|
|
#1 |
|
POL Activist
Political Alignment:
Democrat
-
Neutral
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Mid-south
Posts: 13
Reputation =
90
|
debunk Creationism, easier than you think really.
This another set of things (not even complex science involved) to use when confronted with a Creationist/Intelligent design. I am not sure I have heard it argued this way but here goes:
Man is the sum of fact and faith, for us to exist and function (not go nuts) balance/understanding/compromise has has to be acheived. This is what I got from reading Aristole, Plato, Martin Luther King, Erich Kahler...and even passages of the Bible (I was brought up in the Anglican/Episcopal church...BTW, new female Bishop here in America, a good move in the right direction for them). 'Fact' is what we are as flesh and blood, the physics and science of the universe we understand. Yes, there are MANY things we can explain but not all things can be explained which are physical phenomenon. Faith is why we are here. We do not know that, period. Faith (contrary to any devout religious person) cannot in any way be attached to one sect or religion. If we are to be happy and live on the planet together then the things have to be in balance for ALL, EVERY one of us around the world. Here is my argument for a more secular view and why Creationism has a certain place but not in the context of Itelligent design or explain the real origins of man: All humans are the same physically, they are no smarter or no dumber than each other. We are all common in all parts of the world. Based on our physical attributes alone we all HAVE to need the same things to be healthy and happy. Faith has to jibe with that in a common way to work out, to be compatible; common ground for everyone on the earth. the American conservative, Creationist Christian POV: I Creationist/evangelical explains that the Bible tells us about the creation of man and the there was no evolution. There are many problems with this. First, how is the Bible (in it's 60+ conflicting versions) any more the truth than the Quran...Hebrew writings...Hindu...Shinto, etc, etc...the most sacred texts of other religious sects? This Creationist POV (call it Intelligent Design now) only takes into consideration a fraction of the entire population of the Earth, based on that faith (Christians, and basically born agains; Anglicans are not considered real Christians in this set of beliefs BTW). You have to find the common ground, you have to be able to get close to why WE ARE ALL HERE. You cannot possibly argue a point that says one sect is more right than any others about the dreation of mankind. The numbers on the planet do not make this happen. There has to be ONE origin for ALL mankind and it can't be just an Evangelical Christian origin. Second, the Bible (this is true for many religious writings around the world) outlines very common, practical ground rules of how to live our lives. All of them (religious text) contain some basic ground rules that are the same, some of these writings have ween reinterpreted many, many times. The word of God, Vishnu, Moses, Allah...? No, not really...a lot of the stories are the same but the names are changed to fit that sect and the values they happen to have during any one epoch. These are all text written by man (and men in particular, a problem in my book), and inspired by the faith of that particular sect...the why are we here part of it. The current Bishop of the Anglican/Episcopal church even admits (heard it today), "the church is a living, breathing, ever evolving entity." That tells me this is about humans and our relationship to one another and not the absolute word of one particular God/diety. Faith is our non-physical link to one another, nothing more and nothing less...there is no word of an absolute God...we have to have this faith and fact link to survive and in balance so to not go nuts. It does still leave plenty of things that are unexplained 'wonderment.' Love, hate, happiness, lonliness...we have to have one another to survive...no Monk in Tibet can pray for our souls to make this better, we have to be good to one another throughout the world. Test this out next time on someone, the more insane they are the more out of balance faith and fact have become in their lives (CM's rule of direct measurable insanity). Consider my own list, and I do not claim to have all the answers, but it works with this list: Hitler Ann Coulter Charles Manson Jerry Falwell Ann Coulter (oh...said that one, sorry) Pol Pot Stalin David Koresh Jim Jones Ann Coulter (oh...damn, sorry again) My smart a**ing aside you get the point I think. There is human wonderment in a faith context (still) and no, we do not KNOW exactly how long we have been here or how we got here,,,why we are here. We do not know if there is an afterlife (Jews are pretty straight ahead in their faith about that, I think they might have it right). We have to treat one another like we want to be treated (all sacred texts do have the Golden rule as a basis) |
|
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
Limited Citizenship (Rules Violation)
Political Alignment:
Green Party
-
very Liberal
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Los Angeles County
Posts: 588
Reputation =
184
|
Re: debunk Creationism, easier than you think really.
