Reconstructed discussion whether belief in literal Adam & Eve is warranted

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To hecd2

Alec,

It must be God’s will that I respond to you once again, …
It is a wasted cause to you. The problems are not in science. The problems are being held off the table in this discussion. The fundamental flaw which turns all the rest into waste is the assumption that: “God can only exist within Nature” This unproven assumption is the pivot of all else. And thus the mighty scientist must focus on a theory which cannot with simple logic be shown. That theory is a dispute that “creationism is not possible” and why is it not possible? No simple answer can be given.

It really is that simple
 
It is a wasted cause to you. The problems are not in science. The problems are being held off the table in this discussion. The fundamental flaw which turns all the rest into waste is the assumption that: “God can only exist within Nature” This unproven assumption is the pivot of all else. And thus the mighty scientist must focus on a theory which cannot with simple logic be shown. That theory is a dispute that “creationism is not possible” and why is it not possible? No simple answer can be given.

It really is that simple
Truth, in its many forms, is never a wasted cause.
 
It’s riddled with logical error and fallacy, the most glaring being

a) the claim that theology is a method for uncovering the truth about the supernatural that is analogous to the claim that natural science is a method for uncovering the truth about the natural world. There are many reasons why that is pure wishful thinking, including motivational, methdological and performative ones

b) the claim that “The scientific study of the physical world, however, reveals that it could not be the way it is unless there existed something that is not part of the physical world and at the same time the cause of the physical world” on which much of what follows is based and which is simply not true.

As for quantum indeterminism, just how do you distinguish between a miracle and the natural world rolling along according to its natural laws, if God only acts directly through quantum indeterminism?

Alec
evolutionpages.com
Try this one (I will pre-emp your disagreement - It is riddles with logical fallacies, and on and on and on.)🙂

“Creation, Cosmology, and the Cosmogonical Fallacy”
 
Dear Buffalo,

That article on the critical distinction between mere change and genuine creatio ex nihilo is a splendid example of the lasting relevance and accuracy of St. Thomas Aquinas, the Angelic Doctor.
 
In that case, you must hold that all natural scienceis incompatible with Catholic doctrine, which is a very bizarre position to hold.
Wherever the natural sciences explain origins,order,and life,their naturalistic explanations are bound to be incompatible with the Catholic doctrines of creation and divine providence,because those phenomena are theological territory.
Even apart from Catholic doctrine,it is logically necessary for there to be super-natural power for origins,order,and life,because they all entail power over natural things.
Because the evidence shows that humans are biologically related to other animals in degrees of closeness according to a phylogeny, because the molecular evidence shows that humans and other geat apes had a common ancestor, and becasue we see the emergence of humans in the palaeontological record.
The phylogenetic tree is ultimately based upon Linnaeus’ arbitrary taxonomic system,which lumps together species which can’t breed with each other according to similar physical characteristics. In the course of the 1800’s,scientists took the taxonomic system literally and assumed that all the species which share similar bone structures must be related by descent. But the only way to verify that two distinct species are really related is have them alive and to see if they can breed at all. Species reproduce by way of the flesh,not bone structures. Descent is vertical and has to do with acts of reproduction;it is not merely a matter of lateral physical similarities. We can’t verify reproductive relatedness of species which have been defunct for thousands of years and thus are no longer reproducing. The science of paleontology is just comparative cross-analysis between the bone structures of defunct species,and it makes illogical assumptions
about the history of species,ignoring the factor of reproductive linkage. Likewise,molecular biology makes illogical assumptions about the genetic history of species based on comparative cross-analysis of genetic material. What ultimately matters is the reproductive linkage of species,or in other words,acts of reproduction throughout the history,and that cannot be traced out by comparing the similarities of genetic material.
Science would have us view the history of living species,which exist as individual creatures which are conceived and die,as if they were like “evolutionary rock”,which just amorphously “evolves”.
 
Howdy, 🙂

Paul believed in a literal Adam who committed the first sin which made us all enemies of God, and so do I. 😃

Romans 5:10-19 “For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much more, having been reconciled, we shall be saved by His life. 11 And not only that, but we also rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received the reconciliation. 12 Therefore, just as through one man sin entered the world, and death through sin, and thus death spread to all men, because all sinned— 13 (For until the law sin was in the world, but sin is not imputed when there is no law. 14 Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over those who had not sinned according to the likeness of the transgression of Adam, who is a type of Him who was to come. 15 But the free gift is not like the offense. For if by the one man’s offense many died, much more the grace of God and the gift by the grace of the one Man, Jesus Christ, abounded to many. 16 And the gift is not like that which came through the one who sinned. For the judgment which came from one offense resulted in condemnation, but the free gift which came from many offenses resulted in justification. 17 For if by the one man’s offense death reigned through the one, much more those who receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness will reign in life through the One, Jesus Christ.) 18 Therefore, as through one man’s offense judgment came to all men, resulting in condemnation, even so through one Man’s righteous act the free gift came to all men, resulting in justification of life. 19** For as by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners, so also by one Man’s obedience many will be made righteous.**”

