :-3
Alphakoka said
Nah, Brovo does, he's the one who said that he's going to post soon and then not posting.


Well pish posh. One post in and I'm already leading again.
ASTA said
...It seems like these threads only ever attract those that accept evolution as fact, in which the same infallible proof, facts and concepts are thrown about as suitable counters to the inherently flawed beliefs produced by creationists and devote theists. Sometimes, they turn into insufferable circle-jerks.It's kind of hilarious, actually.


Probably because Creationism has about as much evidence backing it as the tooth fairy does. It's so one sided that people could die laughing at the pure comedy of it if it wasn't so depressingly prevalent.

So yeah. It's a circlejerk. Everybody gets to enjoy at least one.

@Drakel: I'm not quoting your post, but just a few things you should know.

#1: If you post your beliefs on the Internet, they're going to be criticized. It doesn't matter how famous, intelligent, wise, or kind you are, it will be. The moment you engage in a discussion, or speak your mind, others will have an opinion on it. That's just how life works, and so long as free speech is a thing, telling people not to criticize or analyze your beliefs is a bit... Erm... Arrogant and pointless.

#2: Telling people to "fuck off" and what not in advance of any response by anyone is probably unwise.

#3: I'm not really going to question your beliefs, I'll respect your request, but in the future, please don't be a Neanderthal about how you make such a request. Thank you.

Shy said I am actually currently writing a research paper on this very topic (which is why I'm keeping this short because it has to be done in 48 hours)


Good luck with it.

Shy said Just something I want to point out because there seem to be a few misconceptions.The whole Creation vs. Evolution debate can be broken into 3 groups:Creation Science (Commonly referred to as Creationism) - A sect that believes God created the world and that the earth is still very young (young earth scientists). Typically base these beliefs on the Bible. Against Evolution. It also isn't respected in the scientific community.Darwinians - Follow the whole evolution, natural selection shebang. Basically we all came from simple cells and overtime evolved into what we are today. Basically what all of you seem to believe. A large chunk of the scientific community.Intelligent Design - the belief that evolution DOES exist (certainly on a micro scale though macro is under debate) but there are things such as "irreducibly complex cells" that could not have possibly developed by themselves. This theory does not imply a Christian God, simply a designer of some sort (some scientists have claimed aliens). This is based PURELY ON EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE, not any sort of religious text. While a smaller chunk of scientists than the Evolutionist belief, there is still a significant amount of scientists who have this belief.


#1: As Jorick said: No. 8% is not significant in the scientific community. As well, to reiterate a previous point...

#2: The job of science is not to answer why, it's purely to answer how. If you believe God started it all, good on you, I suppose. If you don't, that's also fine, I suppose. Again: One cannot assault the fortress of faith with logic. If you stretch it far enough you can put a creator in any mystery there is, but as an atheist, I cannot accept that idea, that all mysteries or things we don't understand are the result of some omnipotent being. History has shown time and time again that when we discovered what the actual, natural cause was, that when an omnipotent being was no longer necessary, that new mysteries were found where the omnipotent being was placed instead. It's like when light is shined on a mystery, God disappears and goes to some new shadowy area.

Again, this isn't to offend, this is to state simply that something which science has yet to understand is not automatically God-required. We don't understand certain complex cells. That's fine. One day we will, one way or another, using the scientific method and gathering evidence and inventing the tools necessary to find the answers.

#3: There is still no empirical evidence that any creator did it, be that ET's or a deity.

Google said Empirical (Google): based on, concerned with, or verifiable by observation or experience rather than theory or pure logic.


There is no verifiable observation or experience of a deity or ET or otherwise creating things. No evidence that they left behind that suggested they created things. Nothing.

Now that doesn't mean they didn't, but one cannot draw the conclusion that because we cannot disprove something, means that it's real. We can't figure out X yet, that doesn't mean that Y, something which has equally lacking evidence, caused X to occur and then disappeared. That's not how science works and that's why Intelligent Design was thrown out by the US Supreme Court for not being a scientific theory.

Again, if you, personally, want to believe that a deity or creator or ET or otherwise made the universe the way it is, complete with evolution and the like, I'm just fine with that. Go ahead, that's your personal belief... However, ID is not a scientific theory, it's not accepted by 90%+ of the scientific community, it wasn't created using the scientific method, and the US judicial system in its highest offices does not hold it as being credible to be taught in a classroom as a science.

Ergo, it's probably not a scientific theory. At least, not until it gets something more concrete than "X is impossible without Y, which has no evidence."

Shy said The main debate (at least in more 'scholarly' areas) has been between Darwinism and ID, not Creationism (since most disregard it, as it is not considered science). THe problem is, most scientists who back ID get labelled as Creationists who are religious fanatics and they get tossed to the side fairly often.