Well, cat's meow, that is simple and generally pactical. For me, though, I know there are more answers out there than common wisdom provides. Science is growing and showing me so much more than I ever thought possible; spirituality I've discovered while considering implications of quantum physics (I saw that movie, "What the Bleep Do We Know" and read Hawkings and Kaku among others); a DVD I have by Arthur C. Clarke that provides compelling evidence for reincarnation., etc. I think the multiverse is stranger than we know and maybe stranger than we can know. I keep looking up, in awe and wonder of it all.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#3 | |
|
POL Activist
Political Alignment:
Democrat
-
Neutral
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Mid-south
Posts: 13
Reputation =
90
|
Re: debunk Creationism, easier than you think really.
Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4 | ||
|
POL Historian
Political Alignment:
Democrat
-
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Oakland Californication
Posts: 89
Reputation =
196
|
Re: debunk Creationism, easier than you think really.
I would warn anyone, that to debate the issue of Darwin vs.The Bible is seriously starting from a bad standpoint. Thomas Paine wrote a decent dissertation on the problem of the Catholic Church' doctrine and the source of the texts that they ultimately decided to put in the book.
Also, Darwin is a terrible standpoint upon which base the issue of science. We must not leave out the circles that he was part of, that were trying to codify a doctrine for the British empire based upon the idea that the Anglo-Saxon race was superior to other races, which in turn, became the "science" of Eugenics, and the horrible racist programs that came out of that. To unify something like God/Science, take Johannes Kepler for instance. I've included sections from his paper "The Six Cornered Snow-Flake". He started with why snow takes the form it does, and then went into why bees make their honeycombs the shape they do? Quote:
Quote:
__________________
No! There's a limit to the tyrants power. Friedrich Schiller Peace is not made with friends. Peace is made with enemies. Yitzhak Rabin |
||
|
|
|
|
|
#5 |
|
POL Congressperson
Political Alignment:
Democrat
-
Liberal
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 19
Reputation =
99
|
Re: debunk Creationism, easier than you think really.
The answer to all the puzzles about Creationism and Intelligent Design are here: http://www.venganza.org
|
|
|
|
|
|
#6 |
|
POL Citizen
Political Alignment:
Green Party
-
very Liberal
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Florida
Posts: 62
Reputation =
186
|
Re: debunk Creationism, easier than you think really.
Optimism in Evolution
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/13/op...ml?ref=opinion By OLIVIA JUDSON Published: August 12, 2008 LONDON When the dog days of summer come to an end, one thing we can be sure of is that the school year that follows will see more fights over the teaching of evolution and whether intelligent design, or even Biblical accounts of creation, have a place in America’s science classrooms. In these arguments, evolution is treated as an abstract subject that deals with the age of the earth or how fish first flopped onto land. It’s discussed as though it were an optional, quaint and largely irrelevant part of biology. And a common consequence of the arguments is that evolution gets dropped from the curriculum entirely. This is a travesty. It is also dangerous. Evolution should be taught — indeed, it should be central to beginning biology classes — for at least three reasons. First, it provides a powerful framework for investigating the world we live in. Without evolution, biology is merely a collection of disconnected facts, a set of descriptions. The astonishing variety of nature, from the tree shrew that guzzles vast quantities of alcohol every night to the lichens that grow in the Antarctic wastes, cannot be probed and understood. Add evolution — and it becomes possible to make inferences and predictions and (sometimes) to do experiments to test those predictions. All of a sudden patterns emerge everywhere, and apparently trivial details become interesting. ... Olivia Judson, a contributing columnist for The Times, writes The Wild Side at nytimes.com/opinion.
__________________
"The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don't have any." - Alice Walker - edited by 1tinsoldier: 03/25/12 at 02:10 pm. |
|
|
|
|
|
#7 |
|
Limited Citizenship (Rules Violation)
Political Alignment:
Green Party
-
very Liberal
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Los Angeles County
Posts: 588
Reputation =
184
|
Re: debunk Creationism, easier than you think really.
Is the totality of all energy conscious? Is there a morphic field? Do aliens seed life where they go? Do aliens re-combine DNA to create new life forms and seed those too? Are Homo Sapiens the result of alien DNA experimentation, or, in other words, are Homo Sapiens a created species among other species on our planet, Earth, or transplanted on Earth from other solar systems elsewhere in the multiverse?
- edited by Jennifer_SFBA: 08/13/08 at 05:41 pm. |
|
|
|
![]() |
| Email this thread, etc. | |
| why some ads lean right? |
|
|