Pax,
SHW
 
The phylogenetic tree is ultimately based upon Linnaeus’ arbitrary taxonomic system,which lumps together species which can’t breed with each other according to similar physical characteristics. In the course of the 1800’s,scientists took the taxonomic system literally and assumed that all the species which share similar bone structures must be related by descent. But the only way to verify that two distinct species are really related is have them alive and to see if they can breed at all. Species reproduce by way of the flesh,not bone structures. Descent is vertical and has to do with acts of reproduction;it is not merely a matter of lateral physical similarities. We can’t verify reproductive relatedness of species which have been defunct for thousands of years and thus are no longer reproducing. The science of paleontology is just comparative cross-analysis between the bone structures of defunct species,and it makes illogical assumptions
about the history of species,ignoring the factor of reproductive linkage. Likewise,molecular biology makes illogical assumptions about the genetic history of species based on comparative cross-analysis of genetic material. What ultimately matters is the reproductive linkage of species,or in other words,acts of reproduction throughout the history,and that cannot be traced out by comparing the similarities of genetic material.
Science would have us view the history of living species,which exist as individual creatures which are conceived and die,as if they were like “evolutionary rock”,which just amorphously “evolves”.
This is for you, Anthony, :flowers:
You have just saved this non-philosophical, non-scientific, general evolutionist, somewhat analytical granny some precious time of going through stacks of papers and notes covering my rug, not to mention two dictionaries, a “favorites” section devoted to pro & con evolutionary theory and a supply of Pepsi. What I am doing is testing current evolutionary theory in the light of the Catholic belief of Eve & Adam.

Your information about the phylogenetic tree being based upon Linnaeus’ arbitrary taxonomic system added to my idea that the “Tree of Life” has to be revisited. In my humble opinion, the phylogenetic tree and the first point when life started forming cells etc. is key to the literal Eve & Adam. It is my understanding that the exact origin of life is not part of evolutionary theory even though various people have theories regarding the exact origin.

Considering that it is more than 50 years since my last high school science classes and a minor in philosophy, I have a lot of catching up to do. Fortunately, there are good posters are both sides of the literal question who are patiently filling in the gaps in my knowledge.

So far I have ruled out any form of polygenism. The bottleneck theory is solid. While common ancestor theory is pretty clear, in my opinion, one has to go farther back along the evolutionary trail. The genomic evidence is compelling. But then I start to wonder about number of base pairs and “junk” shown in one diagram along with genetic drift and some of my own confusion in this area. While following links, I found Carl Woese and the idea of unique organisms which I have not checked out. The area of biochemistry interests me since I have never had a course in chemistry and I am an awful cook. Now you can understand why I have a mess of papers and notes on my rug. 😉

Blessings,
granny

All human life is sacred from the moment of conception.
 
question from grannymh -

“Given the choice between spending a summer evening in my garden listening to a songthrush as the sun goes down, or a night in La Scala at a performance of La Boheme, I choose … both.”
How is it, Alec, that you can choose both?
The glib answer is that I will choose to go to Milan in one week and stay at home, presumably when the weather forecast is better, another week.

But I guess you are asking whether my ability to conceptualize the existence of La Boheme and the existence of songbird simultaneously, speaks of a difference between us and other animals that is too great to bridge naturally. My answer is that it is not too great to bridge naturally (particularly since I have experienced both in the past). It is no different fundamentally from the ability to choose between hunting in the wooded area where we saw some fat wart hogs last week, and fishing in the river, because it’s the time of year that the fish run.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
Dear Alec,

Both answers are appreciated because they lead to the differences between humans and other animals. For the time being, we can consider the differences in degrees if you wish. The second answer is a testimony to the individuality of people. It expands one’s horizons which is what happens with the ability to conceptualize. So far, I believe my train of thought is on track. :yup:

It is here where my doom and gloom survey of philosophy course kicks in. But first, shall we look at the human being as a union of who and what. In order to understand humanity, the essence, the inherent nature of humanity, needs to be looked at completely. In other words, I would talk differently to you than I would talk to your dog.

