JaMDuDe wrote:
Its just as bias as talk origins. Heres another webiste explaining some of the fossils, still bias but a little less than true origins.
http://www.ideacenter.org/contentmgr/sh … php/id/839
That's where you're wrong. You consider anything that does not assume that your side is correct as 'biased', whereas I consider a side that chooses an answer before exploring the question to be biased. In that regard, your primary sources of information thus far have been ludicrous, to say the least. You haven't used Answers in Genesis in a while, which is a good step, but you're still using websites that are primarily christian. Read the caption on trueorigins: "exposing the myth of evolution." Even the name, '
trueorigins' is implying that there are no possibilities other than the ones they give. That doesn't sound like they're open to the possibility of evolution being true, just as you are not open to anything that does not fall into your rigid and juvenile understanding of the universe.
The primary difference I've seen thus far between scientists and creationists is that scientists accept that they think they know how life began, but they do not know it for a fact. They accept that they do not know there is a God, just as they do not know there is not a God. Creationists, on the other hand, take for granted that they know everything, or at least the cause for everything. They know for a fact that there is a God. They know He created life. They know everything, and everyone who does not agree with them is either a fool or a liar. You, sir, fall into the second category, and your unwillingness to consider anything but that which you already believe to be true is painting you in a poor light. I have sometimes wondered if you are homeschooled, because I cannot see any other way that you would have been so sheltered from anything that disagrees with your religious viewpoints.
Anyway, I have accepted at this point that I am not going to change your mind about a damn thing, but I hope that the other viewers of this thread can see the creationist perspective for what it really is: A feeble attempt to explain a universe that is beyond comprehension through faith. That in and of itself is fine, I have no problems with religion in general terms. It is when the religious begin to believe that they are better than everyone else because of their belief that the problem arises, and it can be seen in the United States today. The evidence for evolution is very strong, but some Christians (like JaMDuDe) feel that their beliefs supercede science, and that their beliefs should be taught hand in hand with science. I for one will do everything in my admittedly limited power to make sure that religion stays out of school and science, and I urge everyone else to do the same.