KC Clark wrote:
Evolution is true?!?

Perhaps according to the Discovery Channel, the BBC and National Geographic (all devoted to promoting the philosophy of evolutionism BTW).
Because it's true.
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Evolution is extremely simple. In a universe that’s 14 billion years old and currently 100s of billions (American billions) of light years across and getting so much bigger every second that it boggles the mind, it’s not a huge leap to think that somewhere by shear fluke something (amino acid) would interact with its surroundings in way that by pure chance would create something else that is nearly an exact copy of it. Now, if it’s an nearly an exact copy then it too has the capacity to absorb the matter of its surrounding to create a copy of itself. Now evolution kicks in. What if it creates 100 copies and 50 of those can utilise photosynthesis to extend their life spans. They will have more offspring than the others, meaning the next generation will be better at using their surroundings than the previous one was, and so on, until you get us.
Take ten identical things. Now make those ten things produce ten copies of themselves after a randomish amount of time. Make the copies very slightly different to account for random mutation. One is slightly slower than the others and one is slightly quicker. Now add ten things that kill the other things. Which one of the second generation of original things do you think is most likely to survive long enough to reproduce and which is the least likely to last that long? Rinse and repeat.
Yes it does because those variations help to decide which survive and reproduce and pass on those variations to the next generation who will have more of the advantageous mutations and there own mutations that will survive or not depending on whether they advantageous or not etc.
Random mutation will cause variation. That's undeniable. Those variations will affect their average life span and therefore the average frequency of reproduction. That's undeniable. Genetic mutations get passed down through generations. That's undeniable. So if the mutilations are advantageous then they stand more chance of enduring and becoming the norm rather than mutations, so any advantages will tend to get exaggerated over time.
Why would cutting off their tails affect the genetic code of mice? You would have to select the mice with the shortest tails and breed those ones. There will be variations of the next generations length of tails but the average will be shorter then the original group. It will be the same average as the ones you selected to breed. Then you do the same again and so on. How do you think we got all the breeds of dog from the wolf? It's a lot easier with dogs for some reason but the principle's the same with any life. I can't believe you still haven't grasped this concept. Evolution is just selective breeding based on advantages.
Tell me where you get lost. The giraffes with the longest necks were more likely to reproduce because they were able to reach higher and feed themselves better. This meant that each generation had a tendency to be the offspring of the giraffes with the longest necks from the previous generation. This means that the average neck length increased with each generation.
If you want to claim evolution isn't true then I'm afraid the onus is on you to show exactly where the flaw in that argument is.
KC Clark wrote:
No, I believe you've all misunderstood the question. According to evolution the strong survive and the weak perish - e.g. might makes right or "survival of the fittest" (a tautology). Destroy the weak, to strengthen the strain. Why then does our "modern" ethics revolt against this very idea. I mean people like Margaret Sanger and Adolph Hitler fully embraced this philosophy. Were they right? Certainly not!
WTF? Hitler believed it so if you believe in evolution then you support all of Hitlers views? Your logic is the worst I've ever seen. You think that evolution can't be true because there would be no accountability. Even if that were true (which it isn't), it's a meaningless statement as far as whether or not evolution is true (which it is). Nature destroys the weak genes because they don't get as much chance to be passed down.
KC Clark wrote:
And what part of being a desk jockey (
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.p ... esk+jockey, in case you're not familiar with the term) at a hotel qualifies you to explain scientific principles?
It doesn't. How could it? How does it disqualify me? Besides, I'm not a desk jockey. That would be an office job. And anyway, it's what I do, not who I am. I'm a labourer.

I saw Richard Dawkins the other day.