Considering one of the lead proponents of ID is the Discovery Institute: Known for being painfully biased towards God and for being a conservative think tank, one should not be surprised that the majority who view it would see it as simply being another version of Creationism.

Considering based on how it is written, it really does come off as Creationism with edits replacing "God" with "unknowable creator" or the like.

Shy said One of the authors of one of my source books (Darwin's Black Box by Michael Behe - this book basically exploded the entire ID vs Darwinism debate) explains in it how going to seminars and such his students expect him to spout religious nonsense but are actually surprised when he comes at it from a fully scientific point of view. So basically my point is don't confused Intelligent Design and Creationism, they are very different things.


Certainly, one has a more open minded view about who the creator is or might be, but it still requires some form of creator. That's a problem in the scientific world in which we can't prove that there ever was a creator, of any origin. If anything, the "guided", intelligent designs of creatures on Earth has gone terrible. One could be mistaken if they couldn't see how the designs are intelligent in any manner.

Shy said That wasn't in extreme detail or anything because I really do have to get to work on this essay (which I'll be happy to share with you all after if you want) so I can get it done with. The thesis is that Creation and Evolution are compatible (Creation, not creationism.)


Creation itself? As a belief? Certainly. If you believe the universe was created by a deity, who set everything we presently know as fact into motion, then yeah, it's perfectly compatible, and I won't try to argue it because that would be a pointless thing to do. You believe what you believe and I believe what I believe. That's fine, and I hope your essay goes well, Shy.

xAsunaWolfx said S'cuse me? i'm not Jesus (lol) at debating, just rather inserting my opinion like drakel is.


I hope not, Drakel told everyone to fuck off. That's not really Fonz-cool. :<

xAsunaWolfx said I guess it has to happen, since i started the debate.


That would be appreciative.

xAsunaWolfx said @Drakel/ Brovo (somewhat of a reply to your historical evidence piece)... by far your argument has been the one so far that morally, i really do feel closest to.


Morally? There were immoral arguments here? O.o Hm. You probably intended something else.

xAsunaWolfx said Now before anyone raises guns (lol) religion has a huge label of faith, and it's pretty obvious that it does lack science.


Because it's not science. It tries to answer why, science tries to answer how.

xAsunaWolfx said But i believe it lacks science for the creationist, because hey, in the history class i took, the first thing i was made to read about was evolution.


That's how things are. Schools are for learning what is presently the most up to date, most likely version of how things are. Religion belongs in a church, education belongs in a school. It's a pretty fair compromise all things considered.

xAsunaWolfx said It is almost as if scientist are automatically programmed to be for evolution.


A scientist is someone who follows the scientific method and attempts to discern fact from fiction through gathering evidence (defined as being: observable, repeatable, physical, etc) which is then used to formulate a theory that is then peer-reviewed and either verified or dismissed. Further evidence is then gathered, compared to the theory, and if the evidence puts a hole in the theory, further investigation is levied to understand why, and either adjust the current theory, or create a new theory that can encompass the new evidence.

The reason why Evolution auto-wins 90%+ of scientists is because it passes all the previous qualifications with flying colours and has for decades. All the evidence found thus far merely suggests it to be true, compounding it further and further into near-inscrutable fact. It's one of the most air-tight, researched theories on the planet. The only one I can even think of off the top of my head which holds more air-tightness in terms of how well researched it is, would be the theory of gravity.

xAsunaWolfx said That's the way our schools/ society roll, highly likely to keep from offending someone from another religion, which could start a whole other mob.


Also because we live in a secularist nation. (The US or Canada--both are secularist.) This means that religion is kept separate and distinct from government. Public education is run by the government. If you wish to attend a private school or religious school, you have that option, too. There are plenty of catholic schools around here, that I know.

xAsunaWolfx said Sometimes i almost wonder if "creationism research" lacks information since evolution is mostly the central of research nowadays.


Creationism research lacks information because it does the scientific theory in reverse. It's a theory that searches for evidence. That's incorrect. Evidence creates a theory.

xAsunaWolfx said That's I believe that's why it's just, you guys are bringing up data that 96%-97 are scientist for evolution, the rest must be a scatter of "intelligent design" and other forms of creationism, etc, etc, who has "faith" in religion,.


Because that's where the data points, and scientifically, one follows the data.

xAsunaWolfx said Some of that 96% may even have been pressured into promoting another belief by their general sphere to keep from being targeted.


