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William Hughes  
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 More options 9 Nov, 02:51
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: William Hughes <wpihug...@hotmail.com>
Date: Sun, 8 Nov 2009 18:51:47 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 02:51
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches
On Nov 8, 9:35 pm, John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> macaddicted wrote:
> > From a theological standpoint monogenism is that which traces man's
> > origins back to a "historic" Adam and Eve. So everything that moves from
> > Adam and Eve, from special creation (from clay or otherwise), to the
> > idea that the original pair were the first to respond to grace, can be
> > included in monogenism. Polygenism describes the rise of man from
> > multiple sources (individuals) that eventually rose to current
> > civilizations and is more in line with current evolutionary theory as I
> > understand it.

> Still not clear. Does monogenism require that all humans are descended
> exclusively from Adam & Eve?

Depends what you mean by "exclusively".   It is usually taken
to require that all humans must have  Adam & Eve as ancestors
(this follows from the doctrine of original sin).
This leads to the question of where Cain's wife came from.  If incest
is ruled out, then Cain's wife is non-human but his children
are (or at least can be) human.  On the other hand if you insist that
Cain's wife must be human then you need either incest and a
genetic bottleneck, or some sort of intervention by God so that
someone who does not have Adam & Eve as an ancestor can
still be human  (since we know that all things
are possible to God, this would be possible).

As far as I can tell, there is no official position here.

                      - William Hughes


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Discussion subject changed to "The problem Forrest calls "small" is the linch pin of the whole" by Ray Martinez
Ray Martinez  
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 More options 9 Nov, 02:54
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: Ray Martinez <pyramid...@yahoo.com>
Date: Sun, 8 Nov 2009 18:54:27 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 02:54
Subject: Re: The problem Forrest calls "small" is the linch pin of the whole
On Nov 8, 6:53 am, John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote:

False.

That's not what the word "punctuated" means as defined by Gould &
Eldredge.

Ray


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Dana Tweedy  
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 More options 9 Nov, 03:58
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: "Dana Tweedy" <reddfr...@bresnan.net>
Date: Sun, 8 Nov 2009 20:58:03 -0700
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 03:58
Subject: Re: The problem Forrest calls "small" is the linch pin of the whole

No, John is right.  You got it wrong again, Ray.  How long will it take you
to admit your mistake?

> That's not what the word "punctuated" means as defined by Gould &
> Eldredge.

What do you think "punctuated" means, Ray?

Here's Gould's own description:
http://www.stephenjaygould.org/library/gould_comes-of-age.html
"We realized that a standard biological account. Mayr's peripatric theory or
speciation in small populations peripherally isolated from a parental stock,
would yield stasis and punctuation when properly scaled into the vastness of
geological time--for small populations speciating away from a central mass
in tens or hundreds of thousands of years, will translate in almost every
geological circumstance as a punctuation on a bedding plane, not gradual
change up a hill of sediment, whereas stasis should characterize the long
and recoverable history of successful central populations."

Nothing there about more rapid mutations, or the changes being "not the
standard Darwinian way".

DJT


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Discussion subject changed to "Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches evolutionism" by macaddicted
macaddicted  
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 More options 9 Nov, 02:58
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: macaddic...@REMOVETHISca.rr.com (macaddicted)
Date: Sun, 8 Nov 2009 19:58:19 -0700
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 02:58
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches evolutionism

John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote:
> macaddicted wrote:

[snip]

Except that I'm not saying it happened a few, or even several thousand
years ago. I'm also not saying that special creation was involved.
Lastly, the nature of the "spread" of sin does not preclude
pre-adamites, though this line of theology is not mainstream.

--
macaddicted
Wisdom is radiant and unfading and she is easily discerned
by those who love her and is found by those who seek her.
Wisdom 6:12 (NRSV)


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macaddicted  
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 More options 9 Nov, 02:58
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: macaddic...@REMOVETHISca.rr.com (macaddicted)
Date: Sun, 8 Nov 2009 19:58:20 -0700
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 02:58
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches evolutionism

John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote:
> Free Lunch wrote:
> > On Sun, 08 Nov 2009 17:35:09 -0800, John Harshman
> > <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote in talk.origins:

> >> macaddicted wrote:
> >>> John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> >>>> macaddicted wrote:
> >>>>> John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote:

[snip]

> >> Still not clear. Does monogenism require that all humans are descended
> >> exclusively from Adam & Eve?

> > The doctrine does.

