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Well since there isn't one agreed upon Theory of Creationism, I would think that each Creationist has their own individual opinion of Natural Selection (which probably then leads to some discussion about micro vs. macro evolution).t_BuckeyeScott;1890931; said:I know I'm pulling this out of a longer string of things, but it made me wonder:
What does everyone think the creationist thinks about Natural Selection?
What standard are we holding "an agreed upon theory" too? If it's the same as a bunch of scientists agree on the overarching idea that man and everything esle evovled from a single-celled simple organism. Then yes the same could be true of a "Theory of Creation."Well since there isn't one agreed upon Theory of Creationism, I would think that each Creationist has their own individual opinion of Natural Selection (which probably then leads to some discussion about micro vs. macro evolution).
t_BuckeyeScott;1890990; said:I actually see less deviation from the "Theory" standpoint in creationism than evolutionism.
For instance: Have we decided whether the change is incremental and barely noticible from small changes in base pairs or is it large changes happening quickly resulting in large noticeable differences between evolutionary transitional species?
Edit: Hold on. I forgot something.
If I'm not mistaken, isn't progressive just evolution with a Divine starter?I believe there is just as much variance in the creationist viewpoints: progressive, literal, etc.
Well it woud seem like fish and lamb were likely part of his diet. See the feeding of the 5,000 and the Passover meal.Anybod else feel like Jesus was probably more of an herbivore rider?
t_BuckeyeScott;1891001; said:If I'm not mistaken, isn't progressive just evolution with a Divine starter?
t_BuckeyeScott;1890990; said:What standard are we holding "an agreed upon theory" too? If it's the same as a bunch of scientists agree on the overarching idea that man and everything esle evovled from a single-celled simple organism. Then yes the same could be true of a "Theory of Creation."
I actually see less deviation from the "Theory" standpoint in creationism than evolutionism.
For instance: Have we decided whether the change is incremental and barely noticible from small changes in base pairs or is it large changes happening quickly resulting in large noticeable differences between evolutionary transitional species?
Edit: Hold on. I forgot something.
Edit2: I don't understand the hang-up on the lack of "agreed upon theory of creation".
I find this in particular very interesting. I'm willing to submit that it may be true.My personal impression is that there are many varied theories in evolution simply because of the number of scientists and disciplines involved; whereas, creationism would have the same if the numbers were the same.
Brewtus;1891011; said:Considering that each religion has its own stories of creation, I would argue that there are as many or more Theories of Creationism as there are religions. Even within Christianity there isn't a consensus on the details of Creation (is the universe 6,000 years old or billions?, did God create the universe in 6 days or over billions of years?, did Adam and Eve really exist or did God use evolution to "create" mankind and then at some point gave him/her a soul?, etc.).
There is no controversy or arguments among scientists regarding the big-picture of Evolution. The disagreements and discussions are regarding the specific mechanics and influences of evolution, the exact relationship between extant and extinct species, etc.
t_BuckeyeScott;1891016; said:I'm going to be honest, the way some of you think I'm a quack makes me wonder just a little about my comprehension ability.
Well you'd have to get an answer from them directly, but I think their response would have something to do with acknowledging "micro evolution" (such as bacteria developing resistance to antibiotics) but not "macro evolution" (evolution of a new species). But what I'd like to know is how a Creationist would explain the fossil skulls I posted photos of previously in this thread. How do they fit into the Creationist model?t_BuckeyeScott;1891022; said:So, then, let's revise, back to the title of the thread. And back to the crazy fundamentalist which seems to be who we describe as the makers of the creation museum.
What do they (and the people who subsribe to it) think about natural selection?