Page 7 of 14

Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 1:14 am
by Jagna
artemis-lady-warrior wrote:Janga let me say this. Since I'm an American I don't appreciate how American's are portrayed in the media. While SOME of us act like morons and some of us make and participate stupid reality shows *kicks Survivor and Big Brother around for an hour* we're not ALL like that.
......isn't that what I said? I'm pretty sure hat's exactly what I meant....
As a whole, and a global opinion of Americans, yes, it seems that way.
Perhaps I should have put emphasis on SEEMS. :P
If I was American, I'd probably object to how they are represented in the media and cartoons. Both mediums are just complete opposing juxtapositions.
I happen to like the British accents. They're cool sounding
Why thank you! :lol: And I'm not entirely English, either, my dad is fully Irish, and my mum half Scottish half English, and my dad thinks his ancestors came from Normandy in France o.0

Back to that, and BW in fact (i.e. on topic XD) I thought it slightly odd that when we saw the globe in The Low Road, the land masses were almost exact to today's. In my fic, I've set it on Pangaea. Hence the base names Pangaea One and Two. :P I'm not sure how everybody else views this, even though I caught a glimpse of it in a previous post, but it makes sense to me. Africa and South America fit in with each other almost perfectly. Historically, I think my setting for BWR is relatively accurate.......I think.....I haven't done Geo since before the summer, so it's probably been eroded from my memory :P

I think the show could have done the same, but I'm just picky. :P However, I did like the fact that they interlinked a lot of the different habitats and whatnot. Even if it's not quite correct. In fact, there is snow in Africa....something I learned quite late in life :P BUT the 'frozen north' suggests the one continent theory.

Ahhhh, my brain. It's too early and I have a cold :(

Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 1:10 pm
by Wonko The Sane
Well not much is known on what part of the world the characters were in,but I do know they travel far....as in The Agenda Part III,the Maximals were after the Ark and flew from Africa to the US,and it looked like they were boken apart in Posesssion.


Sinead:Agnostics are guessing if God exists or not.Some of God can be explained,while other things can be explained through human logic.

There is a great flood,but I'm still a little off if it is worldwide or not.Earthquakes,melted glaciers,and so on can create soemthing like that,and water is incredibly deep,that it is still unexplored by humans.

I know there are many stories of the Great Flood,but I'm still looking into it.

Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 3:44 pm
by 7Knight-Wolf
Jagna wrote:
Oh, dear. Now I just have to say something. You can't really compare real people to CARTOON characters. They've been deliberately cartoonised to show the difference between right and wrong, good and evil etc.

AND you really shouldn't make sweeping generalisations like that. As a whole, and a global opinion of Americans, yes, it seems that way. But lets face it, how many purple guys with rubber ducks and ambitions for global domination are you going to meet walking around Tampa Bay? :P If I was American, I'd probably object to how they are represented in the media and cartoons. Both mediums are just complete opposing juxtapositions. Not to mention, I'm British, and I resent the entire nation being seen as cockney-speaking, fish-and-chip-eating, tea drinking limeys. Though I'm quite partial to the last two :P Scottish cod, YUM.

I'm trying my very best to keep on topic.....how am I doing? :P *gah*

Actually, it's the same with many cartoons. At least, the older ones. Mostly. "I'm going to rule the world, MWAHAHAHAAAA!" I've only ever met one lunatic who said that, and she's my best friend. XD (In jest, btw)

Okay, so I'm not actually on topic, technically, but I don't know much about the Bible to comment poignantly. Ahem. I wasn't raised like that. I'm either Aethiest or Agnostic, but I can never remember the difference between the two :lol: But thankfully, I was raised in a multicultural society and have absolutely no problem with anyone's choice of religion.

....so yeah, this is a bit of an iffy topic for me, input-wise :lol: *durrrr*

p.s. I DO like tea, and fish and chips. But I don't speak cockney. My dad would disown me! XD
Sorry for sweeping generalizations...I'm just basing this on what I've seem in the media...and quite frankly, America LOVES and WORSHIPS media, so they are what they see. And I'm not saying that Americans are the only selfish people--it's human nature. The only difference is that modern American media actually encourages selfishness.

And by the way... I'm an American. :D

Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 4:54 pm
by Razor One
Warning: This post contains many words. Many Many Words. Many Many Many Many Many Many Many Many Words.

If you have a fear of many words, turn away, TURN AWAY I SAY!
7Knight-Wolf wrote:Razor One, I agree with you that animals are very intelligent and have their own ways of talking to each other and to us.
You're telling me! I had a budgie (Parakeet for you yanks :P) who once swooped me non-stop the one time I forgot to refill her feed bowl. She only stopped when she saw me reaching for the feed container and gave the most... EVIL look. I'll post a picture after I make this post and close all the tabs I have open.

I believe the Grand Canyon was formed by the flood. And I believe the flood was worldwide, too. The only reason anything survived was thanks to Noah who saved the animals and insects, which carried some seeds in their bodies.
Let's briefly tackle Noah's Ark here.

God commanded Noah to build an Ark

300 Cubits Long
50 Cubits Wide
30 Cubits Tall

Let's assume that a Cubit is 20 inches.

Since I prefer the Metric system (the one I was raised with, more scientific too =P) this translates as

1 Cubit = 50.8 Cm

300 x 50.8 = 15240 Cm
50 x 50.8 = 2540 Cm
30 x 50.8 = 1524 Cm

Divide by 100 to get all values in meters

152.4 Meters Long
25.4 Meters Wide
15.24 Meters Tall

Giving a Volume of

152.4 x 25.4 x 15.24 = 58994 Cubic Meters

I've rounded up by one cubic meter there.

This translates to 64516 Cubic Yards or so.

Now, according to This website, there are 1.5 million species of animals, plants and algae.

For now, let's ignore all the plants and sea creatures and focus on the creatures that live on land as well as birds.

This will thusly include

Mammals: 5416
Birds: 9956
Reptiles: 8240
Amphibians: 6199
Insects: 950,000 (!)

Total: 1009811

Volume of Ark (In Meters): 58994
Number of Species: 1009811

This would mean am average of 17.1 species per cubic meter of ark space, not including space for the food required, nor for that matter room to breathe.

I'll grant the bulk of that is insect species, but since most insects dont deal too well with water, they HAD to be in the Ark, or else your following statement:

Evolution through mutations is impossible.
Would make taking a few insect species and having them evolve out would be nonsense.

I ran that calculation again excluding insects entirely, it works out to ~1 species per cubic meter which is more reasonable but still begs the question of how they kept the animals from killing each other, keeping them alive that long, which entails room enough for food stocks which in turn compresses them further, etc.

My Point: There is nowhere near enough room on Noahs ark to have ever contained every species of every animal on earth. The only way to explain it would be that he built a VERY large ark, there were multiple arks (which got conveniently left out), the event was local (and therefore not global), or that Noah took on some kinds of animals and neglected others, and that these others then diversified through some form of rapidly accelerated evolution over the past few thousand years to form the MILLIONS of species we observe today.

But evolution requires mutation and... oh wait!

When there is a mutation, the animal usually dies. Comapre mutations with house blueprints. Somebody comes by and tears the blueprint, so that when the house is assembled there are mistakes in the structure.

Now how in the universe do you justify that random force ruins the genetics of an animal and somehow hits the perfect note to let the animal live. It makes no sense! My common sense suggests that it is more likely for animals to have been what they were in the first place, than to rely entirely on chance mutations.
Ah, likening the genetic code to a house blueprint. You seem to forget in your analogy that any deleterious effect is self effacing, that is, if it sabotages the chances for survival for an organism, it destroys itself before it gets to propagate.

