UK bans teaching of creationism in any school which receives public funding

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No, according to Darwinists, our earliest ancestors were protozoan rebels with a cause! 😉
So what is sillier believing that or believing that God went POOF! and popped down each type of animal on earth and had this guy put two of each type onto a great big boat?
 
Oh, I forgot and now I get to use the genius quote from another poster…

“creationists want to turn God into a Minecraft player”.

I just love that.
 
I have no idea of what you are driving at with your comment :confused:

This is what I wrote:

Yes, it boils down to the poor science education we have in our schools. I have spoken with a university professor who teaches biology. After every introductory course on evolution he gets students coming up asking “Is that how evolution works? I have always been told that evolution proves that there is no God”.

I wanted to highlight that young people often get the impression that the theory of evolution is not just a scientific theory, but at the same time a kind of proof that God does not exist. This could be partly because they were not taught proper science in school, or, more likely, that they grew up in a fundamentalist environment. Once they learn what evolution really means, they are surprised that there is nothing in evolution which is intrinsically anti-God or anti-religion.

BTW, my conversion was with an American professor of a well-known university, who happens to be a Christian.

Could you please explain what you mean by your comments on doubting science, scientists and professors.
I don’t understand the fundamentalist connection. Any average person who reads that the current theory is fully sufficient to explain the development of life on earth is likely to correctly assume that natural causes alone did this, and God (of any sort) is unnecessary. It is intrinsic to the whole theory.

The frequency of threads like this leads me to conclude the following: (a) they mean something but I don’t think it has anything to do with science, (b) they usually degenerate into name-calling and finger-pointing based on guesses, i.e. it must be a Protestant infection or some such, people are clueless/ignorant and education will solve the “problem.” The problem being a lack of acceptance, with universal acceptance being the goal, and (c) what does it matter on a practical level that anyone could care less about the theory or conclude that it excludes God? Why are there so many threads here, on a frequent basis, as if this issue was so important? In the grand scheme of things, for the average layperson, life goes on with or without it.

Finally, I have concluded, based on a long list of threads, that something other than science is being promoted. It appears to me that a lack of compliance is the issue. Therefore, I doubt science regarding this topic a little more as threads like this continue to pop up. Scientists and Professors will continue on - I’m referring to an ongoing campaign here to promote an idea, as if all must comply or, if not, just get more of the same from others on a regular basis in future.

Best,
Ed
 
So what is sillier believing that or believing that God went POOF! and popped down each type of animal on earth and had this guy put two of each type onto a great big boat?
It’s not an either/or proposition. All I know for certain is that the narrative that single-celled organisms mutated into cats and rats and elephants and humans is not possibel. And “science” classes should not teach students it did happen.
As a Catholic, Ringil, at what point do you believe that God did go “POOF”. If there never was such a moment, why would anyone consider himself a Christan believer. You do know that on some level God did have to go “POOF” to resurrect Jesus Christ. 🙂 Rob
 
Thanks for this lecture. Unfortunately, I can’t use a single statement in my thesis on methodological and ontological naturalism, because it’s all nonsense.
So you think its nonsense for me to say that both methodological naturalism and ontological naturalism exclude the supernatural? Are you going to say in your thesis that they allow for the supernatural? And is it wrong for me to say that naturalism is a false perspective? Do you think that it is a true perspective?
 
So you think its nonsense for me to say that both methodological naturalism and ontological naturalism exclude the supernatural? Are you going to say in your thesis that they allow for the supernatural? And is it wrong for me to say that naturalism is a false perspective? Do you think that it is a true perspective?
I hope that Hans has not left the building. I am interested to hear his response. 🙂
 
I don’t understand the fundamentalist connection. Any average person who reads that the current theory is fully sufficient to explain the development of life on earth is likely to correctly assume that natural causes alone did this, and God (of any sort) is unnecessary. It is intrinsic to the whole theory.
No, it’s intrinsic to a philosophy.

It’s just as valid to believe God = Natural world, natural order. Is that so wrong? What do you have against deism? I thought your country’s Founding Fathers believed that much. Is nature’s own work so vile that you can’t possibly see God as its creator?

So much for my Jesuit education. 🤷
 
It’s not an either/or proposition. All I know for certain is that the narrative that single-celled organisms mutated into cats and rats and elephants and humans is not possibel.
Yet you have no problems believing the person you see in the mirror once began as a fertilized egg cell. :rolleyes:
As a Catholic, Ringil, at what point do you believe that God did go “POOF”. If there never was such a moment, why would anyone consider himself a Christan believer. You do know that on some level God did have to go “POOF” to resurrect Jesus Christ. 🙂 Rob
Was the resurrection so childishly simple? That says a lot about you as a Christian wouldn’t you think? For all you know, it could only more science that we don’t understand. Real science is just about exploring the unknown. The supernatural represents that unknown. It is science not yet to be understood. Maybe someday we’ll even get more specifics to the kind of power that this being called God has. Maybe we’ll see more scientists discovering the same about the human soul. You’re all right to believe that science doesn’t know everything.

