• 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!

Evolution My ToE

Dan From Smithville

He who controls the spice controls the universe.
Staff member
Premium Member
Side topic- did you ever hear of a scientist losing tenure for a
controversial theory?
No. Not to my knowledge.

Your question brings to mind J. Harlan Bretz and his controversial hypothesis about the origin of the channeled scablands of the Pacific Nortwest. His hypothesis and research of it were widely challenged for decades and there was much resistance. Through it all, he not only kept his position, but lived to reap rewards and honors as his ideas became recognized. It is now understood that the origins were the result of periodic and tremendous flooding from ancient and no longer, Lake Missoula.

I have heard some much less grounded ideas coming from a few academics that had no impact on their tenure. One proposed that transgenic crops were somehow causatively linked to AIDS. Way out there, but he kept his job. No research sprang from that wild idea either.
 

Audie

Veteran Member
No. Not to my knowledge.

Your question brings to mind J. Harlan Bretz and his controversial hypothesis about the origin of the channeled scablands of the Pacific Nortwest. His hypothesis and research of it were widely challenged for decades and there was much resistance. Through it all, he not only kept his position, but lived to reap rewards and honors as his ideas became recognized. It is now understood that the origins were the result of periodic and tremendous flooding from ancient and no longer, Lake Missoula.

I have heard some much less grounded ideas coming from a few academics that had no impact on their tenure. One proposed that transgenic crops were somehow causatively linked to AIDS. Way out there, but he kept his job. No research sprang from that wild idea either.

I have been to Coulee Dam, the dry falls etc, and
know the story.

It’s a creationist thing to bring that up to show why
creationist geologists, biologists etc are scared to
let it be known, for fear of being, as they say,
Expelled.
 

Dan From Smithville

He who controls the spice controls the universe.
Staff member
Premium Member
I have been to Coulee Dam, the dry falls etc, and
know the story.

It’s a creationist thing to bring that up to show why
creationist geologists, biologists etc are scared to
let it be known, for fear of being, as they say,
Expelled.
The tenure myth is used to offer credibility to conspiracy theories and is a conspiracy theory of its own. Creationist appear to love conspiracy theories as evidence of the motives of those sinister scientists.

I have not been there, but I would love to some of it. It is a very good story with a great ending.
 

YoursTrue

Faith-confidence in what we hope for (Hebrews 11)
She did not have a Y chromosome unless she was not human. So now we have a god that can go inside a woman's body to convert one of the eggs in to the male equivalent of a sperm then guide them together to implant into the uterus. Does that sound right to you?
If god becomes that active in a woman then why doesn't that god go in and correct the genetic defects in children or turn off the tumor genes in those who believe in him with malignant cancers?
Why didn't god just use the appropriate organic compounds to make adam? Why change the atomic particles in dust to become organic? Why rip out a rib from Adam then genetically manipulate the genetic material to convert all of the y chromosomes to X so eve could be female unless she was actually male?
There is only one answer - these are myths created by people who knew very little about biological systems.
Thiß is not an issue. For me. Because since I believe God is the Prime Cause of life, He can do what humans cannot do. As if to say God could not get a cell to divide as He wanted. But if we want to go back to evolution, I suppose you have to figure when the first appearance of male and female chromosomes came about.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
The tenure myth is used to offer credibility to conspiracy theories and is a conspiracy theory of its own. Creationist appear to love conspiracy theories as evidence of the motives of those sinister scientists.

I have not been there, but I would love to some of it. It is a very good story with a great ending.
I don't think that even Behe lost his job for his ideas. And almost all of his claims have been refuted. He has lost all academic credibility because he will not own up to his errors. I think the only thing that can cause one to lose academic tenure is openly lying. Lying is the one unforgivable sin. And I might be overstating it. If a person that openly lied owned up to his lies and asked for forgiveness he could work his way back into academic acceptance.
 

YoursTrue

Faith-confidence in what we hope for (Hebrews 11)
At one time it could. The only difference I can see is historical luck.

The religion that Athena was a part of didn't focus on personal relationships with deities, although appeasing them for public safety was considered essential. Certainly the worship continued over the course of centuries.
Hmm historical luck that the scrolls of the Jews were held and preserved throughout millennia as sacred testimony of their history, both physically (the temple arrangements, for instance), historically (the exile to Babylon), and spiritually (their relationship with their God)? (I don't think it was luck.)
 

YoursTrue

Faith-confidence in what we hope for (Hebrews 11)
I was raised Christian also and attended most of life. I understand why people believe in god and have faith as well as appreciate the fellowship and so much of the selfless actions performed. Most I have know accept the stories as teachings with a mixture of literal and mythical interpretations. Ironically my split from Christianity came from studying ecology rather than evolution although the two studies are interlinked. The more I saw how interconnected life was the less I saw humans as separate and not special/different. I could not find this concept in its true importance in any of the Christian teachings and that is my issue.

