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“Bill Dembski is world famous” says creationism’s prodigal son Michael Shermer

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I was at the Dembski-Shermer Debate at Bridgewater College in Bridgewater Virginia last night. I had the privilege of finally meeting both William Dembski and Michael Shermer for the first time in person. They spoke to a crowd of about 350 people from Bridgewater College, James Madison University, and the surrounding community. The crowd was diverse from high-school educated carpenters to PhD trained scientists and philosophers. Symbolic of the diverse mix of people was an American pastor of a rural church and his wife, a Russian laser physicist!

Dembski won the debate, but I must salute Shermer’s honorable and courageous performance in the face of overwhelming odds. Shermer debated fairly and cleanly and avoided slinging mud and motive mongering. He did his best to stick to the discussion of scientific issues. Hats off to him.

It is hard not to really like Michael Shermer. One often gets the sense that Michael Shermer is viewed as creationism’s Prodigal Son by many. He was once an Evangelical Christian and renounced his faith after accepting Darwinian evolution. It seems many in my circles hold out hope Shermer will one day see the light and be restored to his long lost family.

That said, Shermer made a gallant attempt to discredit the hypothesis of intelligent design. His presentation reminded me of the valiant but ill-fated Pickett’s Charge in the battle of Gettysburg where Confederate soldiers marched a mile in the open field in the face relentless canon and musket fire. In that charge two life-long friends (Armistead and Hancock) found themselves pitted against each other, with Armistead leading his confederates into the blistering fire of Hancock’s canons. Such was the debate last night. Two friends, Bill Dembski and Michael Shermer were pitted against one another, and Shermer heroically fought on the side of a losing cause. I cringed that it was a courageous and honorable Michael Shermer marching into the battlefield instead of Barbara Forrest (see: Barbara Forrest, will the real coward please stand up).

Shermer attempted to discredit intelligent design by arguing the evidence for common ancestry. Shermer really shined when he cited the writings of Evangelical Christian and renowned scientist Francis Collins. He said Collins’ defense of Darwinian evolution in the book The Language of God was one of the best ever written, and Shermer read almost verbatim from chapter 5 of Collins’ book. That was a brilliant move by Shermer (especially before a crowd sympathetic to Dembski), but the move was brilliantly repulsed when Dembski reiterated, “ID is not inherently against the idea of common ancestry”. Thus Dembski neutralized Shermer’s best argument.

Shermer in the end said he was open to ideas like self-organization, or other evolutionary scenarios, and thus contradicted his own thesis on the importance of natural selection. When Shermer said he was open to the possibility of other mechanisms for evolution (like self-organization), Bill pulled out Shermer’s book and reminded him of Shermer’s own words:

No one, and I mean no one, working in the field is debating whether natural selection is the driving force behind evolution

Bill put together a wonderful arsenal of slides, videos, and compelling arguments making constant references to engineering. The audience was full of wonder as he showed the marvelous complexity of life graphically. He cited peer-reviewed articles demonstrating that debate was active on various ID topics. Bill Dembski mentioned the infamous Wistar Convention of 1966 where the world’s top neo-Darwinists were bludgeoned by mathematicians and computer scientists.

During the Q & A, Jason Rosenhouse (of Pandas Thumb) vigorously objected to Dembski’s citation of Wistar. Rosenhouse used a line of argumentation that he used in the essay CAN PROBABILITY THEORY BE USED TO REFUTE EVOLUTION?. Rosenhouse makes a formidable and convincing argument, but there is actually a more formidable and almost invulnerable counter argument (which I will give briefly). But rather than using his best counter to Rosenhouse, Dembski chose to avoid formalism and appeal to a popular audience by pointing out the selective use of probability theory by evolutionists. He showed Rosenhouse’s objections based on uncertainty regarding the conditions of the deep past were equally fatal to proponents of Darwinian evolution if Rosenhouse’s standards were equally applied, thus demonstrating Rosenhouse was arguing for a double standard.