When talking with others of our species, we automatically unite those parts of a human being which would fall under the discipline of science with those parts which would fall under the discipline of philosophy. Nonetheless, I would like to skip the depressing part of my philosophy course. It followed the premise that Rene Descartes’ philosophy resulted in the birth of communism via subsequent philosophers. This line of philosophies kept turning inward until one poor fellow couldn’t figure out if he existed or if he were a perception in someone else’s mind. The idea that I was a figment in someone else’s imagination was not uplifting. 😦

So – can we look at the foundation of both the scientific discipline and the philosophical discipline as one which seeks answers to the questions of who? how? what? when? where? why? cost? This happens to be an old journalism mantra which works for all kinds of subject matter.

Blessings,
granny

All human beings are worthy of profound respect.
 
The following quote from your post 293 in closed Adam & Eve thread was addressed to someone else. Nonetheless, it is uppermost in my mind. I believe it addresses the issue of “kind.”
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hecd2:
You have never addressed my scenario of a human born so brain damaged that no uniquely human activity is possible - such a person deserves to be treated with the dignity of a human not because of operative potencies, of which they have none, but because of species identity.
Regarding the questions of "intangible " being explained or unexplained by the emergent properties of matter-- again, I am going to rely on you to help me sort out the terminology and what it implies – which of course will benefit our discussion. I do have to remain firm that in order for me to propose a possible theory for a literal Adam and Eve, my foundation is based in what the human being is now.
Emergence is a term which describes the commonly observed phenomenon that, in nature, complex behaviour arises from much simpler underlying phenomena. This is a question which has been explored by people like Henri Poincare and Edward Lorenz in developing dynamical-systems theory, and von Neumann and Turing in computation - the common theme of complex systems is that they are basesd on information processing. Such systems are rich, unpredictable and adaptive. See for example the recent book by Melanie Mitchell “Complexity: A Guided Tour” and George Ellis on “Physics, Complexity and Causality” in Nature 435, p743.
Thus, when you mentioned, “emergent properties of matter” I would like to know the recent evaluations. Please give me a link to a summary, when possible.
Also, see this:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complex_system

In other words, we see that at level of nature, complexity arises from underlying simpler processes and cannot be explained directly by them. This is a natural outcome of information processing and does not require a supernatural concept - the human intellect is no different.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
 
Since someone raised the question as to how miracles are discerned, the following criteria in use for Lourdes and cited in the web site I mentioned above are as follows:

"1) The diagnostics and authenticity of the disease has been preliminarily and perfectly assessed;
  1. The prognosis provides for an impending or short-term fatal outcome;
  2. The recovery is sudden, without convalesce, and absolutely complete and final;
  3. The prescribed treatment cannot be deemed to have resulted in a recovery or in any case could have been propitiatory for the purposes of recovery itself. These criteria are still in use nowadays, in view of their highly logical, accurate and pertinent nature."
Care is also taken to rule out “any psychopathic component, as well as any other subjective pathologic state or manifestation (which are therefore not verifiable)” so as to make certain that only scientifically, medically verifiable cases are considered.

Again, those serious about examining the evidence of Lourdes would do well to check out the site at metacrock.blogspot.com/2008/08/lourdes-and-healing.html as well as any and all other sites dealing with the miraculous, especially at Lourdes and Fatima. Some sites are skeptical, and that is fine. But careful examination of the arguments and data on all sites, both pro and con, is warranted for those desiring to determine the truth.

It is well and good to suggest that cures rely upon limited scientific knowledge at the time, but careful examination of individual cases has led many to conclude that this a priori “explanation” is inadequate in concrete application. Those on their deathbed do not readily get up and thrive. Nor were medical doctors in the recent past entirely inadequate in their knowledge of what is physically possible according to the laws of nature regarding healing and recovery.
The key point is that the claim that miracles at Lourdes are real is an argument from ignorance (overlaid with intractable philosophical problems). That statement is supported by the following evidence:
  • The rate of claimed healings at Lourdes has fallen over time - in other words, as we have learned more about human biochemistry, immunology, physiology and anatomy, along with their pathologies, fewer and fewer of what were once accepted as miracles are now so accepted, to the point that Church-authenticated miracles at Lourdes have all but dried up.
  • There is absolutely no evidence that what happens at Lourdes is statistically different from what happens in the human population at large - in other words, there is no evidence that Lourdes “miracles” are anything other than purely natural processes which give rise to known natural phenomena resulting from processes such as spontaneous remission or misdiagnosis…
  • The kind of healing which is irrefutable (eg the regeneration of missing limbs) is completely absent
Furthermore, as I have pointed out before, the concept of miracles has intractable philosophical problems - with respect to belief in a just God and with respect to the concept of making deductions from what you call “scientifically and medically verifiable cases” to claims of phenomena outside nature.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
 
