Murray wrote:There is a good reason ID is not taught, not even by Christian by bio majors, it is because Evolution is truly a scientific and testable theory which has been tested repetitively and found to be the best explanation for how we got here.
Murray wrote:Life, in the right conditions will develop, and will evolve, that is fact. Why do you see it as a far shot to say we developed from perfect circumstances?
Those are just-so stories, Murray, and you know that.
Murray wrote:And you mentioned scientist that back ID.
I would love to see the number that supports evolution in comparison to ID.
What does that have to do with anything? The truth doesn't depend on the number of people who favour it.
Murray wrote:Think of it this way, 1000 engineers called for a re-investigation of 9/11, does that mean 9/11 was an inside job because a minority of engineers believe that. No of course not, the vast majority of engineers (like 97%) believe the explanation was solid. Now the offensive anti-American dumm dumms known as “truthers” use this as proof that we attacked ourselves while ignoring the infinite amount of proof that denies them.
So, did the
proof or
the number of engineers convince you that it wasn't an inside job? Those two are not the same, you know.
Murray wrote:Now it works the same way with ID. Believers in ID attach themselves to a minority and use them as proof. My father has masters in sentimental science; he opposes evolution even though he is un-religious. But I could go out and find 20 other masters in environmental science that believe in evolution.
Have you asked your father why he opposes evolution?
Murray wrote:Just because a vast minority of a population believes something does not give it more credibility.
True, but neither does a majority.
Evidence is what matters. Examine it and make up your mind - that's what rational people do.
Now, as for the evidence - It seems to me that your arguments against ID boil down to:
1) You can't comprehend an
ex nihilo creation, and
2) A majority of scientists believe in evolution.
That's not very convincing, now is it?
Murray wrote:The only argument ID has is pointing out tiny flaws with evolution, that's it. There are tiny holes in the theory of gravity but does that make it wrong? No. There are tiny wholes in the Theory of relativity but does that make it untrue, no.
Spontaneous creation of life -
NOT observed
New information added to the genome -
NOT observed
Interbreeding of different species that produces fertile offspring -
NOT observed
Science, as defined by
Oxford Advanced Learner's dictionary, 7th ed. =
"knowledge about the structure and behaviour of the natural and physical world,
based on facts that you can prove, for example by experiments"
Now, it sometimes happens that we can't prove something to an extent that we consider it a fact - we've neither observed Creation, nor evolution. There are, of course, two possible explanations to our existence - we were either created by a supreme Being, or we came out of nowhere. Based on the following facts:
- Nothing ever comes from nothing,
- Information requires a designer, and DNA may be the most complex code ever seen,
We can, IMO, safely conclude that the evidence points to a Designer. Of course, I oversimplified the situation (as there are many other arguments in favour of a Designer, furthermore the Christian God), but as you can see, the reasoning is simple.
What do you want to prove anyway?