Is The Theory of Evolution mandatory for the modern worldview

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Intelligent Design looks at this beauty and intricacy and attempts to evaluate it through scientific analysis.
Their first attempt at “scientific analysis” was to take a Protestant YE creationism book, substitute “intelligent design” everwhere it said “creationism,” and peddle it as a science textbook.

How about showing us some of that “scientific analysis” you think exists?
Is this beauty and intricacy something you can explain or prove scientifically?
It can be analyzed in various ways. Many artists used mathematical and other scientific processes to prepare their works. And that goes all the way back to the ancients. The Parthenon, for example, is a fine example of such analysis applied to art. It can be applied to abstract expressionism, to show why what might look otherwise like splatters of paint cause an emotional reaction. (Jackson Pollack’s art has the same fractal dimension as open woodlands, for example)

Not that I care that much for his painting, but clearly the ones that resonated with buyers were intentionally or unintentionally interesting for demonstrable reasons.
 
The confused girl returns to her mother and says:“Mom, how is it possible that you told me that the human race was created by God and Papa says we developed from monkeys?”
The mother answers: “Well dear, it is very simple. I told you about the origin of my side of the family, and your father told you about his.”
👍

BTW, I hope no one here actually thinks evolutionary theory says that humans evolved from monkeys. I understand that some Vedic religions say so.

Maybe you should ask Wolseley.
 
#106 Feb 21, '08, 11:26 pm
drpmjhess
Senior Member Join Date: August 27, 2007
Posts: 1,139

Re: Is The Theory of Evolution mandatory for the modern worldview

Quote:
Originally Posted by The Barbarian
Except in the odd cases of two heads and one body, I don’t think so. But I don’t know.

There is a spectrum ranging from mildly conjoined twins to teratomas to tetragemtic chimeras. Do teratomas have immortal souls? If not, where is the dividing line between a body that has an immortal soul and one that does not?

Why does the hubris of man demand to know all things – wasn’t the lesson of Eden instructive?

We don’t even know the state of the unbaptized infants…. Apparently because there are things we cannot or should not or have no need to know. The path to salvation has been revealed- that doth suffice.
 
Hi Barbarian. Please note the word CONFUSED. Just thought it was cute. We all need enlighten-ment sometimes.
 
This from the site to which Wolseley linked…

"According to the widely accepted scientific account, the universe erupted 15 billion years ago in an explosion called the “Big Bang” and has been expanding and cooling ever since. Later there gradually emerged the conditions necessary for the formation of atoms, still later the condensation of galaxies and stars, and about 10 billion years later the formation of planets. In our own solar system and on earth (formed about 4.5 billion years ago), the conditions have been favorable to the emergence of life. While there is little consensus among scientists about how the origin of this first microscopic life is to be explained, there is general agreement among them that the first organism dwelt on this planet about 3.5-4 billion years ago. Since it has been demonstrated that all living organisms on earth are genetically related, it is virtually certain that all living organisms have descended from this first organism. Converging evidence from many studies in the physical and biological sciences furnishes mounting support for some theory of evolution to account for the development and diversification of life on earth, while controversy continues over the pace and mechanisms of evolution. While the story of human origins is complex and subject to revision, physical anthropology and molecular biology combine to make a convincing case for the origin of the human species in Africa about 150,000 years ago in a humanoid population of common genetic lineage. However it is to be explained, the decisive factor in human origins was a continually increasing brain size, culminating in that of homo sapiens. With the development of the human brain, the nature and rate of evolution were permanently altered: with the introduction of the uniquely human factors of consciousness, intentionality, freedom and creativity, biological evolution was recast as social and cultural evolution."

Why link to it, if you aren’t going to accept it?
 
So are these, also from his statement:

Are you willing to accept all of the teaching, or are you another cafeteria Catholic, taking what you like, and rejecting what you don’t?

That was not a teaching of the Catholic Church. The teaching of the Catholic Church is what follows the summary of evolution theiry.

Perhaps you forgot what you asked me.