I just don’t see how it desecrates everything it manages to understand (like the origin of species).
So what is sillier believing that or believing that God went POOF! and popped down each type of animal on earth and had this guy put two of each type onto a great big boat?
Exactly. It’s fun imagining that a creature equivalent to some ancient kaiju really existed but how can that be when it no longer exists? What happened to Behemoth? Where is that in the Bible?
 
Yet you have no problems believing the person you see in the mirror once began as a fertilized egg cell. :rolleyes:

Was the resurrection so childishly simple? That says a lot about you as a Christian wouldn’t you think? For all you know, it could only more science that we don’t understand. Real science is just about exploring the unknown. The supernatural represents that unknown. It is science not yet to be understood. Maybe someday we’ll even get more specifics to the kind of power that this being called God has. Maybe we’ll see more scientists discovering the same about the human soul. You’re all right to believe that science doesn’t know everything.

I just don’t see how it desecrates everything it manages to understand (like the origin of species).
(1) Protozoa remian protozoa. They cannot see, hear, smell, feel, think. They haven’t changed into anything but new generations of protozoa.

(2) Believing that the resurrection was purely naturalistic relies on speculation, not science. You might also say that it is “childishly simple” to explain mid-numbing phenomena (such as consciousness) as exclusively a product of chemical and physical reactions, created by positive mutational happenstance.

(3) I don’t think that believing in a God-directed evolution desecrates anything. I just think you are wrong. But I am alarmed by the fact that belief in an erroneous theory has caused millions of souls to lose their faith. Rob 😦
 
(1) Protozoa remian protozoa. They cannot see, hear, smell, feel, think. They haven’t changed into anything but new generations of protozoa.
Evolution isn’t exactly an overnight process. Furthermore, this is besides the point. You have a problem with the idea of mankind coming from something less. I can’t say that make sense when you have no problem with the idea that you came out a fallopian tube.
You might also say that it is “childishly simple” to explain mid-numbing phenomena (such as consciousness) as exclusively a product of chemical and physical reactions, created by positive mutational happenstance.
Happenstance? Again, what is it with you ‘Christians’ and confusing atheist nihilism with neutral scientific objectives?
I just think you are wrong.
Yet the alternatives make a lot more sense huh? I see where this is going. :rolleyes:
But I am alarmed by the fact that belief in an erroneous theory has caused millions of souls to lose their faith. Rob 😦
Maybe because you put that erroneous premise in their heads to begin with.
 
Evolution isn’t exactly an overnight process. Furthermore, this is besides the point. You have a problem with the idea of mankind coming from something less. I can’t say that make sense when you have no problem with the idea that you came out a fallopian tube.

Happenstance? Again, what is it with you ‘Christians’ and confusing atheist nihilism with neutral scientific objectives?

Yet the alternatives make a lot more sense huh? I see where this is going. :rolleyes:

Maybe because you put that erroneous premise in their heads to begin with.
(1) No, evoultion did not happen overnight, but neither can scientific methods prove that it could happen over billions of years either.

(2) By definition, evolutionary processes have no “objectives”.

(3) Yes. I make no apologies for believing that ten billion million synapses firing in our brains every second did not “evolve”, one synapse at a time. God graced us with consciousness.

(4) Never have I so much as attempted to put any thought in the mind of another (that some evolutionary process disproves God), since I do not believe that myself.

Rob 🙂
 
So you think its nonsense for me to say that both methodological naturalism and ontological naturalism exclude the supernatural? Are you going to say in your thesis that they allow for the supernatural? And is it wrong for me to say that naturalism is a false perspective? Do you think that it is a true perspective?
I would love to answer in more detail, but I am very busy at the moment.

Just very briefly for now. Methodological naturalism is something every scientists takes on when doing his/her research. When you are facing a problem, you assume that it has a natural explanation. So far, looking back over the last 400 years this assumption has been very successful in giving us knowledge about the world.

400 years ago people thought that it was angels who push the planets around the sun. Newton found a natural solution, but even he thought that the whole solar system would eventually become unstable and collapse, so God needs to ‘wind up’ the clockwork from time to time. The infamous God of the Gaps.

I worked in research for 30 years. Not once did it come to my mind to appeal to a miracle or to demons if I couldn’t explain something. It always turned out to have a natural cause.
But that never prevented me from believing in a creator who not just designed the whole universe, but sustains it continuously. There are millions of scientists who believe in God, but use the assumption of methodological naturalism in their work.