But for the reader’s benefit, and to try to put a rest to some of this, the more solid but tediously formal argument against Rosenhouse’s thesis is laid out in Design Inference. Understandably because of time constraints, Bill did not bring out the big guns of formalisms laid in Design Inference. The formalisms demonstrate that there is a moot point crushing the Darwinist position, namely that Darwinists arguments are logically self-contradictory probability arguments of the form: “E = not-E” (page 46). Bill even uses the phrase reductio ad absurdum to described what his formalism demonstrates. “Reductio ad absurdum” is “proof by contradiction”. A proof by contradiction is not the same as argument from incredulity. A proof by contradiction shows how a claim is logically self-contradictory and therefore indefensible.

Darwinists argue that an unspecific mechanism can make specific outcomes. That is a logically self-contradictory claim, like the square circles. Probabilistically speaking, it’s like saying any ole combination (an unspecified mechanism) will open the safe (a specified outcome). When Darwinism is put into mathematical language, the self-contradictory nature of Darwinism is readily apparent. Rosenhouse argues that we would need detailed knowledge to make a probability argument, whereas the formal ID refutation is simply pointing out Darwinists have framed their claims in a logically self-defeating manner. That is the crux of the ID formalism refuting Darwinian evolution. This was shown in more detail in The Fundamental theorem of intelligent Design.

Shermer touched on the co-option argument and the flagella of other organisms other that E. Coli. This is a deep enough subject, I might have to defer discussion to another thread, but in brief, consider the fact your passwords are irreducibly complex. Does the fact that other people using passwords with some of the same alphabetic characters negate the IC of your password? Because some people have passwords that use the same letters as yours, can your password be more easily broken? There is a similar problem then with using arguments from protein homology to say IC is solvable since organisms use similar proteins (where we might think of proteins as letters to a password, and the passwords as IC systems). Dembski did not have time to address that point in Shermer’s presentation, and it was probably deep in the weeds enough that it would have bogged down the discussion.

During the Q & A the community of YECs came out in force and were rather polemic toward Shermer. I thought their tone was a bit rude. Can’t these guys be just a bit more collegial? No wonder they have such a bad reputation. After the hammering Shermer took, the YEC behavior was like the act of sticking bayonets into the bodies of dead soldiers. They could have been considerably more gracious, but they seem to have a real chip on their shoulder. Some YECs in that community are pretty tough, and one even showed me the door last year because he viewed me as too much a compromiser for my association with the ID movement! I was actually worried for Bill that the YECs in the crowd would start giving him a bad time over him not being a YEC himself. I mean, I was worried these guys would start arguing with Bill about what they think the Bible says.

In the closing remarks Shermer made some good points. He commented on the question that people pose to him about the after life, to which he responds “I’m all for it….but wanting something to be true does not make it true…the question of ID does not address the matter of such things…science shouldn’t be used to bolster religious belief, because science may over turn it.” Interestingly, that hit home for me. I cannot imagine having a religious faith not bolstered by empirical facts and sound theoretical arguments. If the facts overturn what I believe, then so be it. I can understand Shermer’s not wanting religion to rely on science, but on the other hand I can’t imagine a body of beliefs totally decoupled from empirical reality…..

The informal reception afterwards was very interesting. I met Bill Dembski for the first time and also had a cordial conversation with Jason Rosenhouse about things outside of ID. Though Rosenhouse and I are polar opposites, and sometimes we probably fume at each other, he has always been civil in person and conducted himself in an honorable manner whenever he participated in the Campus Crusade/Chi Alpha/IDEA functions I put together at his school.

I finally managed to talk to Dr. Shermer. He is quite a gentleman, and it was a delight to meet him. I asked him what he thought about the media attention given the ID movement. He said, “It’s far more than anything the creationists have ever gotten…it’s a truly successful media relations campaign…the creationists had nothing like it…a lot of it has to do with the internet….Bill Dembski is now world famous because of ID”. This is an interesting comment about the effectiveness of the internet. I didn’t have the time to pursue why he thought the internet was so important to the spread of ID.

