Amill
Apikoros
Umm, no.What I meant to say is that atheists use evolution to escape the idea of religion and not the contrary.
Many of us even believed in Evolution before we became atheists.
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Umm, no.What I meant to say is that atheists use evolution to escape the idea of religion and not the contrary.
....and this guy is studying medicine??????
(god) help us all!
AS he gives rationalization 4 what he saysOk, so why are you posting material from one guy who disagrees, as if that's a meaningful rebuttal?
I said the current fossils don't have anything intermediate to show. That's what I see but it's not my buisness if somebody has another opinion.What's lacking in your opinion? What sort of fossil would make you go "Ah, now the case for human/primate common ancestry is compelling"?
They aren't very close, they are another primate and I won't repeat my wordsAgain, because the Australopithecines are very close (time-wise) to the last common ancestor of humans and chimps, we expect them to show mostly primitive characteristics, with only a few hints of more modern characteristics. As we move forward in time and start seeing members of the genus Homo, we start to see fewer/less primitive traits, and more/more modern traits, which is exactly what you agreed is predicted by human/primate common ancestry.
So, they r another primate different from both apes and humans and not intermediate-as Oxnard interpreted-.Except they're not like chimps and orangutans. If they were, we would call them chimps and orangutans.
I am not dodgig but I can't understand exactly the aim of the question, I tried to answer according to my understanding as i don't know what's going inside ur mind.Again, you're dodging questions. Why? I thought you promised me you were in this discussion in good faith?
I disagree with evolution as a theory not because it affects my religionSo again, what would it mean to you personally if it turns out humans shared a common evolutionary ancestry with other primates? Would that change your religious views at all? Could you still be a Muslim? Would you have to go to a different Mosque? What would your friends and family say if you told them you were an "evolutionist"? Would you have to hide it from them?
I don't understad which postBut none of the unknowns you posted have anything at all to do with our ability to determine if Australopithicenes belong on our family tree. They're all about secondary (at best) issues. So why did you post them?
God created rules in this life, if the conditions around an animal become inconvenient the animal extincts. This extinction doesn't mean that God wiped them because he hates them . As what occurs from humans when they promote animal extinction by their spoiled behavior. And what difference did the extinction affect life on earth? nothing happened.And you still haven't answered if you think the following is a better interpretation of the fossils than evolutionary theory.
So did this god create Sahelanthropus tchadensis, decide he didn't like it, wipe it out, and then create a little bit different Ardipithecus? And then he didn't like that either, so he wiped them out and created a bunch of Australopithicene species, each a little different than the others? But then he didn't like those either, so he wiped all of them out and created H. habilis? And then he was bored with that, so he killed all them and created H. erectus, which were slightly different than habilis? And then after a while, he decided to kill off erectus and created a slightly different species, H. heidelbergensis? But then he tired of them, so he killed them and created the first H. sapiens, which were only slightly different than heidelbergensis? And just for kicks, he created the slightly different H. neanderthalensis alongside sapiens, but then for whatever reason he just killed them off leaving just H. sapiens?
If you're just going to keep dodging questions, bringing up side issues, and copying from websites, what's the point in continuing? That's not really anything we can call a "conversation" is it?
If that's right so you need to reconsider your principles-as I see-.Umm, no.
Many of us even believed in Evolution before we became atheists.
u'd better show me this delineation.I'm going to need you to give me a delineation between "micro" and "macro" evolution, then, since everything we know about biology today indicates that no such thing exists.
The transition from man to apes require the prsence of a myriad series of fossils that carry gradually changing characters from apes to man, a gradual increas in the size of the skull, etc and not using another primate that differs from both apes and humansWhat would be sufficient? You seem hell-bent on disbelieving, so why don't you give us an idea of what data could be presented that you would consider sufficient?
I've alredy give rationalization beforeOld member, actually. Died out three million years ago.
