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THE Evolution Thread

@DLH
I get the impression that you believe that the world is billions of years old but there is no macroevolution....

So what do you think happened? God created lots of different species and rather than them evolving into other species God instead created new species using divine intervention? And he made their DNA in such a way that it appeared that species involved into other species? What was the point of having millions of years if there was actually no macroevolution?
If you believe in billions or trillions of instances of divine intervention then do you believe divine intervention is still happening today? Like when a human is conceived is God personally giving them a soul or something?
 
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Saying humans and bonobos are both apes and therefore the same kind is a bit like saying sharks and tuna are both the fish kind and should therefore be able to breed - or saying ants and bees are both the same insect kind and should also be able to breed. Like I said, AiG is saying a "kind" means the same species or maybe genus. The Flood talks about having 2 animals of each kind. Do you think it meant 1 chimp and 1 gorilla is enough because they're both the same "ape" kind?

Depends on which flood story 1 or 2.

Dr. Joel Baden points to the story of Noah and the animals entering the ark as a prime example of how the Bible contains contradictions due to being composed from multiple sources. In Genesis 6:19–20, God tells Noah to bring two of every kind of animal into the ark, one male and one female. This instruction applies to all animals, both clean and unclean. This version comes from what scholars call the Priestly source, or P.

However, in Genesis 7:2–3, God gives a different command. Here, Noah is told to bring seven pairs of clean animals, and only one pair of unclean animals. He is also told to bring seven pairs of every kind of bird. This version comes from the Yahwist source, or J.

Dr. Baden emphasizes that these are not small differences or elaborations on the same story. They are direct contradictions. You cannot reconcile “two of every animal” with “seven pairs of clean and one pair of unclean.” These are two different traditions that were preserved side by side in the text.

Rather than choosing one version over the other, the editor of Genesis decided to include both accounts, resulting in the contradiction we now see. Baden uses this to illustrate how the Documentary Hypothesis works: the Bible, especially the first five books, is a composite work made up of multiple sources with differing details, perspectives, and theological ideas.

This example, he argues, shows clearly that the Bible is not a seamless, unified narrative but a woven-together collection of traditions.

NHC
 
I'm going to respond to this post twice. This, my first response, points out the futility of your presentation by using a simile. Your patient is dead. You didn't save him because you were too busy writing a book on his illness. That is this thread.

You see what I've done? I didn't have to explain that you were a doctor in the simile because saying your patient made it self-explanatory. I didn't have to explain the illness, its history, I didn't have to send the inquirer to 12 years of medical school. None of that matters because your patient, i.e. your presentation on the case of evolution is dead.

I see exactly what you’ve done — you’ve used a metaphor to sidestep the argument. Not because the evidence is weak, but because you haven’t answered most of it.

Let’s be honest:
You briefly touched on the ring species — and misunderstood it.
You barely responded to the nylon-eating bacteria — and misunderstood that too.
But Tiktaalik? Ignored.
Lucy? Ignored.
Endogenous retroviruses? Ignored.
Pseudogenes? Ignored.
The contradictory order between Genesis 1 and 2? Ignored.

That’s not a rebuttal. That’s a pattern. You challenged me to show you macroevolution — literally. I did. You said you didn’t want links, bone fragments, or vague similarities. I gave you full fossil transitions, new genetic functions, and hardcoded evidence in your own DNA. You asked for the case to be made simply. It was.

And now, instead of dealing with any of it, you’ve written a poetic metaphor declaring the whole thing “dead.”

But the only thing on life support here is your willingness to engage.

If the case were actually dead, you’d have shown how. But you didn’t. Instead, you gave a clever monologue while leaving the core evidence untouched. The simile doesn’t rescue you from that. It just puts polish on a retreat.

Let’s see if response #2 actually touches the substance. Because so far, you’ve barely grazed the surface — and the rest remains standing.

NHC
 
The topic is very much science versus religion. For decades Christians tried to get creationism taught in p0ublc school science class. In multiple court cases Intelligent Design was labeled region not science, and not required to be taught as science.

In the 90s here in Washington a Christian legislator floated a bill requiring school science texts to have a disclaimer saying that there are explanations other than science.

I exchanged emails with char of the committee, she assured e it would never get out of committee.

It is one of the reasons I post on religion. In the real world I don;t care what anyone beeves. As long as beliefs are personal and not enacted through laws and imposed om others.

Keeping the deluded crackpots form forcing ideological religious beliefs on others.

Abortion, gay rights, women's rights. minority rights, abortion, and evolution are the prime examples.

Christians tend to be obsessed with proving and declaring faith publicly.
 
That's pretty much what you're doing with your circular reasoning. Evolution is true because science says it is - is like saying creation is true because God says it is. Not much of an argument.
You’re wrong again. Evolution is true because it is observed to be true. That’s nothing at all like your mythical book of fairy tales.
 
I see exactly what you’ve done — you’ve used a metaphor to sidestep the argument. Not because the evidence is weak, but because you haven’t answered most of it.

There is no argument! Only an explanation which you have failed to give. You can't do it because you're an ideologue. You can't see that.
 