I asked him about the mood of his colleagues post-Dover. To my surprise he said, for most of them it’s back to business. He’s all for people believing what they want to believe and teaching their children as such. He and his colleagues were concerned that tax payer money would be used to impose Christian beliefs on students, and thus he and his colleagues are much less worried about that now that Dover is behind us.

If I recall corretly, he said, “I’m against public schools, I think they’re a bad idea.” He mentioned he is favorable to private and home schools. But home and private schools are a veritable incubator of creationists! So I had to see if I could corroborate my recollection of what Shermer said with something he has published. He in fact wrote 25 EVOLUTIONISTS’ ANSWERS

In private schools funded and/or controlled by creationists, it is their freedom to teach whatever they like to their children.

Whoa!

He said he wanted to visit my alma mater, George Mason, because of their renowned free-market economics department run by 2 Nobel laureates. Is Shermer a libertarian of sorts? Hmm….Any way, I could go on, but the sum of my remarks is that I find Shermer to be an honorable gentleman. I would hope some day he sees the light.

Comments
Sal wrote:
“Not only that, says Mortenson, ID proponents say they’re not even interested in the Bible.”
Let Mortensen find a quote from an ID proponent who is a professing Christian saying those words ID does not rely on the Bible for its positive arguements for design, so in that sense, ID is not interested in the bible. For sure, Terry knows that many ID scientists are prophesing Christians, but Terry also knows that, in their scientific work, ID scientists don't apeal to the Bible. This is where YEC and ID clash. But that is not the issue at hand right now. The fact still remains that you pick YECers who are in the fringe of the Young Earth position, and try to place them as the "norm"
And yet AiG (rightly so, for a change) refutes this horrible “appearance of age” ... The “appearance of age” argument gives people even within the church plenty of reason to distrust YECism. If Don Batten, a YEC, thinks its a suspect argument, how much more anyone else.
So in other words, people "within the church" are distrust with YECism bkz of the "appearance of age" hypothesis? What kind of logic is that? Let alone the overwhelmingly known fact that almost half of the american population subscribes the YEC position, you clearly ignore the fact that it was an YEC organization that wrote about the problem with the "appearance of age" scenario. AIG and other ministries try to keep our position honest and clean at all times, even if that includes criticizing theories that one of our own comes up with. The fact that we do that doesn't mean that we are skeptical of ALL YEC. What kind of logic si that?!! One bad arguement does not invalidate the whole enterprise.
When Josh McDowell gave me “the appearance of age” argument, did that incline me to believe the Bible more? No, it inclined me to distrust YECism and the credebility of its proponents. Rather than arguing with evidence, they argued in circles.
So because ONE YEC gave you a bad arguement, you get suspicious of ALL YEC ?
As long as YECism tolerates such bad arguments, it will continue to have a bad reputation.
But YEC does NOT tolerate such arguements, as you yourself clearly have shown by alluding to the post of Dr Don Datten. IF we to "tolerate it", we would keep silent about it. Your own words work against your own position.
I feel like my teammates are letting the cause down by their horrid logic and occasionally suspect behavior.
Even though this behavior is "occasional", you make it sound as if it's the norm. "No wonder these YECers are so despised!" No, YECers in general are not letting Bible believing Christians down. People don't like our position bkz we attack Darwinism where it hurts the most, meaningly, time. WIthout time, we don't come from slime. As long as we stand in the way of evolutionary geology, YEC will always be a target. But since darwinian geology (like it's biology, cosmolgy and anthropology) is wrong, we are not afraid to stand up for the Truth.Mats
February 18, 2007
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Salvador, "Is that sort of behavior honorable? Will such falsehoods woo ID sympathizers to join the YEC camp wherein there are people like Mortensen who spread falsehoods about them and their Christian brethren? He owes his brethren an apology." I have not seen you apologize to me for the falsehoods you have spread about me here.Douglas
February 18, 2007
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I think it still needs some work, Sal.tribune7
February 18, 2007
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Continuing discussion of YEC specific issues is invited to a new weblog (still under major construction) here: Young Cosmos I'd like to thank the Uncommon Descent hosts for forebearing with the discussions in this thread and giving me time to set up a weblog to explore these issues more thoroughly. Salscordova
