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RACJ
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Biologists as well, with regard to origins theory.Not so much under the auspices of science as under the misapplication of science to realms where hard science doesn’t work (psychology, philosophy, theology, etc)

Biologists as well, with regard to origins theory.Not so much under the auspices of science as under the misapplication of science to realms where hard science doesn’t work (psychology, philosophy, theology, etc)
Right. And the UPB is 10^150. So lets just add one hundred more times.How plausible, or how probable? The probability is 1:2.58e120, just as it would be at 201 seconds, or 200 hours, or 200 years, etc.
I’m sorry; I checked out for a couple of weeks so I didn’t see the last 1000 posts or so. Did you explain why 10^45 transitions a second make sense (that fundamental part of the UPB that you were unable to explain the last time we discussed it) because I’d love to understand it.Right. And the UPB is 10^150. So lets just add one hundred more times.
So the odds are infestitimal that it would happen the first time or the second or the third.
It is plausible that if it happens the first time in 200 seconds it was setup.
Or the 10^100th time. The odds don’t change for a given number of attempts.Right. And the UPB is 10^150. So lets just add one hundred more times.
So the odds are infestitimal that it would happen the first time or the second or the third.
Plausible, but not necessarily true. When one applies the principle of parsimony, the fact that a designer is not an absolute necessity makes the designer a needless addition.It is plausible that if it happens the first time in 200 seconds it was setup.
I can say it’s quite reasonable to connect the work of a scientist to his beliefs.Well, you are far more trusting in the people of science than I am. People in any walk of life can have an agenda. Millions of souls have lost their faith due to specious reasoning under the auspices of “science”.Rob
I linked a great article.I’m sorry; I checked out for a couple of weeks so I didn’t see the last 1000 posts or so. Did you explain why 10^45 transitions a second make sense (that fundamental part of the UPB that you were unable to explain the last time we discussed it) because I’d love to understand it.
So we think. The odds are actually infitesimal in any given 200 seconds. Probability-wise, though, it’s no more probable in the first 200 seconds than it is in ANY given 200 seconds. However, given enough chances, it’ll eventually happen somewhere along the line. At the same time, someone could easily set it up so that it happens on any given 200 seconds. The problem is that we expect science to define the actual cause of phenomena. It doesn’t - it defines the phenomena themselves and what happens in a phenomena, but science as it is currently defined cannot explore anything outside the natural realm.Right. And the UPB is 10^150. So lets just add one hundred more times.
So the odds are infestitimal that it would happen the first time or the second or the third.
It is plausible that if it happens the first time in 200 seconds it was setup.
It matters a great deal and Biology textbooks are not agnostic. The writers feel the need to add purely biased, unscientific conclusions to the data.So we think. The odds are actually infitesimal in any given 200 seconds. Probability-wise, though, it’s no more probable in the first 200 seconds than it is in ANY given 200 seconds. However, given enough chances, it’ll eventually happen somewhere along the line. At the same time, someone could easily set it up so that it happens on any given 200 seconds. The problem is that we expect science to define the actual cause of phenomena. It doesn’t - it defines the phenomena themselves and what happens in a phenomena, but science as it is currently defined cannot explore anything outside the natural realm.
The methods of science and the results of science are actually quite agnostic. They say nothing about the existence or non-existence of God. Scientifically, it doesn’t matter whether evolution is random chance or is guided by God - it just happens.
In essence, God can’t be studied directly through scientific experimentation. But that’s not surprising, considering that God is neither matter nor energy. God is God - He is outside the material world. No matter how far away you travel in the universe, you will never find Heaven - Heaven is outside of space and time. Jesus’s crucifixion defies space and time, and is once for all who believe in Him. God has the ability to intervene in any space and any time. This is what a miracle is - God intervening and defying the laws of nature at a specific time and at a specific place.
How many more times of can we add 100 more until we all agree it is impossible without being setup? 100 more, 200 more, 300 more? Or will anti-ID’ers forever hold out for more?So we think. The odds are actually infitesimal in any given 200 seconds. Probability-wise, though, it’s no more probable in the first 200 seconds than it is in ANY given 200 seconds. However, given enough chances, it’ll eventually happen somewhere along the line. At the same time, someone could easily set it up so that it happens on any given 200 seconds. The problem is that we expect science to define the actual cause of phenomena. It doesn’t - it defines the phenomena themselves and what happens in a phenomena, but science as it is currently defined cannot explore anything outside the natural realm.
Here’s the thing. Science, as it is currently defined, is different than how it was defined under Thomas Aquinas and Aristotle. Thomas Aquinas and Aristotle considered metaphysics to be a science; what we consider “the sciences” of today were not well developed before the 1600s. “The sciences” of today explain how the world works. Unfortunately, they cannot explain why the world works the way the world works. If something is not directly observable (or indirectly, through data collection), it can’t be studied (and yes, quantum physics and the laws of relativity have been studied directly). This limits science to studying matter (including life) and energy. As such, this makes evolution to appear as quite random chance.
Is random chance possible? Yes. Is God manipulating change possible? Of course, and absolutely. Can the direct study of only matter and energy answer this question? No. What does happen, though, is that theists see the apparent random chance, say that since the probability is infitesimally small, it must have been intervened in, and so use the apparent random chance as proof of God. Atheists, believing that God is an impossibility, use the apparently random chance as proof of absence of God. But both are wrong. The methods of science and the results of science are actually quite agnostic. They say nothing about the existence or non-existence of God. Scientifically, it doesn’t matter whether evolution is random chance or is guided by God - it just happens.
In essence, God can’t be studied directly through scientific experimentation. But that’s not surprising, considering that God is neither matter nor energy. God is God - He is outside the material world. No matter how far away you travel in the universe, you will never find Heaven - Heaven is outside of space and time. Jesus’s crucifixion defies space and time, and is once for all who believe in Him. God has the ability to intervene in any space and any time. This is what a miracle is - God intervening and defying the laws of nature at a specific time and at a specific place.