Let me put it to you this way. If man is an ape, according to evolution they, a bonomo for example, could reproduce fertile offspring with a man?

No, evolution does not predict that. It predicts the opposite. While related by common ancestry, humans and bonobos are too genetically distinct for successful fertilization.
 
You’re wrong again. Evolution is true because it is observed to be true. That’s nothing at all like your mythical book of fairy tales.

No, you're wrong again. Evolution is science because it is observed to be true. That is exactly like "my mythical book." Like I explained to @excreationist - "If man is an ape, according to evolution they, a bonobo for example, could reproduce fertile offspring with a man?"

It doesn't matter if it is right or wrong according to the Bible or science because it's a question. You don't get it. You (collective) are religious. You're TV evangelists for science.
 
Bonobos and humans aren't the same species or genus so they can't breed or produce a fertile offspring. They say man is a primate and so are bonobos but man is not an ape.
That’s right, but humans are apes.

That is the answer to my request? That is where evolution and the Bible differ? A hell of a roundabout piled on top of a mountain of bullshit but probably as good as it gets.
 
How long have you been doing this? It depends on the individual, of course, but I got bored with it decades ago. I give the opportunity for discussion. Brief discussion. To the point. If the forum would like to spend a great deal more time on the subject - great. But not me. It's a warning not to get too involved and just state your case simply.

You asked for evidence. Literal, observable macroevolution. No jargon. No long threads. No links. You warned us that most of what we’d show you would be “bullshit,” and then said all you needed was someone to show you the goods.

So I did exactly that. I gave you multiple examples of directly observed speciation. I showed the evolution of new functions like nylon digestion. I pointed to transitional fossils like Tiktaalik and Lucy found exactly where evolutionary theory predicted. I brought up hardcoded genetic evidence like shared ERVs and broken pseudogenes. I also explained how Genesis contradicts observable science — and even itself — with two conflicting creation accounts. All of this, clearly laid out, in the exact simple terms you asked for.

And now, your response is: you’re bored of this. You’ve been through it “decades ago.” This wasn’t a debate — just “brief discussion.” You’re “just warning us not to get too involved.”

Let’s be honest: that’s not a warning. That’s a retreat.

You challenged others. You set the terms. You made demands. You framed yourself as someone who was fair and open, ready to be shown the truth — but who just hadn’t seen it yet. Now that it’s been put right in front of you, plainly and literally, you’re backing out and calling it wisdom.

If you’ve really been doing this for decades, then you should already know the strength of the evidence. You should also know the Bible’s creation account does not align with science — not in timeline, not in order, not in content. If after all that time you still haven’t found a way to honestly respond to these facts, then maybe it’s not the evidence that’s lacking.

It’s your willingness to deal with it.

You don’t have to keep going. But you don’t get to pretend the case wasn’t made — and you don’t get to claim the high ground by walking away from the discussion you started.

This wasn’t just “getting too involved.” This was the moment where the evidence finally showed up.

And you blinked.

Irrelevant. Seems like an appeal to probability to me. Though, I'm not even sure there is a contradiction there.

That’s not an argument — it’s hand-waving. First, there’s no “appeal to probability” happening. I laid out direct contradictions between Genesis and the scientific order of events: Earth before sun, plants before sunlight, birds before land animals, humans created separately and last. These aren’t statistical guesses — they’re factual sequences confirmed by astronomy, geology, and evolutionary biology. Saying “I’m not sure there’s a contradiction” doesn’t make the contradiction vanish. It just signals unwillingness to deal with it.

If you have someone of faith vs. someone of science arguing the order of creation you can't, in all fairness assume that their order must be correct.

This isn’t a matter of assuming. Science doesn’t ask for belief — it asks for testable, repeatable, falsifiable evidence. Faith, by definition, requires none of those things. You can’t put “faith vs. science” on equal footing when one is grounded in centuries of converging evidence and the other is belief unsupported by observation. If a person of faith wants to disagree with what science shows, they’re free to — but they’re not entitled to call that disagreement “equally valid.” The order given by Genesis is demonstrably wrong. That’s not an assumption. It’s a conclusion drawn from the evidence.

A person of faith doesn't put faith in science, they put faith in God. The best source for this specific God is the Bible. Who are they going to trust? Science? No.

And that right there is the problem. You’ve admitted that, regardless of what the evidence says, you’re going to side with a book — a book written by Bronze Age humans, with demonstrable contradictions, internal inconsistencies, and zero predictive power — over data, experimentation, and physical evidence. That’s not faith. That’s intellectual surrender. You’ve just told me, plainly, that no matter what’s shown to you, you won’t consider it. That’s not a defense of God. It’s a confession that your position can’t stand up to scrutiny — so you won’t let it be scrutinized.

Maybe the discrepancy could be addressed, but I don't see the relevance in establishing first, as I'm suggesting is necessary, just the basic concept itself.

You’re deflecting. The “basic concept” is meaningless if its foundational claims are factually wrong. You don’t get to skip past the contradictions and say they’re irrelevant while arguing that the Bible should be taken seriously in matters of origins. If it gets the order of creation wrong, how do you trust it on the “concept” of creation? You can’t just focus on the vague idea of “a Creator” and ignore all the specific claims your text makes about what He supposedly did. That’s cherry-picking.