> So that requires that if there were any humans prior to Adam & Eve,
> those other humans contributed no genetic material to modern humans. And
> thus, we are not related to chimps, or any other species. True?

Ah, you just hit the soft spot. 100 years ago the Church would have said
absolutely no other genetic material was involved. Today we say leave
science to the scientists, then go stare at a portrait of Aquinas.

--
macaddicted
Wisdom is radiant and unfading and she is easily discerned
by those who love her and is found by those who seek her.
Wisdom 6:12 (NRSV)


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John Harshman  
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 More options 9 Nov, 04:58
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net>
Date: Sun, 08 Nov 2009 20:58:25 -0800
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 04:58
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches evolutionism

Does it bother anyone that this position is incomprehensible? No, what
am I saying? These are the people who brought us the Trinity,
transubstantiation, etc.

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John Harshman  
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 More options 9 Nov, 04:59
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net>
Date: Sun, 08 Nov 2009 20:59:16 -0800
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 04:59
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches evolutionism

Is clarity the 8th deadly sin?

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Discussion subject changed to "The problem Forrest calls "small" is the linch pin of the whole" by John Harshman
John Harshman  
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 More options 9 Nov, 05:03
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net>
Date: Sun, 08 Nov 2009 21:03:37 -0800
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 05:03
Subject: Re: The problem Forrest calls "small" is the linch pin of the whole

Again, you have no apparent idea what "punctuated" means. It refers to
episodic change in morphology, coincident with speciation, and taking at
most a few dozen millennia. The mutation rate has nothing to do with
that, only the ability of populations to respond to selection.

But feel free to provide a quote that contradicts me.

>> which happens to individuals.
>> You are at least as ignorant on this subject as Tony.

>>>>> Furthermore even Punc Eq doesn't explain why the fossil record NEVER
>>>>> captured a single example of a nascent structure in the fossil record.
>>>> What explains that is that when shown a nascent structure you refuse to
>>>> agree that it's nascent.
>>>>> Finally while this may seem like small potatoes to
>>>>> "stick-a-fork-in-me-I'm-done" Forrest the whole theory hinges upon it.
>>>> Wrong as usual. Common descent would be clear even in the absence of a
>>>> mechanism.
>>> False.
>>> Without mechanism (causation) the alleged effect is imaginary.
>> You're saying that there are no phenomena in nature whose mechanisms are
>> unknown?

Ray?

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Discussion subject changed to "Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches" by John Harshman
John Harshman  
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 More options 9 Nov, 05:00
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net>
Date: Sun, 08 Nov 2009 21:00:23 -0800
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 05:00
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches

I was unaware there was more than one meaning.


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Discussion subject changed to "Atheism and Evolutionism are both consistent AND inseparable." by PepsiFreak@teranews.com
PepsiFreak@teranews.com  
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 More options 9 Nov, 05:34
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: "PepsiFr...@teranews.com" <bobsyoung...@yahoo.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 00:34:07 -0500
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 05:34
Subject: Re: Atheism and Evolutionism are both consistent AND inseparable.

On Nov 7, 3:35 pm, T Pagano <not.va...@address.net> wrote:

> On Thu, 5 Nov 2009 00:39:11 -0800 (PST),

Years and years of the same old crap, distortions and lies.

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Discussion subject changed to "Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches evolutionism" by Michael Siemon
Michael Siemon  
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 More options 9 Nov, 05:36
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: Michael Siemon <mlsie...@sonic.net>
Date: Sun, 08 Nov 2009 21:36:57 -0800
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 05:36
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches evolutionism
In article <aYKdnaxgAK_sPGrX4p2d...@giganews.com>,
 John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote:

I do not think macaddicted's position is incomprehensible. It is somewhat
evasive (but not maliciously so, because there is a range of [IMO]
mostly fragile strategies to somehow splice traditional dogma onto
current science.)

The (apparently absolute) inability of Rome to revise ill-informed early
dogma leaves Catholics with limited resources here, and I personally
think macaddicted has done a fair job of hinting at possible options.

As he says, a century ago the Magisterium would have adamantly rejected
any kind of genetic relation to other primates. But they were also aware
that such a position was increasingly open to empirical criticism -- so
[luckily for the Vatican] the various pronouncements from that time do
not _dogmatically_ reject genetic relationships. They simply insist on
(rather overly specified) restatements of traditional dogma, with some
unstated but intended implications with respect to the science. In fact,
I suspect a semi-educated unwillingness to stage another Galileo episode,
while at the same time being as strongly anti-evolutionary as they could
manage in their actual ignorance of what they were talking about.

