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[_ Old Earth _] Creation vs. Evolution

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The folks over at AIG and I agree that a literalistic reading of Genesis is not in conflict with Science.



A day is marked by evening and morning, not by the earth revolving around the sun.

Genesis 1:5 And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And the evening and the morning were the first day.
Genesis 1:8 And God called the firmament Heaven. And the evening and the morning were the second day.
Genesis 1:13 And the evening and the morning were the third day.
Genesis 1:19 And the evening and the morning were the fourth day.
Genesis 1:23 And the evening and the morning were the fifth day.
Genesis 1:31 And God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, it was very good. And the evening and the morning were the sixth day.

So we see with the plain reading of scriptures that evening and morning delineate a day.


You are entitled to express your theory, but please, lets try to be courteous of one another.


Yes, it seems discourteous, or politically inorrect, that saying the Bible interpretations espoused by others' is wrong.

But on that side of the aisle, people will deny others freedom of speech not on this side.

I assume that you can accept then, that the six days could correspond with the six Geochronological eras?
 
and Im not doing that cupid. theres much both jeff and i could post on this forum on beersherit(the jewish name of the account from adam to joseph) it means in the beginning. things that are missed if one took it to support either. that is the point.

vah and the yud being one of them.


I believe that the converted Jewish people can indeed shed more light on the Old Testament, in general, and that they ought so do now.
The Jews will be the priesthood of the next age for Christianity once they accept that Christ was their Elijah, returned in 32AD.
 
Cupid Dave said:
I assume that you can accept then, that the six days could correspond with the six Geochronological eras?

Well Dave, if I were to be honest, I've never heard of the word Geochronological... Please don't take this the wrong way, but I've purposely tried avoiding conversations with you. Not because I don't think your a swell guy or anything like that. I'd image your probably a great guy. But when I read some of the stuff you post it's just a little too far off for me, and I do mean that respectfully. As such, I figure it's best if I just let you find somebody who wants to engage in conversation with you and just sit back and sandbag if you don't mind. And I do hope you take this in a non offensive way.

P.S. I know you posted to Jason, but how do you understand these verses?
Matthew 17:12-13 But I say unto you, That Elias is come already, and they knew him not, but have done unto him whatsoever they listed. Likewise shall also the Son of man suffer of them. Then the disciples understood that he spake unto them of John the Baptist.

Meatball,
I'll try and find some time tomorrow to give you a response.
 
Because it's a very foolish and harmful thing to add new doctrines to Christianity. It's not that you deny science; it's that you damage faith.

I'm not sure what you mean here. Evolution began in the 1800's. Christianity has been around for over 2000 years. Who's adding new doctrines? I think you are, on this board.

That's the tough thing about reality; it doesn't care at all what you think.
You're so right.

I know you want us to believe you, but the forum is littered with threads you started, and then abandoned as the facts accumulated against you.
Perhaps I'd better disabuse you of this foolish notion.

The reason I abandoned those threads is simply that you had nothing to say of any value, and the ad hoc explanations you made up out of your own fancy, and presumably the fancy of others, were worthless and not deserving of my continuing to waste my time and the readers'.

For example - how foolish can you possibly get, when facing up to the following facts (and these are merely a few examples, remember):

1 Your incredibly foolish assertion that the respiratory system of birds could conceivably arise fron the pores of Cohn. Your ignorance of anatomy simply glares at anyone with a relatively open mind. Here's the fatal diagram:

2.jpg


As you don't apparently know, the pores of Cohn connect one alveolus to another (those grape-like bubbles on the left hand diagram).

The air enters and leaves the reptile and mammalian lungs via the same route that it entered.

In the bird, the air enters the airsacs on inhalation, and then passes through the lung on EXHALATION - THE DIAMETRIC OPPOSITE SITUATION to the reptiles.

To change from one to the other is impossible, but not to your feverish imagination. Evolution is powerless to gainsay this ugly fact, and should therefore be discarded as a theory of origins.

2 The European salmon migrate 3000 miles to the Sargasso Sea, spawn and die there. The young, WITH NO GUIDES ALIVE, make their way back, 3000 miles underwater.

Your foolish ad hoc explanation has something to do with continental drift. Long ago, the salmon swam down to the sea and returned upriver somehow. And they learned the route, thereby invoking Lamarckism with a vengeance, and somehow passed it down to their children. Which swam back, distances increasing to 3000 miles as now.

It's a good thing Free closed down that thread, or I would have squeezed you till the pips squeaked. The sheer foolishness and unscientific quality of that piece of fancy wins the Nobel prize for evolutionary fairy tale composition.

3 Just one more example.

The Pacific Golden Plover flies from Hawaii across 2,800 miles of open ocean, with no stopping points or resting places.

It arrives in Alaska and breeds there. When the young can fend for themselves, the adults LEAVE THEM THERE. and fly back to Hawaii.

The young FLY TO HAWAII a few weeks later, having never been there, and with no guides.

How did that migratory instinct evolve?

Well, said LK, practice did it. They flew a few miles north, to find food, then came back. They then passed down the information somehow to the young, who flew a few hundred miles further north and came back, and passed down the info to the next generation.

And so it went on, till the Plovers flew 2,800 miles from Hawaii to Alaska, with no stopping points. They then passed the info on to their offspring, and flew off and left them to fly back to Hawaii.

The offspring then followed them a few weeks later.

Or maybe we could look at the godwit - which flies across the Pacific from Alaska to new Zealand, 7,000 miles nonstop. They too breed, and fly back to Alaska, leaving the young to find their own way there. And they do.

