Posted: Mon Jun 06, 2005 2:44 pm
I don't want links, I want it in the original words of the person posting. Links are too easy, and requires little thought on the person who cuts and pastes--it is the lazy way out.
"The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." (Psalm 19:1)
https://discussions.godandscience.org/
Did anyone here claim to not be lazy? I certainly didn't! You got what you asked for, even if it's not in the form you would have chosen(which is really a problem with you and your preferences, not the information). Thanks, jerickson314! I have to go to work now, and wouldn't have had time to reply with all that info anyway.Kelly wrote:I don't want links, I want it in the original words of the person posting. Links are too easy, and requires little thought on the person who cuts and pastes--it is the lazy way out.
The problem with my own words is that I am not as well-versed as you in this subject matter anyway. I prefer to point you to someone with more knowledge, essentially to the arguments that seem convincing to me. Even though in this case I happen to be linking to someone who agrees with you and disagrees with me.Kelly wrote:I don't want links, I want it in the original words of the person posting. Links are too easy, and requires little thought on the person who cuts and pastes--it is the lazy way out.
An evidence against naturalistic evolution is lack of sufficient time. When dinosaurs were wiped out 65 million years ago, the highest animals survived were birds. To evolve from birds to humans in this time span is really a miracle. I believe God must be involved in this evolution. However, some people think it is possible without God's intervention. Scientifically, it is indeed possible, but with near-zero possibility.Kelly wrote:Well, I agree that it is not Christian to reject empiric evidence of the nature of the world around us, but I have yet to see hard evidence *against* ToE here (or anywhere else, for that matter).
I think Frank2005 makes some very good points, especially the last. As long as the statistical probability of something is non-zero, then it is impossible to prove it didn't happen that way and pointless to try and do so.Frank2005 wrote:...To evolve from birds to humans in this time span ... is indeed possible, but with near-zero possibility.
Naturalistic evolution is a possible process. You may provide evidence against it, but there is no way to disprove it. I think it is a waste of time for Christians trying to disprove naturalistic evolution. The best way to convince people the existence of God is to "Show them the God". ...
That's not science then, that's guesswork. Evolution can't be grounded in chance, it must be a process that DEMANDS the emergence of complex lifeforms. Chance demands entropy, entropy is the opposite of complexity, for evolution to be valid it must be grounded in a scientific principle that basically forces life to evolve into more complex organisms, rather than the entropic tendency of all objects in the universe to break down into simpler objects.sandy_mcd wrote:I think Frank2005 makes some very good points, especially the last. As long as the statistical probability of something is non-zero, then it is impossible to prove it didn't happen that way and pointless to try and do so.Frank2005 wrote:...To evolve from birds to humans in this time span ... is indeed possible, but with near-zero possibility.
Naturalistic evolution is a possible process. You may provide evidence against it, but there is no way to disprove it. I think it is a waste of time for Christians trying to disprove naturalistic evolution. The best way to convince people the existence of God is to "Show them the God". ...
sandy
http://discussions.godandscience.org/vi ... hp?p=12699 - the same logic you are presenting, put a different way. I will comment there when I have a chance but am crunched for time right now.Kelly wrote:The a priori stastical probability that a specific grain of sand will stick to you after a day at the beach is astonomically small. Does this mean that God put that grain of sand there? Conversely, the a priori probability that at least one grain of sand will stick to you after a day at the beach is very high. Does this mean that God doesn't exist?
According to Darwin's theory, the principle that forces life to evolve into more complex organisms is "survival of the fittest".Dan wrote:it must be grounded in a scientific principle that basically forces life to evolve into more complex organisms, rather than the entropic tendency of all objects in the universe to break down into simpler objects.
I'm not exactly a science expert, but there are a few observations I've made on the theory of evolution, and why I have no faith in the theory. You guys seem pretty onto it, I was hoping you might have some answers I'll just start off with this one.Well, I agree that it is not Christian to reject empiric evidence of the nature of the world around us, but I have yet to see hard evidence *against* ToE here
Information is closely related to entropy. While entropy measures randomness, information measures order. The statement that "in a closed system, the entropy never decreases" is the same as "in a closed system, the information never increases".Ben wrote:if we evolved from single celled organisms over billions of years through random genetic mutations, we still have the problem that genetic mutations don't produce new information.
I am not aware of any scientific definition of "information" (Shannon's use of information and entropy are mathematical, not scientific). Entropy on the other hand is a well defined scientific quantity just as volume and energy are. And just as volume and energy have units (eg cubic feet and BTU's) and can be measured with numerical values (a 3 cubic foot box, a 5000 BTU air conditioner) , so can entropy.Frank2005 wrote:Information is closely related to entropy. While entropy measures randomness, information measures order. The statement that "in a closed system, the entropy never decreases" is the same as "in a closed system, the information never increases".
It can be shown that Shannon's definition of entropy in the information theory is the same as Boltzmann's definition of entropy in statistical mechanics. The only difference is in physical units. Seesandy_mcd wrote:Shannon's use of information and entropy are mathematical, not scientific
This is a topic I wish someone else would post on. I not only don't know the answers but am not even sure if the questions are valid. For awhile, I thought that the question "What existed before the Universe ?" was meaningless since I had read time (and space) were properties of the Universe. But in another thread, (just looked it up) True origin of our universe will be resolved soon http://discussions.godandscience.org/vi ... highlight= you point out that a bulk universe and string theory can be used to validate the question.Frank2005 wrote:By the way, since the entropy of a closed system can never decrease, the entropy of our universe (a closed system) at the Big Bang must be very low. How could our universe start with such a highly ordered state? Where did the initial order come from?