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Member Posts: 3941 From: Duluth, Minnesota, U.S. (West end of Lake Superior) Joined: Member Rating: 10.0 |
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Author | Topic: Kenneth R. Miller - Finding Darwin's God | |||||||||||||||||||||||
nwr Member Posts: 6408 From: Geneva, Illinois Joined: Member Rating: 5.1 |
I'll note that I have not read Miller's book, so bear that in mind when reading my comments.
marc9000 writes: Let’s look at what he forgot he wrote in his book, page 54 (in the paperback version); I don't see that as actually contradicting the earlier statement. Most people take a theistic evolutionist to be a theist who
One can, however, be a theist who believes that God kept a hands-off approach to the details of how species evolved, though he designed the whole system at the start. I take Miller to be the latter kind of theist/evolutionist. To say, as in that page 54 comment, that evolution affects religion is a different matter. I think he is just commenting on the fact that many members of his religion are not happy with evolution, so he has to keep defending it.
marc9000 writes:
I suspect that you are dumbfounded because you are so familiar with seeing evolution bad-mouthed by creationists.He opens chapter 8 with the following statement; quote: This goes along with what I see from posters on forums such as these. As a believer, yes I am dumb-founded just like he says, and up to now I’ve only had atheists attempt to explain this rationale to me. It seems to me, though, that creationists are denying their own creationism when they object to evolution. For, if one believes that God is creator of all, then it follows that he is creator of evolutionary processes. The anti-evolution creationists seem to be saying "I believe that God created half of what I see around me. He created the parts that I like, but I refuse to believe that he created the parts that I don't like."
marc9000 writes:
I suspect that you are misreading Miller there (though keep in mind that I have not myself read Miller's book).In reading Miller’s book, I find that he also shows little knowledge of Christianity. Almost at the end of the same chapter, chapter 8, he makes this statement; quote: I read Miller as saying, in that quote, something like: "As a believer in God as creator of all, I marvel at the absolute brilliance God showed in his design of the evolution system." In short, while you read Miller as saying something about the nature of God, I read that as saying something about the nature of evolution, and about evolution being counted as an enormous credit to a God brilliant enough to come up with such an idea.
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nwr Member Posts: 6408 From: Geneva, Illinois Joined: Member Rating: 5.1 |
marc9000 writes:
That's a strange thing to say. Are you rejecting the idea that God is omnipotent and omniscient?
A hands off designer? It doesn’t make logical sense. marc9000 writes:
I'm sure he listens. He obviously doesn't agree with the views of some Christians.
And in defending it, all he’s focused on is the evolution, he doesn’t seem to listen to the views from the religious standpoint. marc9000 writes:
I'm sure that Miller understands that science is fallible. All scientists understand that.That’s understandable if he thinks that science is the only, or main, source of knowledge — that it’s in first place, and religion has to fall in line behind it. I’ll c/p part of what was c/p’d from the book in message #16 of this thread; It's not science that is in first place. But the way the world is, has to be given high place. For that is the direct creation of God. The biblical text is secondary, for that involves the hand of fallible man.
marc9000 writes:
The text you quoted does not show that. It only shows that Miller puts reason and evidence above the claims of Henry Morris.
Miller obviously puts human reason above anything in Christianity. marc9000 writes:
It seems to me that it is Henry Morris and other founders of 20th century creationism, who have bent Christianity beyond recognition.
His secular convictions that allow Christianity to be bent beyond recognition are also unjustified and dangerous to many in the general public who provide tax money to publicly fund scientific research. marc9000 writes:
Yet that part is already sufficient to account for all of biological diversity.
Most creationists don’t deny all evolution, they’re fine with the micro parts, the build up of immunity to diseases, the changes within kinds, the parts of evolution which are proven. marc9000 writes:
The physics in Genesis 1 is badly wrong. Why can you make excuses for Genesis, and read it as symbolic? But you apparently won't do that for Genesis 2, 3.Claims that the book of Genesis is an allegory, that there was no fully formed first man, that there was no original sin by one man, later redeemed by one man. I guess it is all the "original sin" issue. Yet the doctrine of original sin is mostly made up theology with very little real biblical support. It is not universally accepted as a required part of Christian belief.
marc9000 writes:
Why would they be furious. The question of origins has not been settled by science, so there is room for a diversity of views. Moreover, most atheists are not anti-theist, they just don't adopt a theistic view for themselves.
Why aren’t atheists furious at that claim?
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nwr Member Posts: 6408 From: Geneva, Illinois Joined: Member Rating: 5.1 |
bluegenes writes:
There has long been some sort of creationism. But the modern strident YEC version is quite a bit different from the more traditional versions.Henry Morris is very much in keeping with interpretations that have existed in Christianity throughout all its epochs. Christianity is a creationist religion, and has always included "young earthers". The Wikipedia article suggests that the modern version originated with George McCready Price and was modified by Henry Morris and John C. Whitcomb Jr. That's pretty much consistent with other reports about modern young earth creationism (such as the book by Ron Numbers). I'm old enough to have been been a member of an evangelical church before the 1961 publication of the Morris and Whitcomb book, and young earth creationism never came up.
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nwr Member Posts: 6408 From: Geneva, Illinois Joined: Member Rating: 5.1 |
bluegenes writes:
Yes, that's probably a pretty good assessment of the current situation.Morris felt (and apparently marc9000 feels) that Christianity is threatened by the high level of acceptance of science that Miller represents. Miller probably thinks that Christianity is threatened by the rejection of science. I agree with both of them. It's doomed either way. I am reminded on my former neighbor. I'm sure he was deeply religious. I saw him heading off for church every Sunday (at least in the warmer weather). He was carrying a bible. The bible was disguised as a bag of golf clubs. And that, I think, is the real situation in USA today. Many people call themselves Christian. Yet they are more likely to go to the football game, the rock concert or the golf course than to a religious institution. Many of the Churches are turning themselves into social clubs. We are said to be a religious nation, but I think much of that religion is superficial.
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nwr Member Posts: 6408 From: Geneva, Illinois Joined: Member Rating: 5.1 |
marc9000 writes:
Ah, okay. So you seem to be saying that God is a bungling incompetent fool. He is incapable of planning anything. Therefore he must keep his hands on at all time so that he can patch up and cover for his mistakes, thereby giving the illusion that he is omnipotent and omniscient.No — if he’s omnipotent and omniscient, he’s ALWAYS hands on! If his hands are off at any time, then he’s not omnipotent and omniscient. And since you say that he has hands on at all time, then we must also accept that the usual statement that God exists outside of time is also wrong.
marc9000 writes:
Perhaps you should explain that. It seems to me that you are denying that God is intelligent enough to do any planning, and because he lacks that intelligence he must keep hands on at all times.
He doesn’t show knowledge of, or interest in, two more very important things about God, that he is intelligent, and that he is purposive. marc9000 writes:
The physics of Genesis 1 is quite plainly false.
And most of them think that scripture is fallible as well. marc9000 writes:
That may be a basic to fundamentalists. But it is not a basic to all of Christianity.It is a basic of Christianity to believe that biblical text is written by God You are taking your own extremist view of Christianity, and asserting that all of Christianity agrees. You are quite wrong about that.
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