Are you saying that the order is relevant? Let's say my interpretation of the Bible was different than traditional "creationists" or the current science corrected itself and changed the order. Would that settle the debate?

Yes — the order is absolutely relevant. If your account of creation claims to describe how life came to be, and it contradicts the actual history of the cosmos and life on Earth, that matters. And no — science doesn’t just “change the order” on a whim. Scientific corrections happen through better evidence and tighter predictions — not because someone feels like shifting a verse around. If the scientific record drastically changed, we’d change our understanding accordingly. The Bible, on the other hand, doesn’t evolve — even when it’s wrong. That’s why the debate stays stuck: science moves forward, theology clings to outdated claims and then calls it “interpretation.”

Nothing will settle the debate, by the way. I only make a point.

Exactly — nothing will settle the debate for you, because you’ve already decided that no evidence could. You admitted it earlier when you said a person of faith won’t trust science. That’s not a neutral stance. That’s a wall. And if all you’re doing is “making a point,” then let’s be clear about what the point actually is: you’ve acknowledged that no amount of observable, measurable, predictive evidence will change your mind.

That’s not a strength. That’s a refusal to engage with reality. And it proves exactly why this conversation keeps going: not because the evidence isn’t there, but because belief is shielded from it at all costs.

That is wrong. I hadn't posted it yet, but - oh - as I compose this response, I see you've addressed that just recently. I'll get to it then. And again, making it science vs. creation doesn't resolve anything. I could respond simply with, well, God says evolution is tripe, so there. That's pretty much what you're doing with your circular reasoning. Evolution is true because science says it is - is like saying creation is true because God says it is. Not much of an argument.

Actually, there’s a massive difference between saying “evolution is true because science says it is” and saying “creation is true because God says it is.” And that difference is evidence.

Science doesn’t just “say” something and expect you to believe it on faith. It provides independent, testable, and falsifiable evidence from multiple fields — genetics, paleontology, geology, embryology, molecular biology, biogeography — all converging on the same conclusion: evolution happened.

We can observe speciation. We can trace shared genetic markers like endogenous retroviruses. We can predict where transitional fossils like Tiktaalik should be found — and then find them there. None of that is circular reasoning. That’s reasoning built on physical, repeatable data.

Creation, by contrast, offers no mechanism, no testable model, no predictions, and no evidence that stands up to scrutiny. It begins with the conclusion — “God did it” — and then rewrites interpretation around that belief. That’s the definition of circular reasoning.

Saying “God says evolution is tripe, so there” is not an argument. It’s a declaration of belief. And that’s fine if all you’re doing is stating your personal conviction. But don’t pretend it belongs in the same category as science, which doesn’t rely on any holy book or authority figure. It relies on what we can see, test, and repeat.

So let’s be honest here: you’re not responding to the evidence. You’re dodging it by falsely equating belief and science as if they operate the same way. They don’t.

One starts with observation and builds toward conclusions.
The other starts with conclusions and resists observation.

That’s not a debate. That’s one side refusing to play by the rules of reality.

If you want to respond to the actual evidence — the speciation, the fossils, the genetics — go for it. But dismissing it all with “well God says otherwise” doesn’t move the discussion forward. It just reinforces what’s already obvious: your belief isn’t grounded in evidence, and it isn’t open to challenge.

They aren't contradictory accounts; they are only from two different perspectives. The first chronological and the second topical.

That’s a well-worn explanation, but it doesn’t hold up under even basic scrutiny. The idea that Genesis 1 is “chronological” and Genesis 2 is just “topical” falls apart the moment you actually read what the text says — and compare the sequence of events.

In Genesis 1, the order is clear and linear:

• Light → sky → land → plants → sun/moon/stars → sea life → birds → land animals → man and woman created together (Genesis 1:27).

In Genesis 2, the order is entirely different:

• The earth is already formed, but no shrubs or plants have grown yet (Genesis 2:5).
• Then God forms man from the dust (Genesis 2:7).
• Then God plants the garden and makes trees grow (Genesis 2:8-9).
• Then God realizes the man is alone and creates the animals (Genesis 2:18-19).
• After the animals fail to be a suitable companion, God finally creates woman from man’s rib (Genesis 2:21-22).

That is not the same order. It’s not even close. And it’s not just a difference in emphasis or “topic” — it’s a flat contradiction in sequence and structure:

• Genesis 1: animals before man, man and woman created together.
• Genesis 2: man before animals, woman created later, after failed animal companionship.

If Genesis 2 were simply a “topical” or theological retelling, it wouldn’t contradict the core timeline. But it does — explicitly. And no amount of wordplay about “perspectives” changes the fact that one says A before B, and the other says B before A.

So let’s be clear: if these two accounts were found in any other book, believers would immediately call them contradictions. But because they’re in the Bible, you’re forced to bend over backwards to make them “fit.” That’s not good interpretation. That’s special pleading.

And more importantly: if the Bible can’t keep its own foundational story internally consistent, how can it possibly be trusted as a reliable account of cosmic or biological origins?