I asked you how you could miss the whole point of the document.
And you still miss it. The document affirms the traditional Catholic teaching on Creation. .

Barbarian observes:
You’re having trouble reconciling these two facts. But the Pope understands it.

No need, really.

So you’re lying about the pope.

Nope. Maybe you should go and learn what it’s about, first?

It’s about natural selection. Let’s see what Barbarian has to say:

“Hence, random variation can serve His purposes as well as anything else. ( with the direction of natural selection, of course)”

Random variation under the direction of natural selection.

Sounds like a real non sequitur.

Turns out to be the same thing, in this case. As he says, common descent, (the most ambition claim of evolutionary theory) is “virtually certain.” He acknoweledges the huge body of evidence showing that it is.

I acknowledge the existence of the huge body of evidence as well,but I don’t believe in the theory,and neither does the pope.

It became the foundation of biology. The discovery of the means by which common descent happened was the single greatest discovery in biology.

First you have to show that common descent happened.
That is a matter of history as well as biology. But science can’t demostrate the history of genetic mutations in a labratory. So the theory of common descent is actually a theory of history.

Nope. If you don’t understand what the theory says, how can you hope to fight it?

Try explaining to yourself how natural selection is not about chance.

He merely points out that the claims of the theory of natural selection have been verified.

He points out no such thing.

“Just who is this nature or evolution as an active subject? It doesn’t exist at all!”
Pope Benedict,“Creation and Evolution”

And he also points out that the sort of contingency involved in natural selection is not inconsistent with God’s creation:

He said “contingent natural process”,not “natural selection”.
Nature does not select. Selection is from a thinking being.

As I said, if you actually knew what evoutionary theory was, you’d be more effective fighting it. It’s not about the cause of life.

It’s about the origins of life forms. You can’t give a reasonable explanation about the origins of life forms without knowing what life is. Life is what activates and sustains the processes in living forms. And life is from God,who is always giving life to forms.
 
Hi Barbarian. Please note the word CONFUSED. Just thought it was cute. We all need enlighten-ment sometimes.
Yeah, I know. I thought it was funny. But I’ve actually seen people who actually thought that evolutionary theory means people evolved from monkeys.

I wasn’t suggesting that you were that ignorant. My apologies.
 
Yesterday, 11:17 pm
drpmjhess
Senior Member Join Date: August 27, 2007
Posts: 1,139

Re: Is The Theory of Evolution mandatory for the modern worldview

Quote:
Originally Posted by anthony022071
A product of evolution is can only be meaningless,because evolution has nothing to do with reason or purpose,but rather with chance and necessity.

Not true at all. Look around you at the beauty and intricacy of the world, produced over 3.5 billion years through evolution. I wouldn’t call that meaningless at all!

Philipp adds: In addition, Anthony, the dating method using K/Ar, Ur/Pb are also “meaningless” which reduces macroevolution theory to a mere ludicrous hypothesis. Why? Because those ages [600 M, 3.5 B or 4.5 B years or whatever the current propaganda machine for today is turning out] simply don’t exist; this is because the dating theory is faulty and the methods give rediculous, anomalous ages for known crystals of volcanism tested by isotopic laboratories. A major example follows:

This is how they falsely dated our non-existing ancestors in Africa:
The first radiometric dates of Richard Leakeys skull 1470 found in Ethiopia had a date of 221 million years. This was considered an impossible date since man was not supposed to have evolved until around 2-3 million years ago. They therefore threw the date out.
Fitch and Miller of Cambridge University were given some fresh rocks [basalt] samples and their tests ranged from 2.4-2.6 million years which Leakey agreed to. A paleontologist named Cooke did not agree with it however because of his previous work on fossil pigs in the area.
….A man named Curtiss of the University of California at Berkely performed some radiometric tests and announced a date of 1.8 million years. Leakey rejected his date because he wanted his fossil to be the oldest fossil man ever found.
Fitch and Miller meanwhile declared they could not have been wrong. So they took more samples to Cambridge to have them tested. Their samples revealed ages from 290,000 years to 19.5 million years. Needless to say even Fitch and Miller rejected these ages. Today, a date of about 2 million years has been somewhat accepted for skull 1470. The public however is led to believe that this is a firm and exact date, as they believe all radiometric dates are. Little do they realize that all radiometric dates are based ultimately on index fossils and what paleontologists think the age should be based on evolutionary thinking [and the location of index fossils in the geologic column]. Reports abound revealing seriously discordant radiometric dates that make the whole system suspect. Want More!!! 😛
 