It is amusing that there hasn’t been one article I referred that you agree with. 😃
I haven’t been counting, taking each on its own merits or lack thereof, but, if so, it’s probably because the things that you find compelling are written from a perspective that I find erroneous and fallacious.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
 
Try this one (I will pre-emp your disagreement - It is riddles with logical fallacies, and on and on and on.)🙂

“Creation, Cosmology, and the Cosmogonical Fallacy”
It contains fewer errors than the previous one, but it is still wrong because he misunderstands the nature of cosmogonies that include the possibility of a past eternal or a finite unbounded universe, and so sets up a false dichotomy between state-changes and creation ex nihilo.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
 
Furthermore, as I have pointed out before, the concept of miracles has intractable philosophical problems - with respect to belief in a just God and with respect to the concept of making deductions from what you call “scientifically and medically verifiable cases” to claims of phenomena outside nature.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
So that I don’t go off topic.

The miracle involved with Adam and Eve could be described as part of the inititial miracle of creation. Or the miracle of Adam and Eve could be described as the direct intervention of God. According to notes in the Saint Joseph Edition of The New American Bible The grandeur of the Pentateuch is the result of a careful and complex joining of several historical traditions or sources. There are primarily four strands in the first five books of the Hebrew Scriptures. This “beginning” plus subsequent Scripture study during Apostolic times and the era of the “Church Fathers” deserve respect whether or not one understands it. These initial miracles are part of Divine Revelation. However, they do not include a handbook of details.

Miracles such as Lourdes, etc., do speak to God’s power to intervene. However, they belong in another category called private revelation. I would be happy to discuss this particular category somewhere else.

Blessings,
granny

All human life is sacred.
 
Wherever the natural sciences explain origins,order,and life,their naturalistic explanations are bound to be incompatible with the Catholic doctrines of creation and divine providence,because those phenomena are theological territory.
Well, you are precisely wrong about this. Explanations to do with the origin of life, the origin of the human and other species and the nature of life are the territory of science. Theological explanations might make testable natural claims, and wherever they do so, they are subject to correction by observation and experiment.
The phylogenetic tree is ultimately based upon Linnaeus’ arbitrary taxonomic system,which lumps together species which can’t breed with each other according to similar physical characteristics.
On the contrary, the nested hierarchy of species is amply demonstrated by overwhelming evidence from comparative physiology, comparative biochemistry and, above all, molecular biology, as well as comparative anatomy (quite apart from the fact that the Linnaean system is anything but “arbitrary”)
In the course of the 1800’s,scientists took the taxonomic system literally and assumed that all the species which share similar bone structures must be related by descent.
If you talk about “bones” you are limiting the discussion to the absurdly narrow taxon of the Class of Osteichthyes (bony fish and their descendants, including humans). Not only does that exclude the rest of the subphylum Vertebrata, but the rest of the Chordata phylum, all other phyla of animals (which are hugely more diverse and numerous than chordates), all plants, all fungi and all bacteria. The nested hierarchy of species, and their relationship through common ancestry, is a biological fact that is simply not in question. For more information on the tree of life, see here:
tolweb.org/tree/
But the only way to verify that two distinct species are really related is have them alive and to see if they can breed at all.
You are mistaken, because the biological species definition is that species are populations that do not successfully interbreed in the wild.
Species reproduce by way of the flesh,not bone structures. Descent is vertical and has to do with acts of reproduction;it is not merely a matter of lateral physical similarities. We can’t verify reproductive relatedness of species which have been defunct for thousands of years and thus are no longer reproducing. The science of paleontology is just comparative cross-analysis between the bone structures of defunct species,and it makes illogical assumptions about the history of species,ignoring the factor of reproductive linkage.
So what is your natural explanation for the nested hierarchy of species that stretches back through evolutionary history, with older and now extinct species showing basal and shared characteristics of more derived extant species (such as teeth and post caudal vertebrae in early birds for example), if you reject common ancestry? What specific “illogical assumption” is made by palaeontology?
Likewise,molecular biology makes illogical assumptions about the genetic history of species based on comparative cross-analysis of genetic material.
Illogical assumptions such as what? How do you explain shared syntenic endogenous retroviruses or processed pseudogenes or tandem repeats?
What ultimately matters is the reproductive linkage of species,or in other words,acts of reproduction throughout the history,and that cannot be traced out by comparing the similarities of genetic material.
Of course it can, and it has been done, to show, for example that humans and chimpanzees shared a common ancestor at about 7 million years BP.