February 18, 2007
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One’s position should be disciplined by reality (evidence) - not philosophy. And humilty. Anyway, all positions are ultimately philosophical.tribune7
February 18, 2007
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Agreed, Bfast! One's position should be disciplined by reality (evidence) - not philosophy. Although some will contend that they are more disciplined than others! :)apollo230
February 18, 2007
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apollo230, "Should the Bible be allowed to dictate science? I say not." I wholeheartedly agree with you. If young earth, then, as far as science is conserned, young earth only because the physical evidence requires it. If neo-Darwinian evolution, then, as far as science is conserned, neo-Darwinism only because the physical evidence requires it, not because a naturalistic philosophy dictates it. Same-same.bFast
February 18, 2007
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Should the Bible be allowed to dictate science? I say not. If one wants to learn about nature, go to nature. If there is such a thing as divine revelation, the natural world should be as good as any. If God indeed made heaven and earth, then surely He left logic and design embedded within its matrix for us to "read" first-hand (whenever practical). Therefore, books (any books) are to be considered second-hand sources at best if one is hoping to understand nature's secrets. Best regards, apollo230apollo230
February 18, 2007
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[I'm in the middle of setting up a weblog to continue the discussion as it is wandering into non-ID territory. I'd like thank the forebearacne allowed us until the new weblog is up and running]
Mats wrote: I mean, you have tons of other well read read, highly trained scientists to use as examples. Why, what about Dr Jonathan Safarti, PhD,? Or Terry MOrtensen?
Mortensen? The guy who spreads falsehoods about ID proponents? Christianity Today article placing creationism in opposition to ID
“Not only that, says Mortenson, ID proponents say they’re not even interested in the Bible.”
Let Mortensen find a quote from an ID proponent who is a professing Christian saying those words. Any guess of the outcome? Is that sort of behavior honorable? Will such falsehoods woo ID sympathizers to join the YEC camp wherein there are people like Mortensen who spread falsehoods about them and their Christian brethren? He owes his brethren an apology. Furthermore, let me remind the readers of an idea circulated by the ICR and Josh McDowell in the 1970's. This idea is epitomized by the following article: I believe we should be able to accept a creation with the appearance of age And yet AiG (rightly so, for a change) refutes this horrible "appearance of age" argument in another portion of their website in an aricle by Don Batten:
To create such a detailed series of signals in light beams reaching earth, signals which seem to have come from a series of real events but in fact did not, has no conceivable purpose. Worse, it is like saying that God created fossils in rocks to fool us, or even test our faith, and that they don’t represent anything real (a real animal or plant that lived and died in the past). This would be a strange deception.
The "appearance of age" argument gives people even within the church plenty of reason to distrust YECism. If Don Batten, a YEC, thinks its a suspect argument, how much more anyone else. When Josh McDowell gave me "the appearance of age" argument, did that incline me to believe the Bible more? No, it inclined me to distrust YECism and the credebility of its proponents. Rather than arguing with evidence, they argued in circles. As long as YECism tolerates such bad arguments, it will continue to have a bad reputation. The "appearance of age" argument is contrary to the spirit of Romans 1:20 and John 10:38. Romans 1:20 promises that the facts are stronger than world views. Resorting to "appearance of age" arguments dishonors that promise. Added to the dishonorable behavior of some who put a blight on the movement, I can only suspect that YECism has survived because it might inherently be true.... I sympathize with the YEC position because it seems emprically reasonable. I accept it despite the conduct of its most vocal proponents, not because of it. I feel like my teammates are letting the cause down by their horrid logic and occasionally suspect behavior. I'd gladly be despised and scorned for standing up for the truth. But its another matter to see the cause I cherish enduring reproach for the wrong reasons.scordova
February 18, 2007
