T
The_Barbarian
Guest
Barbarian observes:
Notice that the Popes have taken the time to learn about it, and disagree with you.
Barbarian suggests:
No. Verified predictions are the way theories are validated. One more time; learn what science is, and it will help you.
Barbarian explains:
Every human has a genome that does not change. But each new human has a novel genome. And that is evolution.
Barbarian observes:
No, that is evolution. Polygenism says that all humans descended from more than two people. That is not a requirement 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.
bringyou.to/apologetics/p80.htm
You’re way outside the Church’s teaching on this one.
Barbarian on the idea that chance isn’t part of divine providence:
Let’s take a look…
**Thus, even the outcome of a truly contingent natural process can nonetheless fall within God’s providential plan for creation. ** (same source)
Barbarian observes:
God is a lot more powerful and effective than creationists are willing to let Him be.
That is Catholic theology.

Barbarian observes:
Could an almighty Creator be able to do what an inferior deity might do? Of course. Would he? Evidently not.
Barbarian observes:
This is the Catholic conception of creation, one in which evolution is a consistent part.
Notice that the Popes have taken the time to learn about it, and disagree with you.
Everyone knows that you snipped that off of one sentence, (about the big bang), and appended it to another (about evolution). Not a good practice. If you can’t prove your point by what he actually said, it won’t help to edit things.The first quote is from the paragraph that begins: 63. “According to the widely accepted scientific account,” So it is not an endorsement.
Barbarian suggests:
No. Verified predictions are the way theories are validated. One more time; learn what science is, and it will help you.
No, that’s wrong. Verified predictions are the way theories are validated.The predictions of evolutionary theory are besides the point of what the theory purports to explain.
But there are numerous predictions by which that can be tested. For example, when the function of DNA was discovered, it was predicted that the DNA of humans and apes should more closely match each other, than either would match any other organism. And that was validated. The prediction that there must have been organisms intermediate between humans and apes was validated by numerous examples found after the prediction. Even Darwin’s prediction that they would be found first in Africa was validated.No one has verified a prediction that human beings will evolve from a common ancestor of apes.
Millions of years, actually. Genomes of various organisms can be compared to learn about when different mutations occured. It’s a very well-defined science in genetics.No one has brought tens of thousands of years of genetic mutations into a labratory to be tested.
It is the way theories are validated. If this bothers you, I can only point out that it has been an extremely successful method.The predictions are tangentical.
Barbarian explains:
Every human has a genome that does not change. But each new human has a novel genome. And that is evolution.
You’ve been badly misled about that. Each of us (except identical twins, of course) has a unique genome.All human beings are of the same genetic substance.
You’ve been snockered on that one, too. Would you like to learn about some recent mutations that have become part of the genome of various groups of humans?The uniqueness of genomes don’t amount to the theory of evolution,just inherent variation within human genetics.
Barbarian observes:
No, that is evolution. Polygenism says that all humans descended from more than two people. That is not a requirement of evolution.
Neither does it require that humans descent from more than one pair of humans. They lied to you about that, too.Polygenism means multiple first parents,or multiple sources,
of a species. It does not require that they be humans.
And now you know better. This is why Cardinal Ratzinger wrote:So the idea that humans evolved from another species is out of the question.
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.
bringyou.to/apologetics/p80.htm
You’re way outside the Church’s teaching on this one.
Barbarian on the idea that chance isn’t part of divine providence:
Let’s take a look…
**Thus, even the outcome of a truly contingent natural process can nonetheless fall within God’s providential plan for creation. ** (same source)
Perhaps you don’t know what “contingency” means. And science can’t say whether or not anything in nature is guided by any supernatural agent.That quote talks about guided contingency,not the unguided chance that science proposes.
Natural selection is a non-random process. However evolution works by natural selection and random mutation.And if you really think that natural selection is not about chance,then you shouldn’t be concerned to uphold chance.
No, just your failure to learn about the issue.That shows duplicitity…
Barbarian observes:
God is a lot more powerful and effective than creationists are willing to let Him be.
He could. But He could (and did) do something much more amazing. Our God is the Creator; as St. Augustine wrote, He created the universe ex nihilo, with the seeds of all things to come in it, from which all things developed in time.So powerful that he can create a man from the earth in an instant,
That is Catholic theology.
Natural selection is not a random process, since it is directed by specific factors in the environment and the population.
The speed of a ball rolling down a ramp is deterministic. Physics is unacceptable to the doctrine of Creation?Then it is deterministic. That is unacceptable to the doctrine of Creation as well.
Barbarian observes:
Could an almighty Creator be able to do what an inferior deity might do? Of course. Would he? Evidently not.
The gods of the pagans who had to make each thing individually, because they were not the Creator of all things.What deity are you referring to?
Barbarian observes:
This is the Catholic conception of creation, one in which evolution is a consistent part.
St. Augustine is a doctor of the Church, and a highly regarded theologian.It isn’t consistent with the Catholic conception of Creation.
Your Pope says otherwise. Sorry about that.The theory of evolution only works if a Creator is out of it