So where are all these stopping points for use while they are discovering the route?

Or shall I remind you of the Pacific Shearwater, which makes a round trip of 26,000 km around the Pacific basin, arriving back at their own nests on nearly the same date every year?

And the young leave some weeks after the parents have left, AND MAKE THE SAME JOURNEY - without any guides. All 26,000 km of it. How did that evolve?

And what about the Capistrano swallows - who arrive in Capistrano on March 18th every year, and depart on October 23rd the same year: making a 7,500 mile journey to and from Goya in Argentina?

What piece of evolutionary nonsense are you going to spew out to account for these mighty phenomena?

You have none, and it is the pathetic quality of your guesswork which prevented me from continuing with the threads which expose the folly so clearly. If you were talking sense, I would be prepared to listen, but...

Just imagine the idiotic picture you present: here's a reptile in a chicken suit - meaning it has somehow got feathers - running along happily on the ground, and lo and behold, suddenly it can fly!

It has somewhere acquired a preen gland, without which the feathers are useless, an aerodynamically significant tail which can alter its angle and spread in order to slow and balance the bird as it comes in to land.

How did that evolve from a reptile? What nonsense are you going to produce now?

I don't know, but the evolutionary garbage dumps you forage in are bound to have some P-A-P-E-RRRRR- SSS with the great mantra 'mutations and natural selecti---oooo----nnnn' in them. Somewhere.

I could go on, but I won't. I'll write another summary article in December as I did last year.

So do disabuse yourself of the foolish notion that I stopped contributing to those threads because of your facts.

No, it's the foolishness I can't handle.

But the fact remains that YE creationist is a great atheist-maker. And that is the real damage you do to God's purposes.
More misrepresentation. I told you a long time ago that I am an Old Earth Creationist, not a YEC. Of course, you wilfully misrepresent me, as you did Professor Lennox.

Don't you get tired of being embarrassed?
 
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I assume that you can accept then, that the six days could correspond with the six Geochronological eras?


Certainly...

If there were six geochronological eras AND if eras were the primary divisions of geochronological time.

Neither of those conditions are true, however, so there is no reason to entertain the idea any further.
 
Barbarian explains:
Because it's a very foolish and harmful thing to add new doctrines to Christianity. It's not that you deny science; it's that you damage faith.

I'm not sure what you mean here. Evolution began in the 1800's.

Evolution began about 3.5 billion years ago. The theory began in the 1800s, about a century before YE creationism was invented by the Seventh-Day Adventists. But of course Christian theologians such as St. Augustine knew that some sort of evolution had to be part of creation well over a thousand years ago.

Who's adding new doctrines?

Creationists.

Barbarian chuckles:
I know you want us to believe you, but the forum is littered with threads you started, and then abandoned as the facts accumulated against you.

Perhaps I'd better disabuse you of this foolish notion.

I'm not the only one who's noticed, Async. There's no point in denying it.

1 Your incredibly foolish assertion that the respiratory system of birds could conceivably arise fron the pores of Cohn.

Kohn. Anatomically and topologically, the bird lung is the same as a single alveolus. As you learned, you have the same sort of respiratory system as a secondary system in case of pulmonary obstruction. It's called "collateral ventilation." Birds have it an on a much larger scale, and in birds, it's become the primary means of ventilation.

As you don't apparently know, the pores of Cohn connect one alveolus to another

That's what I've been trying to tell you. Collateral ventilation works in all vertebrates as the primary form works in birds. In such cases, the air leaves the alveolus through the pores of Kohn and in the case of pulmonary obstruction provide a secondary form of respiration.

The pores of Kohn are small communications between adjacent pulmonary alveoli and provide a collateral pathway for aeration.
http://radiopaedia.org/articles/pores-of-kohn

In the bird, the air enters the airsacs on inhalation, and then passes through the lung on EXHALATION - THE DIAMETRIC OPPOSITE SITUATION to the reptiles.

Some reptiles. But...

A 33-foot long, carnivorous dinosaur that lived 85 million years ago had a breathing system similar to that used by modern birds, and researchers say the finding is further evidence of the evolutionary link between dinosaurs and birds. A fossil found in a riverbank in Argentina shows evidence of efficient air sacs that pumped air into the dinosaur’s lungs.

Lead researcher Paul Sereno named the new dinosaur Aerosteon riocoloradensis, which means “air bones from the Rio Colorado.†Instead of lungs that expand and contract, Sereno thinks this beast had air sacs that worked like a bellows, blowing air into the beast’s stiff lungs, much like modern birds…. Most paleontologists believe birds evolved from small, feathered meat-eating dinosaurs, and the earliest known birds were strikingly similar to these dinosaurs [Reuters].

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2008/09/30/elephant-sized-dinosaur-had-bird-like-lungs/

To change from one to the other is impossible,

Apparently, some dinosaurs weren't as knowledgeable as you, and did it anyway. Too bad you weren't there to tell them they couldn't.

Evolution is powerless to gainsay this ugly fact, and should therefore be discarded as a theory of origins.

Surprise.

The European salmon migrate 3000 miles to the Sargasso Sea, spawn and die there. The young, WITH NO GUIDES ALIVE, make their way back, 3000 miles underwater.