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. . .you are wrongly assuming that the Young Earth position has no confirming scientific evidence. Mats! Go back an look at what I wrote! Of course, you can make empirical case for a young Earth.(Sal even gives you a little help in Post 38). And you should try to do so. Iconoclasm can advance knowledge and science. The thing is you can also make a strong empirical case for an old Earth, and those who accept an old Earth are not necessarily being blindly dogmatic in doing so, nor are they being anti-Christian or anti-Creator. Which gets to the main point in my comment in that if you do argue science you have to accept that someone may refute your science with science without being against our religion.tribune7
February 18, 2007
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idnet.com.au said: May I remind YECs and others that Bill has writen a brilliant essay that if correct solves the major theological problem of pre fall death. It is really worth a read and should be offered to those who feel YEC is the only theology that fits with the Bible. [link] ---------- I read the article at the link. It appears that Dr. Dembski ignores or downplays the testimony of New Testament writers regarding how Genesis 1-11 is to be interpreted. For example, the genealogy of Christ according to Luke 3:23-38, written some three decades after the resurrection, indicates that significant numbers of Christ's followers believed chapters 4-11 of Genesis were both reliable and chronological, and not an allegory. Moreover, Christ equated the effect of Noah's flood on the world to the effect his Parousia would cause, namely universal judgment. In fact "kataklysmos" is a Greek word reserved in the NT for Noah's flood, even though Christ also spoke of the foolish man whose house, not built on rock, was struck by "floods" so translated. Dr. Dembski says in the article that Noah's flood was local and that genealogies are not reliable, the result of his confidence in modern archeological dating of human artifacts, which are dated to 5000 BC and earlier. So then, according to the article there is a sophisticated kairological view of how God intended Genesis 1-3 be interpreted, given by Dr. Dembski, over against the "naïve" view that apparently Christ and the writers of the NT held, as do most YEC folks. No offense, but I'll go naive. --------------- ID is separate from religion. The “revelation” which ID gives is that there is some amazing intelligence behind the biosphere. -------------- To this I would agree. At the link given above by Sal to the Wistar meetings we find the following: ------ "The 1980 meeting was held in Chicago's Field Museum and was attended by 160 of the world's top paleontologists, anatomists, evolutionary geneticists, and developmental biologists. "[Evolution] is undergoing its broadest and deepest revolution in nearly 50 years . . Exactly how evolution happened is now a matter of great controversy among biologists . . No clear resolution of the controversies was in sight [at the meeting]."—*Boyce Rensberger, "Macroevolution Theory Stirs Hottest Debate Since Darwin," in The Riverside (California) Enterprise, p. E9; *Roger Lewin, "Evolutionary Theory under Fire," Science, November 21, 1980, pp. 883-887. It was decided that no record would be kept of the sessions, in order not to give ammunition to the creationists. " --------- So here we see altruistic modern science at its finest!benkeshet
February 18, 2007
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tribune7 Even though you are right that the Christian basic presuposition is that God's Word is 100% True from the very first verse, you are wrongly assuming that the Young Earth position has no confirming scientific evidence. I can direct you to the work of Dr Russ Humphreys on that, and you can see how the scientific evidence fits confortably with the Biblical Timeline. However, given your total faith in evolutionary dating methods, I don't think that the scientific evidence Dr Russ gives will produce any change of heart in you ;-) http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs/4005.asp It's kind of sad that, from time to time, Sal chooses to attack YECers. Will this type of methodology ever end, or should we YECers always keep and eye on his words? Most ID scientists are OEC, but respectful to the YEC position. There are, however, a few ID suporters who assume that, by attacking YEC, they might somehow raise their status in the Darwinian eyes. Nothing could be further from the truth.Mats
February 18, 2007
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Sal said:
We have a bad reputation because we have Kent Hovind and Ted Haggard on our side.
So basically, before there was a Kent Hovind or Ted Haggard, YECers had a "good reputation" ? And how come you use those examples as "pristine YECers" ? I mean, you have tons of other well read read, highly trained scientists to use as examples. Why, what about Dr Jonathan Safarti, PhD,? Or Terry MOrtensen? I repeat, we don't have a bad reputation bkz of "our behaviour during debates", but bkz we deny darwinian geological dating methods, which have been shown to not only contradict true science, but God's Word.Mats
February 18, 2007
