Rose Immortal
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I thought Creationism was the attempt to merge science with literal Biblical interpretation. Have I got two different things confused?
Rose Immortal said:I thought Creationism was the attempt to merge science with literal Biblical interpretation. Have I got two different things confused?
Rose Immortal said:After all, how do you get a scientist to zero in on those and do the fine-tuning or (on occasion) create a new and better theory unless you give them a good awareness of where the clunky spots are?
Rose Immortal said:Why do you guys think the debate is always framed as being between random, atheistic evolution on one end, and literalist creationism on the other?
Why is the middle-ground hypothesis--theistic evolution--left out?
Rose Immortal said:I am ALSO curious about why the name of creationism was changed to "Intelligent Design". I have some ideas, but I'd rather see the real reason before I open my mouth.
MorriganTait said:No - that evolution has occured and continues to occur is an accepted scientific fact (read essay in other post). Some specific modes of evolution are still a matter of theory, while some modes of evolution are known fact.
hottiedeafboi said:When her teacher talked about how earth formed and stuff all it start before anything is gas. My daughter asked, how gas formed itself. She said out from nowhere?
zookeeper4321 said:I think if it's presented we should include everything and let the kids decide. If you want to bring morality into it, that should be taught at home. Religion doesn't belong in school in this country.
Liebling:-))) said:I voted Both
My both sons were taught at school in different weekday...Creationism and Evolutionism. I think it's meanfuling to have children to know the difference between Creationism and Evolutionism.
web730 said:Evolution stays as a theory, not a fact yet so it shouldn't be taught to the kids. It belongs to the science world whatever they wish to believe in.
web730 said:By the way didn't you know that pro-evolutionists* enforce the kids that they believe it's a fact. It's so ridicious part of them. *(not all pro-evolutionists but in good numbers)
web730 said:It's no harm and maybe the best way to teach both of them and have them decide for themselves, yes.
web730 said:So for the schools I have to rethink that they teach them both ways so it can tell and show to make them understand far more that way. So I would go for that at best.
Teresh said:Read the posts in your thread. Theories *are* facts. Your dogma has no evidence backing it up.
Teresh said:Well, given that evolution is a theory, that makes sense. Do you think that pro-gravity people should not teach kids that gravity is a fact because gravity is "just a theory"?
Teresh said:Not in a biology class, though. Biology classes teach science *NOT* religion. Intelligent design and creationism are religion, not science. Teaching religion in a science class is patently idiotic.
web730 said:Theories = Theories, not Facts
the·o·ry (th-r, thr)n.
1. A systematically organized body of knowledge applicable in a relatively wide variety of circumstances, especially a system of assumptions, accepted principles, and rules of procedure devised to analyze, predict, or otherwise explain the nature or behavior of a specified set of phenomena.
2. Abstract reasoning; speculation.
web730 said:Gravity is an irrefutable fact .. that's not good one for you to use this as a sample or parable.
web730 said:Didn't I know that religion isn't science? Come on, Teresh .. everybody knows that. Isn't that obvious?
web730 said:By the way didn't you know that pro-evolutionists* enforce the kids that they believe it's a fact. It's so ridicious part of them. *(not all pro-evolutionists but in good numbers)
Teresh said:Well, given that evolution is a theory, that makes sense. Do you think that pro-gravity people should not teach kids that gravity is a fact because gravity is "just a theory"?
Teresh said:Where are you getting this definition from? It's not the proper definition of the term.
Teresh said:If you think religion should be taught in science classes in preference to science, then no, you do not know the difference.
MorriganTait said:That evolution has and continues to occur is an accepted scientific fact - NOT a theory.
web730 said:God exists. So these kids deserve to know Him more and learn both ways and decide it for themselves. Is that simple?
web730 said:What can you and I do in case if you don't want to have Creationism or Evolution or even both in schools for the science classes.
None, ofc. You and I have no control in what they can teach or not in schools. You and I know that.
web730 said:accepted? These scientists just accepted the evolution theory as a fact. Still they have NO irrefutable evidence with them. If they did, it would be all well-known fact that would be a big headline .. so why didn't we all get that already (??) BECAUSE it's still declared a theory by all of us non-scientists, however. Rather they have to say it to cover up it up because they have to save their red faces. Comprende?
The short, easy version if you did what I would do and you blew off reading all the above:
- Fact and theory have different definitions when they are used in actual, technical language compared to casual conversation.
- There is no such thing as a fact.
- The highest form of "fact" is theory. Gravity is a theory. The idea that germs make you sick is a theory. When you look at your hand and say, "I have five fingers" it is only a theory. You may actually have six fingers, but you cannot disprove that there is something playing a trick on you, making you think you have five.
- In science, a theory is something that has not been disproven from empirical (real-life) knowledge. It, however, can become more specific and more accurate as we learn more.