This isn’t just about Genesis 1 vs. 2. It’s about credibility. And this is where the Bible loses it.

I may not be terribly enthusiastic about going toe to toe with you in the depth your posts normally would require as I once would long ago, but I do appreciate that you actually seem to be paying attention to what I'm saying without assuming I'm just another "Creationist."

I appreciate that. And to be clear, I’m not lumping you in with young-earth creationists or the “dinosaurs lived with humans” crowd. You’ve made it clear that you’re a Jehovah’s Witness, that you accept an old Earth, and that your position on Genesis is more nuanced than typical fundamentalism. That said — and I think you know this — the core tension still remains.

You said you wanted literal examples of macroevolution, and I gave you exactly that. Not theories. Not links. Not “trust the scientists.” Just real-world cases:

• Ring species demonstrating speciation,
• Nylon-eating bacteria showing new function from mutation,
• Fossils like Tiktaalik and Lucy that physically document transitional forms,
• Genetic evidence like shared ERVs and pseudogenes — not just similarities, but shared mistakes, inherited from common ancestors.

And I know you’re not “terribly enthusiastic” about diving into all of it in depth. That’s fair. But it’s also telling.

Because if the evidence is now too much to respond to directly — if we’ve passed the point where belief can absorb it without retreating to “well, I just trust God over science” — then that’s not a debate about the data anymore. That’s about insulation. And you’re not the only person reading this exchange.

So I’ll just say this: you asked for literal macroevolution. You got it. You asked for contradictions between evolution and Genesis. You got those too. You even got the internal contradictions within the Bible’s own creation accounts. All clearly laid out, no assumptions made, and nothing brushed aside.

What you do with it now is up to you. But the conversation didn’t go in circles. It went in a straight line — from challenge to evidence to silence.

That’s not nothing. That’s the weight of the evidence doing what it always does when it’s actually looked at head-on.

Ass. An ass and a donkey are terms often used interchangeably to refer to the same animal, while a mule is a hybrid offspring produced by crossing a male donkey (jack) with a female horse (mare). Mules, generally speaking, can't reproduce. Your warblers interbreed with neighbors that aren't warblers and produce offspring that mate with what?

You’re confusing two completely different biological concepts — hybridization between distant species (like horse and donkey) and gradual speciation within a single evolving population, like the greenish warbler.

Let’s clarify.

A mule is a sterile hybrid between two separate species — a horse and a donkey — which diverged from a common ancestor millions of years ago. Their offspring are usually infertile because their chromosome numbers and structures are mismatched. That’s not speciation in progress — that’s an evolutionary dead end.

Greenish warblers, on the other hand, are all part of the same species complex. They didn’t start out separate — they started as one population, which expanded geographically around the Himalayas. Along that ring, adjacent populations remained genetically similar enough to interbreed, but accumulated gradual genetic changes as they spread and adapted to different environments.

By the time the two ends of the ring meet in Siberia, they can no longer interbreed — even though there’s a continuous chain of populations linking them. This is a textbook example of speciation via geographic and genetic divergence, and it’s not theoretical. It’s been documented in the field and in genetic studies.

So no — these aren’t “not warblers.” They’re all warblers. But the two end populations have diverged far enough that they behave like separate species — the very definition of speciation. No sterile hybrids. No distant species. Just slow, observable evolution splitting one population into two.

That’s macroevolution. Exactly what you asked for.
And once again: exactly what was provided.

You're suggesting that nylon was invented in the 20th century is an example of macroevolution? That's quick. The nylon-eating bacteria wasn't bacteria prior to that? You see?

You’ve misunderstood the example. No one said the bacteria themselves weren’t bacteria before nylon was invented. Of course they were. The point isn’t that a new organism suddenly popped into existence — the point is that a new metabolic function evolved that had never existed in those bacteria before.

Here’s what actually happened:

Nylon is a synthetic compound, first created in the 1930s. It’s not found in nature, so no living organism before that had ever encountered it. But by the 1970s, scientists discovered certain bacteria had developed the ability to digest nylon byproducts. This ability wasn’t there before. It arose due to a mutation — specifically a frame-shift mutation in a gene — which led to the creation of a completely new enzyme called nylonase.

This wasn’t a reshuffling of existing traits. This was the evolution of a new functional protein, enabling the bacteria to use a synthetic compound as a food source — something they couldn’t do before. And it happened fast, which is exactly what evolutionary theory allows for, especially in organisms with short generation times like bacteria.

So yes, it’s an example of macroevolution in the sense that it shows the emergence of entirely new functions, not just small tweaks to existing traits. It’s also repeatable and has been studied in detail in the lab.

You asked for literal, observable evolutionary change. This is it — new capability, new enzyme, new metabolic pathway — all arising through mutation and natural selection.

And no, saying “but they were already bacteria” misses the point entirely. Evolution doesn’t require one creature to become a totally different creature overnight. It works by accumulating functional changes, and this is one of the clearest examples we have of that happening.

Are you suggesting my beliefs have to be dishonest in order to coincide with yours?

No — I’m saying it’s dishonest to ask for evidence, get exactly what you asked for, then refuse to engage with it.