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I would have asked Shermer where are all the whale fossils? The fossils that led from land animal to fully aquatic cetacean- we should have 50,000+, yet all we can muster is a few speculative fossils. Also someone should point out to Sheremer that the design inference is based on what we know of the capabilities of designing agencies coupled with our knowledge of what nature, operating freely, can accomplish:
Thus, Behe concludes on the basis of our knowledge of present cause-and-effect relationships (in accord with the standard uniformitarian method employed in the historical sciences) that the molecular machines and complex systems we observe in cells can be best explained as the result of an intelligent cause. In brief, molecular motors appear designed because they were designed.-- Pg. 72 of Darwinism, Design and Public Education
IOW ID is NOT just an attack on the blind watchmaker. To even suggest that demonstrates ID ignorance. And again to refute ID all one has to do is to substantiate THEIR position with actual scientific data. To Jerry- I would say that ALL IDists in a debate should start off their speech with that Behe quote.Joseph
February 18, 2007
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Guys remember the encouragment given by Phil Johnson and One before him that "a house divided against itself will fall."idnet.com.au
February 17, 2007
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I was hoping to find out if there were transcripts or recordings and let everyone know if there were. I don't think any will be forthcoming. Sorry. Salscordova
February 17, 2007
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I was really hoping for online MP3 files or video of the debate. Is that likely to happen? Thanx!Robo
February 17, 2007
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The Berlinski video is online ready for watching here: http://www.theapologiaproject.org/video_library.htmRobo
February 17, 2007
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Mike1962 Scripture says Altogether, Adam lived 930 years, and then he died.tribune7
February 17, 2007
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contrachronos, "Let your yes be yes and your no be no. Why make a dramatic decision based on mere guesswork?" My decision to leave ARN wasn't based on anything other than a great frustration with ARN, and in particular several of its posters and how ARN handled them, at the time. The "guesswork" merely aided the choice. "I believe your decision to leave ARN was fueled by pure emotion and not by any spirit induced conviction." I never claimed it to be due to anything else. I never said or implied that the Holy Spirit was inducing me to leave ARN. "We don’t have false prophets in this age, just alarmist 'speculators'." My "speculation" wasn't "alarmist". Do you not recall that I said I wasn't sure, and that my only "advice" was for people to be attentive, to "watch and pray"? In what way is that advice "alarmist"? "Basically it false prophecy without all that nasty responsibility stuff." No, it's not. It was, and is, (in my case, anyway), nothing more than attempting to understand the times, and presenting the reasoning for what it is: speculative reasoning, though having personal confidence in the reasoning, and in the interpretation. Others are free to consider the reasoning, and be convinced by it, or not. It is not presented as, "Thus saith the Lord: by the end of the year, the End will come", or anything of the sort. No, it is more along the lines of: "Listen, if these assumptions are correct (and I believe they are), and if this is what this means (and I believe it is), then this will likely happen on this or that Feast day. I am not certain of all of this, but feel confident it is correct, so watch and pray." Can you discern the difference, and that it is not a minor one?Douglas
February 17, 2007
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Mike1962:
How do you know what the time span was from Adan and Eve to the “fall” and beginning of their progeny? Genesis doesn’t say. How then can a YEC date the earth from this?
Good queston, with a simple answer. Adam's had two sons, Cain and Abel. Cain killed Abel at a time after Adam had sinned. Adam and Eve had Seth, named so because he was appointed a new son in place of Abel. Adam was 130 years old when Seth was born. Therefore, the fall occured at least within 130 years of the creation of Adam. Adam could have easily said "At last" when he saw Eve becasue he had got through seeing all the animals he named with mates. I don't think Adam had to name, as an exmaple only - coyote, sheperd, labrador :) it was probably just been "dog" - It was the beast of the field and the birds... not to include fish, insects and possibly certain other animals. JGuyJGuy
February 17, 2007
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Douglas:
