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

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   Message 142,385 of 142,579   
   Martin Harran to specimenNOSPAM@curioustaxon.omy.net   
   Re: Chimp to human evolution - Sandwalk    
   03 Feb 26 15:44:28   
   
   From: martinharran@gmail.com   
      
   On Mon, 2 Feb 2026 09:24:22 -0800, Mark Isaak   
    wrote:   
      
   >On 2/1/26 1:34 AM, Martin Harran wrote:   
   >> On Sat, 31 Jan 2026 17:49:39 -0800, Mark Isaak   
   >>  wrote:   
   >>   
   >>> On 1/31/26 3:15 AM, Martin Harran wrote:   
   >>>> On Fri, 30 Jan 2026 14:04:03 +0000, "Kerr-Mudd, John"   
   >>>>  wrote:   
   >>>>   
   >>>>> On Wed, 21 Jan 2026 08:18:42 +1100   
   >>>>> MarkE  wrote:   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>>> On 20/01/2026 9:29 am, Jim Jackson wrote:   
   >>>>>>> On 2025-12-17, MarkE  wrote:   
   >>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>> It is difficult to quantify, but even a casual observer of chimps and   
   >>>>>>>> humans recognises the scale of the difference. Civilisation and   
   >>>>>>>> spaceflight, for example.   
   >>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>> I would just make the observation that there were people only about 150   
   >>>>>>> years that said the similar things when comparing white people with   
   >>>>>>> indigenous people.   
   >>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>> It's a reminder of how wrong a widely held viewpoint can be. God and   
   >>>>>> materialism are both widely held, mutually exclusive viewpoints.   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>> Martin Harran, if I understand him correctly, doesn't see it this way.   
   >>>>   
   >>>> Depends on how you (or MarkE) define, materialism. If you go with the   
   >>>> standard definition that *everything* is due to natural causes and   
   >>>> there is no such thing as the supernatural, then that excludes God by   
   >>>> definition. As a convinced dualist, I certainly would not subscribe to   
   >>>> that.   
   >>>   
   >>> A literal definition of "supernatural" is "beyond (outside of) nature",   
   >>> with nature, in that context meaning all that exists. So the   
   >>> supernatural, by definition, does not exist. A more useful definition   
   >>> is, "stuff that nobody understands or expects ever to understand."   
   >>   
   >> You don't get to make up your own definitions. I gave you the Mirriam   
   >> Webster definition of supernatural a few days ago; here is the almost   
   >> identical Cambridge Dictionary definition   
   >>   
   >>      - caused by forces that cannot be explained by science   
   >>   
   >>       - things that cannot be explained by science   
   >   
   >Of course you get to make up your own definitions, as long as you tell   
   >people what they are.   
      
   A definition is useless unless people accept with the definition. Can   
   you cite any source that supports the definition you give above?   
      
   >People do it all the time in all kinds of contexts.   
      
   Where there is a recognized standard definition, there is no real   
   reason to invent a new one. The only reason I can see for you coming   
   up with that definition is to get an answer that you wante din the   
   first place.   
      
   >   
   >The definitions you quote would mean that a great many things, including   
   >dew, earthquakes, and ulcers, were once supernatural but now are not.   
   >And they would mean that schizophrenia is still supernatural. Is that   
   >your idea of "supernatural"?   
      
   No, there is a distinct difference between not having an answer at   
   present but good reason to think that we will get one in the future   
   compared to not being able to see where we might even start to look   
   for an answer - cf for example  the 'Hard Problem of  Consciousness'.   
      
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_problem_of_consciousness   
      
      
   >   
   >> https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/supernatural   
   >>   
   >>>   
   >>>> I accept materialist explanations where there is good scientific   
   >>>> evidence to support those explanations as is the case with both   
   >>>> evolution and cosmology, the areas that ID'ers struggle with.   
   >>>>   
   >>>> Science, however, despite its best effort, has nothing to offer in   
   >>>> explaining consciousness which I believe is the same thing that   
   >>>> religious believers term the soul.   
   >>>   
   >>> That's overstating it. Science does not have a complete handle on   
   >>> consciousness, but what it has is far from nothing.   
   >>   
   >> Science has been able to figure out where processes happen in the   
   >> brain but nothing about what consciousness even is let along where it   
   >> comes from.  As I've described it before, it's like an electronics   
   >> engineer analysing the electronic processes going on in my PC as I   
   >> type this response and claiming that gives him understanding of where   
   >> the ideas are coming from that I am using the PC to express. No need   
   >> to take my word from it, here is what a detailed analysis in this   
   >> month's Scientific American has to say:   
   >>   
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
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