How about showing us some scientific proof of that?
It was a silly comparison anyway,because the mechanical sciences don’t speculate on the origination of life forms,which is a subject for philosophy and theology.
 
Barbarian asks:
Are you willing to accept all of the teaching, or are you another cafeteria Catholic?
That was not a teaching of the Catholic Church.
Any person who asserts that evolution is inconsistent with Catholicism is denying the teaching of the Church.

Barbarian, explaining why he cited Imago Dei;
Perhaps you forgot what you asked me.
I asked you how you could miss the whole point of the document. And you still miss it.
No, I accept all of it, and you don’t. When Cardinal Ratzinger said that common descent was virtually certain, he was doing no more than his predecessors, in acknowledging that evolution and our faith are consistent. That is the teaching of the church. But you aren’t willing to accept everything the Church teaches, and so you rejected that part.
The document affirms the traditional Catholic teaching on Creation.
Indeed. That’s why he asserted the reality of common descent.

Barbarian observes:
You’re having trouble reconciling these two facts. But the Pope understands it.

No need, really.
So you’re lying about the pope.
No, and you should be ashamed of yourself.
It’s about natural selection. Let’s see what Barbarian has to say:
First, let’s see what the Pope had to say:
"But it is important to note that, according to the Catholic understanding of divine causality, true contingency in the created order is not incompatible with a purposeful divine providence. Divine causality and created causality radically differ in kind and not only in degree. Thus, even the outcome of a truly contingent natural process can nonetheless fall within God’s providential plan for creation. According to St. Thomas Aquinas: “The effect of divine providence is not only that things should happen somehow, but that they should happen either by necessity or by contingency. Therefore, whatsoever divine providence ordains to happen infallibly and of necessity happens infallibly and of necessity; and that happens from contingency, which the divine providence conceives to happen from contingency” (Summa theologiae, I, 22,4 ad 1)."

Again, from Imago Dei, the part you refuse to accept.

Barbarian agrees:
random variation can serve His purposes as well as anything else. ( with the direction of natural selection, of course)"
Random variation under the direction of natural selection.
Sounds like a real non sequitur.
Perhaps you don’t know what a non sequitur is. Hint; a random process plus a non-random process is a non-random process. It’s what the Pope was saying in Imago Dei.

Barbarian observes:
As he says, common descent, (the most ambition claim of evolutionary theory) is “virtually certain.” He acknoweledges the huge body of evidence showing that it is.
I acknowledge the existence of the huge body of evidence as well,but I don’t believe in the theory,and neither does the pope.
Odd that he says it’s “virtually certain”, then. As you know, John Paul II was similarly approving of it. They objected when science steps out of bounds and tries to make conclusions about God. So do almost all scientists. You notice the creationists here are most vehement in saying that science can make inferences about God.

Barbarian, re Darwin’s theory:
It became the foundation of biology. The discovery of the means by which common descent happened was the single greatest discovery in biology.
First you have to show that common descent happened.
That is, as the Pope says, “virtually certain.” For the reasons he makes clear.

Barbarian on the misconception that evolution is random:
Nope. If you don’t understand what the theory says, how can you hope to fight it?

Try explaining to yourself how natural selection is not about chance.
COLOR]

Natural selection is the antithesis of chance. Would you like to see a demonstration.

Barbarian observes:
He merely points out that the claims of the theory of natural selection have been verified.
He points out no such thing.
No point in denying the obvious:

"Converging evidence from many studies in the physical and biological sciences furnishes mounting support for some theory of evolution to account for the development and diversification of life on earth, while controversy continues over the pace and mechanisms of evolution."