There are various theories about how this happens. One theory is that there are geomagnetic and chemical cues which the salmon use to guide them back to their birthplace. The fish may be sensitive to the Earth's magnetic field, which could allow the fish to orient itself in the ocean, so it can navigate back to the estuary of its natal stream.[21]

Salmon have an strong sense of smell. Speculation about whether odours provide homing cues, go back to the 19th century.[22] In 1951, Hasler hypothesised that, once in vicinity of the estuary or entrance to its birth river, salmon may use chemical cues which they can smell, and which are unique to their natal stream, as a mechanism to home onto the entrance of the stream.[23] In 1978, Hasler and his students convincingly showed that the way salmon locate their home rivers with such precision was indeed because they could recognise its characteristic smell. They further demonstrated that the smell of their river becomes imprinted in salmon when they transform into smolts, just before they migrate out to sea.[20][24][25] Homecoming salmon can also recognise characteristic smells in tributary streams as they move up the main river.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salmon_run

So we now know that salmon use smell to home in on their home river. And now, it appears that Salmon, like other migratory species, can orient in the Earth's magnetic field. What we don't yet know, is not proof or disproof of anything.

It's a good thing Free closed down that thread, or I would have squeezed you till the pips squeaked.

Surprise. You should know by now that bravado won't help you. And now that scientists are putting together the understanding of how migration works, ignorance turns out to be a bad place for you to hide.

Just imagine the idiotic picture you present: here's a reptile in a chicken suit - meaning it has somehow got feathers - running along happily on the ground, and lo and behold, suddenly it can fly!

It's always amusing to be reminded that you really think that's what the theory says.

It has somewhere acquired a preen gland, without which the feathers are useless, an aerodynamically significant tail which can alter its angle and spread in order to slow and balance the bird as it comes in to land.

Turns out feathers are primarily for warmth and display. Only secondarily for flying. There were feathers millions of years before any organism used them to fly.

How did that evolve from a reptile?

We see flight feathers on dinosaurs that could not possibly have flown. But they would have been quite useful (as they are today for ostriches) in providing lift and manuverability in running.

Ostrich wings apparently help the giant flightless birds run,explaining the puzzling phenomenon of why ancient dinosaurs evolved feathered limbsbefore developing flight.

The wings on ostriches, the largest living birds, were oncethought to be evolutionary leftovers that lingered around even after the birdsadapted to life on the ground, retained mostly for display andtemperature-control purposes.

New long-term observations and airflow experiments withostriches now show these flightless birds can use their wings as advancedstabilizers.

http://www.livescience.com/6657-ostrich-wings-explain-mystery-flightless-dinosaurs.html

I could go on, but I won't.

Darn. This was getting to be fun.

I'll write another summary article in December as I did last year.

That's the spirit. Can't wait to see it.

So do disabuse yourself of the foolish notion that I stopped contributing to those threads because of your facts.

The list of threads you bailed on when facts showed up is long and varied.

Barbarian observes:
But the fact remains that YE creationist is a great atheist-maker. And that is the real damage you do to God's purposes.

More misrepresentation. I told you a long time ago that I am an Old Earth Creationist, not a YEC.

So you say, but you trot out the YE misrepresentations regularly.

And, as you learned, Lennox said that he saw evolution as Darwin did. He's on video saying so. No point in denying that, either.
 
BTW, I missed this bit of silliness...

Async declares:
It has somewhere acquired a preen gland, without which the feathers are useless,

...is belied by the fact that the uropygial gland (preen gland) is not present in all birds.

Remember when I told you ignorance was your enemy? It still is.
 
Barbarian explains:
Because it's a very foolish and harmful thing to add new doctrines to Christianity. It's not that you deny science; it's that you damage faith.

Evolution began about 3.5 billion years ago. The theory began in the 1800s, about a century before YE creationism was invented by the Seventh-Day Adventists. But of course Christian theologians such as St. Augustine knew that some sort of evolution had to be part of creation well over a thousand years ago.

You're begging the question, as usual. Try again.
If Augustine was a theologian. then his scientific opinion matters not at all. Try again.
Barbarian chuckles:
I know you want us to believe you, but the forum is littered with threads you started, and then abandoned as the facts accumulated against you.

As I said,it's the stupidity that I can't stand. And here comes some more:

Kohn. Anatomically and topologically, the bird lung is the same as a single alveolus. As you learned, you have the same sort of respiratory system as a secondary system in case of pulmonary obstruction. It's called "collateral ventilation." Birds have it an on a much larger scale, and in birds, it's become the primary means of ventilation.

I really wonder about the state your gray cells have reached: fried by this evolutionary garbage.

Tell me, is it too difficult for you to see, that if a bunch of balloons have pinpricks in them, that does not constitute a great hole in the bottom of the lung and a pipe leading to the outside, bypassing the balloons altogether.

Is that really too difficult for you to grasp? Now here's more nonsense:
That's what I've been trying to tell you. Collateral ventilation works in all vertebrates as the primary form works in birds. In such cases, the air leaves the alveolus through the pores of Kohn and in the case of pulmonary obstruction provide a secondary form of respiration.

The pores of Kohn are small communications between adjacent pulmonary alveoli and provide a collateral pathway for aeration.
http://radiopaedia.org/articles/pores-of-kohn

Your PAP-ERRR doesn't help at all, does it? Surely you know the meaning of COLLATERAL? In case you don't, here's the dictionary:

Situated or running side by side; parallel. 2. Coinciding in tendency or effect; concomitant or accompanying.

Notice? 'side by side, PARALLEL'. Unfortunately for you, the bird's system is EXACTLY OPPOSITE to every other vertebrate. That is not 'parallel' or running side by side.

