And I have discussed how this theory can be refuted, the “evidence” is a bunch of wishful thinking by people who have self-devised their own form of religion.
Wishful thinking? Please tell me how observations of genetics, optics, radioactivity, and population dynamics are “wishful thinking.” If these evidences are not just made up, as you suggest, then what do they indicate in your view?
Finally, we have already discussed the fact that you just can’t strip philosophy from science, these two build upon each other. To deny philosophy in science is to deny science. If you disagree, please show me how this is not the case. We can start with the history of science, as an example.
I did. You apparently never read it. What’s the point in trying to have a discussion with you if you wholly ignore things that I say time and time again? I posted sources on the mainstream ideas of limitations of science and its relationship with philosophy. I also posted Catholic sources about it.
Not exactly, one of the criteria is that it must be self-sufficient, how does this show to be compatible with an Incarnate Creator.
You are wrong because you don’t seem to know what science is. Materialistic philosophies look for self-sufficiency. The biological, empirical scientific theory of evolution has no evidence about how existence came to be and so makes no claims on it.
As Peter Kreeft and his co-authors said, evolution is merely a process like any other natural process that God created, the method God used to govern the diversity of species.
I believe I am not “labeling” you that. Heck, by your own words you seem to think everything just sort of came together for no particular reason.
Where have I EVER said anything even a tiny bit like this?
I have been consistent in that God created the whole physical universe and all its laws and processes. He had a design and purpose for these things–the purpose we come to know through philosophy and theology; the particulars of how His creation physically works we come to know through science.
I don’t want to judge the state of your soul, but evolution time and time again has proven to be the poison that has infected many minds. It is no surprise Darwin is considered one of the seven heads and fathers of the culture of death.
Every age has its errant philosophies and people who hide behind some false idea or another. There’s nothing special about Darwin in that respect.
Not literal, contextual. Tell me, honestly, why do you think the sacred writer spent the effort to put those words there if it was meant to be taken as a fable?
As I said in post #762 (
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5336453&postcount=762), I believe what the CHURCH teaches about these things. I will post that again:
"CCC 337:
“Scripture presents the work of the Creator
symbolically as a succession of six days of divine ‘work,’ concluded by the ‘rest’ of the seventh day” (CCC 337)
"*Pope Pius XII warned us, “What is the literal sense of a passage is not always as obvious in the speeches and writings of the ancient authors of the East, as it is in the works of our own time. For what they wished to express is not to be determined by the rules of grammar and philology alone, nor solely by the context; the interpreter must, as it were, go back wholly in spirit to those remote centuries of the East and with the aid of history, archaeology, ethnology, and other sciences, accurately determine what modes of writing, so to speak, the authors of that ancient period would be likely to use, and in fact did use. **For the ancient peoples of the East, in order to express their ideas, did not always employ those forms or kinds of speech which we use today; but rather those used by the men of their times and countries. *
What those exactly were the commentator cannot determine as it were in advance, but only after a careful examination of the ancient literature of the East” (Divino Afflante Spiritu 35–36).
CCC 110 In order to discover the sacred authors’ intention, the reader must take into account the conditions of their time and culture, the literary genres in use at that time, and the modes of feeling, speaking and narrating then current.
"For the fact is that truth is differently presented and expressed in the various types of historical writing, in prophetical and poetical texts, and in other forms of literary expression."7
I suggest reading all around CCC110, as that chapter describes how Scripture is to be interpreted, and why a modern literal interpretation of 6 day Creation or Instantaneous, Special Creation, or even some details about Adam and Eve (aside from essential truths of individual and the Fall) are not necessarily or even likely to be what Scripture is actually telling us."