philologus
Subgenius
Originally posted by Trevor
What gets me are the crackpots that literally believe things like creationism and Noahs ark. Two of every animal? How did he feed them? What about parasites? Was each animal carrying exactly 2 of every one of its parasites? What about tropical and arctic species? How did he keep them warm/cold? What about Australian species? How did they get to the ark? Strange Noah didn\'t remark on how odd it was to have egg laying mammals, or that God was clearly taking the piss with the duck billed platypuss.
Strikes me that these people just can\'t be bothered, or don\'t want to think for themselves.
Here\'s the main problem I have with this debate, wherever it arises. I am suddenly a crackpot.
I am always entertained by this debate and enjoy reading/speaking about it, but I genuinely don\'t care if evolution is ever \"proven\" correct or not. It doesn\'t affect me mentally, financially, relationally OR spiritually in the least. If you provide unassailable proof of evolution, then to me it means God made it happen. If I believe in a God who could create the universe with His words, then why could he not suspend the reproductive (or other) functions in animals He created, while they were on the ark? It makes no difference. I work in a very technical job. In our industry we have the most advanced machinery available, and I use math and scientific principles, daily, to solve production problems. My bosses all know what my beliefs are and have no problem with me wielding the mighty weapons of science without supervision. This is largely because I always produce results, which equal money. My belief in God has no impact (except perhaps that I endeavor to live up to my beliefs on a daily basis). My point, is that the actual daily life of the majority of humans is not impacted by this debate, unless they are working scientists. So calling people crackpots or (as has been said in previous threads on this topic) claiming that they shouldn\'t be trusted to be rational, is silly. I simply subscribe to what I believe is a more sublime, elegant explanation for my \"Origin of Species\". And in the end it comes down to Pascal\'s wager anyway.