Think of the auto mechanic fixing your car. You wouldn’t be happy if he comes and tells you “Sorry, I can’t find a fault. There is no natural explanation. It must be a demon”.

I repeat again - science doesn’t look at the ultimate questions: why is there a universe? what is our purpose? what is the meaning of life? why am I here? is there an afterlife? are there miracles? is there something beyond the natural world? and so on …

Ontological, or philosophical naturalism is the belief, the conviction, that there is nothing beyond the physical world. Methodological naturalism doesn’t say that, it only lets me consider natural explanations, in our space-time universe, to explain natural phenomena. Think of our auto mechanic: he can believe in the supernatural, but it wouldn’t be part of his job to use miracles or demons as an explanation.

I am happy to discuss that further. Keep asking questions. But as I said before, listen to Fr Robert Barron on YouTube. He goes quite deep into the faith/reason problem.

Gordon Glover is a Christian who put a great series on science/philosophy on YouTube:

youtube.com/watch?v=Fperp1Mezt0

He does a great job explaining the two types of naturalism. He is an evangelical Christian. We Catholics have even less of a problem embracing science. 🙂
 
(1) No, evoultion did not happen overnight, but neither can scientific methods prove that it could happen over billions of years either.
Show me the fossil of an anatomically modern whale in rocks a billion years old, then.
(2) By definition, evolutionary processes have no “objectives”.
You’re misunderstanding the statement. The objective of science is to increase our knowledge, not to prove or disprove God. An atheistic scientist claiming evolution disproves God is being just as unscientific as the Institute of Creation Research.
(3) Yes. I make no apologies for believing that ten billion million synapses firing in our brains every second did not “evolve”, one synapse at a time. God graced us with consciousness.
I believe that He did. Scripture tells us that :
"Genesis 2:7:
And the Lord God formed man of the slime of the earth: and breathed into his face the breath of life, and man became a living soul.
No mention is made of how long God took to form us “out of the slime of the earth” (sidebar - the earliest known organisms are a form of single-celled algae, aka “slime”) We are the only self-aware, rational creatures on the planet because we are the only ones that God gifted with an immortal (“living”) soul. Several animals have more neurons, or more complex brains, but none of them seem to have our degree of awareness. To me, that shows that our consciousness is something unique that can’t be explained by biology alone.
(4) Never have I so much as attempted to put any thought in the mind of another (that some evolutionary process disproves God), since I do not believe that myself.

Rob 🙂
But several people place the idea that God would never work through natural processes like evolution as a tenet of their faith on a level with the Incarnation. When that tenet is challenged by taking Biology 101, where evidence is presented to back up every scientific claim, the faith built on such an untenable foundation shatters. That’s the danger of Scriptural literalism - one of the most rotten fruits of Sola Scriptura. The Word we worship is a Person, not pages in a book, and He hasn’t told us everything about how His Father created the universe. We are left to discover that on our own using the minds He granted us by examining the evidence and drawing rational conclusions.
 
(2) By definition, evolutionary processes have no “objectives”.
Oy vey, there you go doing it again! This is nihilism, not science! Science is like the manual teaching you how to properly fire a gun. It doesn’t tell you the reasons to shoot one.
(3) Yes. I make no apologies for believing that ten billion million synapses firing in our brains every second did not “evolve”, one synapse at a time. God graced us with consciousness.
Uh-huh yet those synapses developed in a span of nine months inside yo momma. :rolleyes:
(4) Never have I so much as attempted to put any thought in the mind of another (that some evolutionary process disproves God), since I do not believe that myself.
Your fear-mongering regarding the idea is what leads many atheists to go full-turbo with it even when it’s clear that their nihilism is just one way to perceive the evolutionary process.
 
This discussion has nothing anymore to do with science, scientific theories, or evolution.

For people who are seriously interested in these topics I recommend to go to one of the references in post #65
 
I would love to answer in more detail, but I am very busy at the moment.

Just very briefly for now. Methodological naturalism is something every scientists takes on when doing his/her research. When you are facing a problem, you assume that it has a natural explanation. So far, looking back over the last 400 years this assumption has been very successful in giving us knowledge about the world.

400 years ago people thought that it was angels who push the planets around the sun. Newton found a natural solution, but even he thought that the whole solar system would eventually become unstable and collapse, so God needs to ‘wind up’ the clockwork from time to time. The infamous God of the Gaps.

I worked in research for 30 years. Not once did it come to my mind to appeal to a miracle or to demons if I couldn’t explain something. It always turned out to have a natural cause.
But that never prevented me from believing in a creator who not just designed the whole universe, but sustains it continuously. There are millions of scientists who believe in God, but use the assumption of methodological naturalism in their work.