You asked for literal examples of macroevolution. I gave you real-time speciation, new genetic functions, transitional fossils, and hardcoded genetic evidence of shared ancestry. You specifically said, “don’t give me links, don’t give me bone fragments, don’t give me similarities between apes and humans — show me macroevolution.” That’s what I did.

So when I said “all I need from you now is some honesty,” I wasn’t attacking your beliefs. I was pointing out that it’s not honest to move the goalposts, dismiss the evidence as “irrelevant,” or claim it’s just “science vs. faith” after asking for something specific and receiving it.

If you want to hold onto your beliefs — fine. You’re free to do that. But don’t pretend this was ever about testing the evidence on equal ground if, once it’s laid out plainly, you won’t even engage with it.

Honesty doesn’t mean abandoning your faith. It just means acknowledging when the evidence contradicts it — and owning that tension, rather than pretending it’s not there.

It’s telling that you had something to say about the warblers, something to say about nylon-eating bacteria, something to say about creation vs. science, and even something to say about tone — but nothing at all in response to the fossil and genetic evidence.

Nothing on Tiktaalik, a transitional fossil predicted in advance and found in the exact rock layer it was expected.
Nothing on Lucy, a species with a mix of ape-like and human-like features, showing upright walking long before Homo sapiens.
Nothing on endogenous retroviruses — ancient viral insertions found in the same spots in human and chimp DNA.
Nothing on pseudogenes — shared broken genes passed down from a common ancestor.

This wasn’t just one piece of evidence. It was a convergence of anatomy, geology, and molecular biology — all pointing to the same conclusion. If that doesn’t at least merit a response, then I think it’s fair to ask: why not?

Is it that the evidence is weak — or that it’s too strong to be dismissed easily?

Because if the only parts of the argument that get replies are the ones that feel easy to pick at, and the parts that go straight to the heart of the issue are quietly avoided… that says more than a rebuttal ever could.

So I’ll ask plainly: Are you willing to engage with the genetic and fossil evidence — or does the silence speak for itself?

NHC

You nailed it perfectly. You exposed the weakness and vacuity of his “arguments,” his purposeful resistance to engaging with the very evidence he himself asked for, like an x-ray machine.
 

You see what I've done?

Yes. You made a fool of yourself. Again.

When presented incontrovertibly with exactly what you asked for, you choose to run away from reality with your tall tale tucked firmly between your legs.
 

I'm going to respond to this post twice. This, my first response, points out the futility of your presentation by using a simile.

It’s not a simile. It’s a (bad) metaphor. You can’t even get that right.
 
I see exactly what you’ve done — you’ve used a metaphor to sidestep the argument. Not because the evidence is weak, but because you haven’t answered most of it.

There is no argument! Only an explanation which you have failed to give. You can't do it because you're an ideologue. You can't see that.
Tall tale between legs. Retreat, shadow box, move goal posts, run away.
 
You’re wrong again. Evolution is true because it is observed to be true. That’s nothing at all like your mythical book of fairy tales.

No, you're wrong again. Evolution is science because it is observed to be true. That is exactly like "my mythical book." Like I explained to @excreationist - "If man is an ape, according to evolution they, a bonobo for example, could reproduce fertile offspring with a man?"

We already gave you the answer to that. The answer is NO.
 
Bonobos and humans aren't the same species or genus so they can't breed or produce a fertile offspring. They say man is a primate and so are bonobos but man is not an ape.
That’s right, but humans are apes.

That is the answer to my request? That is where evolution and the Bible differ? A hell of a roundabout piled on top of a mountain of bullshit but probably as good as it gets.

No, the answer to your question was given upthread by me and mainly and spectacularly by NHC, who laid bare the dead bones of your silly hocus-pocus like a metaphysical x-ray machine.
 
I see exactly what you’ve done — you’ve used a metaphor to sidestep the argument. Not because the evidence is weak, but because you haven’t answered most of it.

There is no argument! Only an explanation which you have failed to give. You can't do it because you're an ideologue. You can't see that.
That’s a bold claim for someone who hasn’t actually responded to the evidence.

I’ve given not just an explanation — I’ve given you examples, mechanisms, predictions, and data. Literal speciation with ring species. The evolution of a new enzyme in nylon-eating bacteria. Predicted transitional fossils like Tiktaalik. Upright-walking hominins like Lucy. Shared ERVs and broken genes like the human GULO pseudogene — clear, testable markers of common ancestry.

You haven’t explained why any of that is wrong. You haven’t shown that it doesn’t fit the definition of macroevolution. You haven’t even attempted to deal with the contradictions between Genesis 1 and 2.

You’ve just waved your hand and declared “there is no argument,” as if repeating that makes the evidence disappear.

Calling me an ideologue doesn’t answer a single point. It’s projection — especially when I’ve laid out testable claims and you’ve responded with parables and metaphors. If anyone in this thread is operating from a fixed belief they refuse to let go of, it’s the person who said earlier that a person of faith “doesn’t trust science” and who now insists there’s nothing to debate.