If the houses in your analogy are subject to the selective pressure of "Able to be lived in" or "Will Pass Structural Safety Tests", then houses that do not meet those requirements are discarded. If a house has a nicer verandah, thereby increasing sales of that particular design of house, then more get built.

Of course the entire analogy is flawed because of one minor detail.

Houses are not alive.

You also assume that mutation "Ruins" the genetics of an organism. Mutation is the correct term but it possesses a certain negative connotation that must be put out of ones mind when considering it.

A mutation in my family genetic code means that I am taller then my parents or any of my ancestors. Arguably this is an improvement.

Down my particular line of the family, there is an additional mutation which gives young male Razor relatives blonde hair whilst young, that slowly turns brown as they grow older. My nephew exhibits this, as did I when I was younger. This was not previously observed as far as the family can recall. This mutation is neutral, as it confers no beneficial nor deleterious modifications and is likely to be preserved in future Razor Descendant/Relatives.

My father has the gene for bowel cancer. It is the first time it has been observed in the family and came as quite a shock. The condition is genetically heritable down the male line, thus putting me and my brother and my nephew at risk in later years of life. Since my father and my brother have lived long enough to pass the gene on, it is a negative mutation that is not outright deleterious.

And now, to continue disproving evolution. Evolutionists want to find a missing link to prove that humans are descended from apes. Not once have they been able to find that missing link. In the magnazine "Creation," Russel Grigg writes:

"The most well known autralopithecine is 'Lucy', a 40% complete skeleton found by Donald Johanson in Ethopia in 1974 and called Australpithecus afarensis. Casts of Lucy's bones have been imaginitively restored in museums worldwide to look like an ape-woman, e.g. with an apelike face and head but human-like body, hands, and feet. However, the orginal Lucy fossil did not include include the upper jaw, nor most of the skull, nor the hand and foot bones! Several other species of A. afarensis do have the long curved fingers and toes of tree-dwellers, as well as the restricted wrist anatomy of knuckle-walking chimpanzees and gorillas."

Most evolutions now admit that Lucy's kind are actually apes, and not a missing link at all.
Straw Man.

Lucy's fossil is 3.2 million years old, and I addressed why she wasnt the missing link you describe. Kindly read my post at the top of page 5.

Furthermore, your expert testimonial flatly ignored the important areas of Lucy's skeleton such as the length ratio of humerus to femur, which sits at 84.6%. The Chimp Ratio is 97.8% whilst the human ratio is 71.8%.

The only thing Lucy is proof of is upright apes, not a missing link between man and ape.

All of the following fossil fragments were presumed to be ape-men, but were actually distinctly ape or destinctly human: Homo Hobilas, Homo Erectus, and the Neandertal man.
Neanderthal man was actually very human-like, not only making sophisticated tools but actually burying their dead as well.

Consider that momentarily. They buried their dead. This implies religion, or at the very least spiritual belief. They had to care about the body, the "Person" they once were enough to bury them, sometimes even with accoutrements to go to the effort of burial.

Homo Habilis is another case of "Too old to be missing link".

Homo Erectus likewise, however the observation of this species is important in witnessing increasing brain size over time as it is in fact one of the longer lived distinct hominid species.

Here's another interesting thing that evolution has wrong: the planet of Neptune, by their theory, should be cold and extremely old. However, the Voyager II spacecraft revealed that the planet actually gives off heat and looks way, way too young to fit the evolutionist model of long-age. According to evolutists, planets like Neptune are not even supposed to exist that far away from the sun.
o_O

First off, Neptune IS cold, really cold!

I think you're getting Neptune and Jupiter confused. Jupiter was found to be emitting heat, as was saturn, creating turbulence in their atmospheres causing massive storms.

Neptune on the other hand is frigid. It has very little energy in it's atmosphere, this in turn reduces turbulence and in turn allows incredibly high wind speeds. Think nuclear blast, that's how fast. Asteroid impacts on neptune create the winds and due to the low friction low turbulence environment, they just keep going, round and round and round they go.

While there is some amount of internal heating and reason for this is unknown, possible theories include radiogenic heating from the core (which may also occur on Earth) or chemical reactions within the atmosphere.

Futhermore, you're confusing Evolutionists with Cosmologists.

Even furthermore, I find it strange how a planet with no real surface (Neptune is essentially a big ball of gas) to "Look Old".

And Even Furthermore, planetary formation in the original accretion disk that created the sun and planets was not a calm process. The current favored theory for how Neptune and Uranus (if anyone cracks a joke I swear they're banned for a day :P) is that they migrated out from the "Inner" solar system. Given the general hectic nature of the time, this is plausible, considering Jupiter's gravitational influence threw a lot of material back at the sun or straight on out of the solar system (if not absorbing the material itself, that is).

NEXT!
Nurann wrote:
Razor, have you seen any of the work on auras? I.E. things like kirlian photography (physical, researchable material and therefore can fall under science). If you're interested, I can try scouring my college's database for some research. I think I may even have some of my old kirlian photos from my case studies last year...
After a little research into the matter, it turns out that Kirlian Photography is nothing more then the well understood and well known phenomena of an electric spark taking it's own picture through a photographic emulsion. It was spotted at the dawn of the photographic age.

It occurs as a result of electrical interaction between high frequency electricity and grounded objects.

In fact, a variety of things can alter these photographs, such as the type of film being used, voltage, skin resistance, how well you're electrically grounded, the type of shoes you wear, humidity, exposure time and so on.

With liberal application of Occams Razor, which explanation do we presume?

1. That there is an invisible "Aura" that has hitherto not been observed and can do all these amazing things, of which there has been no empirical scientific test of.

Or

2. That the cause of "Kirlian" photography was a misinterpreted natural phenomenon.

Consider also that inert objects, such as coins, flowers and so on also produce these auras in kirlian photography and is therefore not proof of a quantifiable, measurable existence of a soul.

For that matter, if a soul was quantifiable and measurable, would it be a soul?

Where I'm going with this one is that I've done work with things like kirlian photography and chakras and have had some suprising results. Results which I've been able to replicate. I'll have my pendulum with me next Botcon, so I can do an energy reading on you if you'd like. There's a good reason why the concept of a soul exists when you can see something like an energy reading being done. You might be suprised.
While the concept of a soul certainly exists, it is not a physical or measurable effect that can be quantified (as stated above).

We'll see how that pendulum thing works out if I can make it to botcon, if it goes like that mood ring, I'll be amused... it turned black, and stayed black, and remains so till this day :lol:

NEXT!
7Knight-Wolf wrote:
This is an excerpt from another article from Creation magazine, written by David Allen.

"Interestingly, the grand canyon strata extends over 400 km (250 miles) into the eastern part of Arizona. There they are at least 1600 m (1 mile) lower in elevation. Supposedly, the uplift of the Grand Canyon occurred about 70 million years ago--hundreds of millions of years after that the sediments were deposited. One would expect that hundreds of millions of years would have been plenty of time for the sediment to cement into hard rock.

Yet, the evidence indicates that the sediments were soft and unconsolidated when they bent. Instead of fracturing like the basement did, the entire layer thinned as it bent. The sand grains show no evidence that the material was brittle and rock-hard because none of the grains are elongated. Neither has the mineral cementing in the grains been broken and recrystallized. Instead the evidence points to the whole 1,200-m (4,000-ft) thickness of strata being still "plastic" when it was uplifted. In other words, the millions of years of geological time are imaginary. This 'plastic' deformation of Grand Canyon strata dramatically demonstrates the reality of the catastrophic global Flood of Noah's day."
The process of the grand canyon uplift is little understood. Given this evidence, however, geologists theorise that the colorado plateaus shifted clockwise as they uplifted, thus preserving their stability.