What macaddicted suggests is that _current_ thinking, even under
constraint by the earlier pronouncements, can sneak in the genetic
relationships, if only with the (essentially non-empirically testable)
reservation that the "actual" Adam and Eve and their (human, _sensu
religio_ :-)) offspring may have originated -- with God's aid -- from
a pre-existing primate population, which continued to exist.

Frankly, the real problem for the Church is not biology as such, but
the moronically ill-conceived dogmatic position that "original sin" is
a biological trait passed on by human reproduction. This is simple
insanity, in fact. And has nothing to do with gospel, faith, or God.


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Discussion subject changed to "Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches" by VoiceOfReason
VoiceOfReason  
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 More options 9 Nov, 10:13
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: VoiceOfReason <papa_...@cybertown.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 02:13:40 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 10:13
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches

macaddicted wrote:
> John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote:

<...>

> > So that requires that if there were any humans prior to Adam & Eve,
> > those other humans contributed no genetic material to modern humans. And
> > thus, we are not related to chimps, or any other species. True?

> Ah, you just hit the soft spot. 100 years ago the Church would have said
> absolutely no other genetic material was involved. Today we say leave
> science to the scientists, then go stare at a portrait of Aquinas.

Good one!  Got a major chuckle out of it.  :-)

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VoiceOfReason  
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 More options 9 Nov, 10:19
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: VoiceOfReason <papa_...@cybertown.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 02:19:55 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 10:19
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches

In a way, I think that's similar to the way science deals with the
unknown.  There were previous species, now there's us.  The exact
details aren't fully understood.  Think of abiogenesis: before there
was no life, now there is -- the exact details aren't fully
understood.

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VoiceOfReason  
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 More options 9 Nov, 10:28
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: VoiceOfReason <papa_...@cybertown.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 02:28:45 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 10:28
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches

<...>

Regardless of Ray and Tony's squirming, the fact remains that Catholic
schools and universities teach evolution to their students, and have
been doing so for a couple of generations.  Evolution is compatible
with Catholic theology.


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Discussion subject changed to "Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches evolutionism" by Burkhard
Burkhard  
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 More options 9 Nov, 11:05
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: Burkhard <b.scha...@ed.ac.uk>
Date: Mon, 09 Nov 2009 11:05:20 +0000
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 11:05
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches evolutionism

My catholic friends (including one Jesuit trained)  would express it
more carefully - they say that whatever makes us human (and they don't
mean H. sapiens with that) is something you caught either from Adam and
Eve, or from someone who caught it etc... But that is not something
genetic, but ensoulement. So "qua humans", we are related only to Adam
and Eve, leaving the genetics issue out. Privately, they are worried it
think that leads to traducianism,while the official position is
creationism (in the technical sense on creation of new souls), but I
always felt that creationism works just as well, and is even less
dependant on the need to single out biological/genetic relation.

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TomS  
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 More options 9 Nov, 11:54
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: TomS <TomS_mem...@newsguy.com>
Date: 9 Nov 2009 03:54:55 -0800
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 11:54
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches evolutionism
"On Sun, 8 Nov 2009 19:58:20 -0700, in article
<1j8voh6.1t3ydo7xinxsaN%macaddic...@REMOVETHISca.rr.com>, macaddicted stated..."

But 100 years ago, who knew anything about "genetic material"?

Mendel had just been rediscovered, and I don't think that there
was any conception of the material nature of whatever-it-is that
transmits inherited traits.

Meanwhile, I don't see how anyone could deny that there was some
kind of close relationship (even though it might not be one
involving generations of parent and child) between the bodies of
humans and those of other animals. (Humans being "rational
animals".)

I don't know how much the theologians and philosophers of the
Catholic church kept up with the major developments of biology
that were discovered in the 19th century. (I'm thinking of
things like the synthesis of organic chemicals, the process of
fertilization of the mammalian egg, ...)

--
---Tom S.
the failure to nail currant jelly to a wall is not due to the nail; it is due to
the currant jelly.
Theodore Roosevelt, Letter to William Thayer, 1915 July 2


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Discussion subject changed to "Whose version of evolution is correct?" by richardalanforrest@google mail.com
richardalanforrest@google mail.com  
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 More options 9 Nov, 12:56
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: "richardalanforr...@googlemail.com" <richardalanforr...@googlemail.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 04:56:12 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 12:56
Subject: Re: Whose version of evolution is correct?
On Nov 7, 12:44 am, Nashton <n...@na.ca> wrote:

> richardalanforr...@googlemail.com wrote:

> > And creationists are predictably ignorant and dishonest, and run away
> > when asked to produce a coherent argument against evolution or for
> > creation.

