• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

30,000 feet of water?????

1213

Well-Known Member
...I suggest that you ask AI ...
I would not recommend that, if one wants to have real knowledge.
...The hair style and color may be lucky guesses in this example, but clearly, this was not an image of Lucy or Homo habilis:

View attachment 99862
Thanks, that is interesting. Even with well preserved skull, the end result is more neanderthal than the actual photo. Could explain why the artistic illustrations from small fragments tend to lean to "earlier species".
...Lucy's bones are shorter than modern man because Lucy was a smaller animal. She combines the pelvis and skull of a bipedal ape like man with the much smaller cranial capacity of a chimp - about 1/3 the volume. This how we know that standing upright preceded big brains in human evolution.
The difference to bones can be from several reasons:
1) was not a man
2) was not fully grown
3) had some kind of developmental disorder
4) was actually not a human at all, nor any ancient relative to humans...

I think that what can actually be observed, doesn't support the idea that those bones are evidence for evolution.
 

1213

Well-Known Member
Polar bears and black bears... ... it's almost impossible for them to interbreed, and if it succeeds anyway, the chance of having viable off spring is incredibly low.
Almost impossible means it is possible, which would then by older scientific definition make them the same species.

How do you know the chances are low?
 

TagliatelliMonster

Veteran Member
So, please tell one example, what is a meaningful difference in the case?
Obvious differences include:
- Cranial capacity
- facial structure
- longer arms and curved fingers (indicating that climbing trees was still a big part of their lives even though they were bipedal)


Ow, you only asked for one difference. Well, here you have three.
 

TagliatelliMonster

Veteran Member
Almost impossible means it is possible, which would then by older scientific definition make them the same species.

No.

All humans can interbreed. There is no "close to impossible" there. All dogs can interbreed as well, with the caveat of the brutal anatomical disfigurement due to artificial breeding I noted earlier. But genetically they are all compatible. The same species.

When I say that it is almost impossible between those different bear species, it is not merely an anatomical barrier. It is a genetic barrier. And in the rare cases where it would succeed, then still the chances of viable off spring are extremely low also.

This is so because they have diverged genetically in big ways. They are genetically pretty much incompatible.
That's what happens when you share an ancestor older then a millions years.

Dogs share ancestors that are 10 to 12000 years old at most.
Humans share ancestors that are some 100.000 years old, with a lot of interbreeding since then also.
HUGE difference.

How do you know the chances are low?
Science.
 

shunyadragon

shunyadragon
Premium Member
By what is said in the Bible, death is the wage of sin. Evil people are destined to die. I have no problem with that, if God is the one who decides. He has given life and therefore has the right to decide how long life He gives. He would not have to give eternal life for anyone. And I think it is good, if He doesn't allow evil to continue forever.

The problem with this is, has some people the right to end other persons life. For example if someone attacks and the gets killed, I think it is the attackers fault and he got what he deserved and I don't think it is wrong to defend oneself, although I think best would be to live by the example of Jesus.

I believe in the case when Jews killed others, it was accepted when the others were evil. And I don't think it ever has been just because some believe/think differently, that is something western secular governments tends to do (for example to Gonzalo Lira).

So, I think righteous reason is, if the other is evil and violent. However, it may be difficult sometimes to judge correctly how it really is. I believe that is why Jesus told that his disciples (="Christians") should not judge, nor be violent.
I do not believe this addresses the history as I described. The elephant in the room up front is the persecution, ethnic cleansing and anti-Semitism relevant in the history of Christianity and today, which also often considered Jews as evil as in the writings of Martin Luther. Hitler followed the blueprint of Martin Luther to deal with the Jews with the full cooperation of the Christian German people, and the problem extended far beyond Germany to the history of Orthodox Russia and Eastern Europe and the widespread passion plays describing Jews as "Christ killers."

Your white wash in your post disappears in the first rain.
 

Foxfyre

Member
I've always been curious about the great flood story in the Bible.
Supposedly God flooded the earth with a rainstorm for 40 days and nights.
That does not jive with me for several reasons.....
Mt. Everest is the highest natural point on earth and over 29,000 feet. The flood supposedly covered the entire earth with enough water to kill everything and everyone including the Nepheliem which were reported to be giants.
That means 30,000 feet just came and went from nowhere. There is not enough water on earth to provide that much rain.
Then the earth was repopulated by only 8 people that were one family ( Noah sons and wives ) which would mean that not only would our current civilization would be based on incest but there would only be one race on the entire planet.( not meant as racism!!!!!!) Apparently this is not true which makes me even more suspicious especially after finding out the holy Bible has been edited as early as 1875 or 1877 AD...this is the first time the words "God" and "Lord" were ever in the bible.
I take a pretty pragmatic view of the stories in the Bible like that. In my opinion, whether actual history or metaphorical allegory, there are a number of ways to see it.

First to consider is that pretty much every ancient culture of the near East has a massive flood story in their lore. That suggests that there was a massive flood at some time. Secondly, the people of the Old Testament had very little world experience and didn't know the configuration of the Earth, much less all the life that was on the vast majority of it. So a massive flood to them could easily be seen by them that the whole world was flooded and that is the way the story would be written.

But finally, I am not personally a Biblical literalist and it doesn't bother me to separate the teaching stories from what it more likely actual history, to recognize what the of the Bible is history, what is metaphor/symbolism/allegory, what is poetry, what are wisdom sayings, what is prophecy, what is to be considered the Law the people were to live by.

And those who do take the Bible absolutely literally are encouraged to not be bothered by my interpretations. I respect your beliefs whether or not I share them.
 

Argentbear

Well-Known Member
I would not recommend that, if one wants to have real knowledge.

Thanks, that is interesting. Even with well preserved skull, the end result is more neanderthal than the actual photo. Could explain why the artistic illustrations from small fragments tend to lean to "earlier species".

The difference to bones can be from several reasons:
1) was not a man
2) was not fully grown
3) had some kind of developmental disorder
4) was actually not a human at all, nor any ancient relative to humans...

I think that what can actually be observed, doesn't support the idea that those bones are evidence for evolution.
1 Lucy was named that not just because the Leakey's were playing the beetles white album at the dig sight but because the fossil is a female. You can tell from the angle and spread of the pelvic bones
2 Lucy was an adult. that can be determined by many means but mostly by the terminals of the femurs
3. Lucy is not markedly different from hundreds of others austalopithecines
4 Yep actually human. Bipedal, upright posture, opposable thumbs, binocular vision etc.
 
Top