You challenged someone to show you macroevolution. I did. The fact that you’re now calling the whole discussion meaningless tells everyone exactly what happened: You weren’t expecting someone to actually answer your challenge. Now that it’s been answered, the only move left is denial.

But denial isn’t a response. It’s a retreat.

The evidence is still sitting there. And it’s not going away.

NHC
 
Response # 2

How long have you been doing this? It depends on the individual, of course, but I got bored with it decades ago. I give the opportunity for discussion. Brief discussion. To the point. If the forum would like to spend a great deal more time on the subject - great. But not me. It's a warning not to get too involved and just state your case simply.

You asked for evidence. Literal, observable macroevolution. No jargon. No long threads. No links. You warned us that most of what we’d show you would be “bullshit,” and then said all you needed was someone to show you the goods.

So I did exactly that. I gave you multiple examples of directly observed speciation. I showed the evolution of new functions like nylon digestion. I pointed to transitional fossils like Tiktaalik and Lucy found exactly where evolutionary theory predicted. I brought up hardcoded genetic evidence like shared ERVs and broken pseudogenes. I also explained how Genesis contradicts observable science — and even itself — with two conflicting creation accounts. All of this, clearly laid out, in the exact simple terms you asked for.

And now, your response is: you’re bored of this. You’ve been through it “decades ago.” This wasn’t a debate — just “brief discussion.” You’re “just warning us not to get too involved.”

Let’s be honest: that’s not a warning. That’s a retreat.

You challenged others. You set the terms. You made demands. You framed yourself as someone who was fair and open, ready to be shown the truth — but who just hadn’t seen it yet. Now that it’s been put right in front of you, plainly and literally, you’re backing out and calling it wisdom.

If you’ve really been doing this for decades, then you should already know the strength of the evidence. You should also know the Bible’s creation account does not align with science — not in timeline, not in order, not in content. If after all that time you still haven’t found a way to honestly respond to these facts, then maybe it’s not the evidence that’s lacking.

It’s your willingness to deal with it.

You don’t have to keep going. But you don’t get to pretend the case wasn’t made — and you don’t get to claim the high ground by walking away from the discussion you started.

This wasn’t just “getting too involved.” This was the moment where the evidence finally showed up.

And you blinked.

I asked for evidence of a contradiction. All you had to do was tell me where evolution differed from the Biblical kind. If it does. You did not do that. You may think you did but you didn't. I knew this would happen because this always happens. I've actually answered my own request several times in the thread, but you want a debate, maybe? An argument? You can't tell me in simple terms where evolution and the Bible are incompatible - a simple explanation on your own terms because it's an ideological obsession. Not a simple truth. It's religion. It's science fiction. Fantasy.


Irrelevant. Seems like an appeal to probability to me. Though, I'm not even sure there is a contradiction there.

That’s not an argument — it’s hand-waving. First, there’s no “appeal to probability” happening. I laid out direct contradictions between Genesis and the scientific order of events: Earth before sun, plants before sunlight, birds before land animals, humans created separately and last. These aren’t statistical guesses — they’re factual sequences confirmed by astronomy, geology, and evolutionary biology. Saying “I’m not sure there’s a contradiction” doesn’t make the contradiction vanish. It just signals unwillingness to deal with it.

That is irrelevant because it has nothing to do with evolution. An argument from fallacy. Science has no explanation of life, only the Bible does. We are talking about evolution. After life.

If you have someone of faith vs. someone of science arguing the order of creation you can't, in all fairness assume that their order must be correct.

This isn’t a matter of assuming. Science doesn’t ask for belief — it asks for testable, repeatable, falsifiable evidence. Faith, by definition, requires none of those things. You can’t put “faith vs. science” on equal footing when one is grounded in centuries of converging evidence and the other is belief unsupported by observation. If a person of faith wants to disagree with what science shows, they’re free to — but they’re not entitled to call that disagreement “equally valid.” The order given by Genesis is demonstrably wrong. That’s not an assumption. It’s a conclusion drawn from the evidence.

Test that mankind wasn't created but comes from an unknown common ancestor? Nonsense. Right there. It failed the test. Repeat? No. You can't. Falsifiable? Only because you say so. Eveolution is faith by definition.

A person of faith doesn't put faith in science, they put faith in God. The best source for this specific God is the Bible. Who are they going to trust? Science? No.

And that right there is the problem. You’ve admitted that, regardless of what the evidence says, you’re going to side with a book — a book written by Bronze Age humans, with demonstrable contradictions, internal inconsistencies, and zero predictive power — over data, experimentation, and physical evidence. That’s not faith. That’s intellectual surrender. You’ve just told me, plainly, that no matter what’s shown to you, you won’t consider it. That’s not a defense of God. It’s a confession that your position can’t stand up to scrutiny — so you won’t let it be scrutinized.

Demonstrable contradictions? That's what another poster said and I asked him/her to demonstrate just one. They gave me a long list they copied from somewhere, two or three of which I successfully refuted before I got bored. There was no response from the poster. So, demonstrate one contradiction.