As it stands, the process is poorly understood. One instance of uncertainty does not disprove all of geological science and vindicate creationism in one fell swoop. Further analysis of the data would be required before anything meaningful can be drawn from it.

Next!
artemis-lady-warrior wrote:

Your new point is also refuted. Scientists have taught apes to read and recognise symbols and how to communicate via lexigrams. Lexigrams are symbols that represent words, the language used is an artificial one called Yerkish and was developed in the mid 70's.

Source: Source PDF
so monkeys learn to recognize and remember what symbols looks like. It doesn't mean they can read real words. :roll:

sorry. I just had to comment on it because it really doesn't help. They don't know what the word means, do they? Can they actually find some way to tell you what these words mean?
I just looked up Lexigram. It's "a symbol that represents a word but is not necessarily indicative of the object referenced by the word".

XD That should tell ya something right there.
So, the %, &, #, and @ symbols arent real?

All of these symbols represent words to be spoken but are not necessarily indicative of the object referenced by the word.

Considering the Bonobo brain is ~1/3rd the size of a human brain, it's hardly fair to ask them to communicate with us on the same level.
This still leaves the question of the flood however. If as the bible states the world was flooded so that even the highest of all mountains on earth were covered with water, where then did this water go?
I'm not sure where all that water went. Some of it probably went back under the ground. I mean when you dig a well you find water, even in deserts. and some of it evaporated.

You know what. I'm currently reading an article in Answers magazine about this. When I'm done reading this I'll be able to answer this question better.
Ah, back to that damn boat again.

Lets consider that water had to cover 8848 meters of land. If it soaked back into the land, the earth would STILL be covered with water.

If some of it evaporated, the earth would be a hothouse. Atmospheric H2O is a significantly stronger greenhouse gas then CO2. It would have triggered a runaway greenhouse effect that would end up with the entire planet ending up as a hellhole as hot (if not hotter) then venus.

Even if you could somehow saturate the atmosphere with water and still have breathable and not trigger a runaway greenhouse, there would STILL be too much water to be rid of.
Explain to me how creationism is logical. There is no way to logically prove that god exists, just as there is no way to logically prove that god does NOT exist.

Since god can neither be proven to exist or not exist, it falls to faith (or lack thereof) to fill this uncertain void with certainty.

Logic, as defined by the dictionary has no bearing on faith. Logic comprises science, reason, methodology, but not faith.

Faith is illogical, just as humans are illogical, just as You or I am illogical.

There is a science to evolution. There is a method to evolution. There is reason behind evolution.

Creationism is none of these things, because Creationism requires faith.
No offense but :roll: I know there is no way to prove he does or does not exist but saying there is no reason behind creation and that it is illogical is going a bit too far. There are plenty of scientists who study creation and are very logical in their arguments. I would seriously suggest getting a copy of Answers magazine or something so you can read things from the other point of view. I've read plenty of things about evolution and now I'm reading stuff about Creation.
There are a lot perfectly rational and logical arguments about it. Plus they're not biased about their answers and just like any other science magazine they use quotes from other sources (Faithbased and not faith based) and give the original writer the credit. XD

and no I'm not trying to force you to read the magazine. I'm just making a suggestion.
The arguments are perhaps logical. The basis is not.

NEXT!
7Knight-Wolf wrote:Evolution is also faith-based. You cannot prove evolution. Evolution is a religion of itself, the religion that worships chance and mutations, without being able to prove they exist. Public schools say that they have eliminated religion, but they are actually teaching one. Both creationism and evolution are religions, and both recquire some ammount of faith.
Definition: Religion
Definition: Science
Definition: Evolution

a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, esp. when considered as the creation of a superhuman agency or agencies, usually involving devotional and ritual observances, and often containing a moral code governing the conduct of human affairs.

Evolution is a scientific theory, not a set of beliefs. It does not cover the the nature and purpose of the universe (Cosmology and Philosophy/Theology respectively) and it does not avow or disavow the presence of a superhuman agency by which to facilitate this. It has no devotional or ritual observances and promulgates no moral code whatsoever.

As for attempting to define Evolution as a religion, that is an oft used argument by creationists in an attempt to undermine Evolution and science in general by simply branding it "Just another religion" so that it can be set aside and conveniently ignored or dismissed.

A. The only things that are true can be proved scientifically.
B. If things like love and joy are real but can't be proved, then why can't there by a God who can't be proved?

A. The stories in the Bible just happened to spread over all cultures, and the Bible just happened to be protected for centuries.
B. The events in the Bible are true and that is why so many cultures have similar tales. The Bible is protected by God and that's how it has managed to survive so long.

A. Organisms, even down past the subatomic particles, are uncontrolled and completely held together by chance. :P
B. An intelligent mind lives in all things, controlling everything, down to subatomic partcuiles and onto infinity.

I think the real reason behind evolution is that, whether or not we're aware of it, all humans are rebellious. We don't want there to be a Creator, because if there is, then he must be greater than us. :shock:
Your first dichotomy is flawed. Love and joy are measurable testable and quantifiable, as they are chemical reactions that occur within the brain.

Your second dichotomy is also flawed.

I refer to the Epic of Gilgamesh, dated Circa 2750 BC.

The Noachian Flood apparently occurred 2350 BC.

There are 20 points of similarity between the epic of gilgamesh and the noachian flood.

Furthermore, if the flood did occur in 2350 BC, why then did the ancient Chinese and Egyptian cultures not jot down in their heiroglyphs and texts that they were being wiped out? Why then did these cultures show no interruption whatsoever from a disaster that calamitous?

Your third dichotomy is flawed again. At the smallest levels they are controlled by the laws of physics. At higher levels, we eventually get into the laws of chemistry.

The laws of physics determine that we dont fly apart at random intervals.

And if said creator controls everything, does that not undermine free will?

As to your final point, While I have been rebellious to authority figures in the past (who hasnt?), the real reason behind evolution is as an explanation to the origin of species. It does not outright preclude a god. It never says in evolution "There is no god!". If you can find that statement in a scientific evolutionary study, I'd love to see it.

Next!
7Knight-Wolf wrote:
We talked about that somewhere in page 2, I think, about NOT having a religious debate. Then Razor One demanded that the Bible was fake and I demanded otherwise, and things went on from there. This is such an interesting topic I'd be sad if it were locked.
Actually, I never said the bible was fake, I just said the stories therein should be taken allegorically. And I stated that on page one also. :P

NEXT!

And before the next monstrosity of text assaults you, allow me to say:

Oi Vey!
Sinead wrote:
Prelude: Atheism doesn’t believe in God, and Agnostic believes quite a few things about God, but not that he was resurrected. If I’m wrong on that, please correct me, because that’s my understanding of Agnostic beliefs.
True enough about Atheism, Agnostics as I recall aren't sure.

To start off, there was the comment that someone saw that portion of scripture I used to prove the bible’s authenticity as being noted that it wasn’t part of the original scriptures. There are two main texts that the New Testament is taken from. The Textus Receptus and then texts from Alexandria. Until the 1800s, the New Testament text that had been exclusively used was the Textus Receptus and in 1525, Erasmus compiled the first Greek text using the Textus Receptus, which was from Byzantium. That later became translated into Latin, or the Latin Vulgate, but when the King James version of the Bible was translated (and yes, Shakespeare was one of the translators of Psalms), they used the Textus Receptus of the New Testament.

However, there were other texts found in 1853 in Alexandrian libraries that had been unearthed. Scholars Wescott and Hort compiled them starting in that date, ended 28 years later. The texts they used were the Codex Vaticanus and Codex Siniaticus. They not only took from early Gnostic teaching, which denied that Jesus Christ actually died, or that he did die and had a physical, real resurrection. Not only did they take from there, but at the same time, they made over 8,000 changes to the traditional Greek. I find that more than a little scary, don’t you?