Here he makes the point that God creates through evolution:
"God causes to arise those conditions required for the emergence and support of living organisms, and, furthermore, for their reproduction and differentiation. Although there is scientific debate about the degree of purposiveness or design operative and empirically observable in these developments, they have de facto favored the emergence and flourishing of life."
These two also from Imago Dei.

Barbarian observes:
And he also points out that the sort of contingency involved in natural selection is not inconsistent with God’s creation:
Nature does not select. Selection is from a thinking being.
When the weather changes, and natural selection changes the populations of microbes in the soil, which intelligent entity is sorting them out?

Barbarian observes:
As I said, if you actually knew what evoutionary theory was, you’d be more effective fighting it. It’s not about the cause of life.
It’s about the origins of life forms.
No. Please go find out what it is.
You can’t give a reasonable explanation about the origins of life forms without knowing what life is.
Evolutionary theory is about the way existing populations of organisms change, not about the origin of living things.

But if you’d like to define “life” for me, I’d be pleased to hear what you think it is.
 
Philipp adds: In addition, Anthony, the dating method using K/Ar, Ur/Pb are also “meaningless” which reduces macroevolution theory to a mere ludicrous hypothesis. Why? Because those ages [600 M, 3.5 B or 4.5 B years or whatever the current propaganda machine for today is turning out] simply don’t exist; this is because the dating theory is faulty and the methods give rediculous, anomalous ages for known crystals of volcanism tested by isotopic laboratories.
It’s a popular scam for creationists. Here’s how to do it:
  • You find some freshly-formed volcanic rock, making sure there are some unmelted xenocrysts in it (these, not having melted will be very, very old)
  • You go to a testing lab, and ignore the warnings they give you about unsuitable samples, and insist that they test it anyway.
  • You then feign astonishment that the rocks come back as millions of years old.
This is how they falsely dated our non-existing ancestors in Africa:
The first radiometric dates of Richard Leakeys skull 1470 found in Ethiopia had a date of 221 million years.
You can’t do a radioisotope dating on fossil material. It is sedimentary rock, and only igneous rock or metamorphic rock derived from igneous rock can be so tested. You’ve been lied to.

Incidentally, a blind test correctly identified the time of the eruption that buried Pompeii using Argon/Argon analysis.

If you have more, let’s take a look at it.
 
Barbarian points out:
Like plumbing, evolution is methodologicaly naturalistic. Which means it can’t say anything at all about God.
How about showing us some scientific proof of that?
There is no “scientific proof.” Science is inductive, and never gives you logical certainty.

However, we can certainly test this idea; if it can say something about God, then we should have some results that clearly indentify a supernatural entity. If not, then we can conclude that I am right.

Since nothing of the kind exists (feel free to look in the literature yourself) we can conclude that I am right.
 
Fr. Hilbert of the Toronto Oratory:

"It was as though [Pope Benedict] were directly responding to a Darwinist dogma put most clearly in the widely read Meaning of Evolution (George Gaylord Simpson): ‘Man is the result of a purposeless and natural process that did not have him in mind.’

That the new pope should mention the theory in such an important context shows that he thinks that it can be taken to have a tremendous (and pernicious) influence on man’s understanding of himself and his relation to God."

Biologist, Simpson stated that “man is the result of a purposeles and natural process that did not have him in mind”.

Thus, evolutionary scientists (as the many who read and supported the conclusions of Simpson’s book) state that evolution teaches that man is the result of purposeless processes that did not have him in mind.
 
[Barbarian observes:
Another reason the Pope approves of Darwinian theory; as you should know, Darwin attributed the origin of life to God.]

[Where did Cardinal Ratzinger say that?]

[Darwin said that. His theory is completely compatible with God.]

So Pope Benedict didn’t say what you claim about him. You’re lying about the pope.
 