I would side with the book because I trust it. I don't trust science. Trust is just another word for belief, credit, faith. If science comes out tomorrow and announces God is real, I wouldn't trust it. If the Bible told me we evolved I wouldn't trust it. Because it doesn't fit. You can't reconcile evolution with the Bible like you can't reconcile the immortal soul with the Bible, or hell. You don't understand this because this subject is an ideological obsession. Nothing to do with truth, or what's real. It doesn't fit.

That the Bible does actually have contradictions isn't surprising to me. The difference between you and me is that I can actually tell you where they are and why. You only assume it does because of misinterpretation and your ideological obsession or fixation. For example, Jesus saying let the one without sin cast the first stone. Didn't happen. How do I know? Earlier manuscripts don't include it. It suddenly appears from nowhere.

Zero predictive powers?! Amazing! The nerve! If you grow grass, you get grass. If you mate dogs, you get dogs. Lizards come from lizards. Birds from birds. That's 100% predictive. Anything not in line with that? Never observed. Made up. Fantasy. You come along and give me several examples of the Biblical kinds and you claim evolution. Pepper moths didn't become something else. That isn't evolution, that's camouflage. Warblers, bacteria, finches, etc.

Maybe the discrepancy could be addressed, but I don't see the relevance in establishing first, as I'm suggesting is necessary, just the basic concept itself.

You’re deflecting. The “basic concept” is meaningless if its foundational claims are factually wrong. You don’t get to skip past the contradictions and say they’re irrelevant while arguing that the Bible should be taken seriously in matters of origins. If it gets the order of creation wrong, how do you trust it on the “concept” of creation? You can’t just focus on the vague idea of “a Creator” and ignore all the specific claims your text makes about what He supposedly did. That’s cherry-picking.

I'm not arguing with anything. Well, I am now. I didn't ask for argument; I asked for an explanation to base the argument. Literally the foundational claim itself. You can't. Or at least you haven't. If the Bible says apes reproduce apes and science says the same, they are compatible. No argument. If you would have just done that we would have been done with the first response. If, on the other hand, you had said science doesn't agree and tell me why we would have an argument. Right now, we have ideological fixation. Vague, insubstantial conjecture. It doesn't matter if it is on the part of a Bible believer or a proponent of evolution.

I believe the Bible - that's knowledge, because even though the world tells me I'm wrong I don't believe them. If your ideology were to change tomorrow you would believe whatever the world told you. That isn't science. That isn't knowledge. It's opinion. Popular consensus. Ideology. We know the Biblical kinds. We don't know anything else. Never observed anything else.

If someone turned the tables on me, I would have supplied a simple explanation from my perspective without having to go on and on about it for decades. In fact, as I mentioned above, I did that with both the Biblical kind and the biological species. In just a short paragraph.

Ridiculous. Look at how much time we've wasted!

Are you saying that the order is relevant? Let's say my interpretation of the Bible was different than traditional "creationists" or the current science corrected itself and changed the order. Would that settle the debate?

Yes — the order is absolutely relevant. If your account of creation claims to describe how life came to be, and it contradicts the actual history of the cosmos and life on Earth, that matters. And no — science doesn’t just “change the order” on a whim. Scientific corrections happen through better evidence and tighter predictions — not because someone feels like shifting a verse around. If the scientific record drastically changed, we’d change our understanding accordingly. The Bible, on the other hand, doesn’t evolve — even when it’s wrong. That’s why the debate stays stuck: science moves forward, theology clings to outdated claims and then calls it “interpretation.”

You almost stumbled upon what was requested of you. If you had no blinders, you might have realized it. The Bible doesn't change. Interpretation or theology does. Evolutionary theory does. What constitutes the Biblical kinds don't change, it's what we have always observed. Our Biblical understanding in general, my interpretation may change, mine certainly has, and science may change, as it should, but whatever the truth is or was doesn't change.

So, all you have to do is tell me where the Bible is wrong. But that isn't an ideological obsession with me like your evolution is to you. I know the Bible is wrong, I know the people who wrote it didn't always agree with or understand it. The Bible itself makes that clear. I don't confuse my knowledge of the Bible or the translation of the Bible itself as infallible. The Evolutionists do - think whatever current science is, is infallible. You (unbelievers) always deny this. I used to think they were dishonest, but it's just stupidity. Willful ignorance. Blind ideology. Religious zeal.

Nothing will settle the debate, by the way. I only make a point.

Exactly — nothing will settle the debate for you, because you’ve already decided that no evidence could. You admitted it earlier when you said a person of faith won’t trust science. That’s not a neutral stance. That’s a wall. And if all you’re doing is “making a point,” then let’s be clear about what the point actually is: you’ve acknowledged that no amount of observable, measurable, predictive evidence will change your mind.

That’s not a strength. That’s a refusal to engage with reality. And it proves exactly why this conversation keeps going: not because the evidence isn’t there, but because belief is shielded from it at all costs.

SCIENCE IS NEVER SETTLED



I never think of my understanding of the Bible as settled. Infallible. Bibles aren't divinely inspired. They are a far from perfect translation of the divinely inspired. I'm not God. I don't represent God. We are nature, we don't represent nature. We don't know with certainty the natural world or science would be obsolete. We use the scientific method to investigate nature. We use the Bible to investigate the Creator, Jehovah God. We abuse science for lots of reasons just as we abuse the Bible for lots of reasons.