Here's the fatal diagram again:

Where do you see anything that resembles COLLATERAL in those diagrams?

Really Barbarian. You claim to teach biology (I think?). Can't you grasp a simple sketch diagram? What else can I do to help your darkness and incomprehension? Not much, I fear, because my powers of English expression don't run to this monumental density.


Some reptiles. But...

A 33-foot long, carnivorous dinosaur that lived 85 million years ago had a breathing system similar to that used by modern birds, and researchers say the finding is further evidence of the evolutionary link between dinosaurs and birds. A fossil found in a riverbank in Argentina shows evidence of efficient air sacs that pumped air into the dinosaur’s lungs.

Lead researcher Paul Sereno named the new dinosaur Aerosteon riocoloradensis, which means “air bones from the Rio Colorado.” Instead of lungs that expand and contract, Sereno thinks this beast had air sacs that worked like a bellows, blowing air into the beast’s stiff lungs (?????), much like modern birds…. Most paleontologists believe birds evolved from small, feathered meat-eating dinosaurs, and the earliest known birds were strikingly similar to these dinosaurs [Reuters].
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2008/09/30/elephant-sized-dinosaur-had-bird-like-lungs/

Don't you get tired of these pathetic quotes? Can't you recognise pure wishful thinking when you hear it? No, if you can accept evolution I don't suppose you can. It goes with the territory.

The earliest known birds COULD FLY. Got that? Now where did they get that from? Oh yeah. From running along the ground waving their forelimbs in the air, and the wing blowing through the scales turned them into feathers over millions of years. Is that right?

And he obviously has never read Rubens on the subject of the lungs. Have you? No, I ddn't think so. Here you are: rattle those gray cells round in their cage and let some fresh air and information come in:

ScienceDaily (June 9, 2009) — Researchers at Oregon State University have made a fundamental new discovery about how birds breathe and have a lung capacity that allows for flight – and the finding means it's unlikely that birds descended from any known theropod dinosaurs.

The conclusions add to other evolving evidence that may finally force many paleontologists to reconsider their long-held belief that modern birds are the direct descendants of ancient, meat-eating dinosaurs, OSU researchers say.

[...]
t's been known for decades that the femur, or thigh bone in birds is largely fixed and makes birds into "knee runners," unlike virtually all other land animals, the OSU experts say. What was just discovered, however, is that it's this fixed position of bird bones and musculature that keeps their air-sac lung from collapsing when the bird inhales.
[...]
However, every other animal that has walked on land, the scientists said, has a moveable thigh bone that is involved in their motion – including humans, elephants, dogs, lizards and – in the ancient past – dinosaurs.

[...]
The implication, the researchers said, is that birds almost certainly did not descend from theropod dinosaurs, such as tyrannosaurus or allosaurus. The findings add to a growing body of evidence in the past two decades that challenge some of the most widely-held beliefs about animal evolution.

"For one thing, birds are found earlier in the fossil record than the dinosaurs they are supposed to have descended from," Ruben said. "That's a pretty serious problem, and there are other inconsistencies with the bird-from-dinosaur theories.

"However, theropod dinosaurs had a moving femur and therefore could not have had a lung that worked like that in birds. Their abdominal air sac, if they had one, would have collapsed. That undercuts a critical piece of supporting evidence for the dinosaur-bird link.

Heh heh heh!
Apparently, some dinosaurs weren't as knowledgeable as you,...

Neither are you, and you should abandon this nonsensical theory. If you've got any sense, that is.

Just a bit more poison for your cup of bitterness:
Ruben noted the problem for the dino-bird theory in general: how would the ‘bellows’-style lungs of reptiles evolve gradually into avian lungs? The hypothetical intermediate stages could not conceivably function properly, meaning the poor animal would be unable to breathe. One of the first stages would be a poor creature with a diaphragmatic hernia (hole in the diaphragm), and natural selection would work against this. Ruben writes:
“The earliest stages in the derivation of the avian abdominal airsac system from a diaphragmatic-ventilating ancestor would have necessitated selection for a diaphragmatic hernia [i.e. hole] in taxa transitional between theropods and birds.
“Such a debilitating condition would have immediately compromised the entire pulmonary ventilatory apparatus and seems unlikely to have been of any selective advantage.”

Hmmm. Where do you go from there now?
Surprise.

Yeah!!!


There are various theories about how this happens. One theory is that there are geomagnetic and chemical cues which the salmon use to guide them back to their birthplace. The fish may be sensitive to the Earth's magnetic field, which could allow the fish to orient itself in the ocean, so it can navigate back to the estuary of its natal stream.[21]

Barbarian, please whip those lethargic gray cells into some kind of a crawl.

Think, man, think!

By the way, I was talking about the eels, not salmon -but you're still up the creek (I won't say which), without a paddle.

Here's this joker talking about eel's sense of smell. It must be a hell of a sense of smell - to be able to smell home from 3000 miles away: especially when the little fishy has never even BEEN HOME! IT'S A MIRACLE! Evolution? Pah.

Salmon have an strong sense of smell. Speculation about whether odours provide homing cues, go back to the 19th century.[22] In 1951, Hasler hypothesised that, once in vicinity of the estuary or entrance to its birth river, salmon may use chemical cues which they can smell, and which are unique to their natal stream, as a mechanism to home onto the entrance of the stream.[23] In 1978, Hasler and his students convincingly showed that the way salmon locate their home rivers with such precision was indeed because they could recognise its characteristic smell. They further demonstrated that the smell of their river becomes imprinted in salmon when they transform into smolts, just before they migrate out to sea.[20][24][25] Homecoming salmon can also recognise characteristic smells in tributary streams as they move up the main river.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salmon_run

Excuse me, I was talking about eels, whose parents die in the Sargasso Sea, and the young stll make their way home. That's the problem you have no hope of ever answering, and about the 20th reason why you should abandon evolution.