The bibles that use the Wescott and Hort translation of the New Testament claim that portions of the Bible aren’t in the “oldest and best” texts are usually the newest Bibles, such as the NIV, NASB, et cetera. And something else: These two were atheists. They didn’t believe in God, but they were translating and compiling the Bible. As an individual who loves authenticity, not even speaking as a Christian, that really makes my blood run cold. I’m not asking you to believe me on this. If you want to see this for yourself, open up a King James Version, or a New King James Version, open it up and compare it with the NIV or any new Bible. They deleted and/or changed the following scriptures: Mathew 6:9-13, 18:11, 25:13; Mark 1:1, 2:17, 9:4, 11:26; Colossians 1:16-17; Acts 8:37; 1 Peter 4:1; Ephesians 3:9; Revelation 11:17; Luke 2:33, 4:4; John 3:15.
Not entirely sure what the precise thrust of your argument here is, but I do agree that having biased editors can be detrimental to the integrity of a valued work. I'll take your word for it at this point, and I'm unable to lookup the verses you cite as the bible I was referring to seems to have disappeared o_O

Just one thing to consider, though.

As it is possible for Atheistic editors to remove and alter portions of the original text, is it not equally possible that theists with a certain bias (hey! that rhymes!) or a fundamentalist might not also add to the work or creatively translate certain portions of text?

As for the flood:

Water exists in three forms, as we all know. After the flood, it did three things: It froze at the poles, evaporated into the air to become the atmosphere that we now are living under, and it went back underground. I say “back,” because the Bible says in Genesis 7:11 “. . . the fountains of the great deep were broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened.” That’s another part of the Creation story: The atmosphere itself had been different, and it supported giants, and animals of great size and shape . . . aka, Dinosaurs, which means that man and dinosaurs co-existed. There’s fossil evidence at the Paluxy River, near Glen Rose in Texas. I can’t get into details about this because I honestly can’t recall everything my teacher said. It’s required that we take the Creation Science class for first year at my school. It’s a great class, explains a lot of myth away. (Heck, my school bookstore even sells books that the professor wrote.)

Anyway, the waters receded back to where they came from. That means under the ground and back into the atmosphere, for the main part. (ref: Genesis 8:3)

Also, every single culture, without one exception, has record of a “great flood.” Bar none. Aztecs, Egyptians, Chinese, West Indian, Native American, many of the African tribes and nations, and so on. Shouldn’t that tell you something? And whoever claimed that it had only been a “localized” flood, could you please find me a civilization that doesn’t have a Great Flood story, backed up with evidence?
Oi! That flood keeps coming back to haunt me! It's also quite poetic, as I'm currently drowning in text! D:

Refer back to the part of my post about the water for noahs flood.

Consider also what you're saying about the atmosphere. How can evaporating water create a massive change in atmosphere?

Consider that the modern atmosphere is (approximately) 78% Nitrogen, 18% Oxygen, 1.8% CO2, 0.2% H2O and the rest is trace gasses of argon and so forth.

How could evaporating H2O, barring a runaway greenhouse effect, alter the atmosphere significantly enough for large life forms to be precluded?

Furthermore, if Dinosaurs and Man had lived side by side, we would find that the fossil record would have a random assortment of human, dinosaur and other fossils at random stratification layers.

Furthermore, genesis states:

Every beast, every creeping thing, and every fowl, and whatsoever creepeth upon the earth, after their kinds, went forth out of the ark.
If this is true, why then do dinosaurs not live alongside us today?

Genesis 8:3, if I'm reading this right, says that the waters "returned from off the earth". How I read it, it seems to be an account of waters receding back from the land, as opposed to draining back into the earth.

Consider this: If the entire earth had been covered by flood waters...

Why are there fresh water lakes?

With fish that cannot tolerate salt water?

Why are there any fish at all, for that matter. Freshwater fish would die in the rising salinity. Salt water fish would die in the dropping salinity of the rising seas.

Why are there any coral reefs left alive in the entire world at all? Coral reefs require that they are only a few meters from the surface of the water to be alive. Any deeper and they die. Rising flood waters of that magnitude would annihilate them totally.

How do animals such as the Koala, Platypus, and Kangaroo make it to the ark? The Koala requires a specialised diet of Eucalyptus leaves found only in Australia and is a marsupial, found only in Australia (and to a limited extent in surrounding land once adjoined). The Kangaroo is also a marsupial. If it made the trek back to Australia, why do we find no Kangaroo bones in Asia, nor for that matter Kangaroo herds as I dont think the asian continent would provide any major troubles for colonising kangaroo herds.

As for Paluxy, that was a proven hoax. I can provide a link if you so desire.

Hey, Razor! My turn!

NEXT! (lol)
**Jaw Drops**

YOU STOELED MY PRECIOUSSSSSSS!

**incoherent gibbering**

Next . . .

Razor:
Why do I believe that I didn’t evolve from an ape?

Because I have more respect for my Creator to have formed us in His image. This also ties into the “whole mind” partial-debate that went on in the forums. If we have evolved from apes, then why do we only have thick hair on certain areas of our bodies, unlike apes who have thick hair on the majority of their bodies? We can’t evolve out of that, can we? Furthermore, I don’t even hesitate to stick with my view that when Adam and Eve were chased out of the Garden of Eden, sin caused their bodies and minds to decay. People who are prodigies, and those with autism and some of the other mental “afflictions” are truly gifted with insight that the “normal” humans don’t have. Have you ever noticed a child with Down’s Syndrome see the bright side of a situation, something good that will happen that we, ourselves, aren’t able to see because of grief or turmoil? God works with and through those people who don’t, can’t, or won’t shut Him out of their minds.

I’ll leave you that to think upon.
The hair on my body is evident all over. It only gets thick at the head and armpits, legs arms and... other areas, but there is a fine layer of thin white hair all over and we most certainly can evolve our way out of it.

Off the top of my head, Featherless chickens have been created by selectively breeding them. They're intended for use in warm countries as a way to get around heating problems when used in farms, though I dont think they're quite in commercial use as yet.

And while I do have respect for your beliefs and opinion, I still must ask the question.

Why is Human Chromosome 2 a fusion of ape chromosomes 12 and 13 joined at the telomeres?

Nextie-poo . . .

Artemis!
Everything was always connected in the beginning! The Bible says so! (that’s kinda up there to annoy people . . . totally having fun, please, people . . . I’m just having fun!) BUT. Scripture says in Genesis 10:25 “. . . the name of one was Peleg, for in his days the earth was divided.” I so would have loved to have been there and seen the reactions on people’s faces when the continents started to run away from each other. *chuckles* seriously, that would have been a Kodak moment.

Also, since the Bible records the continents moving AFTER the flood, don’t you think that Mount Everest could have been slapped up during that shifting? Because if the earth was all one continent, that means that there would only be hills and foothills, nothing absolutely crazily huge like the highest points of the earth. Even geologists and evolutionists will agree that large mountain ranges happen when two tectonic plates slap up against each other with force.
I'd like to contest the interpretation of that reference.

It says the Earth was divided and leaves it at that. In the middle of a long series of X Begat Y Begat Z, A, and M, who in turn Begat... (and so on).

Given that the bible can be quite... wordy... at times, I think the continents shifting and mountains suddenly being thrust up dramatically would warrant a little more then a one line mention.

Furthermore, 8:04 states that the Ark came to rest on Mount Ararat, prior to the mention of the Earth Dividing. If the continents split after the flood as you state and the mountains thus formed afterwards as well, how then did the Ark come to rest on a mountain before the mountain could be there?

Next-indeedy!

