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You've seriously gotta be kidding me - A "Creation" museum?
Right got this emailed to me through facebook from folks doing their Anthro PhD.
Genesis of a theory evolves into museum Quote:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servl...wcreationism28 Are the poll results at the end of the article serious? Do that many American's seriously believe in Creationism or "Creation Science"? and is it true (as reported by the CBC) that 3 of the 10 Republican candidates are Creationists who reject Evolution? |
RACooper, the 3/10 figure is probably accurate. I'm a Republican in the middle of the Bible Belt and I generally think of the creation story as being allegorical.
That said, down in these parts, ignorance is thought of by many as being a virtue. Even though the 3/10 figure may be correct, I think there are far better litmus tests for candidates than their adherence to religious doctrine, so to me, it's just their belief. Whether they believe God created the world in 7 days or that Joseph decoded some magical plates with some seer stones in order to bring us the Book of Mormon, there are more important ways to decide whether or not someone will make a good leader. |
I've heard of the museum, and yes, it's true about the Republican candidates. Luckily their are 7 more of them + however many Democrats we're up to now and we can ignore those three.
As someone said on LJ I think, if dinos had lived at the same time as humans, the Romans wouldn't have had their gladiators fighting lions... Raptors would be way more entertaining. |
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creationism = pwned |
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I love being Catholic ;) |
Ah yes - Theistic Evolution, rationality and faith together (shocking concept huh?)
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Then again, I agree with Kevin that a candidate's religious beliefs don't really hold much water with me; there are other characteristics I'm looking for in the candidate who will get my vote. . |
I dislike being the "monkey wrench", but the Creation Museum was on CBS Affiliates. And I found it extraordinarily disturbing. It debunks all of Einstein's Theory of Relativity and Laws of Thermodynamics.
The issue for me as a scientist is these kinds of things cannot be answered by science, i.e. what was God doing before He created Heaven and Earth; or why do bad things happend to good people? As a scientist, I do not ask those questions. I leave those to the philosophers and theologians to study. Rather, I ask how can I stabilize a patient who is in heart failure or cardiac decompensation... What this museum does in my opinion is add unproven concepts to scientific facts that cannot be tested or proven. It is unethical. |
I have a question for you AKA Monet, how many people have you seen on the brink of death and suddenly for no reason they recovered completely. or how many patients have you dealt with that had cancer, and through no radiation or treatment, were apparently healed. I know that these types of cases exist, and I am not preaching religion at anyone, I just have a legitimate question, and would like some insight from a person in the medical field. Surely you have seen something like this, right?
I just think, at some point its kinda hard to put off that there is no God, otherwise how do people magically get healed in what we call 'Miracles'. If there is no medical treatment and obviously the body cant just make major medical changes overnight, or sometime is the matter of hours, how else do you explain something like this without a higher being? |
I've never actually met someone that believes in Creationism. I mean I know people who believe in Adam & Eve and the whole bit but they either integrate evolution into it or they simply never thought twice about how the two go together. As far as I'm concerned, those crazy freaks are on tv only.
-Rudey |
Accepting a higher being or medical miracles does not equal acceptance of the Creationist story!
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Or you could just take my word for it that they exist outside of TV. |
I had a roommate that truely believed that "God" was something that humans came up with to explain what we now have modern science to explain.
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Thanks for the formal name! |
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We should have a fight to the death! -your friendly ex-christian |
I had always heard of it referred to as Intelligent Design (the rationality and faith together).
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ID is really just Creationism repackaged... and most ID folks disagree stongly with Theistic Evolution.
Theistic Evolution is different in that the Bible Creation Story is just that a story (ie. allegorical not literal), Evolutionary Biology is a sound science that explains the development of life and ulimately 'Man', and that all is ultimately the result of 'divine creation' (ie. God started everything). Where the two differ is that Theistic Evolution does not advocate or teach that God was involved in the process of Evolution (well that we can tell), only that he was the 'Creator' or instigator of the universe and hence life. Or more simply completely accepting of the science of the creation and development of the universe and life - and completely accepting that God was the creator of the universe. |
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Now as a scientist, I have to concede that it is about evolutionary protective genes or single nucleotide polymorphisms or microRNAs. Some people carry them and in times of stress, these genetic survival mechanisms are activated in succession at the right time, in the right place. It is testable, repeatable and possibly an exception rather than the rule. It is highly stochastic and the shows the randomness of the Universe. I am not a physician, so I rarely see any patients. I just test their genetics. However, I develop genetic rodent models that can test those boundaries in pre-phase I clinical trials. Your question is more about acute vs. chronic pathological lesions. If cancer is chronic pathology to the bone, the odds are against the person surviving this illness without invasive experimental treatment. But I did just see some article discussing sudden cardiac arrest and how to reactivate it by some USC cardiologist. Then, I hear the opposite that if the heart is not reactivated under 90 seconds, the brain will die... That means we have to do more research as to what is correct. Scientists question the process "how" and rarely the question "why". I think that theologians and philosophers are about the question of "meaning of life". Scientists cannot successfully answer that kind of question, the testable hypothesis cannot be examined. |
Fair game...