Here's another. Hassler and Co. now need to account for the way the salmon acquired the ability to become imprinted, to be able to smell in the first place, and why so many other fish can't do so, and yet survive very well notwithstanding.

Any ideas or P-A-P-E-RRRRR--S on the subject????
So we now know that salmon use smell to home in on their home river. And now, it appears that Salmon, like other migratory species, can orient in the Earth's magnetic field. What we don't yet know, is not proof or disproof of anything.

It's proof that the theory is incompetent, for one thing - and that it should be abandoned, for another.

And this magnetic field thing. Suppose you could identify magnetic fields. How would that get you home? If you didn't know where home was in the first place?

But that's the situation with the eels, Plovers and a thousand others beside. Evolution? Pah.

Surprise. You should know by now that bravado won't help you. And now that scientists are putting together the understanding of how migration works, ignorance turns out to be a bad place for you to hide.

Really? They are? You mean, they're patching together those mighty pieces of ignorance and producing a quilt to cover the naked ignorance of any of these major natural phenomena! Your emperor has no clothes, Barbarian, and I'm glad that at least you recognise that fact. Now take the next step.

Get those gray cells into action. Ask some questions - you know, I've never heard you question even one bit of this theory, or any of these papers which say clearly that they are puttiing forth guesses, hopes, and tripe? Why not? Haven't you got enough brain power to generate at least a couple of awkward questions?

How's that?

Turns out feathers are primarily for warmth and display. Only secondarily for flying. There were feathers millions of years before any organism used them to fly.

Again undiluted nonsense. Let me see if I can help you see this. You are saying that if I wrap my blanket round me for millions of years, it will become feathers and wings. That right?

And don't you know that down feathers don't bear any resemblance to flight feathers? You should, you know, as a Biology teacher. So if the feathers were primarily for warmth, then they must have been down feathers.

But a bird can't fly with down feathers. So what are we seeing here? Reptiles covered with down feathers, racing along the ground waving their forelimbs in the air, and the wind turns the down feathers into flight feathers, and the repbird takes off: and because it can't fly, it breaks its fool neck.

Ever seen the two kinds of feathers I'm talking about?

Down feather:


Flight feather:


See any difference? I doubt it. Those rose coloured glasses do distort things, I fear.
We see flight feathers on dinosaurs that could not possibly have flown. But they would have been quite useful (as they are today for ostriches) in providing lift and manuverability in running.

Here's more stupidity.

New long-term observations and airflow experiments withostriches now show these flightless birds can use their wings as advanced stabilizers.
http://www.livescience.com/6657-ostrich-wings-explain-mystery-flightless-dinosaurs.html

Are these jokers sufficiently stupid as not to ask the simple question: were the running dinosaurs falling all over the place BEFORE they 'evolved' these feathers? Is that why there are so many reptile fossils? They broke their necks trying to run without the feathers to stabilise them!

They couldn't balance! Har -de har!!!

And these are 'ADVANCED' stabilisers. Got that? Where are the primitive ones? Let me guess, no I won't. The whole thing is just too stupid for words, polite ones, that is.

And, as you learned, Lennox said that he saw evolution as Darwin did. He's on video saying so. No point in denying that, either.

Back to the lies I see. His PA stated quite clearly that he has serious questions about evolution. If he didn't, why was he debating with Dawkins?
 
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Back to the lies I see. His PA stated quite clearly that he has serious questions about evolution. If he didn't, why was he debating with Dawkins?

Because John Lennox disagrees with Richard Dawkins about the existence of God and the role of religion in history and society and Richard Dawkins is one of the most prominent atheists around. In his debates with Richard Dawkins, John Lennox has never challenged evolution, just the conclusions Richard Dawkins draws from it.
 
Barbarian explains:
Because it's a very foolish and harmful thing to add new doctrines to Christianity. It's not that you deny science; it's that you damage faith.

Evolution began about 3.5 billion years ago. The theory began in the 1800s, about a century before YE creationism was invented by the Seventh-Day Adventists. But of course Christian theologians such as St. Augustine knew that some sort of evolution had to be part of creation well over a thousand years ago.

You're begging the question, as usual.

Perhaps you don't know what "begging the question" means:
"Begging the question (Latin petitio principii, "assuming the initial point") is a type of logical fallacy in which a proposition relies on an implicit premise within itself to establish the truth of that same proposition. In other words, it is a statement that refers to its own assertion to prove the assertion."

If Augustine was a theologian. then his scientific opinion matters not at all.

But his theological opinion matters greatly since he is the most influential theologian in Catholic, Protestant, and Eastern Orthodox faiths.

Barbarian chuckles:
I know you want us to believe you, but the forum is littered with threads you started, and then abandoned as the facts accumulated against you.

As I said,it's the stupidity that I can't stand.

But it's the evidence that makes you abandon the threads. As soon as your misconceptions are exposed, you cut and run.

(Async writes about the "pores of Cohn")

Barbarian chuckles:
Kohn. Anatomically and topologically, the bird lung is the same as a single alveolus. As you learned, you have the same sort of respiratory system as a secondary system in case of pulmonary obstruction. It's called "collateral ventilation." Birds have it an on a much larger scale, and in birds, it's become the primary means of ventilation.