For Everyone:
Carbon-dating issue: Just a thought, but the material that’s around the former plant material is tested, right? They don’t test the actual material, because of archaeological worth. Sooo, what’s the carbon-dating on the dirt outside on your front lawn? And what’s that saying about being “older than dirt”? Why don’t we date the material itself, and take the first answer that the machine gives us?
The actual material itself can be radio-carbon dated currently with accelerator mass spectrometry, as it only requires a small amount of material to conduct the test.

And why is radio-carbon dating the end-all argument that a lot of people give? Is the thought that a Creator out there just so happens to really make them angry that they’re not in charge of the past, or that the “illogical behavior” of the Creator in question happens to have a very logical answer that you don’t want to hear?

Just food for thought.
This presumes that science, archaeology, and evolution are "Against God". Radio-carbon dating is a reliable method of dating objects containing carbon within the last 40K years.

The thought of a creator does not make me angry, as I can entertain the thought of his existence without accepting it :P

Okay, that post took me about 7 hours to compile, research and edit. I'll be splitting this topic and moving it to general once I hit submit and then I'll be going to bed.

I'll be extremely busy for the next week or so, I've got assessment due on Monday, it's saturday morning currently and I need to get cracking, after the bucks day/night >_<

Oi Vey what a Schlep!

In any case, play nice while I R Busy, and I'll see how this debate turns out when I get back.

Oh, by the way, while I'm gone, could I ask someone to play "Devils Advocate" for me? I realise that a lot of the time I keep the debate going by providing points and counterpoints as well as evidence and research, so if the debate does slow, could someone step in and take care of that?

Playing devils advocate can be extremely tough at times, especially if you dont buy into the argument you're meant to be defending, can really help keep a debate going :)

{Edit}

Fixed a broken quote tag.

And Another Broken Quote!

And Another!

I Honestly expected more =\

Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 6:32 pm
by artemis-lady-warrior
Oh boy... Not for Mr. Funtime. XD

Razor One wrote:
Let's briefly tackle Noah's Ark here.

God commanded Noah to build an Ark

300 Cubits Long
50 Cubits Wide
30 Cubits Tall

Let's assume that a Cubit is 20 inches.

Since I prefer the Metric system (the one I was raised with, more scientific too =P) this translates as

1 Cubit = 50.8 Cm

300 x 50.8 = 15240 Cm
50 x 50.8 = 2540 Cm
30 x 50.8 = 1524 Cm

Divide by 100 to get all values in meters

152.4 Meters Long
25.4 Meters Wide
15.24 Meters Tall

Giving a Volume of

152.4 x 25.4 x 15.24 = 58994 Cubic Meters

I've rounded up by one cubic meter there.

This translates to 64516 Cubic Yards or so.

Now, according to This website, there are 1.5 million species of animals, plants and algae.

For now, let's ignore all the plants and sea creatures and focus on the creatures that live on land as well as birds.

This will thusly include

Mammals: 5416
Birds: 9956
Reptiles: 8240
Amphibians: 6199
Insects: 950,000 (!)

Total: 1009811

Volume of Ark (In Meters): 58994
Number of Species: 1009811

This would mean am average of 17.1 species per cubic meter of ark space, not including space for the food required, nor for that matter room to breathe.


Would make taking a few insect species and having them evolve out would be nonsense.

I ran that calculation again excluding insects entirely, it works out to ~1 species per cubic meter which is more reasonable but still begs the question of how they kept the animals from killing each other, keeping them alive that long, which entails room enough for food stocks which in turn compresses them further, etc.

My Point: There is nowhere near enough room on Noahs ark to have ever contained every species of every animal on earth. The only way to explain it would be that he built a VERY large ark, there were multiple arks (which got conveniently left out), the event was local (and therefore not global), or that Noah took on some kinds of animals and neglected others, and that these others then diversified through some form of rapidly accelerated evolution over the past few thousand years to form the MILLIONS of species we observe today.
I'm not sure what you're getting out here but a cubit is about... 45.72 centimeters which is about 18 inches... adding up the whole thing it's about 836507 or 83657 feet! YIKEs!

I Just gotta say that some species of animals have come to be recently. Some species of cats for example are mixed breed but go by other names. Like the mule which was created from breeding horses and donkey.

And a LOT of species of animals most likely dies during the flood as well, ever heard of a floating forest?



Neanderthal man was actually very human-like, not only making sophisticated tools but actually burying their dead as well.

Consider that momentarily. They buried their dead. This implies religion, or at the very least spiritual belief. They had to care about the body, the "Person" they once were enough to bury them, sometimes even with accoutrements to go to the effort of burial.

Homo Habilis is another case of "Too old to be missing link".

Homo Erectus likewise, however the observation of this species is important in witnessing increasing brain size over time as it is in fact one of the longer lived distinct hominid species.
I think neanderthal man was proven to be a human...
o_O

First off, Neptune IS cold, really cold!

I think you're getting Neptune and Jupiter confused. Jupiter was found to be emitting heat, as was saturn, creating turbulence in their atmospheres causing massive storms.

Neptune on the other hand is frigid. It has very little energy in it's atmosphere, this in turn reduces turbulence and in turn allows incredibly high wind speeds. Think nuclear blast, that's how fast. Asteroid impacts on neptune create the winds and due to the low friction low turbulence environment, they just keep going, round and round and round they go.

While there is some amount of internal heating and reason for this is unknown, possible theories include radiogenic heating from the core (which may also occur on Earth) or chemical reactions within the atmosphere.

Futhermore, you're confusing Evolutionists with Cosmologists.

Even furthermore, I find it strange how a planet with no real surface (Neptune is essentially a big ball of gas) to "Look Old".

And Even Furthermore, planetary formation in the original accretion disk that created the sun and planets was not a calm process. The current favored theory for how Neptune and Uranus (if anyone cracks a joke I swear they're banned for a day :P) is that they migrated out from the "Inner" solar system. Given the general hectic nature of the time, this is plausible, considering Jupiter's gravitational influence threw a lot of material back at the sun or straight on out of the solar system (if not absorbing the material itself, that is).

NEXT!

*Jokers laughs for about ten hours*
You know what? I recently took out some astronomy books form my library that were evolution based books and they too said Neptune was creating heat as well Jupiter and Saturn. I must have taken out a defective copy. Mwahahaha.

Actually.... about those planets. This might be dumb for me saying this but. I found out that if those outer planets exist to keep the earth in its current orbit. Like a gravity magnet thing or something.

O_o Planets do NOT migrate! They're not bird and butterflies! they're huge chuncks of rocks, like the moon.

Speaking of the moon. If there's water on the moon it's because or comets impacts. (which I also read about in the evolution star gazing book. If people are trying to say there was once life on the moon they're not reading their science books right)



The process of the grand canyon uplift is little understood. Given this evidence, however, geologists theorise that the colorado plateaus shifted clockwise as they uplifted, thus preserving their stability.

As it stands, the process is poorly understood. One instance of uncertainty does not disprove all of geological science and vindicate creationism in one fell swoop. Further analysis of the data would be required before anything meaningful can be drawn from it.
but now they are saying the whole thing was created by a local 'Megaflood" instead of millions of years. >.< DOH!
Next!
artemis-lady-warrior wrote:

Your new point is also refuted. Scientists have taught apes to read and recognise symbols and how to communicate via lexigrams. Lexigrams are symbols that represent words, the language used is an artificial one called Yerkish and was developed in the mid 70's.

Source: Source PDF
so monkeys learn to recognize and remember what symbols looks like. It doesn't mean they can read real words. :roll:

sorry. I just had to comment on it because it really doesn't help. They don't know what the word means, do they? Can they actually find some way to tell you what these words mean?
I just looked up Lexigram. It's "a symbol that represents a word but is not necessarily indicative of the object referenced by the word".

