Nickswitz wrote:To Rochey; What I was stating was what I believed as the theory of evolution, not what was being talked about... So I misunderstood, and thus was incorrect in my statements...
Alright then. My advice would be to look up some works on the theory of evolution itself written by peer-reviewed scientists.
Nickswitz wrote:And as to the 'what do atheists believe' question, I know there isn't a set of any theories or anything... But I was wondering what in general if they don't believe that a being made it all come to appear... then what are basic thoughts on how the world came to be, and life came to form, etc... I'm just curious...
Again, it's completely up to the individual. It's like saying "how do theists believe the world was created". You'll get thousands of different answers, all depending on the person, ranging from the Big Bang theory to Matrix-style "we don't really exist" to "we can never know so it's pointless to ask".
Nickswitz wrote:
Also, something everyone has been saying, you all do know that if God is real creation no longer would be theological... It would become scientific...
Thus why is god not a scientific theory? never mind, thought for another time maybe...
God is not a scientific theory because the very existance of a god is illogical.
Nickswitz wrote:What 'testable predictions' have been coupled with evolution? And what of these have been tested...
As I pointed out earlier: bacteria and virii changing over time, usualy to develop immunities to cures. We can see this happening in laboratory experiments, thus it has been tested.
Did you know there's actualy a strain of bacteria that's evolved to eat nylon?
Nickswitz wrote:I know it doesn't have anything to do with life, but the reason I stated that is because I know atheists that believe that everything was just here... and others that think it all came from larger stars, etc... I'm wondering what any atheists believe about how things got here, besides evolution...
I think I see what you're trying to do. You were trying to ask what the different atheists
here thought, yes?
Personaly, I honestly haven't a clue. I believe abiogenesis is the cause of life itself, and evolution caused life to become what we see now. How did the universe begin? Probably with the Big Bang, but it's not a subject I know much about. What caused the Big Bang? No idea, and we'll probably never know. Personaly I like to believe that we are just the latest in a long chain of universes, stretching back countless aeons. The old universe died as it came slamming back together in the Big Crunch. With all that energy being compressed into one tiny area, it "exploded", thus giving us "our" Big Bang. That's probably not what happened, but it's my own theory on it.
eagle_GT wrote:Part of the problem with the discussion of evolution is semantics. I've attended some very theologically conservative churches and heard arguments about evolution several times. The people that I have heard discuss it have used the terms Macro and Micro Evolution, where Micro Evolution is the gradual change of a species over time and Macro Evolution is the change from one species to another (i.e. men evolved from monkeys). They have readily agreed that Micro Evolution is proven, but contend that there is no proof to support Macro Evolution. So what seems to happen around here is that evolution supporters are talking about Micro, while evolution opponents are talking about Macro, but neither side really realizes that they are not talking about evolution the same way.
The problem is that Creationists don't realise that micro-evolution and macro-evolution are the same frickin' thing, with the difference merely being one of time.
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