I really wonder about the state your gray cells have reached: fried by this evolutionary garbage.

Doesn't take much evidence to get you upset and abusive. I gather your book isn't selling so well?

Tell me, is it too difficult for you to see, that if a bunch of balloons have pinpricks in them, that does not constitute a great hole in the bottom of the lung and a pipe leading to the outside, bypassing the balloons altogether.

Alveoli are not balloons, and collateral ventilation is an observed fact. Reality counts.

Barbarian continues:
That's what I've been trying to tell you. Collateral ventilation works in all vertebrates as the primary form works in birds. In such cases, the air leaves the alveolus through the pores of Kohn and in the case of pulmonary obstruction provide a secondary form of respiration.

The pores of Kohn are small communications between adjacent pulmonary alveoli and provide a collateral pathway for aeration.
http://radiopaedia.org/articles/pores-of-kohn

Your PAP-ERRR doesn't help at all, does it? Surely you know the meaning of COLLATERAL? In case you don't, here's the dictionary:

Situated or running side by side; parallel. 2. Coinciding in tendency or effect; concomitant or accompanying.

Notice? 'side by side, PARALLEL'. Unfortunately for you, the bird's system is EXACTLY OPPOSITE to every other vertebrate. That is not 'parallel' or running side by side.

You misunderstand. "Collateral" in the sense of (2.) When the primary path is obstructed, the pores of Kohn provide a different path for air, similar to that found in birds. A flow-through path occurs in such cases. In birds, and in some dinosaurs, it became the dominant form.

Really Barbarian. You claim to teach biology (I think?). Can't you grasp a simple sketch diagram?

In this case, your error was in understanding what "collateral" means.

What else can I do to help your darkness and incomprehension? Not much, I fear, because my powers of English expression don't run to this monumental density.

It was vocabulary, not expression that took you down this time.

Barbarian observes:
A 33-foot long, carnivorous dinosaur that lived 85 million years ago had a breathing system similar to that used by modern birds, and researchers say the finding is further evidence of the evolutionary link between dinosaurs and birds. A fossil found in a riverbank in Argentina shows evidence of efficient air sacs that pumped air into the dinosaur’s lungs.

Lead researcher Paul Sereno named the new dinosaur Aerosteon riocoloradensis, which means “air bones from the Rio Colorado.†Instead of lungs that expand and contract, Sereno thinks this beast had air sacs that worked like a bellows, blowing air into the beast’s stiff lungs , much like modern birds…. Most paleontologists believe birds evolved from small, feathered meat-eating dinosaurs, and the earliest known birds were strikingly similar to these dinosaurs [Reuters].

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80...rd-like-lungs/

Don't you get tired of these pathetic quotes?

Evidence is the way it works. That's why quote-mining has failed for you so often. It turns out that at least some of the theropod dinosaurs (the group from which it seems birds evolved) had an avian respiratory system.

The earliest known birds COULD FLY.

Jeholornis (meaning "Jehol bird") is a genus of Mesozoic birds that lived approximately 120 million years ago during the Early Cretaceous of China...The shoulder girdles of Jeholornis were well developed and probably allowed for better flight capability than seen in Archaeopteryx. The flight apparatus of the Jeholornis was overall quite similar to that of Confuciusornis in form and function, with forelimbs longer than hindlimbs, and a short, robust hand.[4] However, like other primitive (non-ornithothoracean) birds and theropod dinosaurs, the shoulder blades of Jeholornis were oriented along the sides of the body, rather than on top of its back. This meant that the shoulder girdle was slung low, and according to a 2006 study by Phil Senter, would have allowed only for a typical dinosaurian motion of the shoulder. Primitive birds like Archaeopteryx, Confuciusornis, and Jeholornis would not have been able to lift their arms vertically to achieve true flapping flight, though semi-powered gliding or parachuting would have been possible.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeholornis

Surprise.

Got that?

Yep. Reality blindsides you yet again.

Now where did they get that from?

Fossils.

Oh yeah. From running along the ground waving their forelimbs in the air, and the wing blowing through the scales turned them into feathers over millions of years. Is that right?

It's always amusing to see how poorly you understand biology. Feathers first appeared as insulation and display, long before birds. It's true that scutes (scales found on dinsaurs, birds, and other archosaurs) can still form feathers with a single mutation, but it's a moot point; feathers preceded birds.

ScienceDaily (June 9, 2009) — Researchers at Oregon State University have made a fundamental new discovery about how birds breathe and have a lung capacity that allows for flight – and the finding means it's unlikely that birds descended from any known theropod dinosaurs.

Too bad they weren't around to tell that dinosaur in Argentina, um?
"For one thing, birds are found earlier in the fossil record than the dinosaurs they are supposed to have descended from," Ruben said. "That's a pretty serious problem, and there are other inconsistencies with the bird-from-dinosaur theories.

Oldest dinosaurs are about 230 million years old. Oldest birds, about 120-125 million years old. Ooops.

"However, theropod dinosaurs had a moving femur and therefore could not have had a lung that worked like that in birds. Their abdominal air sac, if they had one, would have collapsed. That undercuts a critical piece of supporting evidence for the dinosaur-bird link.

And yet we have this theropod dinosaur with avian lung sacs. Oops, again.

Heh heh heh!

Indeed. Reality beats anyone's reasoning.