As I say, common ancestry is supported by a vast amount of evidence from several separate scientific disciplines. The common ancestry of humans and other great apes precludes the special biological creation of humans.

Alec
evolutionpages.com/pederpes%20finneyae.htm
 
Theological explanations might make testable natural claims, and wherever they do so, they are subject to correction by observation and experiment.
On the contrary, the nested hierarchy of species is amply demonstrated by overwhelming evidence from comparative physiology, comparative biochemistry and, above all, molecular biology, as well as comparative anatomy (quite apart from the fact that the Linnaean system is anything but “arbitrary”)
If you talk about “bones” you are limiting the discussion to the absurdly narrow taxon of the Class of Osteichthyes (bony fish and their descendants, including humans). Not only does that exclude the rest of the subphylum Vertebrata, but the rest of the Chordata phylum, all other phyla of animals (which are hugely more diverse and numerous than chordates), all plants, all fungi and all bacteria. The nested hierarchy of species, and their relationship through common ancestry, is a biological fact that is simply not in question. For more information on the tree of life, see here:
tolweb.org/tree/

You are mistaken, because the biological species definition is that species are populations that do not successfully interbreed in the wild.
So what is your natural explanation for the nested hierarchy of species that stretches back through evolutionary history, with older and now extinct species showing basal and shared characteristics of more derived extant species (such as teeth and post caudal vertebrae in early birds for example), if you reject common ancestry? What specific “illogical assumption” is made by palaeontology? Illogical assumptions such as what? How do you explain shared syntenic endogenous retroviruses or processed pseudogenes or tandem repeats?
Of course it can, and it has been done, to show, for example that humans and chimpanzees shared a common ancestor at about 7 million years BP.

As I say, common ancestry is supported by a vast amount of evidence from several separate scientific disciplines. The common ancestry of humans and other great apes precludes the special biological creation of humans.

Alec
evolutionpages.com/pederpes%20finneyae.htm
Again you are always putting science at the top. From: Faith, Reason & Science: The View from the Catholic Tradition

…The most general, and therefore last in the order of learning, is metaphysics which studies being simply as being. This science is first in the order of being, because it deals with being in the most basic and most general way. Yet it is farthest from our sense experience, because we never actually experience being in this very general way, but only as being of this or that kind. This is why it is last in the order of learning.

Now, if all being were of the physical changeable kind, then natural science would be first in the order of being. St. Thomas puts it like this: “If the physical universe were all that exists, then natural science would be the most fundamental science.” The scientific study of the physical world, however, reveals that it could not be the way it is unless there existed something that is not part of the physical world and at the same time the cause of the physical world. This non-physical something is the Uncaused Cause of the physical world–the Ultimate Cause of all causes. The existence of this being is demonstrated in the most abstract part of physics (natural science) by showing the contingency of the physical universe and its absolute dependence on a cause that is not part of the universe. Thus, we know that there must be at least one other science besides all the various branches of natural (physical) science. This is a science of divine being (non-physical being). The traditional name for this divine science is theology and the object of its study is the nature of divine being–as far as this can be understood by human beings.

Having established the existence of the objects of both natural and divine science, however, it can be seen that there must be one more science. If natural science studies physical being and theological science studies divine being, neither of these two sciences by itself covers all of being. Thus, there is a science of being, not as physical or divine, but as either physical or non-physical. This is the general science of being as being which is called “metaphysics.”

The following chart provides a general sketch of the order of the sciences according to the order of learning, beginning with the most basic and familiar in human experience proceeding to the most abstract and furthest from direct human experience. Notice that there is an order of coming to know from the sciences listed at the top of the chart to those listed further down; that is, the sciences listed at the top of the chart provide the foundation of those listed next. So, our knowledge of the non-living and living things of our immediate experience are the prerequisite for knowing the laws of physical being in general (physics) and this knowledge, in turn, is the prerequisite for knowing about divine being, and all of this scientific knowledge is the prerequisite for knowing about being as being (metaphysics).

The Sciences According to the Order of Learning
Object of Study - Science
non-living physical being - mineralogy, geology, etc.
living physical being - biology
physical being in general - physics
non-physical (divine) being - theology
being in general - metaphysics

**The Sciences According to the Order of Being **

Type of Being - Science
being in general - metaphysics
non-physical (divine) being - theology
physical being in general - physics
living physical being - biology
non-living physical being -mineralogy, geology, etc.
 
