Mike Gascoigne
<img src=/mike.jpg>
Are you saying that Paul of Eugene is a fake, or UTEOTW, or both of them?Originally posted by Phillip:
You amaze me. I am beginning to think you are a fake...
Mike
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
Are you saying that Paul of Eugene is a fake, or UTEOTW, or both of them?Originally posted by Phillip:
You amaze me. I am beginning to think you are a fake...
Phillip,You amaze me. I am beginning to think you are a fake, if I am wrong I apologize, but if I am not...well.... Here is why I feel that you are either a fake or either very liberal (beyond tht of 99% of any Baptist churches.)
You require a naturalistic answer for every single thing. Including the disorder in our lives. Have you not read your Bible and do you recall reading about something called sin?
No, he is not over the line. I cannot find anything in the forum rules that prevent someone from questioning whether or not someone is a Christian.Originally posted by Craigbythesea:
Phillip,
What do you mean by the word "fake"? As I read your post, it sounds to be as though you are questioning Paul's profession to be a Christian, and if you are doing that on this message board, you are way over the line.
You won't get anywhere by posting the same list twice. I have posted the link to my book many times and you still haven't read it.Originally posted by UTEOTW:
Here, again, are 21 quick examples...
I'm your huckleberry.Originally posted by UTEOTW:
If anyone wishes to assert that evolution cannot produce new information or new order (We are still in need of the YEers to define just what they mean by those terms) then they must address specific instances of evolution producing just those sorts of things.
That is categorically false. If the assumption of naturalism is true then God deserves no glory whatsoever for creation.... He was not necessary to accomplish it. It would be on par with giving a sports reporter credit for the Patriots SB win.Originally posted by UTEOTW:
There is glory for God the Creator no matter what means He chose to create.
Is there glory in making unsubtantiated assertions about why He could not have used the method that His Word tells us He did?Is there glory in making unsubstantiated assertions about why He could not have used the method that His creation tells us He did?
There is evidence... that isn't the debate though. It is the interpretation of the evidence that is at issue.Is there glory about stating that there is no evidence and then admitting that you cannot even pronounce the actual evidence much less show that you have an understanding of what it is?
A better question is if you will ever cite real evidence of these mechanisms ever giving rise to a new species or new functional systems.Will you ever tell us a single mechanism of evolution prevented by entropy and how?
Kind of like the question I asked:Originally posted by Phillip:
I still say it is BAD SCIENCE to know in your heart that an omnipotent God exists and leave THAT variable out of the creation theories.
For the seventh time, nobody seems to want to address this.
And I have answered you more than once.
I DO allow for the supernatural. But I think it demeans God to invoke the supernatural at every opportunity. When there are natural explanations, I find it easier to accept that it is the correct explanation and that it is a part of God's will.
You sound as if you would leave us in the precarious position of never knowing what is real and what is supernatural. Does the earth really orbit the sun because of gravity or are there angels pushing the earth around the sun just so? Do acid-base reactions really happen naturally and repeatably or does God take a personal interest in every molecule of acid or base that come near to one another?
In the case of evolution, there is no problem with the natural explanation. It works well without the need for intervention. The data points to it. The mechanisms explain it and can be seen. There is no need to invoke a supernatural cause for any of it. To do so becomes arbitrary and capricious. Common descent explains precisely what we see with regard to ERVs. Could God make things look that way? Sure! But I do not accept that He would supernaturally intervene to make it look like evolution happened when it really did not. If you think that He would, then I gues we are at an impasse. If you do not, then we are back to the natural explanation.
This is why I have tried hard in the past to get you to come down on one side of the fence or the other. Either you think the world is young and the data shows it. Or you think the world is young and God made it appear to be the product of long term processes for some unknown reason. If the former, then we can get back to the data. If the latter, well we have nothing to discuss once you admit that everything supports OE yet you still reject it.
Phillip,Originally posted by Phillip:
I still say it is BAD SCIENCE to know in your heart that an omnipotent God exists and leave THAT variable out of the creation theories.
For the seventh time, nobody seems to want to address this.
Please cite the example of one species evolving into another in a lab or in the wild.Originally posted by UTEOTW:
"I'm your huckleberry.
I have addressed the things you have posted. None of them are sufficient to prove anything to a reasonably critical person. The only people that could be impressed by the examples you have given are those who are frightened away by the use of big technical terms or do not notice that assumptions, not observations, provide the critical foundations... or someone with a rigid predisposed bias to believe in evolution in spite of the genuine weakness of its proofs."
Several of the items are OBSERVED. Items that were either observed in the lab or in the wild.
I accept the facts but not the conclusions. I don't think you are a liar or even insincere. I think you have bought into a false scheme based on a demonstrably false and wholly unbiblical premise.You still do not accept them.
We will know when I actually see some.You will never accept any evidence for new information no matter how convincing.
I would consider new information something that independently arose in the genetic code from a source other than the parents that resulted in a novel and beneficial development. This change must result in greater genetic complexity. A simple lateral change will not suffice and neither will a net loss of information.I cannot even get a definition for information or an example of what you would consider new information.
Natural explanations are not always correct explanations, and although the supernatural have no place in science, they do have a place in everyday reality. There are several possible natural explanations of the empty tomb, but there is also a supernatural explanation. When one considers the empty tomb from the point of view of science, the resurrection is an impossibility; but when one considers the empty tomb from the point of view of history, the scientific explanations become impossibilities.When there are natural explanations, I find it easier to accept that it is the correct explanation and that it is a part of God's will.
Says who? This is a philosophical decision, not a scientific one. Science should be about following the evidence whereever it leads. If the evidence requires a creator who provided the intelligence and information necessary then so be it. In fact, intelligence is a valid scientific approach since its effects, unlike those proposed for evolution, can actually be observed.Originally posted by Craigbythesea:
Good science, by definition, leaves out all supernatural variables, including God, Genesis 1 – 11 and other variable that are totally irrelevant to science.
Science and evolution are not equal. If evolution turns out to be false as I am confident it will then it was never truly scientific. In fact, this will expose its flawed philosophical premise as well as the abuse of evidence in trying to prove it.Science does not say that there is no God or than the creation stories in the Bible are not true; science simply ignores these subjects as being irrelevant to itself.
That isn't what we are doing. We are saying that God provided an outline for how He created the universe and "true" explanations will conform to that outline. Evolution does not. It conforms to anti(instead of)-God naturalism.Those who try to force God and the creation stories from the Bible into science are in reality modifying religion rather than modifying science.
I believe that Christians should tell the truth and accurately represent the facts whether they like them or not. Case in point:BTW, when the Bible says that it had not rained prior to Noah's flood... Was that literal or allegorical? OTOH, the proper question is "Was it true or false" since there is no allegorical explanation for such a blunt statement.
Neither philosophy nor religion belongs to the discipline of science! If you don’t like science, perhaps you should invent your own disciple and not falsely call it science like the folks at the ICR do.Ignoring God is no more scientific than referencing Him. Both are philosophical choices.