Just a bit more poison for your cup of bitterness:
Ruben noted the problem for the dino-bird theory in general: how would the ‘bellows’-style lungs of reptiles evolve gradually into avian lungs?

As you learned, the flow-through path already exists in vertibrates.

The hypothetical intermediate stages could not conceivably function properly, meaning the poor animal would be unable to breathe.

Collateral ventilation is a fact. Reality.

One of the first stages would be a poor creature with a diaphragmatic hernia (hole in the diaphragm)

Many organisms with lungs lack a diaphragm. Reptiles, for instance. Ruben doesn't seem to have been listening during comparative anatomy.

“The earliest stages in the derivation of the avian abdominal airsac system from a diaphragmatic-ventilating ancestor would have necessitated selection for a diaphragmatic hernia [i.e. hole] in taxa transitional between theropods and birds.

See above. Reptiles don't have a diaphragm.

Surprise.

Hmmm. Where do you go from there now?

Laughing at the obvious error.

Reptiles lack the diaphragms that mammals have. Instead, their lungs inflate and deflate by the expansion and contraction of their ribcage.

Read more: Animals That Use Lungs for Breathing | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/list_7311329_animals-use-lungs-breathing.html#ixzz29FFkg3qE

There are various theories about how this happens. One theory is that there are geomagnetic and chemical cues which the salmon use to guide them back to their birthplace. The fish may be sensitive to the Earth's magnetic field, which could allow the fish to orient itself in the ocean, so it can navigate back to the estuary of its natal stream.[21]

Barbarian, please whip those lethargic gray cells into some kind of a crawl.

It's already known to work:

Resonance effects indicate a radical-pair mechanism for avian magnetic compass
Nature 429, 177-180 (13 May 2004)
Migratory birds are known to use the geomagnetic field as a source of compass information1, 2. There are two competing hypotheses for the primary process underlying the avian magnetic compass, one involving magnetite3, 4, 5, the other a magnetically sensitive chemical reaction6, 7, 8. Here we show that oscillating magnetic fields disrupt the magnetic orientation behaviour of migratory birds.


Surprise.

By the way, I was talking about the eels, not salmon

I know. It kind of all blurs together for you, sometimes.

Excuse me, I was talking about eels, whose parents die in the Sargasso Sea, and the young stll make their way home.

As you learned, long-distance migratory behavior is often by magnetic sense, and it's already been established that fish can use smell to find their home stream. Reality gets you again.

Barbarian observes:
Turns out feathers are primarily for warmth and display. Only secondarily for flying. There were feathers millions of years before any organism used them to fly.

Again undiluted nonsense.

Observed fact. There were feathered dinosaurs before birds.

Let me see if I can help you see this. You are saying that if I wrap my blanket round me for millions of years, it will become feathers and wings. That right?

I don't think that making up silly misrepresentations is going to help you.

And don't you know that down feathers don't bear any resemblance to flight feathers?

You've been misled on that, too. The rachis is present in most down feathers, in a reduced state. Down feathers are biochemically the same as other feathers. Down feathers have the barbs and barbules found on other feathers, just lacking hooks. Indeed, down feathers aren't even the most primitive form of feathers. You weren't listening in science class again, were you?

You should, you know, as a Biology teacher. So if the feathers were primarily for warmth, then they must have been down feathers.

And contour feathers, which are also important in insulation. But the earliest known were filoplumes, which are even more simple. And as you know, feathers preceded birds. Proarchaeopteryx, for example, was a dinosaur, but had all the feathers of a bird, lacking only assymetrical flight feathers.

But a bird can't fly with down feathers. So what are we seeing here? Reptiles covered with down feathers, racing along the ground waving their forelimbs in the air, and the wind turns the down feathers into flight feathers, and the repbird takes off: and because it can't fly, it breaks its fool neck.

Turns out that some running dinosaurs had vaned feathers on their forelimbs. It seems they used them as ostriches do today, for controlling their movement while running.

Ever seen the two kinds of feathers I'm talking about?

Turns out, it's a lot more interesting and complicated than you imagined. Want to learn about different feather types, and how they are related?

Barbarian observes:
We see flight feathers on dinosaurs that could not possibly have flown. But they would have been quite useful (as they are today for ostriches) in providing lift and manuverability in running.

Here's more stupidity.

Directly observed.

New long-term observations and airflow experiments with ostriches now show these flightless birds can use their wings as advanced stabilizers.
http://www.livescience.com/6657-ostr...dinosaurs.html

Are these jokers sufficiently stupid as not to ask the simple question: were the running dinosaurs falling all over the place BEFORE they 'evolved' these feathers?

Can people run without them? Yep. Would it be useful to have some kind of airfoil to deploy when running? Yep, if you're going more than a few miles per hour. Ostriches, for example.
Does that mean they are useful but not essential? Yep.

Surprise.

Barbarian observes:
And, as you learned, Lennox said that he saw evolution as Darwin did. He's on video saying so. No point in denying that, either.

Back to the lies I see.

In the video. No point in denying it.

His PA stated quite clearly that he has serious questions about evolution. If he didn't, why was he debating with Dawkins?

Atheism. Entirely different matter. But the question remains why Lennox said he saw evolution as Darwin did.

Want to see the video again?
 
Back to the lies I see. His PA stated quite clearly that he has serious questions about evolution. If he didn't, why was he debating with Dawkins?

Because John Lennox disagrees with Richard Dawkins about the existence of God and the role of religion in history and society and Richard Dawkins is one of the most prominent atheists around. In his debates with Richard Dawkins, John Lennox has never challenged evolution, just the conclusions Richard Dawkins draws from it.



