I quoted what he did say in the OP: "Darwinism can not explain gravity."
But that
isn't what he said, so you're dealing with a straw man. The interview can be read here:
http://www.glennbeck.com/content/articl ... /196/8621/Stein mentions gravity only twice, and in neither instance does it appear in the phrase you say you have accurately "quoted." Here is the context:
It is a very beautiful documentary and it's about the struggle between the Darwinist establishment that has a hammer lock on all the educational processes and the people who think that maybe intelligent design, the idea that there was an intelligent creator should get its day in the classroom or its day somewhere, laboratory or somewhere so we can have some idea of whether possibly life at some other origin than nothing. I mean, [i]we basically say it's very hard to believe that something came from nothing[i] and that we don't understand that where gravity came from, we don't understand where the laws of physics or thermodynamics or fluid motion came from, we don't understand how life came from a mud puddle when there was one that was mud and the next day there was life and then a few billion years later there was man. How did that happen? No Darwinist has ever been able to come close to an explanation...
We should all be asking where did -- we should all be asking, one, where did life come from. Two, is it possible that life is so complex that it could have come from something other than just nothing. Three, is it conceivably possible that these organizing principles of the universe could have just come up randomly and that gravity and fluid motion and thermodynamics and so forth could have just come up by total random? It seems farfetched to us but maybe it happened in some way that we don't understand but it does seem extremely farfetched.
Stein's point is that these laws didn't just come from nothing. And yes, it is true that atheists do not have answers for any of this other than to say it was just "random chance" that these laws fell into place the way they did.
Moreover, modern "Darwinists," sometimes called the "New Darwinists," like Richard Dawkins, are career atheists who tackle much more than just evolution. And as I said before, they are not true Darwinists since Darwin would not have aligned himself with any of them. Darwin was a theist who believed evolution was an act of God, and that it could not explain all that we know about life.
I understand that the comments on gravity, thermodynamics, and abiogenesis don't relate to Darwinism and he's creating strawmen.
No he isn't. You think this because you're misrepresenting what he actually said.
He's criticizing a particular scientific theory and saying that it can't do what it was never intended to do.
No he isn't. Again, you don't understand his argument.
I actually think Stein doesn't think evolution has anything to do with gravity, yet, his statements are ridiculous on the matter.
So you admit you're attacking a straw man. You admit he doesn't really believe this, but you want to chide him for it anyway. Well, have fun.
Instead of tackling evolution and pushing forward an alternative theory he is the one creating strawmen.
His main fight is in the battle between atheism and theism. Evolution doesn't do anything to disprove God's existence. Stein's gripe is that theists are shunned in the classroom. People who dare express a theory about God are automatically characterized as an ID apologist and dealt with accordingly. Any alternative view that doesn't comply with the new establishment, is generally treated with contempt and ridicule. That isn't science. In fact, this is what one would expect from a religious organization when views contrary to the established consensus are expressed.
Can you give us the theistic explanation for gravity? I'm dying. I mean, I'm aware of one explanjation from the middle ages but what's the modern Christian view? Is it the same as the theistic explanation of complex life?
It isn't gravity alone. It is gravity in concert with dozens of laws that appear to have been written by an intelligent source.