kentington wrote:Actually, I do take the Bible literally not just this part. I assume you will be surprised and think oh a young earther. But I am looking up some definitions regarding Genesis, but I believe God had already created the heavens and the Earth previous to this point in the Bible. The reason the Earth was empty and void may have had something to do with the fall of Lucifer. But that isn't the point of this thread and I gave a more specific reason below. I am doubtful of evolution and a lot of assumptions regarding it. I don't hate people who believe in evolution or think they are stupid I just think that in science certain assumptions need more backing up.
Fair enough.
2 things then.
1. I hate to make an argument from authority, but why do you think virtually all biologists accept evolution as fact. Are they simply wrong? Would you also be similarly skeptical of some things that are accepted as fact by virtually all medical doctors for instance?
2. Did you check out this link I posted in another reply out?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._coli_long-term_evolution_experiment The E. coli long-term evolution experiment is an ongoing study in experimental evolution led by Richard Lenski that has been tracking genetic changes in 12 initially identical populations of asexual Escherichia coli bacteria since 24 February 1988.[1] The populations reached the milestone of 50,000 generations in February 2010.
...
In 2008, Lenski and his collaborators reported on a particularly important adaptation that occurred in one of the populations: the bacteria evolved the ability to use citrate as a source of energy. Wild-type E. coli cannot transport citrate across the cell membrane to the cell interior (where it could be incorporated into the citric acid cycle) when oxygen is present. The consequent lack of growth on citrate under oxic conditions is considered a defining characteristic of the species that has been a valuable means of differentiating E. coli from pathogenic Salmonella. Around generation 33,127, the experimenters noticed a dramatically expanded population-size in one of the samples; they found clones in this population could grow on the citrate included in the growth medium to permit iron acquisition.
kentington wrote:1) I don't know
2) You are assuming He created them with intended purpose of tricking people rather than creating things similar.
This thread isn't about my religion and has to do with evolution.
As I see it, you can always say "I reject evolution purely because of my faith in my religion" to which I would clearly not have any recourse. However that doesn't seem to be the line you are taking, but instead you seem to be comparing creation vs. evolution as competing theories.
If this line is to be taken, then religion must to be treated as a "hypothesis" of sorts and should suffer some of the tests that scientific hypotheses must suffer. It cannot be that religion is simply the "default" as many people would like. Indeed many arguments about creationism vs. evolution seem to be of the nature.
A: "How did this happen in evolution"
B: "Like This"
A: "Ok, but how did this happen in evolution"
B: "Like This"
A: "Allright, but how did THIS happen in evolution"
B: "We don't know yet"
A: "AHA, I told you god did it"
That's not how competing theories work.