Explanations to do with the origin of life, the origin of the human and other species and the nature of life are the territory of science.
Alec
evolutionpages.com/pederpes%20finneyae.htm
Clarification, please.

If I may, I would like to respond to this from my understanding of evolutionary theory. The “territory of science” is too broad for my purposes.

It is my understanding that evolutionary theory does not address exactly where or how life came to be. It does address the very first components involved. I have references to these components as being the chemicals (?) necessary to form the first cells. My impression is that over time, various combinations of _______slowly evolved into different life forms. There are also references to evolutionary concerns regarding bacteria and archaea, whose evolutions cover most of the planet’s 4.5-billion-year history. I have seen the tree of life which is shown in the link. This is the first sentence of [post 34] link – section "root of the tree. --“The rooting of the Tree of Life, and the relationships of the major lineages, are controversial.” There are scientists currently working to improve the concept of this tree of life. It will be interesting to see what they come up with.

From my spot in the trenches, I recognize the unity and beauty of nature. There is no doubt in my mind that human beings are a vital part of all nature. By no means are we seeded by aliens.😉

When determining that a belief of a literal Adam and Eve is possible, IMHO, one can start at the same point that evolutionary theory does, that is, at the first point that life is. This does not mean one should ignore the question – What caused life to begin?

I believe that in order to understand Eve & Adam, it is necessary to understand both who they are and what they are. For example. Regardless of which classification system one uses, the point is that “life” in nature can be divided into distinct groups. What is also telling is while individual species divide their own into groups, such as a pride of lions, it is the human species which classified the other species. If we ask what are human beings, they are part of of the general animal classification. But who are these humans who can go beyond their own to classify other species?

It seems to me that it is important to look at the same evidence that evolutionary theory uses at its point of beginning. So, Alec, once again, I need to be clear about the origin of evolutionary theory being different than the origin of life.

Blessings,
granny

All human life is sacred.
 
To hecd2:

Alec,

I concur that there is an “argument from ignorance” here about the Lourdes miracles, but the ignorance is one of the actual details of the cures, for example, eyes that see while the optic nerves are still inoperable, wounds that instantly and completely close, over an inch of leg bone instantly appearing, people expected to die within hours springing to life, and so forth. Not the Devil, but God, is in the details here. Philosophers may have to get used to miracles occurring in spite of “intractable philosophical problems.” Such “problems” exist largely from assumptions of God not existing, or His not doing things the way we would do them if we were He, or a created natural order that even the Creator cannot “rearrange.” As far as I know, the Blessed Virgin did not promise any miracles at Lourdes whatever, much less that they would continue forever in the flood of numbers that initially occurred. Conservatively speaking, tens of thousands of cures have been personally claimed there, several thousand verified as medically “remarkable,” but only some 67 accepted by the Church. The Vatican cannot present its own cases, but must accept only those the International Medical Commission refers to it as scientifically inexplicable. Of that large number, only those passing far stricter philosophical and theological criteria have been approved.

But our topic is Adam and Eve, and the only question before us here is whether God can directly create the human spiritual soul at a given point in prehistory. If God does exist, and if the human soul is genuinely spiritual in its nature (with intellective and volitional faculties), then the first appearance of truly human beings on Earth would constitute an event above and beyond all the powers of physical nature. You write to Anthony, “The common ancestry of humans and other great apes precludes the special biological creation of humans.” I note your adjective “biological” here. Indeed, God’s creation of the human soul does not, as such, entail a “biological” creation. Nonetheless, since the soul is the substantial form of the human body, and since the form actively determines the specificity of the body (puts it into its proper species), the creation of the first human being would simultaneously radically transform the body of any subhuman primate which might (hypothetically) be used as the vehicle for forming the first true man. This transformation would be at a submicroscipic level which might be totally indiscernible to scientific measurement or observation, but would still constitute the “special creation of man,” body and soul.

Common ancestry with the great apes in no way precludes the special creation of man at a time and place of God’s choosing, any more than having poor cousins would prevent one from winning the Lotto. Your comments to Anthony in general are appropriate to the biological species concept which usually is focused upon populations that do not successfully interbreed in the wild. But Ernst Mayr conceded the need to move past empirical terms, like “phenotypic, morphological, genetic, phylogenetic, or biological” in order to get to the “underlying philosophical concepts,” if we are to have a proper understanding of the “species problem.” (Mayr, The Species Problem [American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1957], p. 17) The natural philosophical species concept is a wholly distinct approach and is based on presence or absence of essentially distinct powers, such as reasoning and understanding which are specific to true man, but not to brute animals. (See chapters 2, 4, and 5 of my Origin of the Human Species (Sapientia Press, 2003). Since God alone can create ex nihilo, and since the human spiritual soul must be created (since matter cannot produce spirit), the first true man (with a spiritual, intellective soul) would be Adam, and he would have been specially created by God as the Church teaches.
 