As I have watched the degradation of the Earths ecosystems despite all of the evidence that exists to reverse this process I wanted to understand why people did not respond to the evidence. The debates in this forum especially with regards to evolution have been very enlightening. I may not be Christian anymore but from what I have learned there is no reason for any Christian or other religions not to accept the evidence of our world and its meaning to our origins or our relationship with all life on this planet. I truly appreciate the balance you have with your faith and what we know about our world. You can believe in god an intact belief system and still understand how we came about and how we are connected to the world.
When I see the interconnection of matter on the earth and even how biologists and geologists place first the earth, then vegetation, then animals, then humans latest in the line, it is in harmony with what the Bible says. The early Bible writers did not study evolution. Yet they knew that humans were after the animals. Ok let's say you believe humans are animals. (I no longer do.) But even so, evolutionists believe, let's say, that gorillas and lions came before humans did on the earth.
 

YoursTrue

Faith-confidence in what we hope for (Hebrews 11)
I was raised Christian also and attended most of life. I understand why people believe in god and have faith as well as appreciate the fellowship and so much of the selfless actions performed. Most I have know accept the stories as teachings with a mixture of literal and mythical interpretations. Ironically my split from Christianity came from studying ecology rather than evolution although the two studies are interlinked. The more I saw how interconnected life was the less I saw humans as separate and not special/different. I could not find this concept in its true importance in any of the Christian teachings and that is my issue.

As I have watched the degradation of the Earths ecosystems despite all of the evidence that exists to reverse this process I wanted to understand why people did not respond to the evidence. The debates in this forum especially with regards to evolution have been very enlightening. I may not be Christian anymore but from what I have learned there is no reason for any Christian or other religions not to accept the evidence of our world and its meaning to our origins or our relationship with all life on this planet. I truly appreciate the balance you have with your faith and what we know about our world. You can believe in god an intact belief system and still understand how we came about and how we are connected to the world.
The fact that you say you are not a Christian anymore makes me wonder what you think a Christian is. Going back into history, we can see the great divide when Constantine took over some centuries after the apostles died out.
 

Dan From Smithville

He who controls the spice controls the universe.
Staff member
Premium Member
I don't think that even Behe lost his job for his ideas. And almost all of his claims have been refuted. He has lost all academic credibility because he will not own up to his errors. I think the only thing that can cause one to lose academic tenure is openly lying. Lying is the one unforgivable sin. And I might be overstating it. If a person that openly lied owned up to his lies and asked for forgiveness he could work his way back into academic acceptance.
Behe is another good example. He is still affiliated with Lehigh University as far as I know. His "speculation" (wink) doesn't seem to have had a negative impact on his position and career.
 
Last edited:

Dan From Smithville

He who controls the spice controls the universe.
Staff member
Premium Member
When I see the interconnection of matter on the earth and even how biologists and geologists place first the earth, then vegetation, then animals, then humans latest in the line, it is in harmony with what the Bible says. The early Bible writers did not study evolution. Yet they knew that humans were after the animals. Ok let's say you believe humans are animals. (I no longer do.) But even so, evolutionists believe, let's say, that gorillas and lions came before humans did on the earth.
You no longer believe humans are animals? Ah, nevermind, what would be the point?
 

Dan From Smithville

He who controls the spice controls the universe.
Staff member
Premium Member
I don't think that even Behe lost his job for his ideas. And almost all of his claims have been refuted. He has lost all academic credibility because he will not own up to his errors. I think the only thing that can cause one to lose academic tenure is openly lying. Lying is the one unforgivable sin. And I might be overstating it. If a person that openly lied owned up to his lies and asked for forgiveness he could work his way back into academic acceptance.
Behe still has a page on the Lehigh University Bio department web site. It does include a disclaimer about his religious, pseudoscience beliefs.
Department of Biological Sciences, Lehigh University
 

Hockeycowboy

Witness for Jehovah
Premium Member
And put yourself in a box.

No, at least not in the way you’re thinking.
I got my questions answered...answers that were reasonable, logical, and made sense.

You can’t get over 8.5 million people (and growing every day), from varied cultures and backgrounds, to come to an agreement on every aspect of Biblical understanding, without there being rational, logical teachings behind it.



If this was about Bible study, why did common descent become a focus of these discussions? What was the motive of these brothers?

By asking this, you are revealing that you (and millions of others apparently) don’t grasp the reason / purpose behind Jesus’ ransom, how it redeems faithful mankind from sin and death, since as descendants of A & E we inherited imperfection and death. (I don’t blame you; you’re just going by what you’ve been taught. I blame those religious teachers, the clergy.) Jesus’ sacrifice redeems Mankind, not animals. Am I wrong?