I’m not seeing it. It say there are 10^45 possible quantum states a second, but it doesn’t say where that number came from. Am I missing it? Can you point me to the specific text on it?
And again, that’s the writers adding their conclusions. The thing is, as far as science can tell, evolution is random. Supernatural explanations cannot be used for science. The result in the natural world appears to be random. It’s like this - it is statistically possible that a 1st grade student could receive a perfect score on a multiple choice test on calculus. Is it probable? No - the chances of this happening are exhorbitantly small. But if it did happen, there are really 3 possibilities: either the child is insanely intelligent for his age, the child is being told the answers, or the child was just a really lucky guesser. The first possibility is actually the least probable of the three (unless he’s a Vulcan from Star Trek).It matters a great deal and Biology textbooks are not agnostic. The writers feel the need to add purely biased, unscientific conclusions to the data.
The 33% have obviously not reviewed the evidence to the contrary, or they fear damnation for not rejecting evolution on the level of a religious belief.NEW YORK (Reuters) - One-third of Americans reject the idea of evolution and Republicans have grown more skeptical about it, according to a poll released on Monday.
Sixty percent of Americans say that “humans and other living things have evolved over time,” the telephone survey by the Pew Research Center’s Religion and Public Life Project showed (Click pewforum.org/2013/12/30/publics-views-on-human-evolution/ for the full survey).
But 33 percent reject the idea of evolution, saying that “humans and other living things have existed in their present form since the beginning of time,” Pew said in a statement.
news.yahoo.com/one-third-americans-reject-evolution-poll-shows-191426764.html
Except an improbability does not equal an impossibility. 1/10^35, while small, does not equal zero. Eventually, given enough coin tosses, there could very well be the string of 200 coin tosses described somewhere in those coin tosses. Regardless, buffalo, you’re arguing with people that believe that God is the First Cause of Everything. The vast majority of people on these forums, myself included, are Catholic (and even most of the people on these forums who aren’t Catholic are other Christians). The thing about the Catholic faith is that it doesn’t require us to reject science - we don’t believe that reason and faith are opposed to each other. We use our reason to augment our faith.How many more times of can we add 100 more until we all agree it is impossible without being setup? 100 more, 200 more, 300 more? Or will anti-ID’ers forever hold out for more?
Exactly!The evidence is mounting. There is no need to overstate or understate its importance. But it is important. Archaeologists are quite good at looking at bits of stone and determining that one was shaped by wind, rain and other methods of erosion.
Even if they never find out who made it, an arrowhead found in the dirt has distinctive marks that show it was designed for a purpose. That it is not just another similar piece of stone that has obviously not been designed but broke into a shape that only resembles the arrowhead without close examination. As we examine the genome, we are finding previously unknown function in what was arbitrarily called junk not long ago.
Peace.
Ed
Hey, I just thought I would reply to this post as I think it is a common misconception to use an analogy such as a building as evidence for a designer.Exactly!
Anyone can look at a skyscraper or an automobile or a computer and immediately tell you that those objects were designed by an intelligent agent. Why should we be shocked when we discover the design present in the molecular building blocks of life? The only ones who are disturbed at the evidence of design are the Materialists - who have decided, a priori, that the Designer does not exist.
I think that Michael Behe and the other pioneers in Intelligent Design Theory will some day get the credit that is due to them. Mr. Behe acutally identified the limit of Random/Darwinian Evolution (he placed it between between the level of vertebrate species and class). In an impartial Scientific Community this discovery would have been welcomed as huge news. Alas, proponents of Intelligent Design are blacklisted not only in the scientific community but in the classroom as well. And as Mr. Behe notes, getting this question of Evolution wrong can actually have practical implications for our lives, particularly in the field of medicine.
Design is simply the “purposeful arrangement of parts.” Inferences of design do not require that we wonder about the designer. We can determine that a system was designed by examining the system itself.Hey, I just thought I would reply to this post as I think it is a common misconception to use an analogy such as a building as evidence for a designer.
It is important to understand that we know the building had an intelligent designer(s), as there are many examples of buildings from intelligent design. We can go to the planning office and view the original architectural layouts and verify who designed it…
What do you mean by “Evolution?”…When applying this to natural life, it is important to remember that no scientific evidence to date suggests that a creator was at hand. This of course, doesn’t rule it out and scientists do not have an agenda to “disprove” it. If sufficient evidence was to be discovered tomorrow that proved intelligent design, scientists would admit their error. So far however, all evidence points to a natural process. Evolution at this point can be deemed fact, like gravity.
Let’s go ahead and make that hard.No one wants to touch this one? :nope:
I want to specify you flip 100 heads in a row then alternate and flip 100 tails in a row. Keep doing it until are successful. How many years must you be doing this at 1 flip per second.
It’s just plain ignorance. Genesis is metaphoric language, not science. It is exquisite theology.NEW YORK (Reuters) - One-third of Americans reject the idea of evolution and Republicans have grown more skeptical about it, according to a poll released on Monday.
Sixty percent of Americans say that “humans and other living things have evolved over time,” the telephone survey by the Pew Research Center’s Religion and Public Life Project showed (Click pewforum.org/2013/12/30/publics-views-on-human-evolution/ for the full survey).
But 33 percent reject the idea of evolution, saying that “humans and other living things have existed in their present form since the beginning of time,” Pew said in a statement.
news.yahoo.com/one-third-americans-reject-evolution-poll-shows-191426764.html
Or they see flaws that rule it out.The 33% have obviously not reviewed the evidence to the contrary, or they fear damnation for not rejecting evolution on the level of a religious belief.