t_BuckeyeScott
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(First real quick to Winslow: I should not have used the term "holes." The theory of evolution, if you accept science, is by far one of the most completely mapped out theories that exists. Again, this is all terminology until it is agreed upon and we must first have a common "language" for all of us until this can be discussed well.)
buckeyegrad: What you will, I assume (:)) discuss is of a different nature than what I think we may be going for here so far, meaning that I am hoping to start a discussion of looking at different theories scientifically, as opposed to discussing the entire paradigm of science as secular humanist ethos as opposed to metaphysical understanding or philosophical understandings of any other "ways of seeing." That is, by far, the best argument against evolution, though I see it as a canard that is able to confuse enough people as to make it seem relevant when such disparate views of the nature of things are unnecessary to science as it (may or may not :) ) exist outside such considerations.
I am unclear and typing a mile a minute and on the run. In my mind we should have two threads regarding all of this-- one about science, one about the philosophy (or theist) look at what is knowledge anyway? Etc.
Okay. .. eh. . . I'll fix this later. These should maybe be two threads by the way. . .
Last thing: what is important is that all of us are able to discuss such disparate views with open minds or, at the least, with LISTENING to other views. I think we have finally reached that point on this board.
For now there is no right or wrong, after all.
I hate to speak for BGrad and hope he corrects any mistake. But I actually think he's not talking so metaphyisically.
Example: Geology. We all have the same strata. Creationists don't deny that there are rock formations. Instead of slow build up over time creationists see it as a result of a worldwide flood.
Natural Selection/Genetics/Mutation: Creationists don't deny the existence of these verifialbe phenomena. They are testable and repeatable. What Creationists see them as though is specialization and speciesiation with in a kind. They argue that nearly all mutation and specialization is a loss of information and adaptability. What might be evidence of or a theory that may extolled from this belief is more genetic maladies or mistakes or malformations than before.
The point of that wasn't to really argue anything. I'm not sure if I'm even up to it. It was just to give an example of what I think BGrad was talking about. Those are really just simplified versions of what a Creationist believes and aren't meant to be full fleshed out discriptions.
What we are arguing about is the interpretation of the repeatable and testable events.
We all have the same evidence.
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