
They should teach science in world religion class.
When discussing the bit in Genesis where God creates the earth, teachers also need to touch on the big bang theory.
It must be stressed that a hypothesis is never shown to be true. Repeated experimentation which supports a hypothesis and develops the hypothesis further leads to the hypothesis being accepted as a theory. Often a well supported theory will be referred to as a law or principle. It should be noted that in reality it is still a theory, just one that has stood the test of time fairly well.
I was more referring to "Bones in the ground do not 100% prove that they existed", that is complete and utter foolishness.. bones of something not being proof... bones have DNA that have been tested. So by your logic if we dug up a dead person we could not prove he existed? You can quote all the sudo-intellect crap you want and be "technical" all you want but it merely convoluted the point that I was trying to make. And that point is that "technicalities" are not the issue when it comes to fact or fiction.
But no, because then you're dismissing the entire scientific method. Then you have to begin debating with yourself as to whether sunlight is actually real,
I'm curious, what makes people so petrified that they're willing to allow their minds to go to such depths? Rational folks who throw rationality completely out the window when it comes to religion.
For the record, I now feel about people who can't fully grasp macroevolution like I do the idiot commentors on your average CNN story. The vast hordes of stupidity will always win out; but I had hoped that wickedfire would be one of the last great strongholds.
Unless you are sticking to your theory from another thread that I should accept macro evolution because there is observable micro evolution, therefore, given enough time, it must exist.
Which came first. The Chicken or the Egg?
Not "must" exist, but highly likely that it does.
Is it likely that people of different skin color are going to stop breeding with each other? Is it likely that humans will start to choose their mates at random? If not, then won't humans look different 100,000 years from now?
As pointed out earlier, it is wrong to discuss living vs. non-living - at the same time I understand your point. It is reasonable to assume a mountain would transform, but is it likely the component parts would transform into something of increased organization, like would it transform into a pyramid with tunnels and chambers inside that have a clear design and purpose, all without outside intervention? I know, it falls apart because it is not living.If we see the shape of mountains slowly change a little bit over time, then isn't the logical conclusion that they will change shape much more over a much larger period of time?
Then say that. Why is it so difficult for the teachers to say that it is "highly likely".
There is the overall theory of evolution and then there are factual examples of evolution occurring. I assumed this is how it is taught in most places, but I could be wrong.For those that are going to lecture me on the the nuance of fact and theory and how evolution is both, then teach that also. Clearly define the terms to the students, something that is not currently taught. When a kid hears "fact" he is thinking, 100% proven true.
If small change is possible among humans, then large changes have to be possible also. If you have a pure white "color" on a computer screen and add an ultra-micro bit of darkness to it every year, so small that the human eye doesn't notice any difference from year to year, eventually the screen will still turn to grey and then black. It would be hard to pick an exact year to draw the line as to label when it became grey (just like it would hard to pick an exact point at which humans became nonhuman), but still most people would acknowledge that grey and then black could be reached by doing that.Yes. But if you ask is it possible that humans will evolve into, say, something totally different than what they are today. let's see, ape to human, so then, ask people if it is logical that in 100MM years humans will have an extra leg, extra arm, and a natural protective shell like an insect due to the change in the Earth's environment - but it will be a human, just evolved, not an evolved insect. Ask people how they feel about that because isn't that what you are asking me to believe?
Yes. But if you ask is it possible that humans will evolve into, say, something totally different than what they are today. let's see, ape to human, so then, ask people if it is logical that in 100MM years humans will have an extra leg, extra arm, and a natural protective shell like an insect due to the change in the Earth's environment - but it will be a human, just evolved, not an evolved insect. Ask people how they feel about that because isn't that what you are asking me to believe?
You undermine your argument when you make ridiculous statements like this, no one is going to take you seriously.
Your views on Macro Evolution interest me though, can you point me to a peer reviewed article in a biology journal that supports it? Or does it come from someone with a religious motive?
But no, that's not how the scientific method works. You start with a hypothesis, gather evidence through research & testing, then it turns into a theory.
You can't start at a theory, then tell everyone to prove you wrong. That's not how it works. And as of right now, there's huge consensus throughout the worldwide scientific community that there's not enough evidence to backup intelligent design and call it a plausible theory. If you want to believe in intelligent design, then the onus is on you to come up with the evidence to backup that claim. Not the other way around.
The statement was ridiculous because I am thinking this is what people want me to believe. Yes it was overstated, but oftentimes I feel this is what the evolutionists want me to believe, that yes, if the Earth's environment warranted it, these changes are plausible given enough time.
29+ Evidences for Macroevolution: the Scientific Case for Common DescentThe questions I have about macro evolution are not from a specific source, rather they are from 20 year old arguments I brought up in another thread that were never answered. I am honestly open to answers. Is there proof of macro evolution other than what I have said earlier, it is a presumptive end of observable micro-evolution?
If you understand the intersection of philosophy and science, you know that there are a number of fundamentally unproven hypotheses that we regardless take to be implicitly true, such as the notion that properties of our universe reflect order even in the absence of sufficient data points to demonstrate this assumption.
One of the problems with ID is that it falls at just such a position between science and philosophy.
The questions I have about macro evolution are not from a specific source, rather they are from 20 year old arguments I brought up in another thread that were never answered. I am honestly open to answers. Is there proof of macro evolution other than what I have said earlier, it is a presumptive end of observable micro-evolution?
Essential criteria
The defining characteristic of a scientific theory is that it makes falsifiable or testable predictions. The relevance and specificity of those predictions determine how potentially useful the theory is. A would-be theory that makes no predictions that can be observed is not a useful theory. Predictions not sufficiently specific to be tested are similarly not useful. In both cases, the term "theory" is hardly applicable.
In practice a body of descriptions of knowledge is usually only called a theory once it has a minimum empirical basis, according to certain criteria:
Non-essential criteria
- It is consistent with pre-existing theory, to the extent the pre-existing theory was experimentally verified, though it will often show pre-existing theory to be wrong in an exact sense.
- It is supported by many strands of evidence, rather than a single foundation, ensuring it is probably a good approximation, if not totally correct.
Additionally, a theory is generally only taken seriously if:
(Since there is no generally accepted objective definition of parsimony, this is not a strict criteria, but some theories are much less economical than others.)
- It is tentative, correctable, and dynamic in allowing for changes as new facts are discovered, rather than asserting certainty.
- It is among the most parsimonious explanations, sparing in proposed entities or explanations—commonly referred to as passing the Occam's razor test.
This is true of such established theories as special and general relativity, quantum mechanics, plate tectonics, evolution, etc. Theories considered scientific meet at least most, but ideally all, of these extra criteria.