> You would say that, given that you and your clueless ilk are on the
> opposite side of the ideological debate.

On the other hand, I  might say that because it is true.
Bearing in mind that you know little about science in general and
evolutionary biology in particular, why should anyone treat such an
assertion seriously?

The case for evolutionary theory is made in numerous scientific papers
and a number of excellent popular books on the subject. Creationists
won't address the evidence, and instead turn to the misrepresentation,
distortion and outright falsehoods in their creationist sources.

I have been reading creationist sources for over 30 years, and have
yet to come across any argument not based on misrepresentation,
distortion or outright falsehoods. I have documented the dishonesty of
a number of creationist web sites. You can find my analyses here:
http://www.plesiosaur.com/creationism/index.php

If you can demonstrate that I am wrong in my conclusion that
creationist sources are guilty of systematic dishonesty, please
provide a link to an honest creationist source. I've asked this
question many times of creationists, but none have provided such a
link.
I have also asked creationists to provide a link to any "evolutionist"
web site they think is dishonest. None has responded to that request
either.
I can see no other conclusion but that creationists are systematically
dishonest, accept that they are systematically dishonest, and don't
care that they are systematically dishonest.
What other conclusion can you draw from this evidence?

> Your words are empty and you're about as intelligent as a box of hair.

..which is more empty bluster coming from someone who very obviously
has no argument to offer.

> >> Why do you bother?

> > Because, as I keep explaining, I post on boards such as this to expose
> > the ignorance and dishonesty of creationists. Your contribution is
> > gratefully accepted.

> Yet, the only thing that you manage to expose is your unrelenting
> stupidity and your ability to parrot stupidities.

I suggest that others are better placed to make such a judgement than
you are.

RF


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Discussion subject changed to "Atheism and Evolutionism are both consistent AND inseparable." by richardalanforrest@google mail.com
richardalanforrest@google mail.com  
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 More options 9 Nov, 13:13
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: "richardalanforr...@googlemail.com" <richardalanforr...@googlemail.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 05:13:32 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 13:13
Subject: Re: Atheism and Evolutionism are both consistent AND inseparable.
On Nov 7, 3:35 pm, T Pagano <not.va...@address.net> wrote:

There's no "might" about it.

 >but I am hardly dishonest about

> it.

Yes, you are, because you refuse to address the evidence that many
scientists, including many evolutionary biologists are not atheists,
and that evolutionary theory is accepted by many, if not most
Christians including the head of your own church.

> Forrest is desparate and intellectually bankrupt.

I suggest that others are much better placed to make such a judgement
than you are.

> Such is the
> inevitable result of adherence to atheism.

1) I have given you no reason to think that I am an atheist. If you
consider a detestation of dishonesty to be the mark of an atheist,
that tells us more about the moral validity of your beliefs than it
does of mine.

and
2) Many scientists are atheists, and no honest assessment of their
work would consider it to be "intellectually bankrupt".

> The facts are clear and indisputable that the class of people labeled
> "atheist" and the class labeled "evolutionist" are almost completely
> overlapping.

FALSEHOOD #1
As you label anyone who accepts the findings of science as an
"evolutionist", you are including the head of your own church, as well
as the over 12,000 Christian clergy who have signed the "Clergy
letter" as atheists.
Clearly the two classes are not "almost completely overlapping. "

Or do you think that all those Christian clergy are lying for
political reasons as you have accused the Pope of doing?

> There are exceptions but not many.

FALSEHOOD #2
...as the 12,000 Christian clergy who have signed the "Clergy Letter"
attests. It's rather strikingly larger than the number of scientists
who have signed the Discovery Institute's deeply dishonest "Dissent
from Darwinism" statement, isn't it?

>  Furthermore my
> compatriots and I have made a considerable effort over these many
> months at showing that every evolutionist in the forum is either an
> outright atheist, a closet atheist, or a practical atheist.

And you have failed utterly to demonstrate anything of the sort.

> So far NO
> exceptions.  

FALSEHOOD #3
Several posters have stated clearly and categorically that they are
not atheists, and you have not given any reason to think that they are
not telling the truth.