Think of the auto mechanic fixing your car. You wouldn’t be happy if he comes and tells you “Sorry, I can’t find a fault. There is no natural explanation. It must be a demon”.

I repeat again - science doesn’t look at the ultimate questions: why is there a universe? what is our purpose? what is the meaning of life? why am I here? is there an afterlife? are there miracles? is there something beyond the natural world? and so on …

Ontological, or philosophical naturalism is the belief, the conviction, that there is nothing beyond the physical world. Methodological naturalism doesn’t say that, it only lets me consider natural explanations, in our space-time universe, to explain natural phenomena. Think of our auto mechanic: he can believe in the supernatural, but it wouldn’t be part of his job to use miracles or demons as an explanation.

I am happy to discuss that further. Keep asking questions. But as I said before, listen to Fr Robert Barron on YouTube. He goes quite deep into the faith/reason problem.

Gordon Glover is a Christian who put a great series on science/philosophy on YouTube:

youtube.com/watch?v=Fperp1Mezt0

He does a great job explaining the two types of naturalism. He is an evangelical Christian. We Catholics have even less of a problem embracing science. 🙂
It is very presumptuous for anyone to state what Catholics accept, or not, regarding this topic.

The only thing I see being supported by most in threads like this is the God Who Did Nothing. By encircling a theory by an impenetrable wall, it doesn’t matter what Catholics think or don’t think about this. What is the difference between a Biology Professor who believes in God and one who doesn’t? There isn’t any - not in the way they teach their classes which are all prepared for them in terms of content.

I find myself falling away from the “we Catholics” idea being promoted here. Why? It’s certainly not the whole answer.

Best,
Ed
 
It is very presumptuous for anyone to state what Catholics accept, or not, regarding this topic.

The only thing I see being supported by most in threads like this is the God Who Did Nothing. By encircling a theory by an impenetrable wall, it doesn’t matter what Catholics think or don’t think about this. What is the difference between a Biology Professor who believes in God and one who doesn’t? There isn’t any - not in the way they teach their classes which are all prepared for them in terms of content.

I find myself falling away from the “we Catholics” idea being promoted here. Why? It’s certainly not the whole answer.

Best,
Ed
All children ask these “why?” questions all the times, which can get annoying to parents sometimes. When you grow up, most people get out of the habit of asking. I suppose they loose interest in how things function and work.

Scientist don’t loose this curiosity. They want to probe deeper, want to know more about the world. You, Ed, obviously don’t fall into this category. Most people couldn’t care less if the earth goes round the sun or if the sun goes round the earth. But there are some people who want to find out how things work, and why it’s this way and not that.

I am not concerned about the older ones; it doesn’t matter if they believe the universe is 6000 or 13,600,000,000 years old. Who cares? But there are young ones who want to know. They don’t need to become scientists, but they are curious, they want to learn about the world. If they have been brainwashed with fundamentalism, then they have to decide one day: God or science?
 
All children ask these “why?” questions all the times, which can get annoying to parents sometimes. When you grow up, most people get out of the habit of asking. I suppose they loose interest in how things function and work.

Scientist don’t loose this curiosity. They want to probe deeper, want to know more about the world. You, Ed, obviously don’t fall into this category. Most people couldn’t care less if the earth goes round the sun or if the sun goes round the earth. But there are some people who want to find out how things work, and why it’s this way and not that.

I am not concerned about the older ones; it doesn’t matter if they believe the universe is 6000 or 13,600,000,000 years old. Who cares? But there are young ones who want to know. They don’t need to become scientists, but they are curious, they want to learn about the world. If they have been brainwashed with fundamentalism, then they have to decide one day: God or science?
So, it is an either/or situation. I’ve read enough about psychological warfare to understand it.

Best,
Ed
 
So, it is an either/or situation. I’ve read enough about psychological warfare to understand it.
No, it’s an either or situation that you force them into because you gave them too much of a psychological stake in something science quickly puts into question.

All the while it was a never a threat to Christianity to begin with. Thank you creationists for this mountain thou has made from a molehill.
 
It is very presumptuous for anyone to state what Catholics accept, or not, regarding this topic.

The only thing I see being supported by most in threads like this is the God Who Did Nothing.
Best,
Ed
Who said that??

As a Catholic I believe that God created the universe, all what we see as nature, and sustains everything which happens in this universe at all times.

But we do find regularities in nature, which we can study. That’s what science does. If things happened willy-nilly, then there would be no science.

But God is outside the universe, not a part of His creation. That’s why we can’t use science to test for God.
 
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