But the thing is, they show traits that are similar to humans, and similar to chimpanzees (chimps being our closest relatives, genetically speaking). Then another organism was found that was similar to a. afarensis, less similar to chimpanzees, and more similar to humans. Then another following that same trend. Then another. Then another. We've found a lot of organisms following this trend.
Taken by itself, A. Afarensis would indeed be a meaningless find in terms of human evolution, but in the context of everything else its role in human evolution becomes more clear.
But scientific theories do have a evidences that are solid and reliable and doesn't stand on false interpretations and the dreams of the poser. In the way you say, anybody can tell a lie and say it's a theory.Here's what you need to understand about scientific theories, and if you really go into medicine I hope this is something you pick up on because otherwise you're going to end up killing people: nothing can ever be proven with 100% certainty. There's a margin of error on the fact that I'm typing this right now. The goal, therefore, is to come up with the best explanation for the available facts, which is called a "hypothesis". When a hypothesis is able to explain all available evidence and is contradicted by none of it, it is regarded as a "theory".
To use an example you might be familiar with, imagine that a patient comes to you and is sick. You can't prove that the patient has a certain disease with 100% certainty, but you need to come up with something that explains their symptoms so you can treat them. If you wait for 100% certainty which you can never have, you can never treat the patient and they will die. It's the same with evolution. We don't know anything about our ancestry with 100% certainty, but we have a certain body of evidence and the best way to explain it is descent from A. Afarensis or something similar.
Sorry i was busyTarkeabdo,
FYI, I'm just waiting on you to finish responding to post #230. No hurry at all, but just to let you know.
You are here to give explanations and share a discussion or to annoy others? If you want to say something related to the discussion, nobody can hinder you but don't go on babbling.
You misunderstand. No such delineation exists. There is no "macro" or "micro" evolution. There is only evolution. It's a difference of degrees, not kinds. The degree of population variation that went into evolving lap dogs from wolves (which, if you study breeding and domestication of dogs you can pretty much see happen, and in fact was duplicated over 50 years with foxes) differs only in magnitude from the degree of population variation that led from fish to great apes.u'd better show me this delineation.
Okay, here we have your requirements for accepting human evolution. It's all pretty reasonable and falls in line with what one would predict if anticipating a gradual evolution. In this same post you quoted my link to Wikipedia's list of fossils of human evolution, which show a gradual increase in skull size, changing characteristics from older apes to man, and a lack of primates that fit nowhere in between. Your response?The transition from man to apes require the prsence of a myriad series of fossils that carry gradually changing characters from apes to man, a gradual increas in the size of the skull, etc and not using another primate that differs from both apes and humans
I gave you exactly what you asked for, and you dismissed it out of hand. You didn't even try to explain what about the evidence might be lacking, you just waved it off. Are you actually interested in having a discussion, or are you just going to look at evidence after evidence and say "meh"?I've alredy give rationalization before
How, out of that whole big explanation about the need for evidence and adequate explanation of phenomena, did you get the idea that "anyone can tell a lie and say it's a theory"? What part of that made it sound like scientific theories are easy to come by? And what part of all the posts you've read here give you the impression that evolution stands merely on "false interpretations and...dreams"?But scientific theories do have a evidences that are solid and reliable and doesn't stand on false interpretations and the dreams of the poser. In the way you say, anybody can tell a lie and say it's a theory.
So? People who believe the earth is flat give rationalizations for what they say.AS he gives rationalization 4 what he says
What if it's the opinion of every paleoanthropologist on the planet? Why do you think your opinion is more valid than that of the entire relevant professional community?I said the current fossils don't have anything intermediate to show. That's what I see but it's not my buisness if somebody has another opinion.
Well that's basically all you've been doing...saying "no they aren't" over and over. We know the first Australopithecines that we find are very close to when the human and chimp lines diverged, yet all you have in rebuttal is "No they aren't"? If that's all you have in response, I'll let that speak for itself.They aren't very close, they are another primate and I won't repeat my words
First, Oxnard never said they weren't intermediate; he said they weren't our direct ancestors. He still argued that they belong on the hominid evolutionary tree. Second, why are you clinging so hard to the four decade old work of this one man, and waving away almost all the subsequent work by many, many more professionals? If the opinion of one professional is compelling to you, why aren't the opinions of hundreds more professionals even more compelling?So, they r another primate different from both apes and humans and not intermediate-as Oxnard interpreted-.