> The high priest Dawkins

FALSEHOOD #4
Dawkins is not regarded by any evolutionary biologist as a "high
priest". Evolutionary biology is not religion.

>has made this unbundantly clear in the forward
> to his bible, "The Blind Watchmaker"-----'Darwin made it possible for
> one to be an intellectually fullfilled atheist.'  

Quite so.
That does not mean that one cannot believe in God and accept
evolutionary theory. It's a statement about atheism, not about
religious belief.

> Will Forrest
> publish a peer reviewed work categorizing Dawkins as dishonest for his
> conflation?

Firstly, Dawkins expressed his opinion (or rather, he repeated Thomas
Huxley's opinion) in a popular book, not a peer-reviewed publication.
Secondly, there is no reason to think that he is being dishonest in
expressing such an opinion.

> Forrest would never think of criticizing the high priest
> of evolutionism.

FALSEHOOD #5
As there is no religion of "evolutionism", there can be no "high
priest of evolutionism"

FALSEHOOD #6
If you  take the time to read my posts you will find that there are
several occasions in which I *have* criticised Dawkins.  

> Last and not least atheism and purely naturalistic evolutionism are
> completely consistent and inseparable.

FALSEHOOD #7
All science is based on the assumption of naturalism. It's about time
you realised that. That does not stop scientists believing in God.

RF


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Discussion subject changed to "Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches" by richardalanforrest@google mail.com
richardalanforrest@google mail.com  
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 More options 9 Nov, 13:18
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: "richardalanforr...@googlemail.com" <richardalanforr...@googlemail.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 05:18:15 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 13:18
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches
On Nov 8, 12:36 am, Ray Martinez <pyramid...@yahoo.com> wrote:

No Ray, I'm not.
Tony labels *anyone* who accepts evolutionary theory an atheist.
That includes the Pope. He is on record as asserting that the Pope has
endorsed evolutionary science for political reasons - i.e. that the
Pope is lying when he endorses science.

> The current Pope, as one would expect, has said the universe is an
> "intelligent project." This means, as one would expect, that he
> accepts Intelligent causation operating in nature.

> If the Pope accepts evolution then it is a counterfeit evolution
> because evolution since Darwin rejects Intelligent causation
> (Creationism).

Oh, please!
You're not convincing anyone with such a phony argument.

> The same is true with Michael Behe: he accepts a counterfeit evolution
> based on the fact that he accepts Intelligent causation. If
> Intelligence is acting in nature the same is called Creationism-ID. If
> Intelligence is not the same is called Darwinism or evolution.

> Basic stuff, Richard.

Pure invention, Ray.

> And when the Pope "endorses" evolution he is attempting to placate
> those who would make this into a divisive issue.

So you agree with Tony that the Pope is lying for political purposes.

> The Pope wants to
> please both sides and he wants the issue to go away for the sake of
> unity and the Gospel.

By lying.

> Darwinists are too stupid to understand that the Pope is giving them
> lip service. He has outsmarted you guys and your attempt to put him on
> the spot (just like when the Pharisees attempted to put Jesus on the
> spot with their "question" about paying taxes to Caesar).

By lying.

> Like all
> Popes, as one would expect, Benedict is strict old school Creationist.

So you think that he's lying for political reasons when he endorses
evolutionary science.

> If you think otherwise then that's exactly what he wants.

If, as you have made it so patently clear, you think that the Pope is
a liar, why should anyone believe anything he says?

RF


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William Hughes  
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 More options 9 Nov, 13:17
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: William Hughes <wpihug...@hotmail.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 05:17:27 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 13:17
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches
On Nov 9, 1:00 am, John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote:

Depends what you mean by "was" :)

In this case I would have picked for "exclusively"
the meaning you appear to have intended:  i.e. any ancestor
of a human must be an ancestor or decendant of
Adam or Eve.

However, an alternate reading (e.g. only individuals who
have Adam and Eve as an ancestor can be human)
would seem at least possible.

I hope I was clear.  Monogenism does not
strictly imply "exclusively".  However, this
would seem to be the way it is often
interpreted  (but I don't know what the official
position is, or even if one exists).

                                      - Willliam Hughes


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John Harshman  
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 More options 9 Nov, 14:24
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net>
Date: Mon, 09 Nov 2009 06:24:52 -0800
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 14:24
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches

That's roughly what I meant, though I think your statement is loose
enough to allow for possibilities I didn't mean. What I meant was that
all modern humans must get all their genomes by linear descent from Adam
& Eve. There could conceivably have been ancestors of that pair, but if
so their lineage must pass to us through that pair.

