Actually, I think that everyone in my church of about 100 believes in ID. MOST Christians reject macro-evolution, including many millions of Catholics. So we are not a small subset.
Many posters have stated that they don’t know of any Catholic who rejects the theory of evolution. It’s an infection coming from the fundamentalist Protestant churches. It is not a big problem with Catholics outside the US.
You should be frustrated that your instructors have not presented your case convincingly enough!
Not sure what you mean by that. Biologists are not out to “instruct” the general public. Teachers introduce a bit of entry-level science in the schools. That’s all. There is no problem once you go to university or if you work as a scientist.
But womanatwell delivers a laser at your main difficulty, Hans. No one should ever leave a class about evolutionary origins without presenting probability exercises such as those mentioned above.
Well, I would have been happy to forget that nonsense she posted, but you bring it up again. I don’t know where she copied it from, or if it was her own brainchild, but any “ID theorist” like Michael Behe or William Dembski would cringe at her arguments.
Let me just give you just two examples:
She writes (post 542):
"The fastest chemical reactions are usually no faster than a picosecond, which means 10^15 reactions per second. All the possible sets of one million (10^6) bases on Earth is 4.4 x 10^48 (available bases) divided by 10^6 = 4.4 x 10^42. … "
The first sentence is totally meaningless. Rate constants in chemistry are expressed in liter/mole sec. In biochemistry you might pick a very fast reaction, such as decomposition of peroxide with the “catalase” enzyme. You might express it as one enzyme molecule can decompose some 40 million peroxide molecules per second. Synthesis of peptides and proteins is a lot slower. But what has that got to do with “all the possible sets of one million bases on earth”. Does she assume the protein chains assemble themselves randomly? until they hit a useful protein?
Take another example from her post, the last sentence:
“The maximum number of organisms on Earth calculated in relation to water volume is 10^50 in 4 billion years”
I think, even to a person not burdened with too much knowledge in science, this does sound a bit nonsensical, to put it politely.
If womanatwell attacks the theory of evolution, that’s fine. Scientists do that all the time. If she has good and sound arguments, we will take note. If she comes with wrong facts, she must expect criticism. However, if her arguments are not even scientific, but just mumbo jumbo dressed up as science, then we don’t take her seriously.