Can we drop the all caps? Makes your post hard to read...
by
JGC
05/09/2008, 11:01 AM #
...and lends no greater authority to it's content.
“IF MY IDEA OF GOD IS THAT HE CREATED THE UNIVERSE IN SIX DAYS THEN THAT IS THREATENED BY EVOLUTION.”
>>I agree your idea of god would be threatened, but that isn’t synonymous with god’s existence being threatened.
There’s certainly no credible reason to presume a priori anyone's idea of god is accurate, and there is abundamt evidence from multiple fields of inquiry which falsify the world’s various creation myths (including the two offered in Genesis.)
“SCIENCE IS BELIEVING SOMETHING ONLY WHEN THE BEST AVAILABLE EVIDENCE SAYS SOMETHING IS SO.”
>>No, it isn’t. Confidence in scientific explanations doesn’t arise as a function of believing that they’re valid: it derives from a demonstrated ability to explain observations within their scope in a comprehensive and predictive manner.
“RELIGION IS THE EXACT OPPOSITE OF THAT.”
>>Only in the sense that it's the opposite of beleiving something based on evidence: religious belief is a function of personal faith. That doesn't make religion the opposite of science,, since science and religion don't address the same questions.
“TO PRETEND THAT ONE IS NOT DIAMETRICALLY OPPOSED TO THE OTHER IS TO LIE TO YOURSELF AND OTHERS.”
>>Nonsense: nothing in evolutionary theory is incompatible with religious faith nor speaks to the existence of lack thereof of supernatural entities commonly termed ‘gods’. It’s demonstrably possible to believe in god, believe in a created universe, and still have confidence in evolutionary explanations for the worlds observed biological diversity. Suggesting otherwise is to ignore the witness of millions of individual of all faiths—Christian faiths included—who do just that.
The only thing evolutionary models aren’t compatible with is the premise that any of the world’s various creation myths represent literal depictions of actual historic events.
“SCIENCE IS RELIGION'S WORST NIGHTMARE AND VICE VERSA.”
>>Only if you mistakenly believe their magisterial overlap. Science and religion appropriately seek answers to different questions—science asks questions of “How?” (e.g., “How did the human race arise as a species?”) while religion asks questions of “Why?” (e.g., “Why am we here?)