However, we can certainly test this idea;
Accordingly, we can scientifically test the idea that “evolution cannot say anything about God”. Thus, evolution does have the potential to say something about God. You’ve proven this here by subjecting this question to scientific testing.
If it can say something about God, then we should have some results that clearly indentify a supernatural entity.
Again, this is testing supernatural entities by a scientific method. You claimed that this couldn’t be done but you are doing it.
Since nothing of the kind exists (feel free to look in the literature yourself) we can conclude that I am right.
You’re attempting to prove that evolution cannot say anything about God by saying that nothing has been said about this topic in “the literature” thus far.

But that is not proof or even conclusive evidence. You’ve offered a philosophical absolute – that evolution cannot talk about God at all in any way. You attempt to support this absolute with incidental information – saying that there either have been no tests or if there were tests, they showed up as inconclusive.

You’re using a scientific method to try to prove a philosophical point.

Your definition of “evolution” itself is not even something that is agreed upon in consensus. You cannot prove that your definition of evolution is correct. You cannot test it or experiment on it or even give probabilities on whether your definition is correct.

You claim that evolution “can’t say anything at all about God”, but this is merely an opinion lacking factual evidence.

Of course, Darwin used evolution to try to refute a number of theological concepts relating to God’s action in the world. Paley’s natural theology was supposedly refuted by Darwin’s theory. So evolution does attempt to say much about God. Did God create man ex nihlio? Evolutionary theory says “no” – that man evolved from a pre-existing creature.

So it’s obvious that evolution does say much about what God did or didn’t do (if evolutionary theory is correct).
 
Darwin attributed the origin of life to God
You tend to repeat this notion quite frequently. What evidence did Darwin give of this idea? What kind of studies did he do and where are his writings on this topic found?

aaas.org/spp/dser/02_Events/Workshops/WS_2003_2004_PET/2003_0221_23_OriginLife/OriginLife_PDFs/tutorials/strick.pdf
Darwin went out of his way, even misrepresenting his own views on life’s origin, to use language that gave these readers some breathing room.” Only one scant passage from Darwin’s book even addressed the question: …I should infer from analogy that probably all the organic beings which have ever livedon this earth have descended from some one primordial form, into which life was firstbreathed.1 In the book’s second edition, Darwin strengthened this statement by adding “by the Creator” to the end of the sentence. (He took out the entire last phrase in the book’s third edition but never publicly offered in any later editions a more specific comment about how the “one primordial form” had arisen
 
the Barbarian:
40.png
Wolseley:
Folks, don’t let Barbarian lead you down the garden path with all his talk of “Church teaching” regarding evolution. In the scale of Catholic teaching, only the Apostolic Deposit and defined Dogma are infallible; Barbarian would have you believe that his version of evolution was put forth in an ex cathedra statement from the Pope (“After all, he said it was ‘virtually certain’, didn’t he!”)
No, you made that up Wolseley. No one here said that.
40.png
Wolseley:
Well, actually, no, he didn’t—the Pope never said that.
And the Barbarian never said that he did. And you should be ashamed of yourself.
Nobody said that, Barbarian? You never stated that the Pope said that?

Let’s review, shall we? You attributed that statement to either Cardinal Ratzinger or Pope Benedict in the following posts:

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=896752&postcount=97

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=902054&postcount=113

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=936655&postcount=7

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=938508&postcount=21

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=1082159&postcount=295

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=1092998&postcount=9

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=1122597&postcount=195

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=1125775&postcount=121

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3076249&postcount=2

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3080959&postcount=607

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3085754&postcount=54

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3098919&postcount=80

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3103295&postcount=303

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3140509&postcount=72

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3163638&postcount=70

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3164177&postcount=76

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3189661&postcount=146

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3194392&postcount=14

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3214710&postcount=340

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3217492&postcount=350

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3220416&postcount=171

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3274070&postcount=421

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3321377&postcount=61

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3336094&postcount=27

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3350300&postcount=137

forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=3350907&postcount=145

In every one of these, you attributed this “virtually certain” statement directly to the Pope, not the commission which actually produced it. I realize you love this little snippet (else you would not have used it so much) since on the surface and devoid of all context, it appears to legitimize your ideas, but I suspect you have seized on this one statement and made it into a whole doctrine, rather like some Protestant Fundamentalists do with some snippet of Scripture. However, no matter how many nails you drive with a screwdriver, it still doesn’t make the screwdriver a hammer.

