Though since my answer to the last question was this was what I thought of myself, I don't know whether it takes any notice of the rest. I must be really nerdy to disassemble the quiz.
It would explain why I find this funny, I guess.
Data is not information. Information is not knowledge. Knowledge is not wisdom. Wisdom is not truth. Truth is not life.
To most persons, nature appears calm, orderly, and peaceful. They see the birds singing in the trees, the insects hovering over the flowers, ... and all living things in possession of health and vigour, and in the enjoyment of a sunny existence. But they do not see, and hardly ever think of, the means by which this beauty and harmony is brought about. They do not see ... the constant and daily search after food, the failure to obtain which means weakness or death.
A.R.Wallace, "Darwinism"
Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to his life?Jesus isn't talking about the struggle for survival here - he is pointing out to his followers that there isn't one. Hence the clash of worldviews.
And why do you worry about clothes? See how the lilies of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these. If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you, O you of little faith?
Jesus
Almost everything that could be wrong is wrong with this reply of Darwin and Wallace. First, as to its method. It is an unsatisfactory way of defending a scientific theory, when it is objected that what it predicts is not observable in one area, to reply that that is not a problem, because what it predicts is not observable anywhere else either.Later on he says:
What would it be like, even, to meet a man who really believed that there is a Darwinian struggle for life among humans? Even this, as far as I know, never happens, and never has happened. Which is certainly a very great mercy. But it is not at all difficult, on the other hand, to imagine meeting such a person.
He would be a man who actually believed that he is struggling for his life, all the time, against his parents, children, wife, neighbours, the postman, the doctor, the Lord Mayor..., and also believes that everyone else is in exactly the same case. What could we possibly make of this most unfortunate man? His mental state, because of its obvious affinity with certain more familiar pathological states, might aptly be named paranoia darwiniensis. In any case it would be clear that he is in some extremely dreadful delusionary state. Nor would any cure seem at all possible, unless it began with someone's convincing him that Darwin's theory of evolution is false
I've just been thinking more about your post here, and there's something I genuinely don't get. If I understand correctly, it's important to you that there be someone somewhere who is doing research that is both scientific and theological. Is that accurate?I think that if Christianity is to work as a worldview, then it must be consistent with any other observations that I make. In this context, I have quite a strong commitment to the Romans 1 idea of what Christians call "general revelation" - the idea that there is publicly accessible evidence of the presence of God.
If so, what's your motivation here? Why is it important to you for that overlap to exist? Why do you think it doesn't bother some other Christians so much
... no cases, possible or even actual, ever do bother [armor-plated neo-Darwinians]. If you discovered tomorrow a new and most un-Darwinian-looking species of animals, in which every adult pair produced on average a hundred offspring, but the father always killed all of them very young, except one which was chosen by some random process, it would take an armor-plated neo-Darwinian no more than two minutes to "prove" that this reproductive strategy, despite its superficial inadvisability, is actually the optimum one for that species. And what is more impressive still, he will be able to do the same thing again later, if it turns out that the species had been misdescribed at first, and that in fact the father always lets three of his hundred offspring live. In neo-Darwinism's house there are many mansions: so many, indeed, that if a certain awkward fact will not fit into one mansion, there is sure to be another one into which it will fit to admiration.(... which ties in nicely with Amanda's post, that I have wanted to link to for months.)
David Stove, "Darwinian Fairytales", Where Darwin first went wrong about man
The only thing, in my opinion, that can save ID is to acknowledge that it is not science but a science-based apologetic.From an apologetic point of view, I think that ID can remove what people want to hang their hats on - I know of people who have become open to Christianity through creationist presentations.
Imagine there's no heaven, it's easy if you try,All well and good. This is a sentiment that is expressed by lots of people. So a commenter to the post below says on a related theme, for example:
No hell below us, above us only sky,
Imagine all the people, living for today.
That's only a depressing state of affairs if you somehow get the impression that things should be otherwise. Me, I'm happy with the universe as it is.The problem is that many people want it both ways. So on john-lennon.com - an unofficial site, I suspect - it says:
While all this [the reaction to his death] happened, one could "imagine" Lennon calmly looking down on us, watching the world's reaction, and having a huge celestial laugh.A trawl through the internet finds other people with similar reactions, apparently missing the irony.