I think you are just trying to corner us by asking the unanswerable questions ("how did evolution create info", etc.). Are you REALLY interested in what science has to say? No, I don't think so. I think you are just trying to distract from the issue of how illogical Biblegod is by putting subject matter on the table that no one on here is qualified to answer.
This thread has become a perfect example of my 'circular argument' comment awhile back. There is really NO way either side is going to concretely, without any doubt whatsoever, present an infallible and/or inarguable answer. It makes interesting reading and much can be learned in all of these discussions, but I don't see an "AhHa!" breakthrough moment as a possibility. queen is right, science DOES have huge gaps, science is always changing, and it will continue to change because life is always changing. The one area of science that will not change is the observations themselves. There is no person
truly able to say Genesis actually took place. There is no person
truly able to say they did, in fact, OBSERVE it so no one is "qualified to answer" as queen wrote above. Just because someone can read and then post scientific theories on here (applies to BOTH sides of the debate ie atheist/agnostic and believers), does NOT imply an understanding of them. I have seen some glaring errors
in how the dots have been connected when some get into science (NOT reffering to queen or sherna's posts when saying that), but there is no way I have any desire to jump in the fray and try to explain errors - it's just not that important/relative to what is brought out in points by both sides (you get close enough for here), would probably interest absolutely no one, and I have to spend too many hours at work using my brain on this alone. I DO have a solid background in science and a solid understanding of how the human body employs the complexity it was given - 9+ years of school and huge amounts of $$ better have taught me a whole lot. Trust me, if I didn't, I would quickly lose my license as a Nurse Practioner along with my Board Certification in 3 areas of medicine. I am NOT trying to sound like a smart a** here, but would you honestly want me diagnosing, treating, and writing prescriptions for you or your loved ones if I had NO idea how we work?
I have never made a statement on here as to when or why I started to question my own religion, beliefs, and if there really was a God responsible for creating life in the form of the amazingly complex machine we call the human body. Well, somewhere along the line while learning what I had to in order to do what I had always wanted, my religion and beliefs
became glaringly and astoundingly inadequate. I could no longer suppress the unanswered questions I had posed in my entire time as a solid and devoted believer. I'm sure many would say, "Well, then you were NOT a 'real believer' all along." That is just NOT true. The more I learned, the more apparent it became to me that there was a reason no one could ever answer my constant questions about the bible -
they did not have a clue other than to say, "That is how it is written and that is the word of god and you just need to trust in that." How many times have I seen that same answer come up on here?
I can't sit here and say what I have heard other atheists/agnostics voice "I lost a child, I got raped, I lost my spouse,.... and that is the exact moment that god and the Bible went out the window." Like I said, I had questions, (that really did NOT go over well in Sunday School
) from the time I was 6 years old, but they never were given any credence or they were glossed over. Maybe I was a 'Creation Story' cynic at birth and just didn't know it? Kidding there. I do know I reached a point where I could no longer say, "Yes, I believe without a doubt that there is a god and he created all I see, touch, hear, smell, taste, and feel." That does not make me any less worthy or moral or compassionate or anything else than all who do believe. I have mentioned that I have seen plenty of things happen with patients that
cannot be explained and probably never will. It is at those times I actually say, either to myself or out loud, "That was a miracle." The difference now, as opposed to when I fully believed, is that I am
once again amazed by the sheer will of the human body and mind to survive. Not by
a supernatural act of a divine agent.
(Sorry for the 'novel'.)