You know very well that rossum was not referring to the kind of change that happens to an individual over his lifetime. Also generating life from non-living molecules is not the issue either. Evolution as a scientific theory deals with one species of life after many generations giving rise to another species of life. So if you are going to argue against evolution, at least stick to evolution. Now there is another whole theory of how molecules might have developed into life, and that theory, while also a scientific theory, is much less supported, and thus a much easier target for criticism. So I can’t blame you for wanting to change the subject to make your job easier. But don’t pretend that by doing so you are arguing against evolution.
This is getting convoluted.
We went back and the issue is not so clear when I posted the Church has been fighting against evolution from the beginning.
If we want to make the distinction pre-Darwin or post-Darwin that’s OK.
Molecules to man - that is a top tier issue. A lot of what we argue are sub tiers.
I responded to this rossum post:
Evolution was originated by Charles Darwin in 1858 when he published his paper, together with Wallace’s paper, at the Linnaean Society.
It became better known a year later on the publication of “On the Origin of Species”. If you can show that one of the ancient Greeks came up with an equivalent theory for the origin of biological species, then I am sure that a large number of professors of Ancient Greek History would like to hear from you.
The creationist side tends to use “evolution” as a catch all for “any science or philosophy that goes against my interpretation of Genesis”. That is not the correct definition. Evolution is a scientific theory explaining how the genomes of a population of living organisms change in response to changes in their environment. The Catholic Church has no problem with that, and has said so.
rossum
I claimed it was not and went back to at least 7BC.
Rossum said - “Evolution is a scientific theory explaining how the genomes of a population of living organisms change in response to changes in their environment.”
I respond that definition fits adaptation or variation within. The Church has no problem with that definition at all.
Rossum - If you can show that one of the ancient Greeks came up with an equivalent theory for the origin of biological species, then I am sure that a large number of professors of Ancient Greek History would like to hear from you.
The Wiki article - Proposals that one type of animal, even humans, could descend from other types of animals, are known to go back to the first
pre-Socratic Greek philosophers.
The origin of life is really relevant to discussions on evolution. If OOL research shows life to be front-loaded it indeed does challenge the modern synthesis. We already are seeing complexity early on.