spotlight wrote:If that list of Mormon scholars testify is the complete list of LDS scholars within the church I would not be waving it around.![]()
I am aware that evolution is taught at BYU and that the church officially has no position on it. Most of the members I encountered online were not so enlightened and were the ones who argued with me about evolution when I was still a member.What physical evidence do I have that your mother had the emotion of love towards you? Assuming she did.
If you are stating that there isn't any evidence of a scientific nature for the emotion of love I would disagree. Just as they are now able to tell what picture a person is thinking about by examining the firing pattern of neurons in the brain I am fully convinced that the time will come when the existence of the emotion of love will be evidenced in the same manner. In other words it is all physical and at some point will be discernible and decipherable when we figure out how to do so.
The following is I think a stretch:If I want to believe God wanted for dogs and cats to have a common ancestor many millions of years ago. There is nothing in science that demands my beliefs be wrong. There is nothing in science that demands my beliefs be right either.
I think that position ended with our ability to sequence DNA. We can date the geologic column so we know it represents the passage of a great amount of time. Where were cats and dogs in the geologic column 55 million years ago? Where is the Dormaalocyon latouri today? Special creation of a series of animals each a bit closer to a cat or a dog doesn't sound very reasonable. Transplantation from another realm doesn't sound any better. How did they all get the ERVs in the right places to look as if they are all related? Just 7 ERVs in the same location in the DNA between a human and a chimpanzee would be like the odds of selecting the same water molecule from the oceans of the world after random replacement. There are some 200,000 ERVs that are in the same locations between a human and a chimpanzee. That's picking that same water molecule from the oceans of the world after random replacement 2,857 times in a row! ERVs and other features within DNA prove common ancestry beyond any reasonable doubt.My journey in Mormonism has been a Grand Adventure, with me learning more and more all the time.
About what exactly? Are you keeping up on your science or has that fallen by the wayside?It has given me a wonderful wife whom I want to be with forever. Children and Grandchildren I love. A purpose beyond my selfish instincts. I feel as though it has made me a better man. not that I was terrible to begin with.
Certainly there are multiple avenues to accomplish those same things.Then I took Psychology 101, found my true love was Psychiatric Social Work.
Please tell me you are not employed by the church telling people that masturbation is bad or some other such nonsense.
I'm a scientist and not on that list.

You'll never go far wrong in underestimating the intelligence of the average person.

It may someday, but so far such brain pattern recognition is beyond us. Large amounts of chocolate has a very similar effect.

DNA research is wonderful, but I do think that while DNA accounts for the differences between Species. It has a harder time within Species. IE; The genetic differences between you and me are vanishingly small. I accepted Evolution from Common Ancestry a long time ago. Whether God wanted it to occur that way is a faith position and not a scientific one.
I'm retired now, but regularly read the journals of my profession.
I was never the employee of any church, and it would have been very inappropriate for me to use my profession to further my religion.
SEE https://www.socialworkers.org/pubs/code/code.asp