I
itinerant1
Guest
Your post indicates that you are still unable to stick to the issue at hand and provide a serious answer to the problems inherent in Darwin’s position that (1) man’s mind differs in degree only from that of higher animals, and (2) the human moral sense is a product of natural biological processes.Like the creationists, when your argument collapses, you fall into mere name-calling. That’s not why you seem to be a creationist, however. It’s because you have copied their arguments. A prime example:
In the “Antiquity of Man”, Lyell argued that the appearance of man required something more than a continuous development from his closest animal relatives. Darwin was not pleased to read this. He said this part of Lyell’s book made him groan.
Darwin’s endeavor was to show that the mental powers of humans and animals was a difference in degree and not a difference in kind. Darwin reduced the causes of human mental powers to that of nature alone, in the same natural processes of evolution that gave rise to the “mental” powers of anthropoid apes. Wallace disagreed.
The only issue, the one you keeping running from, is the one stated in my first paragraph above.
You have repeatedly demonstrated that you are incapable of providing a serious and relevant response to the subject presented. Instead, you continuously resort to non-pertinent matters with retorts involving your contrived imaginations about me copying from creationist sources. That’s not very scientific of you. You are out of context. You lose! Game over!
Any other respondents to the problems described in my first paragraph above are most welcome.