So how exactly did you arrive at your conclusion that evolutionary theory is wrong? What did you study? Please be specific.I disagree with evolution as a theory not because it affects my religion
In your post #221 you copied a list of unknowns about the Australopithecines from the Smithsonian. But none of those unknowns had anything to do with our ability to determine if they belong on our family tree.I don't understad which post
Ok, that answers the extinction part, but what about all the species? Did God create each one of them?God created rules in this life, if the conditions around an animal become inconvenient the animal extincts. This extinction doesn't mean that God wiped them because he hates them . As what occurs from humans when they promote animal extinction by their spoiled behavior. And what difference did the extinction affect life on earth? nothing happened.
Then I suggest you don't post something like that. If you don't understand it enough to summarize it and post it in your own words, then you really would have no idea if he's telling you the truth or not.I couldn't summarize the video as I found that the lecturer used visual illustration that i couldn't explain using words, it was so hard.
That's fine, no need to apologize. As I said, I'm in no hurry.Sorry i was busy
Why? Evolution and God are not mutually exclusive.If that's right so you need to reconsider your principles-as I see-.Many of us even believed in Evolution before we became atheists.
As a medical student, have you learned about endogenous retroviruses?However, God in the Qur'an said that He created Adam by his own hands, not by evolution from a monkey.
Why? Evolution and God are not mutually exclusive.
yes,I have.As a medical student, have you learned about endogenous retroviruses?
If you are indeed studying medicine, I'm assuming you would've done biology 1a and biology 1b in the first year of your degree. Correct?
How did you even pass these topics? Did you write down answers that you disagreed with on your exams?
The point I was making was that I wouldnt go to a doctor If I knew he was disingenuous.
Which doesn't explain why anyone else would have to reconsider their principles.I am not against evolution because it contradicts my faith, I'm contradicting it as I'm not convinced by it as a principle.
The complexity of the universe isn't an indication of a designer. What would be an indication is that some type of evidence that suggests the order of such complexity needed some sort of helping hand to come about. From what we can see the human body is a product of its parents and their parents and so on back to the beginning of life.I live in Egypt and study in a different way and i don't have to be a dodger. in fact, our professors say that it's very strange that a medical student sees the great intricate design of the human body and doesn't believe that there's a creator.
Even if ERV's were prone to insert at the same location in different species, how do you explain that many of them carry the same mutations?yes,I have.
Sverdlov (1998) reports,
But although this concept of retrovirus selectivity is currently prevailing, practically all genomic regions were reported to be used as primary integration targets, however, with different preferences. There were identified 'hot spots' containing integration sites used up to 280 times more frequently than predicted mathematically.
so I think this has a relation to something else rather than evolution
Part of what makes this such powerful evidence for the evolutionary model is that is that ERV distribution and mutation rely on entirely different mechanisms; the function of integrase and the DNA replication complex, respectively. That the two nested hierarchies match at all is only explicable by common ancestry.
I live in Egypt and study in a different way and i don't have to be a dodger. in fact, our professors say that it's very strange that a medical student sees the great intricate design of the human body and doesn't believe that there's a creator.
I was made aware of this page by my site stats module, when tarekabdo12 clicked camanintxs link to my ERV page. I figure, Ill just jump in:yes,I have.
Sverdlov (1998) reports,But although this concept of retrovirus selectivity is currently prevailing, practically all genomic regions were reported to be used as primary integration targets, however, with different preferences. There were identified 'hot spots' containing integration sites used up to 280 times more frequently than predicted mathematically.
so I think this has a relation to something else rather than evolution
Do Shared ERVs Support Common Ancestry? - Evolution News & Views