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   talk.origins      Evolution versus creationism (sometimes      142,579 messages   

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   Message 140,708 of 142,579   
   Martin Harran to All   
   Re: Observe the trend (1/2)   
   18 Mar 25 17:26:45   
   
   From: martinharran@gmail.com   
      
   On Tue, 18 Mar 2025 09:21:31 -0700, Bob Casanova    
   wrote:   
      
   >On Tue, 18 Mar 2025 08:22:39 +0000, the following appeared   
   >in talk.origins, posted by Martin Harran   
   >:   
   >   
   >>On Mon, 17 Mar 2025 22:56:35 -0700, Bob Casanova    
   >>wrote:   
   >>   
   >>>On Mon, 17 Mar 2025 17:08:32 +0000, the following appeared   
   >>>in talk.origins, posted by Martin Harran   
   >>>:   
   >>>   
   >>>>On Mon, 17 Mar 2025 09:23:41 -0700, Bob Casanova    
   >>>>wrote:   
   >>>>   
   >>>>>On Mon, 17 Mar 2025 06:04:13 -0400, the following appeared   
   >>>>>in talk.origins, posted by jillery <69jpil69@gmail.com>:   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>>>On Sun, 16 Mar 2025 09:33:54 -0700, Bob Casanova    
   >>>>>>wrote:   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>On Sun, 16 Mar 2025 05:18:02 -0400, the following appeared   
   >>>>>>>in talk.origins, posted by jillery <69jpil69@gmail.com>:   
   >>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>On Sat, 15 Mar 2025 09:30:41 -0700, Bob Casanova    
   >>>>>>>>wrote:   
   >>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>On Sat, 15 Mar 2025 08:50:22 -0400, the following appeared   
   >>>>>>>>>in talk.origins, posted by jillery <69jpil69@gmail.com>:   
   >>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>>On Fri, 14 Mar 2025 09:19:20 -0700, Bob Casanova    
   >>>>>>>>>>wrote:   
   >>>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>>>On Fri, 14 Mar 2025 20:13:29 +1100, the following appeared   
   >>>>>>>>>>>in talk.origins, posted by MarkE :   
   >>>>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>>>>The measure of literalism is in the *interpretation* of the text of   
   >>>>>>>>>>>>Genesis, not the quoting of it.   
   >>>>>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>>>Nope; sorry. "Literalism" literally (sorry 'bout that) means   
   >>>>>>>>>>>that the text is taken exactly as read; no interpretation   
   >>>>>>>>>>>allowed. If it's interpreted it's not taken literally.   
   >>>>>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>>That's right.  Everybody knows the Bible was originally written in   
   >>>>>>>>>>English.   
   >>>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>...which has exactly zero to do with my point regarding the   
   >>>>>>>>>meaning of "literal", or his error (an error he has   
   >>>>>>>>>admitted).   
   >>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>Check your jerky knees.  My comment is an *affirmation* of your point   
   >>>>>>>>to his error.  That means it has everything to do with your point,   
   >>>>>>>>contrary to your point to me.   
   >>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>I concede that may have been the meaning you intended.   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>>The literal point is that it's silly to argue about THE literal   
   >>>>>>meaning of THE Bible when THE Bible being referenced is an   
   >>>>>>interpretation of a translation of a translation of an interpretation.   
   >>>>>>Children who play telephone know this.  Even if there was a literal   
   >>>>>>omni-everything God who literally quoted Its pearls of wisdom   
   >>>>>>literally directly to some mortal, finite humans in their limited   
   >>>>>>native languages, there is literally zero chance they would have   
   >>>>>>literally understood what It literally meant.   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>I don't disagree; arguing about the "real" meaning of any   
   >>>>>religious text is a fool's game, as nonproductive as   
   >>>>>conjectures about angels dancing on pinpoints.   
   >>>>   
   >>>>I disagree.   
   >>>>   
   >>>Your prerogative.   
   >>>>   
   >>>> Science is a particularly useful way of finding out stuff   
   >>>>that we can verify through testing and experimentation but there are   
   >>>>many things that are simply not open to scientific investigation and   
   >>>>it is an inherent part of human nature to try to figure out how those   
   >>>>things work, how those things have happened.   
   >>>>   
   >>>>That is where approaches like theology and philosophy come into play;   
   >>>>whilst they are very limited in verification techniques in comparison   
   >>>>to science, reasoning and debating can give us better understanding of   
   >>>>areas not open to science - not perfect understanding but still   
   >>>>better. For example, it is theology and reasoning, not science, that   
   >>>>has pushed the Western world to try to move away from warfare as a   
   >>>>means of settling disagreements   
   >>>>   
   >>>>The problem comes when someone tries to hold onto a theological or   
   >>>>philosophical idea when science throws up contradictory but clear-cut   
   >>>>evidence. That is the problem with Bible literalism, there is so much   
   >>>>contradictory evidence against a 7-day creation or God creating man   
   >>>>directly by breathing into dust that it is outright foolishness for   
   >>>>someone to try to hold out against that evidence which damages   
   >>>>religious belief in the way St. Augustine warned about.   
   >>>>   
   >>>I don't know how long it will be until the idea that   
   >>>religious belief can be addressed by the methods of science,   
   >>>or that science can be addressed by the tenets of religion,   
   >>>can be relegated to the dustbin of bad ideas, but it can't   
   >>>come any too soon.   
   >>   
   >>Just to clarify, I'm not suggesting that science can be used to   
   >>directly uphold religion or vice versa but I do think both can be used   
   >>collaboratively to give us a bigger picture. That's where I think   
   >>organisations like Biologos, the Templeton Foundation and the   
   >>Pontifical Academy of Sciences make important contributions.   
   >>   
   >I suppose that's theoretically possible, but all such   
   >"collaborations" of which I'm aware tend to devolve into   
   >cross-justification, usually by ignoring those pesky   
   >contradictions.   
      
      
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