Theistic Evolution does t6hat same thing, but shows that one can easily reconcile the overview of scientific ideas about Cosmic Evolution with what Genesis explained in a way compatible with the various social paradigms that of all generations since 1362BC through which the Bible has had to pass.
 
Back to the lies I see. His PA stated quite clearly that he has serious questions about evolution. If he didn't, why was he debating with Dawkins?

Because John Lennox disagrees with Richard Dawkins about the existence of God and the role of religion in history and society and Richard Dawkins is one of the most prominent atheists around. In his debates with Richard Dawkins, John Lennox has never challenged evolution, just the conclusions Richard Dawkins draws from it.

Bearing in mind the scriptural adage that only a fool judges a matter before he hears it, why don't you do the obvious thing and go read the man's book? You'd soon find out how foolish your claim really is.

Here's the reference:

God's Undertaker 2009 published by Lion Press

pages 100 - 121
 
Bearing in mind the scriptural adage that only a fool judges a matter before he hears it, why don't you do the obvious thing and go read the man's book? You'd soon find out how foolish your claim really is.

Here's the reference:

God's Undertaker 2009 published by Lion Press

pages 100 - 121

I do not doubt what is in his book, I didn't even mention his book. Please go back and re read what I actually put.

Sent from my HTC Desire S using Tapatalk 2
 
Bearing in mind the scriptural adage that only a fool judges a matter before he hears it, why don't you do the obvious thing and go read the man's book? You'd soon find out how foolish your claim really is.

Here's the reference:

God's Undertaker 2009 published by Lion Press

pages 100 - 121


Go back and re-read Genesis with an attempt to see that Science supports every verse.

Set aside the medieval ideas that have been passed down through ages now, and the attempt by Jerry Falwell to stone wall things he thought too difficult in Genesis to maintain if Science was used as a ruler in regard to what is true about the physical universe.

What you will see in that Theistic Evolution uses Science to support the Bible, if you will use intellectual honesty in place of defensiveness for fallacious ideas that evidence poor reading comprehension for Genesis.
 
I do not doubt what is in his book, I didn't even mention his book. Please go back and re read what I actually put.

Sent from my HTC Desire S using Tapatalk 2

This is what you actually put:

John Lennox has never challenged evolution, just the conclusions Richard Dawkins draws from it.

If you go read his book, you'll find out that the statement you just made is completely untrue.

You're as bad as Barbarian, who even wants to contradict the man's PA in support of his sad and hopelessly wrong comment.

When are you guys going to face the truth of the matter?
 
[...]
What you will see in that Theistic Evolution uses Science to support the Bible, if you will use intellectual honesty in place of defensiveness for fallacious ideas that evidence poor reading comprehension for Genesis.

My view of the days of creation is that those are individual, 24hr days on which the creative commands were given. The outworking of those commands took however long it took.

Theistic evolution is an attempt to serve 2 masters - which thing cannot be done, and is a total contradiction in terms, both scientifically and theologically.

Dawkins recognises this, and sneers at the theistic evolutionists. And quite right too. I have little time for them, myself.

All this nonsense about Adam being some kind of degenerate ape is contradicted by Jesus, who uses the account as the basis for His most important teaching re divorce and remarriage. Paul calls Adam 'one man', not some jumped up gorilla or chimpanzee.

And do you know what happens when chromosome numbers in animals are altered for any reason? Google will help you, if you but look. Let us know what you find out.
 
This is what you actually put:



If you go read his book, you'll find out that the statement you just made is completely untrue.

You're as bad as Barbarian, who even wants to contradict the man's PA in support of his sad and hopelessly wrong comment.

When are you guys going to face the truth of the matter?

You've deliberately misrepresented what I said by removing the first part of that statement. What I said, IN FULL;


Because John Lennox disagrees with Richard Dawkins about the existence of God and the role of religion in history and society and Richard Dawkins is one of the most prominent atheists around. In his debates with Richard Dawkins ( this is the bit you removed) John Lennox has never challenged evolution, just the conclusions Richard Dawkins draws from it.


This was in response to your question of why Professor Lennox debated Professor Dawkins. I never said Lennox didn't challenge evolution, I said he never challenged it in his debates with Dawkins but he did challenge what Dawkins concludes from it. 2 very different statements.

If you're going to quote someone to criticize, at least have the decency to quote them in their full context.

Sent from my HTC Desire S using Tapatalk 2
 
1) My view of the days of creation is that those are individual, 24hr days on which the creative commands were given. The outworking of those commands took however long it took.

2) Theistic evolution is an attempt to serve 2 masters - which thing cannot be done, and is a total contradiction in terms, both scientifically and theologically.

.


1) How do rationalize the fact that there was no 24 day until in Genesis 1:14, when God made the Sun the authority over a Solar Clock "for days, and seasons, and years?"

2) The master served by both Science and Genesis is Truth.

Science is merely a path to Truth, aka Christ,... i.e.; "I am the Truth, the way, and the life"....
 
In his debates with Richard Dawkins ( this is the bit you removed) John Lennox has never challenged evolution, just the conclusions Richard Dawkins draws from it.


2


You must recognize that Dawkins is not EVER contradicting Genesis but ONLY the interporetation of these people, like Asyncritus, who you and I also question about their private interpretations to which they stick in spite of all arguments to the contrary.

I do not believe Dawkins would last long if confronted by the verse by verse Theistic Evolution understanding of Genesis.
 
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