I hope this has helped to jog your memory as to what you actually said, my friend…and in light of this, who should be ashamed of themselves?
 
The Barbarian:
Ratzinger was the chairman of the commission, and approved its contents before allowing it to be published.
The chairman of a committee signing off on a document that was submitted for his approval is not the same thing as the chairman directly and personally saying something, as you tried to imply in so many of your posts (see above). I suspect you should know that. If you don’t, do yourself a favor and don’t try for a bar exam; the opposing attorney would rip you to pieces.
The Barbarian:
Another Wolseley moment, um?
Yes, Wolseley has those moments where he insists on identifying who actually said something, instead of attributing statements to someone who didn’t directly make them. I’m funny that way.
The Barbarian:
Are you going again to tell us to go buy a book by the people who are promoting “Krishna Consciousness?” How exactly does Hare Krishna fit into Roman Catholicism?
Barbarian, every time you make a statement like this, you display an appalling level of ignorance regarding Michael Cremo’s book and what’s actually in it. There is virtually no mention of any type of religious viewpoint, Hindu, Christian, or otherwise, in Forbidden Archeology; all the book does is examine the large amount of evidence against Darwinian theory which was airily thrown away by the Darwinists, for the simple reason that it didn’t fit their preconceived notions. If you had actually read this book, you’d know that.

Of course, on the other hand, it’s easier to tell people this book is actually about Krishna Consciousness, instead of anamalous archaeological evidence that damages Darwinism, isn’t it? That way, you can sidestep the issues at hand, and you don’t have to put yourself in the embarrassing position of actually having to deal with the evidence that Cremo and Thompson present. That, I’m afraid, you wouldn’t find so easy.

But, since as we have seen above, since you have already proven yourself to be a somewhat unreliable witness, go ahead and keep saying it’s actually a book about Hindu religion instead of providing proof of the precarious structure of Darwinism. Maybe somebody might actually believe you and forego reading the book, and without that pesky weight of evidence clouding their minds, it’ll be easier to persuade them to believe whatever you tell them, won’t it? Like the idea that the Pope personally made that “virtually certain” statement, perhaps.
The Barbarian:
I know it infuriates you when people show you what Cardinal Ratzinger said about evolution. And probably you aren’t too happy with John Paul II, who also asserted that it is “more than just a theory.” He wasn’t the first Pope to acknowledge evolution as being consistent with Catholicism.
In the first place, I am not the least bit infurated. In the second place, I have no problem with that either Pontiff said, taken in context with everything else they said. They are far from signing off wholesale on Darwinian evolution. But, as I said before, if it makes it easier for you to believe that, you go right ahead.
Given these facts, it’s understandable that you’re trying to make the best of it.
Yeah, we all have to deal with twisted statements, half-truths, and misattributed quotations—don’t we, Barbarian? 😉
The Barbarian:
And you seem to be still a bit angry that I pointed out you were peddling a Hindu doctrine here, at the same time you were denying the statements of the Popes on evolution.
You didn’t point out anything of the sort, Barbarian. As I have already explained to you (at least three times now), Forbidden Archeology has absolutely nothing to do with Hinduism. The fact that you continue to insist that it does, I’m afraid, can only mean one of two things: either you are incapable of comprehending what is said to you, and are equally incapable of corroborating it by actually reading the primary source, or else you are deliberately attempting to mislead people (and yourself) by continuing this outright falsehood that this book is about Hinduism instead of anomalous archaeological evidence.

Either scenario is not very complimentary to your character, sir. I believe you are capable of higher behavior. As I said at the outset: read the book. You might find it interesting.

And now, I’m off, to go do some praying. For my shortcomings, and yours.
 
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