I'm assuming that the anti religion posters are people who believe in evolution.
Question for the evolution people, how did it all start and how did we get to this point
Quote from: Sgt. Dick on August 29, 2011, 04:43:29 PMI'm assuming that the anti religion posters are people who believe in evolution.It's an important distinction that one doesn't "believe in" evolution by natural selection. One accepts (or rejects) the evidence for it.Example: Do you believe in ancient Greece? Or do you accept the evidence that ancient Greece existed?It should be noted that there is vastly more evidence for evolution than there is that ancient Greece existed.
That statement's a little off and I have to disagree. The "evolution" you're referring to is theorized to have happened over millions of years since way before man recorded history.
The "ancient Greece" you're referring to is far more recent and was meticulously recorded by man. Because of this, it's a lot easier to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that ancient Greece existed.If you refer to only physical evidence, there are plenty of fossils that show similarities between them. There are physical ruins of buildings in Greece that match descriptions in writings which tell of life in ancient Greece.
As far as I know, mankind has yet to force any organism to mutate itself in a way that would support theories of evolution other than at the microscopic level with things like diseases gaining resistance to cures and immune systems gaining resistance to diseases.
We have theories, but that is all they are. Some may have evidence to back them somewhat, but none are completely proven IMO.I am not a avid reader so many aspects of this discussion I may not be aware of, that is one reason why I asked the evolution question.From what I know, many aspects of evolution are still just theory.
Quote from: |iR|Focalor on August 29, 2011, 07:50:03 PMAs far as I know, mankind has yet to force any organism to mutate itself in a way that would support theories of evolution other than at the microscopic level with things like diseases gaining resistance to cures and immune systems gaining resistance to diseases.There seems to be a cultural echo chamber that keeps repeating that claim, but it's not true.Speciation has been observed to occur both under artifical selection conditions in laboratories, as well as in the wild over the past couple centuries.http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/speciation.htmlhttp://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.htmlhttp://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/It's really impossible to overstate the vastness of evidence existing in support of evolution.Quantitatively, there's more evidence for evolution than for ancient Greece. But, the ruins of an ancient civilization have the advantage of being easily understood intuitively by homo sapiens.By contrast, many domains of nature being explored by modern science unfortunately don't lend themselves to being intuitively understood by human brains.Evolution, relativity, and quantum mechanics are each difficult for our brains to grapple with intuitively. Nevertheless, the extraordinary degree of evidence for each has produced an overwhelming scientific consensus that each of these theories represent facts about nature. (Cultural echo chamber notwithstanding.)
I briefly read over the evidence of speciation in plants and animals (mostly insects), and that isn't exactly what the majority of the masses considers to be "evolution". Cross-pollination and hybridization (to my knowledge) isn't what they teach about evolution in schools.
Sure, you can cross-pollinate similar plants. Sure, you can breed two different dogs and have a litter of mutts. But it's yet to be shown that you can put dogs up in a tree and they'll grow wings to fly from tree to tree or opposable thumbs to climb around in trees more easily.
I just think that scientists are probably WAY off on their guesstimations of how long it takes, how it exactly happens, and most importantly, how old the earth we live on really is. I think most scientists claim that the earth is around 4 billion years old. I say they're probably wrong. Seems to me that the earth is more likely MUCH MUCH older than that.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Bang
You can't travel faster than light. That's how Einstein came up with his equations. Newton's laws and the limitation, seen in many practical applications, didn't agree. However space itself can expand, so the light doesn't need to travel for 93 billion years, because the universe isn't a box in a 3 dimensional coordinate system.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartesian_coordinate_system
If the observable universe is 28 billion parsecs, or 93 billion Light Year in diameter, it would seem logical that the light occupies that "observable" distance. Plus as far as I remember "observable" means space-time IE 3 dimensions. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observable_universe
Plus as far as I remember "observable" means space-time IE 3 dimensions.