Agnostic75
Well-Known Member
rusra=02 said:I do believe that many biologists have been duped (or silenced) by the propaganda campaign for the ToE.
From an entirely scientific perspective, it would be impossible for a non-expert in biology to accurately make such a claim based upon their own personal knowledge of biology. You are not an expert in biology. Even if you were, the vast majority of experts would still disagree with you. Why should non-experts in biology take your word over the word of a very large consensus of experts?
As I have told you before in some other threads, until the 1800's, evolution had very little support in the Christian church, and Christians who accepted evolution were often persecuted, and unpopular. Only later did theistic evolution become accepted by many Christians. Before the 1800's, the "propaganda" definitely favored creationism, not evolution. Obviously, scientific advances were the main reason why many Christians decided that God did not intend for all of the book of Genesis to be interpreted literally regarding creationism, the global flood theory, and the young earth theory.
You want a fair playing field today, but how much more fair of a playing field could there have been for creationists before the 1800's? You had your fair playing field, and science eventually won as far as the vast majority of experts are concerned.
Science does not intentionally dupe anyone. For example, regarding the global flood theory, if a geologist studies the sorting of fossils and sediments, he has at least two choices, to presuppose that a global flood occured before he conducts his research, and automatically refuse to accept any scientific evidence that appears to contradict biblical literalism, or he can follow the scientific evidence wherever it leads. Are you suggesting that all scientists should presuppose that the book of Genesis is literally true before they study creationism, the global flood theory, and the young earth theory? How could scientific research ever be fair and objective if scientists always presupposed their conclusions before they even started their research?
A great many scientists originally presupposed "your way," and later changed their minds after they conducted lots of scientific research. One of them is geophysicist Glenn Morton, who has studied and written extensively on the global flood. Would you like to critique a lot of Morton's extensive writings on the global flood? If you cannot adequately demonstrate that you know a lot about biology, geology, and physics, why should anyone pay attention to you?
At this time, would you be able to pass the first test in a freshman biology, geology, or physics class? If not, there is no way that you would be able to intelligently discuss creationism, the global flood theory, and the young earth theory. Even if you were an expert in all of those fields, the vast majority of experts would still disagree with you, and most laymen would not know enough about science to understand you. The majority of people do not know a lot about biology, geology, or physics, nor does God require them to. Why should those people accept your uninformed scientific opinions over the opinions of the vast majority of experts?
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