XD That should tell ya something right there.
So, the %, &, #, and @ symbols arent real?

All of these symbols represent words to be spoken but are not necessarily indicative of the object referenced by the word.

Considering the Bonobo brain is ~1/3rd the size of a human brain, it's hardly fair to ask them to communicate with us on the same level.
[/quote]

don't get mad at me. I looked it up. It's not my fault!




Ah, back to that damn boat again.

Lets consider that water had to cover 8848 meters of land. If it soaked back into the land, the earth would STILL be covered with water.

If some of it evaporated, the earth would be a hothouse. Atmospheric H2O is a significantly stronger greenhouse gas then CO2. It would have triggered a runaway greenhouse effect that would end up with the entire planet ending up as a hellhole as hot (if not hotter) then venus.

Even if you could somehow saturate the atmosphere with water and still have breathable and not trigger a runaway greenhouse, there would STILL be too much water to be rid of.
If I could write down the entire article I just read on this subject you would understand what I mean a whole lot more. but unfortunately I cannot which makes it harder for me to explain it to you. I have never been very good at this sort of thing. If the magazines website has this article on it would it be okay if I gave you the link so you could read it for yourself?
The arguments are perhaps logical. The basis is not.
Perhaps? You did not even read them and the basis is too logical. It's more logical than people saying "This was all an accident. " and "it all happened by blind chance."
:roll: accident and blind chance my Aunt Rocsan!

NEXT!

a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, esp. when considered as the creation of a superhuman agency or agencies, usually involving devotional and ritual observances, and often containing a moral code governing the conduct of human affairs.

Evolution is a scientific theory, not a set of beliefs. It does not cover the the nature and purpose of the universe (Cosmology and Philosophy/Theology respectively) and it does not avow or disavow the presence of a superhuman agency by which to facilitate this. It has no devotional or ritual observances and promulgates no moral code whatsoever.

As for attempting to define Evolution as a religion, that is an oft used argument by creationists in an attempt to undermine Evolution and science in general by simply branding it "Just another religion" so that it can be set aside and conveniently ignored or dismissed.
so now you're saying that creationsist are dirty and underhanded and yet... Evolutionists are just as bad. Like Richard Dawkins for instance. Who says things like:
"It is absolutely safe to say that if you meet somebody who claims not to believe in Evolution, that person is ignorant, stupid, or insane)or wicked, but I'd rather not consider that."
Yeah, those Evolutionists would NEVER say something like that! :roll:

sorry, just had to point that out.


Oi! That flood keeps coming back to haunt me! It's also quite poetic, as I'm currently drowning in text! D:

Refer back to the part of my post about the water for noahs flood.

Consider also what you're saying about the atmosphere. How can evaporating water create a massive change in atmosphere?

Consider that the modern atmosphere is (approximately) 78% Nitrogen, 18% Oxygen, 1.8% CO2, 0.2% H2O and the rest is trace gasses of argon and so forth.

How could evaporating H2O, barring a runaway greenhouse effect, alter the atmosphere significantly enough for large life forms to be precluded?

Furthermore, if Dinosaurs and Man had lived side by side, we would find that the fossil record would have a random assortment of human, dinosaur and other fossils at random stratification layers.

Furthermore, genesis states:

Every beast, every creeping thing, and every fowl, and whatsoever creepeth upon the earth, after their kinds, went forth out of the ark.
If this is true, why then do dinosaurs not live alongside us today?

Genesis 8:3, if I'm reading this right, says that the waters "returned from off the earth". How I read it, it seems to be an account of waters receding back from the land, as opposed to draining back into the earth.

Consider this: If the entire earth had been covered by flood waters...

Why are there fresh water lakes?

With fish that cannot tolerate salt water?

Why are there any fish at all, for that matter. Freshwater fish would die in the rising salinity. Salt water fish would die in the dropping salinity of the rising seas.

Why are there any coral reefs left alive in the entire world at all? Coral reefs require that they are only a few meters from the surface of the water to be alive. Any deeper and they die. Rising flood waters of that magnitude would annihilate them totally.

How do animals such as the Koala, Platypus, and Kangaroo make it to the ark? The Koala requires a specialised diet of Eucalyptus leaves found only in Australia and is a marsupial, found only in Australia (and to a limited extent in surrounding land once adjoined). The Kangaroo is also a marsupial. If it made the trek back to Australia, why do we find no Kangaroo bones in Asia, nor for that matter Kangaroo herds as I dont think the asian continent would provide any major troubles for colonising kangaroo herds.

As for Paluxy, that was a proven hoax. I can provide a link if you so desire.

You're determind to make me kill my brain aren't you?
Okay I'll give this a try. Well we do know form what the bible says about the flood that the earth below ALSO gave up water, not just the sky. That means giasers shot water out of the ground. Below the oceans volcanoes most likely erupted and covered the floors with lave, creating mountains and raising the water level.
All these goings on probably did a number to the ocean floor.
After about a year the world calmed down and cooled off from the whole thing or something and the planet comprassed and the water levels went down.
ARGH! I cannot explain this well. just read the article. I'm not so good at this.
Imagine what the weather would be like after a world wide flood? It would be much different than how it used to be.
Many species of animals died during the flood. Also there were dinosaurs afetr the flood because they're mentioned in the book of Job which was like the very first book of the Bible ever written. I know this because I asked my parents.

But.... after the flood the weather would have gone totally cooky as it adjusted to the the tilt of the plant and the breaking up of the land. Of course winters would have been long and harsh and something new and most likely lasted a long time. (I'm currently getting to that part of the article so I'm just guessing). This was the Ice Age. The Ice Age most likely did NOT cover the entire planet because the equador areas of the planet would have been really warm.

To your questions about animals....
Once upon a time on a large body f land called Rodinia there lived many kinds of plants an animals and humans.
Because Rodinia was specially created so that every living thing had exactly what they needed to life there were many kinds of plants that grew on this land mass. Some no longer exist and some still do.

One day the Big Boss said to a man. "Built me a giant boat and put two of every kind of animal in it."

So the man set out to do so. On a side note the Boss told the man that he should also remember to pack food for all the animals. Because there were so many animals living around the man knew what food to bring and if he didn't the Boss most likely told him.

So after a hundred years a major disaster struck, covering the land with water and killing everyone except those that were on the Boat.

While this was happening bad things were going on outside the boat. Storms and waves and horrible weather that had never been seen before. and while this was going on above, bad things were happening below as well.

earthquaks and volcanos caused the land masses to shift and change, breaking apart into pieces then coming back together again in a new form and shape called Pangaea.

Finally things calmed down and the water's resided. The boat landed on a mountain possibly created by the earthquacks and everyone got out to a new world.

The animals spread out, covering the entire world with creatures, going to places on the world that most suited their life styles and after many years the humans did as well.

XD Just trying to put it simply. Even if you don't believe what it's based on I hope you got a good giggle from it. :D


ugh.....

I'd go on but my fingers are killing me and I need a break. That's all I'm going to do for now.

If I broke this rules writing this down I'm sorry. PLEASE DON'T BAN ME!

Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 7:27 pm
by Sinead
To Razor & General Statement

Just to let you know: I am using the New King James Version text for whatever I quote the Bible. However, I am also a seminary student. If you want to quote what the Bible says back to me, remember one thing: I'm also using Lexicons and Dictionaries on what the words mean. That means that I'm researching the words to give you a better explanation of the Bible's words. The tool I use is a free program called e-Sword.

I will post later upon the inaccuracies regarding scriptural references later tonight, once I cool off from the ridiculousness that I just read.

Seriously.

Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 7:36 pm
by artemis-lady-warrior
the ridiculousness you just read? You refering to my post or Razor Ones?

I have an excuse. I'm not a student. :(

BTW I got a problem.

Okay science and theories about the earth are always changing. Whether it's dates or what came from what.
so...
Why does it seem like some people refuse acknowledge this?
Say i pick up a rock and see fossiles of plants in it? Immediately someone will say that it came from a certain time because of what's in the rocks and these plants were extinct later on?
Well what say I look at this same rock and realize it's got fossiles in it from an animal that wasn't supposed to be there at the time? It's the same rock and it still has the plants but the animal is right next to it?
Then what do you do?
If this plant was supposed to exist millions of years before said animal, how can you explain the animal?

Wouldn't that mean you would have to come up with another theory to explain why this extinct plant that's many years older than the animal are in the same rock from the same time period?

Some people might be smart enough to say that they need to come up with a better theory to explain it. Others will discard the said rock and stick to the older evolutionary theory and ignore the new facts represented to them.

Just thought I'd give you something to think on.

Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 10:35 pm
by Nurann
I'm starting to lose track of who-said-what... okay, first to razor:

I think you forgot that after the Venus-like conditions of Earth's youth, it rained for a few thousand-some-odd years straight. And while it's been a while since that science class, I get the feeling I'm giving an extremely conservative estimate compared to what the video said.

Next, to Artemis...

No one said there was life on the moon. The moon's gravity is too low, it's too small, half of it is permanently dark, it's too cold and has a too-thin atmosphere. Mars is the one in question, and they did find water. Now the search for life starts.

Next, I want to point out a problem with the Ark's two-by-two concept:

Inbreeding.

Be careless enough with some breeding-pairs of fish in a fish tank and you'll see the results of inbreeding within a couple of months. Genetic variety is required for a species to survive and thrive, otherwise the bad types of mutation occur more and more often. A species with such a limited population size would also become extremely prone to disease and extreme environmental conditions.

Artemis:
I think neanderthal man was proven to be a human...
Actually, and someone please correct me if I'm wrong, but they are actually believed to have been a seperate, second branch of human evolution that had gone north. Had they dominated, humans would look very different than they do today. They were, however, eventually overcome by the second more agressive species of pre-human that were just coming out of Africa at the time.

Back to Razor:

Okay, fine. Scratch the Kirlian for now. And pardon my absent-mindedness, but what does a swinging pendant have to do with a black mood ring?

And you'd better be at Botcon. You can at least watch me work on Silver, since he's already agreed to be my guinea pig. :twisted:

7knight:

Going back to pages 6 and 7, you've tried to argue evolution can't be proven. I'm only going to say it one more time, then you can go back to ignoring me:

Vampire. Finches.

Link one: http://www.abc.net.au/nature/vampire/finches.htm

Link two: http://www.stanford.edu/class/anthsci10 ... s/keil.doc
... The so-called Vampire finch is not actually its own species; it is merely a variety of the Sharp beaked ground finch, Gesospiza Diffiiclis. The Sharp beaked Ground finch is only one of the fourteen species of Darwin’s finches. (13 on the Galapagos and one on the nearby Cocos Islands). Gesospiza Difficlis is one of the oldest species of Darwin’s finches, and it is the first ground finch to branch of from the common ancestor. Gesospiza Difficlis inhabits 6 of the Galapagos islands (Fernandina, Santiago, Genovesa, Pinta, Wolf and Darwin). However, it is only on the two remote islands of Wolf and Darwin, 80 miles northwest of the nearest island, that the Vampire finch exists. Only here, in the farthest corner of the archipelago, does the bird exhibits the exceedingly peculiar habit of drinking blood. ...

Why Did this Behavior Develop:
The Galapagos Islands are dry, especially Wolf and Darwin. ... One sign that the blood drinking behavior is linked to climate, is that during el Niño, when there is lots of rain, the finches on Wolf and Darwin drink less blood. ... Finches have a relatively high behavioral flexibility for birds, so they are able to adapt their feeding habits to climactic changes. ...

Morphological Consequences:
Blood is significant source of nourishment and hydration for the Geospiza Diffilics populations of Wolf and Darwin Island. It is a valuable resource that only the populations on those two islands have learned to utilize. Consequently, as the resources available to those finch populations have effectively changed, the selection pressures for the finches on Wolf and Darwin have also changed in comparison to the populations on the other four islands. Consequently, different genetic variations are more favorable on Wolf and Darwin than on the other islands in the archipelago. Over time this leads to morphological differences.
The article goes on to say a lot more. Either way, the vampire finch is an example of a new species evolving in order to survive a trying climate.
And fish inbreeding can argue it too. Go to a place where they sell fish. Look for the ones that have spines at funny angles, or messed up fins.

THAT is survival of the fittest in action.

Now I need to shut up and go work on my papers....

Posted: Sat Oct 25, 2008 1:08 am
by Blazemane
So... I was gone... for too long.

I did read most of the posts here, but I'm too far behind too adress things individually.

Seeing as we have gotten off topic, can I just jump into the religious debate?

And thus, let me ask Razor. Razor, would it be too inflammatory for me to record here my reasons for believing in Christianity? I believe good evidence has been posted already, but every bit helps.

I ask, because it's long, and because indeed, while it has applications to this topic (and adresses many things brought up), it doesn't specifically respond to anybody, and thus, it'd kindof be like adding a new catalyst to this debate.

So... can I Razor?

Posted: Sat Oct 25, 2008 7:12 am
by Nurann
Hey Blazemane! It has become quite the beast, hasn't it?
lol
I think that in essence, that's really what this topic is about; seeing what other members of the community think and why. I, for one, would love it if you joined us!

Posted: Sat Oct 25, 2008 8:00 am
by artemis-lady-warrior
A new breed evolving to survive the climate? I don't think that's evolution. I think that's adaptation like when the weather gets cold and your blood thickens.

Can we please stop it with this "survival of the fittest" stuff. If that were so how come a lot of respectively weak creatures life today?

Inbreeding as in the type of animal. Like a house cat with a house cat and a lion with a lion. Types of cats today are the result of inbreeding and they all live in just fine.

Mars might have water but it never had life. and if it does have life its microscopic. People say the sun cooling killed living things on Mars and yet they say our planet has global warming. How is it that Mars is cooling when earth is supposedly warming and yet they say the sun is cooling as well? You can't blame this all on us. I'm reading an article on this. So we'll see just how much is our fault.

Earth was never like Venus at one point. If it was there is no way that life could have suddenly popped up on here by random chance. When the earth was formed it was already the right temperature. The Flood changed all of that.
The earth had to adjust to the changes so the weather got funky for awhile.

Posted: Sat Oct 25, 2008 9:30 am
by Nurann
Bleh, I don't really have time to do this but I will anyways.

Artemis, adaptation is the first step to evolution. That's why I gave them as an example of evolution in action. An organism's ability to adapt is what allows that organism to survive and pass on it's DNA. For example, the insect that can survive cold weather is going to be able to travel further north than the insect that dies at the first sign of frost. Same with humans; the ones that who's blood could thicken had the advantage over the one who couldn't. After enough time, that adaptation to cold weather created a new genotype (keeping in mind enough of the species had to be able to adapt and pass on this new gene for the trait to be desirable in the first place).

As for "weaker" species existing today, how do you know that they aren't the strongest in their niche? Every organism has an ecological "niche" that they fit in to - some role they play in the environment. Can you give me an example of a species that is weak, even considering its role in its environment? If you can, I'm willing to retract my claim.

Furthermore, if you breed a live-birth fish with a live-birth fish, eventually if the only members of the population are siblings and first and second cousins, you'll still eventually start to have problems with the gene pool. Those cats still would have had other cats that weren't immidiate family to breed with.