I think it was “Granny” who asked poliltely that creation and young earth be kept out of the discussion. However, I don’t think that is fare to the church fathers and to Christ himself who founded the Catholic Church; this is because whether it is understandable or not by some of the participants on this thread the church fathers did agree that a literal Creation did occur. So how can you honestly say to yourself, “Keep it out of here?” Are they the original Catholics or not?

From a scientific point of view Creation by God can perhaps be called the “Abrupt Appearance Hypothesis” as opposed to the “Evolutionary Hypothesis” by some natural process or through a God who used evolution. But if the long ages of millions and even billions of years do not exist how can there be evolution of life from no-life? It would be just as logical in my mind that we should be discussing the validity of the ancient pagan religion of Mithras which claims [67 BC to about AD 350 or so in Rome] that Mithras [and perhaps all life forms] came from a rock.

Thus as you can see I can not fathom the wastefulness in arguing for or against evolution or who was Adam and Eve as the long ages required for evolution to have occurred are rapidly disappearing based on parallel and independent research by many researchers in the fields of sedimentology, direct radiocarbon dating of the fossils instead of the rocks, and ichnology [trace fossils in the ancient sedimentary rocks]. Visit en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basilica_di_San_Clemente and enjoy the historical tour of this Basilica originally built in the first century on a pagan “Mithras” worship center as you break from this heady discussion that is perhaps leading no where?🙂 For a little modern science in place of Darwinian celebrations go to:
 