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People can believe what they want. But Christian theories cannot be tested by the scientific method. Whereas, evolution can be successfully tested and the tests are repeatable [sp?]. Origin of the species occurs by "natural selection" that is controled by several mechanisms: one being mutation. The rate of mutation occuring in the entire human genome occurs 1 per 1000 centiMorgan (cM)--which is 1 megabases of DNA, the genetic material. In a given population, as designated by geography, the variations within the genome in some areas are similar and others are diverse. The more diverse, the older the population based on Bayesian statistics and population genetics. Christians that choose to have these strong beliefs are fine. However, they cannot be angry at those who know and think scientifically when their strong beliefs are debunked by strong data and mathematics. |
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I personally believe in evolution, at least on some levels. I'm not a science-oriented person, so I don't really have overwhelming faith that I'll ever get a grip on the information at a level sufficient to make informed decisions for myself. As a Christian, I believe in some form of creation as well, but I wouldn't have a problem if the modern theories were spot on. I'm certainly not a person who has a problem with teachers explaining evolution and the theories involved in the classroom. I don't even care if ID or Creationism or whatever isn't taught beside it, though I do think it should be mentioned that there is some opposition. As I said, my biggest concern is the hostility towards those who question or believe differently. I know you said Christians can believe what they want, but that doesn't mean people will let them do so without affront. Hell, the candidates reluctant to raise their hand at the GOP debate got absolutely slaughtered in the media (I also haven't seen similar questions asked to democrats). This is the kind of thing I'm talking about. Does it really make a difference? Does a reluctance to believe fully in evolution make an otherwise intelligent person unfit for leadership? |
i was raised a Christian. i was read the Bible and taught to read the Bible. i wasnt there for the beginning. neither was anybody else here today. so basically, it is what it is. i believe in the whole "on this day ____, the next day ____..."
in my OPINION, if you consider yourself a Christian, and read the Bible, and believe what is in the Bible, there is no other way. Maybe it was a bang! it could even have happened with a big bang! like i said, i wasnt there so i go by the only written documentation of it. true, it doesnt go into specifics, but who am i to judge? i just believe what i was taught, and lets face it, whats wrong with that? id rather be told in the end i was right and not held accountable for it, than to have believed wrong and suffer the consequences... |
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But if you look very closely at the Bible, you'll actually see two creation stories. One where it ends with "and man and woman did He create..." (or something to that extent) and then it goes into Adam and Eve. Which one should we go with? Are we supposed to mix it up, like what's done when kids put on the Christmas Pageant? |
We discussed this in one of my college theology classes (Jesuit University, although not necessarily Jesuit theology). The more formal one, which I believe is first, is actually a Jewish hymn that post dates the rest of the Bible. The more casual one (the one that includes the tree) doesn't post date it, but reads to me almost like an Anansi story. God makes everyone, God says you can eat of any tree except this one, then puts tree in garden. (WHY WOULD YOU PUT THE TREE THERE IN THE FIRST PLACE?) Wacky antics ensue.
Anyway, to me that story was told to explain why bad things happen, why there is sin in the world, why others attack their clan. There's no definitive answer to this, although my teacher agreed with this interpretation. I refuse to accept an interpretation that necessarily lowers God's abilities to a level at which we can completely comprehend them. God is much bigger than that. |
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Personally I have no problem with people who question or challenge Evolution (or any scientific theory/knowledge),and if anything I encourage or look forward to these questions and challenges; but it has to be on solid scientific grounds, not on ideology - one I'll happily debate with or read up on... the other I'll pretty mush dismiss as a "%#$!^% idiot". Now as for people with "logic-based reasoning" having trouble getting their minds around the current theories regarding Evolution or universe creation models I'd love to have that explained in more detail since I'm at a loss to understand why. |
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As for logic-based people...Where did it all come from? As AKA stated (I think), some people ask why, as opposed to "how". I think a lot of people have trouble with the concept that everything we know of happened by chance. For me, and a lot of other people I know, I just can't wrap my mind around the idea that everything just fell into place. Maybe I'm just not well schooled in science or gifted with a scientific mind, but I just can't look around, look at how things function, etc...and think "what a coincidence that all this came together like it did." I agree that those challenging evolution or whatever should do so on a scientific level. Then again, I don't think it makes someone an idiot to go "that just doesn't make sense to me". |
And God created Heaven and Earth in six days and rested the seventh!
How long was each day? Did God just make Adam and Eve and the fearful serpent? There had to be othere things outside the Garden? Where did all of these huge bones come from? How big is the Univers and are there others similar to us? I do not have a clue as I do not think anyone else does either as we were not there nor was Einstine! He was just a johnny come lately to it all! Heck, he did not know how to run a clothes washer!;) |
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I hope a fearful serpent eats your face.........soon. |
First: The April 9th issue of Newsweek has a very interesting article on religion vs. atheism which includes a discussion on creationism vs. evolution by two well known proponents on each time.
