Um…no. Evolution has one definition. …This is part of the problem - **you guys ** don’t even know the real definitions of the words you are using. Evolution is the idea that living beings change from generation to generation in adaptation to their environment (environment being EVERYTHING that impacts them EVER) - a simple definition, but adequate for our purposes here.
Who are “you guys?” How do you know my actual position when I am still uncertain of it? Merely because I am arguing for a fair hearing does not automatically put me in any particular camp. You do realize that, no?
As to “real definition” I think Meyer has a pretty good definition that proposes six “levels” or aspects to evolution.
- Change over time; history of nature; any sequence of events in nature
- Changes in the frequencies of alleles in the gene pool of a population
- Limited common descent: the idea that particular groups of organisms have descended from a common ancestor.
- The mechanisms responsible for the change required to produce limited descent with
modification; chiefly natural selection acting on random variations or mutations
- Universal common descent: the idea that all organisms have descended from a single
common ancestor.
- Blind watchmaker thesis: the idea that all organisms have descended from common
ancestors through unguided, unintelligent, purposeless, material processes such as natural selection acting on random variations or mutations; the idea that the Darwinian mechanism of natural selection acting on random variation, and other similarly naturalistic mechanisms, completely suffice to explain the origin of novel biological forms and the appearance of design in complex organisms.
If you don’t think it is necessary to distinguish among them, does that mean you are quite content accepting all of them and all implications that result?
Creationism is the belief that the universe/world was created less than 10,000 years ago as is. ID is the same thing as Creationism, under a different name.
You will have to explain to Meyer that ID necessarily restricts him to a young earth model, he claims not to subscribe to it. You had better set him straight about that.
Just for practice, care to provide the logic behind why “creationism” and ID both imply the earth was created less than 10,000 years ago, since many ID proponents do not make that claim? Why do you have the authority to tell ID proponents what they do and don’t believe?
Meyer, for one, makes his arguments for design from a model that accepts and depends upon cellular evolution. His Signature in the Cell makes a case for design from the origin of living cells some 3.5 billion years ago. He accepts the first four “levels” of evolution to account for genetic modification. In fact, much of his case depends upon it since the logic of his argument depends upon accepting genetic code found in cells as the information medium from which life has evolved.
I’m a theistic evolutionist.
Excellent.
Do you accept #6, that “evolution” involved “unguided, unintelligent, purposeless, material processes such as natural selection acting on random variations or mutations?” If so, what role did God play?
I believe God created the universe. I am most certainly not a creationist.
So, God created the universe, but the universe was not created? Seems self-contradictory.
Perhaps you agree it was created, but God left the outcome ( life and human beings) totally up to unguided, blind and chance forces?