What? No. The scientific community loves challenges. It was born to solve the ultimate challenge: Discover all the things! Harness all the knowledge! Why do you think scientists go to answer creationists and intelligent design theorists all the time? Whether that be on YouTube or in a public debate, even figures like Bill Nye and Richard Dawkins take time out of their schedules of science and education to go to these debates. They repeatedly allow themselves to be constantly questioned. Why? Because questions are the food of science and intelligent discourse. Questions make the wheels turn. Questions force people to come up with answers. In the case of scientists, this means that if they hit a question they cannot answer, they must hunt out evidence to discover the truth and formulate a theory.

-That- is science. :-3

xAsunaWolfx said Here, we can all hide behind some computer screen while their advice and name get out to all types of people. I'm pretty sure they experienced more pressure than me posting here for something that isn't 100% for evolution, trust me, it took me awhile to decide to post this.


I held no problems posting anything.

xAsunaWolfx said So What is faith?1.complete trust or confidence in someone or something.2.strong belief in God or in the doctrines of a religion, based on spiritual apprehension rather than proof.


A certain amount of faith is required for day to day life. You have to have faith that your next door neighbour isn't going to straight up murder you, after all.

xAsunaWolfx said Nothing obviously screams science here, but deep in my research ( Fyi, i was to argue the side of creationism in my essay),


No offense but I figured that was the case.

Also, about your link: This is a biased source with questionable authority. It makes no effort to verify its sources, or show where claims were made. Even then, it makes the wild claim that because people were wrong about X, that means the Bible must be true!

Well, no, that doesn't mean the Bible is true. The Bible makes a whole lot of guesses about things that did and did not happen. The less fantastical it is, the more likely it occurred. For example: No Sodom and Gomorrah, none of the events involving Egypt recorded in history, no flood, none of Jesus' miracles, and so on. Jesus himself may have existed, but his miracles most likely did not occur.

That's pretty normal of ancient documents, too. The more fantastical the claim, the less likely it actually occurred.

xAsunaWolfx said . With bringing up these findings which may actually be a....another view seen with these Prophecys that have been fulfilled , testimonies .and accurate descriptions of ancient empires, either someone had to collaborate really well with the 40 authors who wrote this over a period of 1,500 years (article says "The discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, which date from 200 B.C. to A.D. 68, included a copy of every Old Testament book except for one. Comparison with the texts of a thousand years later shows little or no variation and change between them.")


I think this is moving out of the realm of creationism and moving into the realm of biblical studies, which I'm not as well versed in. I'd have to actually look up sources and start researching such things myself. By the time I did that, this thread would be long dead.

Though, honestly, I'm not sure what you're talking about now. My apologies.

As for variation in the text? There's tons of it. Look at all the different versions of the bible. There's at least over twenty different versions still being printed today that vary in wording, some of them critically different from others, which causes hundreds of schisms within the religion itself. The claim that there is "little or no variation between them" is farcical at best. Downright deranged nonsense at worst.

xAsunaWolfx said or something else is going on. Because of this, i honestly do not blame creationist for believing what they believe in.


I don't blame them for believing what they believe. I question it. I question the validity of their beliefs. They don't use the scientific method but want to be treated as a science. It's that simple, regardless of how they feel.

xAsunaWolfx said I guess it all boils down to what appeals to you more strongly & What your parents may have told you:Science or Faith?Both have facts.


Faith does not have fact, that defeats the purpose of faith. Faith is literally believing something without fact, it's the trust you place in a friend not to betray you. It's the reason why you work at a job: Because you expect your employer to pay you. It's the reason why you choose to believe what it is you believe: Because you have faith that it's true. I have a certain amount of faith that there is no god or deity or supernatural entity, no doubt about it in my mind. There's no evidence for it, ergo, I don't believe it. Due to the nature of the supernatural though, I can't disprove that it may be real, and thus, I have faith to fill in where doubt would manifest itself in everyday life.

Just as you have faith in God, as I'm fairly sure you're a Christian, and that's fine. Shy's a Christian, we get along pretty well most of the time. I figure at least half of my friends are religious in some way, and we get along.

Science is as close to pursuing fact without faith as is possible. Faith is not used in conclusions: Probability is. The more evidence there is for something, the more probable it is to be true. And we're not talking anecdotal evidence, we're talking hard, empirical evidence gathered under the scrutiny of peer-reviewed research papers and months, years, or even decades of research. Faith does not come into the equation.

It's the difference between English Literature and Mathematics. You can take one story and read it a thousand different ways, but 2+2 is always 4. They're not comparable because they don't service the same function. English Literature helps you find who you are and what you want, and helps you see the world in all its beauty, and all its flaws. Mathematics teaches you logic and reasoning skills, hard facts. It teaches you measurements, scales, weights, and more, which you can use to build things and understand the physical world around you.