Nothing that I know of demands that it [science] be ignored or deprecated in order for a Christian to remain faithful.
Incredible! Genesis clearly states Jehovah created organisms ‘according to their kinds.’ (And if you study the fossil record in light of these statements, you’ll see that they agree; the evidence supports this.) From that link entitled “Biological Big Bang”..
Major transitions in biological evolution show the same pattern of sudden emergence of diverse forms at a new level of complexity. The relationships between major groups within an emergent new class of biological entities are hard to decipher and do not seem to fit the tree pattern that, following Darwin's original proposal, remains the dominant description of biological evolution. The cases in point include the origin of complex RNA molecules and protein folds; .....eukaryotic supergroups; and animal phyla.”
Excerpt from The Biological Big Bang model for the major transitions in evolution

See? I’ve presented much evidence, not just Biblical passages. (Why did you imply that I haven’t?) Now, getting back to the topic...

But portraying Genesis as allegory is only a convenient POV, apparently believed by numerous professed Christian religions. They muddy and obfuscate the Bible’s words to curry favor with humans and their philosophies.

However, how did Jesus view Genesis / A&E? As genuine history. Easy to understand by reading Matthew 19:4-6 & Mark 10:4-9. And Jesus’ genealogy recorded in Luke 3. (Real people, of course, are listed. But Noah & Adam are allegorical figures? That makes no sense!) Many religions professing Christianity, by promoting such beliefs, relegate the Bible to a book of fantasy.

But these same religions also ignore Christ’s command to love their brothers...rather, they kill them in times of conflict, thereby joining the world. (James 4:4 applies to them) So I wouldn’t trust anything they promote!

I know you can follow my line of reasoning on that, right? Are you willing to, that’s the question.



I cannot say that I did not have some hope that I would not be so casually dismissed, but it is not really unexpected.

That’s really not fair...
My “Lol” was not employed to “casually” dismiss your statements supporting your POV, it was because you assumed my entire argument was based on apologetics, which is wrong! I presented several facts that question the validity of Common Descent.

I guess you just chose to ignore them? Are you going to ignore the statement above, made by E. Koonin?
 
Last edited:

metis

aged ecumenical anthropologist

Audie

Veteran Member
No, at least not in the way you’re thinking.
I got my questions answered...answers that were reasonable, logical, and made sense.

You can’t get over 8.5 million people (and growing every day), from varied cultures and backgrounds, to come to an agreement on every aspect of Biblical understanding, without there being rational, logical teachings behind it.





By asking this, you are revealing that you (and millions of others apparently) don’t grasp the reason / purpose behind Jesus’ ransom, how it redeems faithful mankind from sin and death, since as descendants of A & E we inherited imperfection and death. (I don’t blame you; you’re just going by what you’ve been taught. I blame those religious teachers, the clergy.) Jesus’ sacrifice redeems Mankind, not animals. Am I wrong?


Incredible! Genesis clearly states Jehovah created organisms ‘according to their kinds.’ (And if you study the fossil record in light of these statements, you’ll see that they agree; the evidence supports this.) From that link entitled “Biological Big Bang”..
Major transitions in biological evolution show the same pattern of sudden emergence of diverse forms at a new level of complexity. The relationships between major groups within an emergent new class of biological entities are hard to decipher and do not seem to fit the tree pattern that, following Darwin's original proposal, remains the dominant description of biological evolution. The cases in point include the origin of complex RNA molecules and protein folds; .....eukaryotic supergroups; and animal phyla.”
Excerpt from The Biological Big Bang model for the major transitions in evolution

See? I’ve presented much evidence, not just Biblical passages. (Why did you imply that I haven’t?) Now, getting back to the topic...

But portraying Genesis as allegory is only a convenient POV, apparently believed by numerous professed Christian religions. They muddy and obfuscate the Bible’s words to curry favor with humans and their philosophies.

However, how did Jesus view Genesis / A&E? As genuine history. Easy to understand by reading Matthew 19:4-6 & Mark 10:4-9. And Jesus’ genealogy recorded in Luke 3. (Real people, of course, are listed. But Noah & Adam are allegorical figures? That makes no sense!) Many religions professing Christianity, by promoting such beliefs, relegate the Bible to a book of fantasy.

But these same religions also ignore Christ’s command to love their brothers...rather, they kill them in times of conflict, thereby joining the world. (James 4:4 applies to them) So I wouldn’t trust anything they promote!

I know you can follow my line of reasoning on that, right? Are you willing to, that’s the question.





That’s really not fair...
My “Lol” was not employed to “casually” dismiss your statements supporting your POV, it was because you assumed my entire argument was based on apologetics, which is wrong! I presented several facts that question the validity of Common Descent.

I guess you just chose to ignore them? Are you going to ignore the statement above, made by E. Koonin?

Re your Big Band, we find....As stated by the authors,[7] this book was aimed at professional biologists and assumes considerable prior knowledge.

Which is definitely not true of you.

A quote mine from some pre digested source with
a specific agenda to drive is good stuff only for the
willfully dishonest and intellectually lazy.

In the event, it in no way argues against ToE,
however much you may try to make it do so.

How about you jut come up with one fact contrary t o
ToE and get it over with?

If it were wrong, you know, it would be massively wrong,
and the disproof would be thick all about. And everyone
would know that.

Quote mining, bold type and underlining just underlines
that ya got nothing. (and are wrong)
 
Top