A
Arandur
Guest
You first, M0nkeyIf your attempt was to reach across the isle (again, bridging) I don’t see a reason why this is false. I think some reading up on ID is due:
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uncommondescent.com/faq/
Does this mean you do believe that the idea of common descent and all the mechanisms of evolution (except for natural selection–I’ll get to that in a moment) are compatible with the idea that God designed them all?
If so, I think that covers an enormous amount of ground for what I thought had been conflicts. If we’re just talking about chance (Reggie’s holdout) and natural selection with regard to evolution, that’s much easier.
However, I will note that those other mechanisms and ideas correspond much more to the symbolic interpretation of the Creation accounts in Scripture that the Church has allowed and even leaned in favor of. I think that in light of what science has shown, it one must remain very open to the symbolic interpretation and admit that the literal interpretation, while permissible, does not appear likely. This does not mean that Scripture is in any way false, as the Church has discussed the import truths inherent in the stories.
I don’t have a problem with any of these save for natural selection; if my understanding is correct, natural selection is defined as the only guiding principle – I think you have to accept it on those terms – and therefore does not fully support bio diversity. Plus, survival of the fittest is hardly observable in nature: … I completely and utterly disagree with any notion that resembles survival of the fittest as it is in contrast to Christianity. In fact, I really think it’s just another religion: anti-Christianity.
Thanks for answering the question!Take a look at the dinosaurs for example, do you think they were weak? What about the mammoth, the saber tooth tiguer, all these creatures had natural selection in their favor, yet they are no longer. …Human beings are another example of how survival of the fittest doesn’t hold, we have no claws, no teeth, no fur, virtually no protection against the elements, and yet managed to remain extant. It really only takes just a bit of common sense to refute this obstinate idea.
I think you don’t quite understand the concept of natural selection as used strictly in biology. It has been altered from “survival of the fittest” to mean “… the process by which genetic mutations that enhance reproduction become, and remain, more common in successive generations of a population.” en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution#Natural_selection
Please read the sources (that one and also this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_selection).
It is not about “survival.” It is about “reproduction.” Natural selection is inherently a life-driven, procreative process! In this way it is wonderfully consistent with Christian principles!
Furthermore, as I have quoted, it is indeed self-evident. Unless you can find a flaw in this logic, you cannot disagree with the concept:
"It has often been called a “self-evident” mechanism because it necessarily follows from three simple facts:
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* Heritable variation exists within populations of organisms.
* Organisms produce more offspring than can survive.
* These offspring vary in their ability to survive and reproduce."
Natural selection is also not the “only guiding principle,” as you put it. Evolution occurs by a combination of the sources of variation (sex and recombination, gene flow, population genetics, mutation) with the mechanisms (genetic drift, natural selection) and environmental factors (driving adaptation, co-evolution, and co-operation).
Natural selection is seen in nature all the time. Perhaps the most famous example is the peppered moth. It is also scene in medicine with bacteria and viruses, and in agriculture with the pest and weed responses to pesticides and herbicides.
For purposes of evolution,** I would keep all talk of human evolution separate.** There is debate on the extent to which evolution impacts humans. For instance, we have such a huge interbreeding population that variation gets homogenized. We also try to keep everyone alive, even those with genetic problems that would normally kill them pretty quickly without medical help. We also find certain recessive traits (blue eyes, red hair, etc.) to be disproportionately attractive. Our “most successful” people in terms of wealth and education tend to reproduce much less due to conscious choice than the “least sucessful” (poorest, least educated). These are just some of the ways that humans act against nature (which I’ve always admitted!) I personally don’t believe evolution is acting much on humans–in fact, we’re consciously encouraging “less successful” traits in our population. Genetics still affect the human population, but those “less successful” genes are preserved to a much higher degree among humans than would normally occur in nature.
You also misunderstand “fitness” when you are looking at physical, combative strength in your examples of dinosaurs and sabre-toothed tigers and humans. These really have nothing at all to do with “fitness,” save to the extent that they allow the organisms to successfully obtain food, reproduce, and adapt to the environment, competing within their ecological niche at least as successfully as their competitors for that niche. That is why you see fast-breeding rats overwhelming more specialized organisms when we inadvertantly bring them to new habitats, causing natives to suffer or go extinct.
It really only takes an understanding of what natural selection really is and some basic observation in nature to prove it