That is wrong. I hadn't posted it yet, but - oh - as I compose this response, I see you've addressed that just recently. I'll get to it then. And again, making it science vs. creation doesn't resolve anything. I could respond simply with, well, God says evolution is tripe, so there. That's pretty much what you're doing with your circular reasoning. Evolution is true because science says it is - is like saying creation is true because God says it is. Not much of an argument.

Actually, there’s a massive difference between saying “evolution is true because science says it is” and saying “creation is true because God says it is.” And that difference is evidence.

Evidence: the available body of facts or information indicating whether a belief or proposition is true or valid.

Truth: Truth or verity is the property of being in accord with fact or reality. In everyday language, it is typically ascribed to things that aim to represent reality or otherwise correspond to it, such as beliefs, propositions, and declarative sentences. True statements are usually held to be the opposite of false statements. The concept of truth is discussed and debated in various contexts, including philosophy, art, theology, law, and science.

Evidence is subjective and there are objective and subjective truths. You seem to be suggesting the science is settled, evolution is an infallible fact. Reality; only to some extent the Bible doesn't agree. Why?


They aren't contradictory accounts; they are only from two different perspectives. The first chronological and the second topical.

That’s a well-worn explanation, but it doesn’t hold up under even basic scrutiny. The idea that Genesis 1 is “chronological” and Genesis 2 is just “topical” falls apart the moment you actually read what the text says — and compare the sequence of events.

In Genesis 1, the order is clear and linear:

• Light → sky → land → plants → sun/moon/stars → sea life → birds → land animals → man and woman created together (Genesis 1:27).

You can't even get that right. The light, the sky, the land, the sun/moon/stars were all complete in verse 1. How much later did Genesis 1:27 take place? You figure it was the afternoon? Genesis 1:27 is nearly the end - when man was created. What you are doing is taking a dumbed down version of the Bible as presented by traditional creationism/theology hundreds of years old but not accurately reflected in the Biblical Hebrew itself. It would be like me saying science isn't right because of the miasmatic school of medicine of the dark ages until the late 19th century.

And when you preach science to me like it's a great source of truth, I think that 1) it believed giving babies anesthesia during surgery was unnecessary because they didn't feel pain, so they just temporarily paralyzed them to keep them from squirming. You have to put yourself in the place of someone who thought that because that is what science said. Until 1986. And 2) in the name of progress it has poisoned our air, water, land, food, seed, medicine, blood, children and minds. How much testing, repeating, falsifiable evidence and peer review do you think it took them to figure that out?

Which do you think will destroy humanity - superstition or chemical and biological warfare? You want me to buy into that shit for your ego?

In Genesis 2, the order is entirely different:

• The earth is already formed, but no shrubs or plants have grown yet (Genesis 2:5).
• Then God forms man from the dust (Genesis 2:7).
• Then God plants the garden and makes trees grow (Genesis 2:8-9).
• Then God realizes the man is alone and creates the animals (Genesis 2:18-19).
• After the animals fail to be a suitable companion, God finally creates woman from man’s rib (Genesis 2:21-22).

No, the chronological order is given differently. I'm going to the store to buy milk and bread, which is the same as I bought bread and milk at the store. After a short prologue, it logically goes straight to the creation of Adam, since he and his family are the subject of what follows. (Genesis 2:7) Other information is then introduced as needed. We learn that after his creation Adam was to live in a garden in Eden. So, the planting of the garden of Eden is now mentioned. (Genesis 2:8, 9, 15) Jehovah tells Adam to name “every wild beast of the field and every flying creature of the heavens.” Now, then, is the time to mention that “Jehovah God was forming from the ground” all these creatures, although their creation began long before Adam appeared on the scene. - Genesis 2:19; 1:20, 24, 26.

That is not the same order. It’s not even close. And it’s not just a difference in emphasis or “topic” — it’s a flat contradiction in sequence and structure:

• Genesis 1: animals before man, man and woman created together.
• Genesis 2: man before animals, woman created later, after failed animal companionship.

If Genesis 2 were simply a “topical” or theological retelling, it wouldn’t contradict the core timeline. But it does — explicitly. And no amount of wordplay about “perspectives” changes the fact that one says A before B, and the other says B before A.

So let’s be clear: if these two accounts were found in any other book, believers would immediately call them contradictions. But because they’re in the Bible, you’re forced to bend over backwards to make them “fit.” That’s not good interpretation. That’s special pleading.

And more importantly: if the Bible can’t keep its own foundational story internally consistent, how can it possibly be trusted as a reliable account of cosmic or biological origins?

This isn’t just about Genesis 1 vs. 2. It’s about credibility. And this is where the Bible loses it.

The difference is in order, the second is not chronological. If they were both chronological it would be contradictory. Why am I arguing bullshit when I said I wasn't going to? Huh?
 
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I wonder if anyone is going to actually wade through all the codswallop above. Maybe NHC will have the intentional fortitude. It was wrong and dumb in the very first sentence and that’s where I stopped. It no doubt got wronger and dumber as it got longer and stupider.
 
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