Yehren suggests:
Maybe you should define "transitional." There seem to be a great many number of them...
Really?
Yep. Tell me what you think "transitional" means, and I'll see what I can do.
Is that why you seem to be having problems naming even one?
Well, that's what we're about to test, if you can just tell me what you think one would be. If you don't know, tell me that, and we'll talk about that, first. It's always good to get terms defined first so that there are no misunderstandings.
Yehren corrects an "adjusted" quote:
I think a Christian evolutionist is (a) more reliable one than a Muslim one. But I suppose it depends on which one is more important to you.
No disrespect, but why do you believe your opinions and thoughts are of any consequence?
We'll just have to disagree on that, I guess. I'll still take a Christian over a Muslim when it comes to religious questions, but I'm not saying you're dumb for disagreeing.
Again, and for the last time, I don't care who wrote the articles,
Well, we can see that. I think it's a mistake.
the question and issue is whether others here believe the information presented is accurate and why or why not?
As I said, there's hardly a paragraph without a fundamental error. Pick one, and I'll show you.
Yehren asks, incredulously about the recommended site, which says:
""The following are a sample of the religions which are structured around an evolutionary philosophy. Buddhism, Hinduism, Confuscianism, Taoism, Shintoism, Sikhism, Jainism, Animism, Spiritism, Occultism, Satanism, Theosophy, Bahaism, Mysticism, Liberal-Judiasm, Isalm (sic) and Christianity, Unitarianism, Religious Science, Unity and Humanism. All these share the philosophy (belief structure) that the Universe is Eternal, and reject a self-existent personal God. "
You can't really believe that, do you?
I will repeat myself only one more time: the issue is not the authors view on Christianity,
If they really think Christianity is built around science, and rejects a self-existent personal God, I'm afraid that their credibility isn't very good on anything.
Yehren on the huge number of errors in the cited material:
Pick a paragraph,...I'll see what I can do.
No. You pick a paragraph.
OK. Let's see... here's a rather interesting misconception:
"Time and chance are the creators of evolutionists. The idea is that given enough time, anything possible will happen."
That's completely fantasy. Darwin's great discovery was that it wasn't by chance. If evolutionary theory was really like that, I wouldn't like it, either. Don't blame you; you've just been really, really misled.
Here's another good one:
"The evolutionist says that favorable mutations, the kind that do not harm or instantly kill (which almost all of them do), ..."
Again, very wrong. Most mutations don't do anything noticable at all. Most of us have a few of them. This misconception was probably the result of very early genetics experiments, when only drastic, debilitating mutations were easily observed.
And some more...
"The odds against just 3 favorable mutations developing in an organism are 1 in 10 to the 21st power."
And yet Barry Hall observed an entire series of them forming an irreducibly complex enzyme system, in E. Coli. We have seen this also happen with antibiotic resistance in S. aureus, and many other bacteria. Reality wins.
This thread was started so others could pick out what they felt were flaws in the information presented; the articles are available--the information has been presented.
Those are just a few of the jewels. These guys don't know any more than you do. Probably less.
Yehren on the touted source saying that Christianity does not believe in a self-existent, personal God:
Far as I'm concerned, if they don't get that right, there's a good chance they're wrong about everything else.
You might be right, you might be wrong. But, you haven't really proved anything, yet, have you?
All I know is that they are stupendously wrong about something very obvious.
p.s. Why do you refer to yourself in the third person.
Humor him. He's like that.