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Creation Strikes Back - How Chimpanzees Devolved From Man
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message 51:
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Robert
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Feb 14, 2014 11:49PM

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In the context of the book, it doesn't change much. Instead of God reincarnating the descendants of Seth to impregnate the sorrowful womenfolk of the lineage of Cain, He used angels instead. Yep, that's WEIGHTY alright, much more of a sin than not knowing DNA from spaghetti-O's.


The bias game? Of course I'm biased. Our biases make us who we are. Everything I encounter is filtered through my biases. Brent's review is unbelievably charitable and you still castigate him for it. I thought you wanted honest opinions (which you asked for,) but it turns out that you get angry and defensive when you get them. It looks like you really seek ego-stroking yes men.
I regard your book as a good example of syncretism; the merging of disparate beliefs to form a new belief system. That's not a compliment. Syncretism has been a problem for the church since its inception. You ought to get used to the criticism that is sure to come, especially once your book is read by well grounded Christians. As it is,I only see your book appealing to postmodern relativists who have little idea what they believe.
As to my book that you refuse to read, I have not written a book. You have referred to this non-existent work a few times now despite the fact that you received no evidence for doing so. You leapt to an unwarranted conclusion; a microcosmic illustration given the topic at hand.
The fact that Lee, resident liberal heretic, likes your book very much, coupled with the fact that Brent and I do not particularly, ought to tell you something.

I tried to merge proven, higher tier science with a largely intact Scriptural version and get crucified for it because some knuckledragger can't think for himself, but can only digest what's been spoon-fed to him forever. I shouldn't waste time, but I'll set you straight, if you're capable of illumination in anything other than the Arts.
A new earth is physically impossible, an old earth is the only possible scenario and the Big Bang is not only plausible, but supports God. Being a literalist, you must be a new earther so you are failing to merge facts that should be merged. I'll accuse you of ostrich-syndrone and you do your God no favors by stubbornly counting generations. God didn't say 6000 years, He only allowed you to count and that's as high as your mathematics get. No wonder you have no imagination.
As a slavish drone to a literal Bible you probably haven't any real conception of theoretical particle physics or the intricate workings of a human cell. If you'd open your eyes, you'd see the tide has shifted in the scientific community by recent discoveries in these fields toward a belief in some creative force other than just the Laws of Nature. To me that says science is creeping toward God although most scientists haven't gone that far yet. So guess what, Ned, despite your protestations and obstinancy, two things that God created will eventually merge (Biblical and scientific Truth).
I don't expect you to applaud me as visionary, but at least I'm not afraid to stick my neck out to anticipate this merger. What you study so diligently hasn't changed in 2000 years so it attracts staid, stolid, unimaginative automatons like you, I just hope I never have to sit through one of your boring, stultified presentations.


If my belief in God's supernatural intervention makes me a "knuckledragging moron incapable of critical thinking" (blah blah blah. Very mature!) in your eyes then so be it.
Many things recounted in the bible are "physically impossible." Raising the dead, miraculous cellular regeneration, turning water to wine, feeding 5,000 with five loaves and two fish, etc. You have confessed that you believe some of these "physically impossible" things, have you not? So just where do you draw the line between self-proclaimed intellectual brilliance and "moronic knuckledragger?"
Obviously, you have no idea. Your positions are contradictory and inconsistent. Your delineation is completely arbitrary based on biases of your own, presumably that which makes you "comfortable."

and hair length restrictions, that's extra-Biblical. You disallow interracial dating - that's extra-Biblical. And most of all you evaluate churchgoers by their ability to pay tithes rather than their need of the Lord, and that's REALLY extra-Biblical. You're nothing but a hypocritical, anti-intellectual fakir who gives Christianity a bad name.


I had a couple one-star ratings by people before my books ever came out, and I know they were not given a review copy, so I know it has nothing to do with the writing or research. It's done for God, and it's something you'll have to get used to as an author.
I've come to realize I'm not much interested in reading any book that got no bad reviews.



By midnight I had become a card-carrying pinko commie tool of the Godless socialist liberal takeover plot.
Lee - this is going to take some getting used to!




pp 129-130 tells how amphibians crawled out of the water and took to land, but why? Robert speculates God needed them to eat all the insects who were overrunning Eden. Eden needed frogs and lizards and spiders and things to be more Eden-like.
Robert, it's probably buried in the book somewhere, but could you explain WHEN the garden of Eden came about, how soon mankind was placed therein, and what kept it secluded from all the ravenous beasts outside the garden? I think I missed some details there.



ok, so do we have an island of Eden now with mankind planted there? Surrounded by water? I don't think you picture an island because immediately man gets tossed out on the mainland and Eden needs heavenly guards to keep them out.


I do see your map, but it doesn't show any water barriers around Eden; it's a map of today's land formations, so it's not helping me picture what you have in mind.


Old time, learn by rote and fiat, by-the-book religion is eroding and will continue to. The internet and social media dive deep into the backwards crannies where rigid Fundamentalism thrives. It will be harder for autocratic parents to keep their children ignorant of universal fields of knowledge and they will search for the truth. This will result in some major, uncomfortable changes as all upheaval dictates, with the inevitable heading down blind alleys. Eventually, though, if Christianity is to survive, wisdom rather than fear, will be the guiding light. It is still in the best interest of scientists finacially to maintain that every dilemma is understandable by the "Laws of Physics" and if you'll just keep throwing us money, we'll find the answer for you. But many young scientists with integrity know this not to be the case and are about to holler "Stop the nonsense, some systems are far too complex to have origins understandable by man - there's a higher force at work here." Similarly, control in closed religious societies requires a "barefoot, pregnant, and uninformed" mentality where a few at the top reap profits, that will gradually disappear as the rest of the world makes inroads. God abhors evil, and evil is keeping God's handiworks separated for any reason, but especially by the greed of the scurrilous.

I think it is a worthwhile exercise to go through your last post and highlight those statements that are based on faith. Once the "uncomfortable change" of removing faith-based claims from the picture is accomplished, what remains may be insightful.
It is the faith-based assumptions which hold science back, whether yours or those of extreme fundamentalists.


Science is bending. Religion is bending. Let's hope they keep bending more and more.


But I have a Bible that does not bend. So i'm okay. (you have my permission to continue bending your sciences and religions until they resemble...?)


How many historic sailors do you seriously think "assumed" the world was flat?
Any semi intelligent person would look up and say: "The sun is round, the moon is round, close stars appear round...we can see different surfaces of the moon..."
Science is great - but it appears you may be limiting YOUR science for your own personal biases. Good luck with that.


Lee have you read books by Scientists from the other side? I doubt it.
I have seen so many hilarious assumptions and bad thinking from evolutionary militants that there has to be something wrong with it. And i'm NOT a scientist.




Noah's civilization, with the help of God, who seemed to be fully involved at that time, could well have been quite advanced. The Flood wiped all evidence away without a trace, but it's buried near the Euphrates and north to the Sea of Marmara. Get your shovel out, Guillermo, and find some Biblical history.