> However, an alternate reading (e.g. only individuals who
> have Adam and Eve as an ancestor can be human)
> would seem at least possible.

No, that's not what "exclusively" means. The word was intended to
eliminate exactly that possibility.

> I hope I was clear.  Monogenism does not
> strictly imply "exclusively".  However, this
> would seem to be the way it is often
> interpreted  (but I don't know what the official
> position is, or even if one exists).

So, to be clear. Monogenism requires that we all be descended from Adam
& Eve in the same way that we are all descended from mitochondrial Eve,
i.e. that some portion of each of us (e.g., the soul) has that ancestry,
but not necessesarily all. And thus we can avoid conflict with the data,
if we want to. But conflict is more often avoided by affirming exclusive
ancestry while ignoring any problems that presents. Correct?

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Discussion subject changed to "Whose version of evolution is correct?" by Dan Listermann
Dan Listermann  
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 More options 9 Nov, 14:53
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: "Dan Listermann" <d...@listermann.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 09:53:12 -0500
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 14:53
Subject: Re: Whose version of evolution is correct?

"Dick C." <foo.dic...@gmail.com> wrote in message

news:Xns9CBABDB437E39dickcrmotzarella@188.40.43.213...

I can't even get them to tell me whether or not all the species were created
at once and 99% have since gone extinct, or do they still occasionally pop
into existence to replace the ones that went extinct.  None have had the
courage of their beliefs to say one way or the other.  This behavior seems
to come from their attitude that their's is the default position and
evolution needs proof!

.


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TomS  
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 More options 9 Nov, 15:11
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: TomS <TomS_mem...@newsguy.com>
Date: 9 Nov 2009 07:11:10 -0800
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 15:11
Subject: Re: Whose version of evolution is correct?
"On Mon, 9 Nov 2009 09:53:12 -0500, in article
<bd860$4af82cc4$4a53bf9f$26...@FUSE.NET>, Dan Listermann stated..."

In my experience, it's difficult to get a creationist to give any
description of what happens when a creation event takes place.

What is it like when a species or a "kind" is created? What is there
before the event?

Herbert Spencer wrote a little essay about this question. The
creationists should be prepared by now to give an answer:

"The Deveopment Hypothesis" (original from 1852, online is a
slightly revised version from 1891)

<http://www.victorianweb.org/science/science_texts/spencer_dev_hypothe...>

-or-

<http://tinyurl.com/ypoga4>

--
---Tom S.
the failure to nail currant jelly to a wall is not due to the nail; it is due to
the currant jelly.
Theodore Roosevelt, Letter to William Thayer, 1915 July 2


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Discussion subject changed to "Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches" by William Hughes
William Hughes  
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 More options 9 Nov, 15:41
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: William Hughes <wpihug...@hotmail.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 07:41:59 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 15:41
Subject: Re: Forrest under the mistaken belief that the Pope teaches
On Nov 9, 10:24 am, John Harshman <jharsh...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> So, to be clear. Monogenism requires that we all be descended from Adam
> & Eve in the same way that we are all descended from mitochondrial Eve,
> i.e. that some portion of each of us (e.g., the soul) has that ancestry,
> but not necessesarily all. And thus we can avoid conflict with the data,
> if we want to. But conflict is more often avoided by affirming exclusive
> ancestry while ignoring any problems that presents. Correct?

Nice summary. This is my understanding.

However.

   Go not to the theologians for counsel, for they will say
    both no and yes.

While it is widely believed that polygenism is incompatable
with the  doctrine of original sin, this incompatibility
is not doctrine, and there have been attempts
to make the two conform.

                                              - William Hughes


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Discussion subject changed to "Whose version of evolution is correct?" by Dan Listermann
Dan Listermann  
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 More options 9 Nov, 16:40
Newsgroups: talk.origins
From: "Dan Listermann" <d...@listermann.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 11:40:20 -0500
Local: Mon 9 Nov 2009 16:40
Subject: Re: Whose version of evolution is correct?

"TomS" <TomS_mem...@newsguy.com> wrote in message

news:267779470.000162ce.028.0001@drn.newsguy.com...

"Those who cavalierly reject the Theory of Evolution as not being adequately
supported by facts, seem to forget that their own theory is supported by no
facts at all. Like the majority of men who are born to a given belief, they
demand the most rigorous proof of any adverse belief, but assume that their
own needs none."

A wonderful cite, 118 years old too, and just as relevant today!

.


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