The metaphor by the way is that faith is English Literature and science is Mathematics. One helps you to become who and what you are. The other teaches you how the physical world works. They're not even remotely similar.

xAsunaWolfx said Science is appealing because......debatable facts, Faith is appealing because it seems to take away the fear of death.


Science is appealing because it searches for truth using the best methods we have available to discern fact from fiction. Faith is appealing because it helps you live with the fact that you will never have universal truths in the most important aspects of your life. For some, yes, that includes death.

Albeit, I don't need faith to take away the fear of death. I don't fear death because I know that when it comes, it will not matter how I feel, I will be dead. Simply: I live life the way I wish without fear of death because when I die, I will be dead, and won't feel a thing, but while I'm alive, if I waste time fearing death, I will be on my death bed regretting that I never lived, instead of reminiscing on all the things I did and said.

xAsunaWolfx said You could dissect it all the way how people see religious text = guide to life, but i ain't here to start convertin', nuh huh, just pushing an article to the surface i've found with a little of my opinion.


Well, congrats. I think. I don't think anyone was here with the purpose to convert.

xAsunaWolfx said This is why i like the co-existence of both, and i mainly relate evolution to every other species but humans, who like i said earlier, but however, their body have to adapt to worldly changes, some may ask if a supreme being caused this.Also, shy, i hope you do not mind the changes i made to the intro. PM if you'd like it taken down.


Simple answer.

A. God made the universe the way it is but set everything we know, including evolution, into motion. This is fine. There's no scientific evidence for it, but there's none against it, so, well... If you want put your faith in this, seriously, that's fine.

B. There is no God, the universe just works the way it does because of a set of principles and laws and events that took place. <- This is also fine.

C. 150 years of science is wrong. Creationism!1! <- Probably wrong.

There. All done. Phew. Now to get some bagels.
xAsunaWolfx said
I typed that message when i was half asleep. still on the go (and half asleep sadly), but to be quick, here is the article i was speaking of. Later on i'll sit down and read the longer portions of which others have stated since, life ;-;.Now that i study it more in depth, it seems....more unbiased than most articles but i guess still could be considered "pro-evolution". I'm curious. how would you interpret this?


Considering it gets the very definition of evolution incorrect, I'd say whether it is biased or not, it is entirely irrelevant.

Evolution does not involve metamorphosis. An example of metamorphosis can be found in butterflies. They start out as caterpillars first, go into a cocoon, and become butterflies. That's metamorphosis.

Evolution is the process by which several small changes over several generations of a species causes biodiversity. In a nutshell, anyway. Fish A becomes Fish B by retaining mutations C, D, E, F, and G, gaining each one over time. More successful variants survive, less successful ones die off.

Evolution also does not attempt to explain the origins of life. That's the theory of Abiogenesis. That's the basics of it anyway. I'm sure a biologist could give it better justice than I.

EDIT

An example of mutations at work can be found in dogs, all sorts of dogs, originally bred out of wolves by us humans. There's also sheep, where we've bred them to be so docile that they cannot find water without a Shepard guiding them there, even if they can smell it nearby. Then there's our own species, where we've gained about a foot in height on average from our medieval/dark ages ancestors.
Rendezvous Crash


Bishop hesitates a moment before noticing an icy glare towards her from the one Jester possessed. She knew that look. It would be unwise to try and save him... Jester chuckles as the crowd surrounds him. After momentary confusion, they dismiss it, and all move in. Jester makes no attempt to stop them as he is repeatedly stabbed, a single wheeze leaves the man as Bishop flinches a couple times. She moves through the crowd, rubbing her arms and shuddering. This was one of those few moments that Jester couldn't say anything or even show that he existed; a moment where he had to recover from the ordeal of death.

Temporary respite though it was, it was welcome.

She kneels down and picks up her hat, there was a few droplets of blood on it now, but nothing too significant. It could be cleaned out, certainly. With a single soft sigh she returns back to her compatriots, then looks to the man who told her that he would lead the way. "Good. I'm glad someone around here has some manners." If it weren't for her already typically cold tone, she would be easy to see through. Then again, there wasn't much to see through at the current time. She briefly looks at her allies one more time, and shows a hint of uncertainty in her eyes. Leading was not something she excelled at. Investigative work, sure. Logic, reason, these realms were well within her grasp, but actual leadership?...
xAsunaWolfx said
Hm, I will read deeper into te more recent posts in the morning and post in response if need be as there look to be some GREAT feedback that deserves to be read but that introduction of before I divided the intro into creationism and evolution was taken by an actual pro evolution article, which may look rather.... Well, conflicting . Just letting y'all know ^^, as it is still perfectly fine for evolutionist to debate against other evolutionist , haha.


No offense but I don't understand what it is you intended to say, could you clarify what looks conflicting? Which article?
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