You raise many standard objections to the miracles which fill Catholic history, but the only thing that matters is to note what God has done, not what we think he could or should have done.
But “what God has done” is precisely the point at issue here, and I don’t see how your reply even begins to answer the evidential and philosophical objections to the notion that there is a God who disrupts the workings of the Universe in order to effect cures of illnesses
There is no substitute for simply reading the accounts for yourself, and I have given you some sources previously. Many readers of CAF already know the arguments and have sorted the evidence for themselves. One site about Lourdes you might check out is metacrock.blogspot.com/2008/08/lourdes-and-healing.html . As has been said, for the unbeliever, no amount of evidence will convince.
In saying so, you invert my reasoning again. I am not an unbeliever for whom no amount of evidence will suffice, but I am unbeliever because compelling evidence is not forthcoming. As I have pointed out, when stringent criteria are applied, the miracles all but dry up. They filled the lives of mediaeval people whose understanding of natural processes was limited - where are they now? There is absolutely no evidence that any one of these anecdotal cases even if unexplained, is *unexplainable *by natural causes, nor that what is observed at Lourdes lies outside that which happens statistically across the general population in the usual run of things. It is like intercessory prayer - individuals are convinced that prayer is efficacious in their case, but when tested rigorously no significant effect is found. That is why medicines are not approved on anecdotal evidence, or in open trials, because of the placebo effect and observer bias - instead, a statistically significant effect is required in a double blind trial.
Still, you should understand that this perspective is a rockbed of truth for many Catholics, and that the Church Herself insists that miracles are Her evidence.
I don’t suppose you are claiming that this is an argument in favour of their truth are you? The fact that some Catholics regard it as a rockbed of truth and that the Church insists that miracles are Her evidence is merely to restate the assertion for which we are seeking evidence.
(Incidentally, I never said “thousands” of miracles had been proclaimed by the Church at Lourdes. I said “only some 100 have thus far been accepted,” which is pretty close to the 67 you cite.) As to numbers of miracles, would it have been more impressive had Christ died and risen from the dead ten times instead of once?
Well, the once would be quite impressive if it was based on more than hearsay evidence written decades after the putative event by hagiographers.
You say the scientific evidence is “totally incompatible with a literal Adam and Eve.” What matters here is not my personal speculations, but what the Church has claimed. Pius XII in Humani generis addressed polygenism carefully, saying simply that “it is in no way apparent how such an opinion can be reconciled with that which the sources of revealed truth and the documents of the Teaching Authority of the Church propose with regard to Original Sin” (HG 37)." What the Church as taught, though, is the “special creation of man.”
It really doesn’t matter what Pius XII thinks about the biological ancestry of living humans because it is beyond his competence (and to be fair to him, most of the compelling evidence for polygenism in the Catholic sense postdates Humani Generis. Note that the scientific meaning of polygenism is different from the Catholic meaning - in the scientific sense polygenism refers to the concept that modern humans arise from separate and non-interbreeding populations of pre-humans, and has been falsified). The fact is that the scientific evidence is incompatible with a bottleneck of two individuals in the ancestry of extant humans. From a biological point of view, living humans are descended from a breeding population that never fell below a thousand or more individuals, so the story of Adam and Eve as sole parents of all humans cannot be true.
You claim that “Aquinas’s notions of causality, motion, contingency, perfection and teleology are hopelessly outmoded,” and that “common sense and intuition is denied by modern findings of natural science.” In so saying, you would have us accept the findings of modern science which “undermines the necessity of causality” [and other metaphysical first principles]. But you fail to grasp the force of my point. Science in fact does accept the universal validity of non-contradiction, sufficient reason, causality, etc., in its very methodology.
You appear to be unfamiliar with the findings of modern science so that you attempt to apply a naive philosophy of science. Science does not require all the axioms that you claim it does - indeed were science to require all of those axioms, and in particular strict causality, then it would really be in a logical pickle, because its findings demonstrate that those axioms are not universal. The only axiom that science requires is that what we observe of the external world corresponds to reality, and that reality is not capricious. The many cases in which causality applies are conclusions of our observations, not axioms themselves, and our observation of uncaused events and phenomena which result in contradictions show that they are neither universal truths nor axioms.
If its methodology cannot be universally applied, then it becomes mere faith and whim.
I never said that its methodology cannot be universally applied, and it is precisely the application of the methodology of science that has revealed deeply non-intuitive, uncaused and logically contradictory phenomena. When I say that the necessity of causality (one damned thing after another :)) is undermined by findings of modern science, I mean what I say - we have observed uncaused phenomena, even if most macroscopic phenomena do indeed follow a causal structure, so the necessity of causality in all circumstances has gone. Aquinas is in even deeper hot water when it comes to motion and contingency.
Your admission that we cannot exclude the “universe as uncaused brute fact” is the ultimate avoidance of reason’s universal application.
It’s not an “admission” but a reasonable hypothesis. What logic excludes the possibility of the universe as uncaused brute fact when we know that uncaused phenomena exist?
Antony Flew and Kai Neilsen avoid God with the same “reasoning.” But such is the ultimate abdication of reason, the same reason that always demands consistency in direct laboratory observations and causal explanations for observed phenomena.If these principles are selectively applied, why should we take seriously the claims of positivism that science alone provides true guidance to reality?
But the axioms underlying science as I have described them do not preclude the possibility, indeed the actuality of testing these contradictions, uncaused phenomena, and perceptive distortions of time and space over and over again. The relevant disciplines are Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity which have made many predictions that have been confirmed by observation.
On the contrary, natural science presupposes these first principles which it “borrows” from metaphysics. (See Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange’s God: His Existence and Nature, vol. 1.) If metaphysics is a pseudoscience, as positivists claim, then so is natural science, and all the claims you make on its behalf.
I disagree with the claim that natural science depends on metaphysics for its axioms and that its validity depends on the validity of metaphysics. As we have seen, the only axioms that science requires is the acceptance that our sensory (name removed by moderator)uts correspond to external reality which is not capricious, an assumption that we all make in crossing the road - all else follows. We are warranted in making those assumptions, because without them, existence in the world would be impossible. The methodology of natural science is validated by its superior performance - it works and can be shown to work, because it seems that the human sensory and information processing system has been honed by millions of years of evolution to correspond to external reality.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
 
Again you are always putting science at the top. From: Faith, Reason & Science: The View from the Catholic Tradition
From the paper that’s riddled with error and logical contradiction. It’s too tedious a task to show every place in your short cut and paste where there is error or fallacy; here are just a few:
  • The hierarchy contains both actual sciences (geology, biology, physics) , and things that are not science (ie empirical methods for discovering reality), such as theology and metaphysics: it is a hierarchy of apples and frogs
  • The claim that the scientific study of the physical world demands a non-physical or supernatural cause is simply not true
  • The claim that there is a supernatural domain, the reality of which can be explored by theology, in a way which is analogous to the process of natural science is simply not true - (either that, or theologians are utterly incompetent, because hardly any demonstration of supernatural reality is made to the consensus of practitioners). No theological or metaphysical claim can be tested as can a Natural science claim - the speculations of theology and metaphysics are unconstrained by reality
  • the hierarchy of methods that can be recognised as actual science (geology, biology, physics) omits many important ones (chemistry, for example), and puts those that are mentioned in a bizarre and illogical sequence.
The article really is a dog’s breakfast.

Alec
evolutionpages.com
 
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