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#11
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#12
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Once you incorporate "religion" into a science discussion, you have reduced the discussion to a level of emotions and feelings.
__________________
On sabbatical until things become fun again.
Reach me at NetDoc@ScubaBoard.com or on www.ScubaBoard.com. |
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#13
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If we did "evolve" from apes like some say, it seems odd that we have evolved into needing clothes and sunscreen to protect ourselves from the sun. Humans are the only creatures that need to cover themselves. This would seem more like a deevolution. People do have a hard time believing that God always existed, but if God did not always exist, then what did? Since there is something here, something had to always exist. If a giant rock exploded and it formed the universe in perfect harmony, then where did the rock come from?
Concerning "aliens", Genesis says that the Elohim (angels/gods) made us in their image. It is translated in the king James version "And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness...(Genesis 1:26) Either this is a mistranslation from the Hebrew "Elohim", or the God of the English version of the Bible has a personality disorder. There are many such mistranslations in the bible.
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hashlamah -the path of all prophets. conceit is a barrier to progress and improvement. -imam ali |
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#14
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Who knows... maybe EVERYTHING evolved except man? Maybe just a couple of things. Maybe we did evolve from apes. Scriptures do not not seem to confirm or deny the process.
__________________
On sabbatical until things become fun again.
Reach me at NetDoc@ScubaBoard.com or on www.ScubaBoard.com. |
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#15
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They are wrong and it is not what evolution tells us. Quote:
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This is not what the Big Bang theory states. What the Big Bang theory states is even wierder. Quote:
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If my calculations are correct .. SLINKY + ESCALATOR = EVERLASTING FUN |
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#16
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The only good is knowledge and the only evil is ignorance. ~Socrates |
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#17
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Humans who live near the equator don't really need to wear clothes. It's only when we ventured outside our original habitat that we needed to protect ourselves from sunlight and cold temperatures.
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#18
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<Can we redefine the debate differently?>
Not only can we, but, we must, for the good of religion. The Bible was authored by theologians not scientists. The Bible makes no attempt to define the how of creation, only the why. Therefore, the most science can accomplish is to illuminate God's act of creation. The following excerpt is from Kenneth Miller's book: 'Finding Darwin's God' By pointing to the process of making a flower as proof of the reality of God, Father Murphy was embracing the idea that God finds it necessary to cripple nature. In his view, the blooming of a daffodil requires not a self-sufficient material universe, but direct intervention by God. We can find God, therefore, in the things around us that lack material, scientific explanations. In nature, elusive and unexplored, we will find the Creator at work. The creationist opponents of evolution make similar arguments. They claim that the existence of life, the appearance of new species, and, most especially, the origins of mankind have not and cannot be explained by evolution or any other natural process. By denying the self-sufficiency of nature, they look for God (or at least a "designer") in the deficiencies of science. The trouble is that science, given enough time, generally explains even the most baffling things. As a matter of strategy, creationists would be well-advised to avoid telling scientists what they will never be able to figure out. History is against them. In a general way, we really do understand how nature works. There is, however, a deeper problem caused by the opponents of evolution, a problem for religion. Like our priest, they have based their search for God on the premise that nature is not self-sufficient. By such logic, only God can make a species, just as Father Murphy believed only God could make a flower. Both assertions support the existence of God only so long as these assertions are true, but serious problems for religion emerge when they are shown to be false. Putting it bluntly, the creationists have sought God in darkness. What we have not found and do not yet understand becomes their best - indeed their only - evidence for the divine. As a Christian, I find the flow of this logic particularly depressing. Not only does it teach us to fear the acquisition of knowledge (which might at any time disprove belief), but it suggests that God dwells only in the shadows of our understanding. I suggest that, if God is real, we should be able to find him somewhere else - in the bright light of human knowledge, spiritual and scientific. Each of the great Western monotheistic traditions sees God as truth, love, and knowledge. This should mean that each and every increase in our understanding of the natural world is a step toward God and not, as many people assume, a step away. If faith and reason are both gifts from God, then they should play complementary, not conflicting, roles in our struggle to understand the world around us. As a scientist and as a Christian, that is exactly what I believe. True knowledge comes only from a combination of faith and reason. What science cannot do is assign either meaning or purpose to the world it explores. This leads some to conclude that the world as seen by science is devoid of meaning and absent of purpose. It is not. What it does mean, I would suggest, is that our human tendency to assign meaning and value must transcend science and, ultimately, must come from outside it. The science that results can thus be enriched and informed from its contact with the values and principles of faith. The God of Abraham does not tell us which proteins control the cell cycle. But he does give us a reason to care, a reason to cherish that understanding, and above all, a reason to prefer the light of knowledge to the darkness of ignorance. |
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#19
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I guess I'm gonna have to find this book!
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__________________
On sabbatical until things become fun again.
Reach me at NetDoc@ScubaBoard.com or on www.ScubaBoard.com. |
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#20
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<Once you incorporate "religion" into a science discussion, you have reduced the discussion to a level of emotions and feelings.>
Charles Townes, co-inventor of the laser and a Nobel Prize winner in physics, was named March 9th as the recipient of a religion award billed as the world's richest annual prize. Townes, 89, a professor at the University of California, Berkley, won the Templeton Prize for Progress Toward Research or Discoveries about Spiritual Realities. "Many people don't realize that science basically involves assumptions and faith, but nothing is absolutely proved.' He has compared his flash 1951 discovery of maser principles, while sitting on a park bench in Washington, D.C., with the revelations depicted in the Bible. He said that, with findings of modern physics, it "seems extremely unlikely" that the existence of life and humanity are "just accidental." Science and religion are not enemies, God is the author of both. |
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