Now you're doing what you acused the Zelda forum of doing - you're inviting debate but at the same time discarding everything that's being said without consideration because it doesn't jive with your beliefs. What isn't clear about my argument?

If you can refute the evidence, go for it but please put a little effort in to it rather than just scoffing at us for the sake of scoffing at us.


Lastly, while it might seem that the conditions for life on Earth are vast, on the cosmic scale they are very narrow. A planet has to be a certain distance from the sun, has to have a certain thickness of atmosphere, there has to be sufficient water, and at minimum a constant and strong heat source for chemosynthesis to occur. As for global warming on this planet, I agree that it's not entirely our fault. There is a cycle. However, did cars exist before the last ice age? No. Did plastic manufacturing exist 10000 years ago? No. We're still putting things in to the atmosphere that shouldn't be there, and that's going to do something regardless of how much we as a species stick our fingers in our ears and scream "lalala!"

I never said life popped up randomly. In that regard I'm with you - someone did something to the overheated goo and started the process and poked it along until it was doing well enough on its own and then They let it run. Like once you get a computer program running - if you coded it right you can just let it go without constant supervision and intervention. But also like a program, a functioning code can't create itself. Until somebody creates a working DNA chain from scratch in a pitri dish, that's my opinion. Besides, if it could happen by chance that easily, one could stick sugar, water, and a heat source on a sterile plexiglass plate and watch spontaneous genisis occur under a microscope (even with the size of the planet and global conditions and time factors considered with the supposed original occurance a few million years ago, someone should've been able to catch it by now).

And please excuse my ignorance, but didn't the Flood and Ark happen some time after God originally created the Earth? I don't understand what you're meaning is with that.

Posted: Sat Oct 25, 2008 11:46 am
by artemis-lady-warrior
I have no intention of replying to everything you wrote because it is irrelivent and no matter what I say on the certain things you mentioned will just be ignored anyway. I will just reply to a few things.
Nurann wrote: Now you're doing what you accused the Zelda forum of doing - you're inviting debate but at the same time discarding everything that's being said without consideration because it doesn't jive with your beliefs. What isn't clear about my argument?
Excuse me. but to correct you on this I am not! I've thought about some things mentioned in evolution and it just resulted in more questions than answers. I do not appriciate being accused of discarding things because they don't jive with my beliefs. You don't know what goes on in my head so you cannot make such an assumption.
Lastly, while it might seem that the conditions for life on Earth are vast, on the cosmic scale they are very narrow. A planet has to be a certain distance from the sun, has to have a certain thickness of atmosphere, there has to be sufficient water, and at minimum a constant and strong heat source for chemosynthesis to occur. As for global warming on this planet, I agree that it's not entirely our fault. There is a cycle. However, did cars exist before the last ice age? No. Did plastic manufacturing exist 10000 years ago? No. We're still putting things in to the atmosphere that shouldn't be there, and that's going to do something regardless of how much we as a species stick our fingers in our ears and scream "lalala!"
here's something interesting. After the Flood the earth's temperatures weren't as stable as they are now and it took awhile for it to calm down which probably resulted in wacky temperatures.
I am perfectly aware that all that junk being put in the air probably messed things up and I NEVER said I was ignoring that.
Can you do me a favor? Knock that off.

I never said life popped up randomly. In that regard I'm with you - someone did something to the overheated goo and started the process and poked it along until it was doing well enough on its own and then They let it run. Like once you get a computer program running - if you coded it right you can just let it go without constant supervision and intervention. But also like a program, a functioning code can't create itself. Until somebody creates a working DNA chain from scratch in a pitri dish, that's my opinion. Besides, if it could happen by chance that easily, one could stick sugar, water, and a heat source on a sterile plexiglass plate and watch spontaneous genisis occur under a microscope (even with the size of the planet and global conditions and time factors considered with the supposed original occurance a few million years ago, someone should've been able to catch it by now).
What made is happen? A highly intelligent being who knew what he was doing.
If you read the Bible in the beginning the earth was a mass of water. Then this highly intelligent being made land then plants then stars then animals.
Humans came from dust, not goo and goo can't suddenly come to life.
sugar, water, and heat on a plate? For all you knew bacterica could have been living on that plate as well. Life doesn't come randomly by chance.
And please excuse my ignorance, but didn't the Flood and Ark happen some time after God originally created the Earth? I don't understand what you're meaning is with that.
It's like this. When earth was first created it was the perfect temperature and much different then it is today plus it had a HUGE amount of water in the air called the water table. When the Flood happened this water came down and water under the ground came up. Earthquaks happened and undersea volcanos erupted. All this nuttyness did a number to the planet, making the land break apart and smack against each other.
After the Flood I doubt the weather was perfect. The planet had to adjust to the change and it got weird. Like the colder climates got frozen by long winters and the warmer climates were warmer than they are now, as well as the ocean.

Let me ask you something? What proof is there that the Earth was once the same temperature as Venus?

Posted: Sat Oct 25, 2008 12:51 pm
by 7Knight-Wolf
HOLY HEDGEHOGS!!!!!!!!!!!!! RAZOR ONE, I HAVE MANY-WORD PHOBIA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :shock:

I have no time to argue with everything you said right now... I do have just a couple of points to make...

First of all, while creationists don't believe that one animal can change into a totally different one, we do believe in natural selection. Back in Noah's time, there much MUCH fewer kinds of animals. Probably the only kind of dog in existence was some kind of wolf with a LARGE gene pool, and one kind of cat, and so on. You can read about this kind of thing in Answers magazine.

For a vast database of creationist articles, vist http://www.answersingenesis.org. You can find all sorts of good, solid arguments against Evolution...

...and the by the way... evolution IS a religion. :twisted:

Also, I have one very important point to take into account when facing an evolution/creation argument: WE USE THE SAME EVIDENCE. Both evolutionists and creationists use the Grand Canyon as an important argument in their case, but how they interpret it depends on their PERSONAL beliefs. I say that the Grand Canyon is undeniable evidence of a gigantic flood, evolution says it's undeniable evidence of its theory. All facts can be manipulated to fit your beliefs. That is why both creation and evolution are THEORIES. I just happen to have enough faith in mine to stake my life on it.

And contrary to popular belief, Darwin did not, I repeat DID NOT, come to see evolution as "the only way." He was bais befoer he ever went to Galapados. His grandfather was a big-time materialist, and he also was very materialistic and doubting of any higher power. He did not observe nature and decide that evolution made the most sense; he came there with PRESUMPTIONS. I repeat PRESUMPTIONS.

Razor, hopefully I'll have to argue with you more fully later. :D

Posted: Sat Oct 25, 2008 12:52 pm
by Blazemane
RazorOne wrote:I'll be extremely busy for the next week or so, I've got assessment due on Monday, it's saturday morning currently and I need to get cracking, after the bucks day/night >_<

Oi Vey what a Schlep!

In any case, play nice while I R Busy, and I'll see how this debate turns out when I get back.
Hmm... is he not coming back for a while then? Should I just go ahead?

May I just make this one point though?
...and the by the way... evolution IS a religion.
Razor, I think the assumption here by 7KnightWolf here is not that evolution is a full headed religion, where purpose in life is found, or where we can meet somebody who loves us more than we will ever know, or where we can pray and be heard, but merely, that Christianity and evolution are both beliefs. They both take faith.

In that light, evolution is a religion, not as a text-book defined religion, but as a belief which takes as much faith (and in my opinion, far more) to believe in as does Christianity.

7Knight may correct me if I have misinterpreted him. Anyways, still waiting to see if I can or can not post my catalyst.

EDIT: (Before anyone even responded, just to correct some awkward wording).