Dr. Shades wrote:Good. Now you have the answer to your question. Now you know why we disbelieve in God: Because of the information we have processed and assimilated.
Fair enough, but the origin of matter is a variable. Logic would dictate that something cannot come from nothing. This logic also applies to God, but only in this domain.
Dr. Shades wrote:Simple: Because there's an overwhelming mountain of evidence that we evolved through means of natural selection entirely independent of any intelligent force, while on the contrary nobody has ever discovered a single shred of evidence that a God created us.
When you add "entirely independent of any intelligent force" to the above, it's based on opinion. To believe (or discount the variable) that matter somehow just *happened* and created the universe is one step, but to claim life
was created through a random chemical process is based on a reverse engineered theory. This would make the complexity of our brains a byproduct of a random chemical process. Do you accept this
random chemical process as more logical than the probability God had a hand in creating us? If yes, is "entirely independent" warranted based on the evidence?
Dr. Shades wrote:For two reasons:
- Out of all the diverse species of life on earth, why should homo sapiens sapiens be the one lucky species that was created in His image? Why not any of the other species?
- If He created us in His image, then why does a perfect being have all the same design flaws that we have? For example, why, in males, does the urethra pass through the prostate gland (making urination difficult or impossible if/when the prostate swells) instead of over or under it? For another example, why would God need to keep from slipping when grasping trees (the reason why our simian ancestors evolved fingerprints)? For a third example, why would God have eustachian tubes (the evolutionary remnant of our former gill slits)?
Conversely, why are we the one lucky species with an advanced brain? Wouldn't logic dictate that if all life came from the same random chemical process, there would be many variants?
Dr. Shades wrote:Here's more food for thought: If we were created in God's image, then just who is "we?" Homo sapiens sapiens? Does "we" include homo sapiens neanderthalensis, which was just recently proven beyond all doubt to be the same species as us, since we & they mated occasionally and produced fertile offspring? Does "we" include homo heidelbergensis, the species from which both homo sapiens sapiens and homo sapiens neanderthalensis descended? Does "we" include homo erectus, the precursor to homo heidelbergensis, who nevertheless looked extremely similar to us and thus are also in "God's image?" How about their own ancestors, homo habilis? Or their ancestors, homo ergaster? Just how far back do we go before we leave "God's image?" Australopithecus robustus? Australopithecus afarensis?
To deviate from your point a bit, why aren't there hairy cavemen still around? The earth is a big place and there's many types of four-legged animals ranging from mice to horses in size covered in hair. If things were as cut and dry as you present in the above, doesn't it make sense that Geico cavemen variants would also exist?
Dr. Shades wrote:Ergo, no matter what date you roll the dice and arbitrarily decree that everything after that qualifies as what "God created," the fact of the matter is that a mere one year earlier there were populations that looked extremely similar (if not exactly similar) to the beings living during the date you randomly chose.
Take a while to digest all that.
I've heard that 99.5% of everything we know is based upon the last 500 years. In the slow-moving process of evolution, doesn't this strike you as somewhat out of place?
2 Tim 4:3 For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine.
2 Tim 4:4 They will turn their ears away from the truth & turn aside to myths