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Interesting you say that science itself evolves. Yes, it does. One answers one question, there is always another question to answer... That is why science is the enigmatic puzzle that it is. It is what drives us scientists. Quote:
IMHO, a lot of people have lost their "faith" in US... That is how we are hurting, generally. It has started showing up in the major medical journals: Science, Nature, JAMA and NEJM. Well, like I stated somewhere on GC, when I start to teach some basic concepts in biology, I have to teach the concept about DG or the Gibbs free energy requirement for reactions. It is involved in the calculations of the Laws of Thermodynamics. Without these laws we cannot discuss how and why cells divide. These concepts are in place, provable my mathematics and repetitively tested to suggest that these are taking place. All humans are evolving. But evolutionary time is millions of years. What will we be millions of years later? Probably nothing because we will become extinct... One thing is certain, you were born on Earth and you will die... Everyone has had it happen to them who is alive today. Whatever happens before and afterward, I have not a clue. And although I would love to think there is more, and I am not fine with being worm feed. But, that's just me... |
When Darwin wrote his theory, he assumed that the fossil record would prove what he'd written. For years and years it didn't but now we're finding creatures that agree with the theory. A lot of creationists smirked for years because we didn't have those vital missing links and now they're showing up.
My dad is a strong christian and a man of science. I like his version of fixing creationism and evolution in his mind, it makes sense (because he doesn't take the bible story literally). He believes that Adam and Eve may have been the first self-aware, intelligent humans, not the first humans period. I'm not saying it's wrong to be into creationism, but I do think it's wrong to try and shove science aside in order to teach that doctrine. If you are a christian, it's totally feasible for evolution and creationism to co-exist. If you saw the documentary Jesus Camp, it is so frustrating to see one of the mothers homeschooling her kids and basically brainwashing fundamentalist tripe into them. One of the kids watches a video that claims that the earth is only 6,000 years old. Not five minutes later, the mother prompts her child to say (I'm not kidding, if you haven't seen this yet, go watch it!), "science doesn't prove anything." I still have trouble seeing why people insist that ID be taught in school alongside evolution. ID is a judeo-christian belief, not a scientic theory that's been recreated in a controlled environment with more and more evidence being discovered to support it. Believe it all you want, but stop trying to toss aside evolution for a religious doctrine. Was I redundant? I feel like I was redundant. I didn't get enough sleep last night. |
Hmmmm?
Interesting that this article should pop up on my email notifications:
Communicating Science... Science 1 June 2007: Vol. 316. no. 5829, p. 1286 DOI: 10.1126/science.1141343 Prev | Table of Contents | Next Books COMMUNICATING SCIENCE: Because Science Matters Barbara Kline Pope* -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A Scientist's Guide to Talking with the Media Practical Advice from the Union of Concerned Scientists by Richard Hayes and Daniel Grossman Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, NJ, 2006. 228 pp. Paper, $18.95. ISBN 9780813538587. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Recently, I was sitting with my five-year-old son on a dingy yellow leather chair in the uncomfortable quiet of our dermatologist's vast waiting room. As I was whisper-reading a Magic School Bus book to him, I heard the words, "Well, I can sort of believe in evolution…" Immediately looking up, I saw a woman in her mid-30s with an open book on her lap. She was relating her opinion to a retiring elderly man seated beside her. I listened intently, hoping for a lively discussion about a topic that is occupying much of my time these days. She continued, "but I just can't see that the big bang really happened." Most of us are familiar with the dismal state of science literacy. Basic science concepts and facts escape many people. A majority of Americans say that they do not accept the validity of some of the most established scientific theories--as witnessed on that visit to the doctor. And perhaps the most important feature of the woeful state of public understanding of science is the average American's lack of a firm grasp of the process of science itself (1). |
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:( |
I'll second the "you're lucky" statement - I live a couple blocks away from the "Prayer Sanctuary" (a 'sub-church' of the "Prayer Palace") one of only two 'mega-churches' in Ontario (the other being the Palace one). The 'churches' are hardcore Southern Baptists and very evangelical, I get more doorstep 'witnessing' from them than the Jehova's Witnesses down the street. So I get the standard from them: Bible is literal truth, Creationism, Revelations coming true, condemnation of modern society, all other faiths are bad, Catholics aren't 'christian', Jack Chick tracts/pamphlets, etc. ~ very, very low on the list of folks I like to see darkening my doorstep.
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Jack Chick: the first time I saw some, I didn't think it was real. I thought it had to be a parody. Nope.
Look! Now they are available in Spanish: http://www.chick.com/default.asp |
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Apparently Catholics worship a Babylonian goddess, Dungeons and Dragons is the stairway to hell, Halloween will send you to hell, oh yes, and the Vatican is sponsoring Nazism and encouraging violence against the Jews. *vomit* |
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