...in no way “PROPHESIED” anything at all. I knew what I was doing, and I knew what it was I was presenting, and I was VERY careful to make sure I did not present it as something it was not - namely, a “prophecy”. I was very careful to make it clear that I was CONJECTURING, though I also made it known I was fairly certain my conjecture was accurate.
Let your yes be yes and your no be no. Why make a dramatic decision based on mere guesswork? I believe your decision to leave ARN was fueled by pure emotion and not by any spirit induced conviction. We don't have false prophets in this age, just alarmist "speculators". Basically it false prophecy without all that nasty responsibility stuff.contrachronos
February 17, 2007
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tribune7:
The methodology of the Young Earther is the Bible is the Word of God hence calculating the genealogies in Scripture can provide an accurate age of the Earth.
How do you know what the time span was from Adan and Eve to the "fall" and beginning of their progeny? Genesis doesn't say. How then can a YEC date the earth from this? By the way, I alway thought it was interesting that man and woman was said to be created on the "sixth day", yet in the next chapter we have Adam alone naming all of the animals prior to Eve's formation. How long would it take to name all of the animals. My guess is more than a 24-hour day. Also, Adam's response to Eve's formation in the Hebrew is something along the lines "finally!" indicating he had been waiting quite some time for his counterpart.mike1962
February 17, 2007
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I would like to point out to others here that the portion of my comments which Salvador quoted and highlighted, which I repeat here, "I believe it is most likely that the Rapture would occur next year, either around or on the Day of Pentecost, or the Feast of Trumpets", in no way "PROPHESIED" anything at all. I knew what I was doing, and I knew what it was I was presenting, and I was VERY careful to make sure I did not present it as something it was not - namely, a "prophecy". I was very careful to make it clear that I was CONJECTURING, though I also made it known I was fairly certain my conjecture was accurate. I thought I made it clear that even though I was fairly certain, I was not CERTAIN, and that the conjectures depended on certain assumptions and "comparisons" being correct and accurate. My "advice" was simply for people to "pay attention", to watch and pray - amazingly, Jesus Himself had the exact same advice for Christians, which either means both Jesus and I are stupid, and false prophets, or that my advice was completely within traditional, sound, Christian bounds. I leave it to others here to decide. Salvador, however, has apparently already made up his mind.Douglas
February 17, 2007
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Salvador, do you purposely ignore what I actually say, or is it just carelessness? Or do you merely not know what constitutes a "prophecy"? From your above post, it is clear that at least one of the three is the case - I just can't determine which one, or which combination. Oh, and I think you should feel far more embarassed being associated with organizations which seemingly crave money, like Dr. Kennedy's ministry, than with individuals who have ACTUALLY HEARD DIRECTLY FROM GOD, AND CAN DISCERN WHICH OF THE THREE PERSONS OF THE TRINITY IS SPEAKING, like myself. Dr. Kennedy and his ministry, aside from this glaring blemish (and one other, doctrinal matter), seems kosher. (By the way, I continue to receive more, and more specific, apparent confirmations of a portion of my comments which you quoted above: "Oh, and in all and absolute seriousness, I am fairly certain that God has a much, much, much higher calling for me than merely posting on ARN, or on any Internet discussion board for that matter, quite likely even prophesied in the Bible." I would have liked to have discussed the "revelations" with you, Salvador, but it has become clear to me you are unprepared, or unworthy. It happens. Note, though, that I am still NOT claiming anything regarding this as a factual or prophetic matter - I am merely mentioning what I understand to be the meaning of what I have been, and am being, shown. I hope the distinction can finally settle into your heart, Salvador, so that you can cease falsely accusing followers of Christ of false prophecies and the like.)Douglas
February 17, 2007
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Mats writes: We have a bad reputation bkz we don’t subscribe to nonsensical darwinian geology
We have a bad reputation because we have Kent Hovind and Ted Haggard on our side. We have a bad reputaion because of Douglas saying things like the following on 8/29/2002: Douglas Prophecy