He was staying at the hotel. He walked right past me and smiled. Weird. I checked out Kathy Sykes at the weekend. She's really nice.
KC Clark wrote:
According to evolutionism everything get's better (increase in genetic information through mutation, which has never been observed). Again, THIS GOES AGAINST THE 2ND LAW!
Does it fuck! Mutation has been observed. There are species that you can line up to show how one slowly evolved into another which is supported by carbon dating. You totally ignore the rules that are inconvenient to your paper thin belief system and use the ones that you think support it, but even they don't. You've total misinterpreted them. This is the trouble with using backwards logic. You start with a statement, like God is real, then you desperately try to work backwards to the real world using dodgy logic and out of context laws. Entropy doesn't really increase chaos because there is no chaos. Everything does what it's supposed to. Think of it as an increase of complexity instead.
KC Clark wrote:
Sorry son, you need to learn a little history too. This kind of nonsense was considered cutting edge science "back in the day". And by that I mean the late 18th and into the 19th century.
How does that stop it from being complete bullshit? I meant bullshit from them, not you.
KC Clark wrote:
Oh really? Is that why most of the major branches of science were started by scientists who believed in Creation?
How big do you think the list would be of those that didn't. Besides, like Rich said; they weren't free to express their views. Not without a heavy price anyway.
KC Clark wrote:
Like I said, 3 pounds...!
Everything that's real can be understood.
KC Clark wrote:
Well you've certainly been brainwashed by this evolutionism B.S. You defend your religion with as much (if not more) fervor than I defend mine.
Maybe i have more faith than you.
KC Clark wrote:
wal wrote:
I'm trying very hard to take you seriously and frankly I think I deserve a meddle for my efforts so far, but please do me a favour and drop the braindead religious logic. If you make a claim then you should be able to back it up. Otherwise anyone could claim whatever they want and expect to be believed. If they claim something really silly then they wouldn't be taken seriously so why should you be?
Hey, I feel the same way.
You have no cause to. Your trying to undercut decades of research by people who know more than you ever could and all your using to do it is dodgy premises and misunderstood concepts. That's what religion will do to you.
KC Clark wrote:
Well if you weren't so brainwashed by your religious views you'd see that I have in my earlier posts, like mentioning the work of Mendel and Pasteur and how the big bang couldn't actually work.
Then why is it still considered by far the most likely explanation? My religion doesn't involve ingrained philosophies or immovable viewpoints. I'm brainwashed into not being brainwashed.
KC Clark wrote:
Cosmic Background Radiation and Red-Shifts:
Did you write any of that? Well, I did ask you to back yourself up I spose.
KC Clark wrote:
Big Bang theorists immediately claimed that this proved the Big Bang! They said it was the last part of the explosion. But further research disclosed that it came from every direction instead of only one, that it was the wrong temperature, and that it was too even. Even discoveries in the 1990s have failed to show that this radiation is “lumpy” enough (their term) to have produced stars and planets.
It
would come from every direction! The universe doesn't have a centre or a point of origin. That would be a meaningless concept anyway because of relativity. It started out as a single point which then expanded. The big bang happened everywhere! The wrong temperature? Are you sure? It's not too even. It's spot on what was predicted by Hawkins extension of general relativity, which is the best description of reality that we have.
KC Clark wrote:
The temperature of the CMB is essentially the same everywhere in all directions (to a precision of 1 part in 100,000). However (according to big bang theorists), in the early universe, the temperature of the CMB would have been very different at different places in space due to the random nature of the initial conditions. These different regions could come to the same temperature if they were in close contact. More distant regions would come to equilibrium by exchanging radiation (i.e. light). The radiation would carry energy from warmer regions to cooler ones until they had the same temperature.
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inflation is needed to lock in the uniformity of the universe and keep it flat, but it‘s not known what caused it
It's not like I'm deliberately leaving out the stuff which doesn't support what I've said.
KC Clark wrote:
While this timescale is sufficient for light to travel from distant galaxies to earth, it does not provide enough time for light to travel from one side of the visible universe to the other. At the time the light was emitted, supposedly 300,000 years after the big bang, space already had a uniform temperature over a range at least ten times larger than the distance that light could have travelled (called the ‘horizon’) So, how can these regions look the same, i.e. have the same temperature? How can one side of the visible universe ‘know’ about the other side if there has not been enough time for the information to be exchanged? This is called the ‘horizon problem’. Secular astronomers have proposed many possible solutions to it, but no satisfactory one has emerged to date.
The big bang requires that opposite regions of the visible universe must have exchanged energy by radiation, since these regions of space look the same in CMB maps. But there has not been enough time for light to travel this distance.
Actually you don't need inflation to explain that. At least not the way it's worded there. There are no opposite regions. If you were to draw a straight line through the first circle of the first attachment to slit it in half then the point in space at one end of the line would be the exact same point in space at the other end. Your making light go the long way (which of course it does as well). That picture is misleading anyway. It makes it look as if the explosion and expansion has a centre.
KC Clark wrote:
Recession of the Moon
Where are you copying these from?
KC Clark wrote:
The moon could never have been closer than 18,400 km (11,500 miles), known as the Roche Limit, because Earth’s tidal forces (i.e., the result of different gravitational forces on different parts of the moon) would have shattered it.
This immediately raises the question as to whether the earth-moon system could be 4.5 billion years old, as most evolutionists insist. Would we not have lost our moon a long time ago? Using the appropriate differential equation (which takes into account the fact that the force of gravity varies with distance), this gives an upper limit of 1.4 billion years.
That is, extrapolating backwards, the moon should have been in physical contact with the earth's surface 'just' 1.4 billion years ago. This is clearly not an age for the moon, but an absolute maximum, given the most favorable evolutionary assumptions. Obviously, in a creation scenario, the moon does not have to begin at the earth's surface and slowly spiral out. Evolutionist astronomers have not yet satisfactorily answered this, nor the lack of geological evidence that the moon has dramatically receded over the past 4.5 billion years, which would have to be so if their framework was correct.
The moon didn't start at the Earth. It used to be a planet called Thea. It collided with Earth and gave our planet its crust (at least some of it anyway) and put a lot of rubble in orbit. It's this impact that tilted the Earths axis and gave us our seasons. At this point the Earth had a planetary ring. This ring in time accreted and gravitated into the moon. It was a lot closer and it would have pulled the whole ocean around the planet (twice a day I think).
KC Clark wrote:
The speaker's name is Spike Psarris. He has a Bachelor's of Science in Electrical Engineering from the University of Massachusetts, and has done graduate work in Physics. For a number of years, he was an engineer in the U.S. military space program; he entered that position as an atheist and committed evolutionist, and came out of it as a young-earth creationist and Christian.
What does that prove? That people can walk backwards?
KC Clark wrote:
I'm still talking Creation vs. evolutionism rich. Wal wants some facts, scientific facts (and perhaps a spelling lesson or two).
Nufin t' do with me. Talk to the spell checker. I' carn't spel f' shit! I didn't spell anything wrong in that quote. Oh, favour. That's how it's spelt. You Americans like spelling words differently (especially dropping Us), but as you claim to speak English; you're wrong and we're right.
KC Clark wrote:
Well that's what I did. The moon's recession, for instance, is one (of many) examples of observable facts that favor the Creation model.
That's ridiculous. You think the Earth and moon and stuff were put there as is by God. Seriously, you need a mental health check. People like you shouldn't be walking around unchecked. You could be capable of anything if you think it's what your imaginary friend wants. The vast majority of observable facts support the big bang model.
KC Clark wrote:
Can you hear me now?
Yea, and it's getting sillier my the post.