(Oh, and in all and absolute seriousness, I am fairly certain that God has a much, much, much higher calling for me than merely posting on ARN, or on any Internet discussion board for that matter, quite likely even prophesied in the Bible. Debating about whether God exists is fun and all, but listening to Him when He speaks, and actually [actually] hearing Him is rather more important, edifying, and fruitful. I have heard God speak to me in the past, somewhere around 12 times - I think it's time I silenced the Internet, or at least shut off ARN, and turned my attention to the One Who is most worthy of listening to [and that's not you, Principia].) In Christ, Douglas (P.S.: One of the things God said to me, back in 1993, was that the Rapture would occur "When it is spoken by Iraq"; based on some detailed historical comparisons of various time periods, which I have extensively studied over the past 13 years, I believe it is most likely that the Rapture would occur next year, either around or on the Day of Pentecost, or the Feast of Trumpets. I recommend paying attention, and watching and praying. I am done, not to return.)
Well the Rapture didn't happen, and Douglas returned to ARN to represent YECs. That's why I said to Douglas and friends, "you guys embarass me". This is the stigma and unsavory associations that I have to overcome, and because of things I wasn't even a part of. This sort of behavior is not honoring to the YEC cause. NO WAY!scordova
February 17, 2007
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But like you said, who would throw the money at it? I wish I had $100 billion as Gates did seven years ago :-)tribune7
February 17, 2007
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Mats The methodology of the Young Earther is the Bible is the Word of God hence calculating the genealogies in Scripture can provide an accurate age of the Earth. Now, that's fine. It's not stupid. It's not irrational. It could very well be right. But, it's not science. It's faith. So if the Young Earther tells the Old Earther, yes I know measurements of radioactive decay of particular isotopes indicate the Earth to be 4.3 billion years old but my faith tells me that ultimately they are going to be found incorrect, his position is unassailable. If, however, the Young Earther starts citing data that can be tested and claiming science as evidence of his position, then the Young Earther is free to be hit. Now, there is nothing wrong with the Young Earther doing so -- in fact the Young Earther may be obliged to do so -- but the Young Earther must understand that he can be hit and when he is he mustn't cry. Now, Sal strikes me as someone who seems pretty sympathetic to Young Earthers and I'm saying this as one who is basically a Young Earther -- namely when all is said and done the Biblical genealogies will be found to be right. But that is a matter of faith. Right now science is on the side of the Old Earthers, and I'm certainly not going to hold it aginst someone who is an Old Earther for not sharing my faith.tribune7
February 17, 2007
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tribune7, Well, yes, I think your right.. an engineering solution could be devised. But like you said, who would throw the money at it? One reason I'm highly intrigued about the idea of Antarctica, is that I love the idea of looking for fossils in extreme locales. I have a theory that we would find fossils of land dwelling creatures if we were to excavate the middle of the Pacific ocean basin. Sounds crazy.. but that's why I like it :) Only a world view with a global flood would make the prediction. Last year, I belive, there was found a knuckle bone of a large dinosaur a mile under the basin of the North Sea (I believe it was)... but the Pacific would be an exceedingly more shocking find - imo.JGuy
February 17, 2007
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Douglas, Don't be surprised with Sal's comments. He has a very low view on Young Earth Creationists. I mean, what do you expect from someone who uses words like:
*Can’t these guys be just a bit more collegial? * No wonder they have such a bad reputation.
We have a bad reputation bkz we don't subscribe to nonsensical darwinian geology.
After the hammering Shermer took, the YEC behavior was like the act of sticking bayonets into the bodies of dead soldiers.
How graphical. Was it done for schock impact?
Some YECs in that community are pretty tough, and one even showed me the door last year because he viewed me as too much a compromiser for my association with the ID movement!
That's really odd, considering that YECers are very enthusiastic of ID as good science. YEC organizations sell ID books joyfully.
I was actually worried for Bill that the YECs in the crowd would start giving him a bad time over him not being a YEC himself.
As far as I know, there hasn't been an ID scientist attacked in a debate, due to his non-Biblical positions regarding the age of the universe, I don't really think you were afraid of that.
I mean, I was worried these guys would start arguing with Bill about what they think the Bible says.
In a debate between ID vs Unguided Evolution, that would be totally unexpected. Seems to me that the charicatures that the liberal media does of YEC has been swallowed by "some people".Mats
February 17, 2007
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