Re: Qs for Dr. Collins

From: D. F. Siemens, Jr. (dfsiemensjr@juno.com)
Date: Thu Mar 28 2002 - 14:06:37 EST

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    Vernon,
    I think I understand where you're coming from, an unqualified commitment
    to recent creation. Since I didn't get my point across earlier, let me
    try another example. Imagine that I show you my new car, the most recent
    product of the best design minds in the business, and you discover that,
    under the steering wheel is a spark advance lever and under the hood is a
    magneto, though the car is equipped with electronic ignition. There is a
    pull labeled "choke," and under the hood both a carburetor and fuel
    ignition injectors. There is a hand throttle and cruise control,
    generator and alternator. Does keeping all the archaic devices, which of
    course have to be disconnected, demonstrate that the designer was more
    intelligent than the ones behind the various 2002 production models?
    Since there is lots of disconnected stuff in the genome of virtually
    every creature examined, did an intelligent Creator directly produce
    things with all this nonfunctional stuff? Does this manifest omniscience
    and omnipotence? Only a dogmatic insistence on God's immediate production
    of all living things require the answer, "Yes, though nothing about it
    makes sense." If the Creator is not in a hurry but can use billions of
    years for the development of creation under his providential rule, then
    what the various sciences discover in terms of "junk" DNA, resemblances
    across genera and kingdoms, the age of the fossils and universe, and all
    the rest, all fit into a reasonable whole.

    Can God have produced the universe and all that is in it instantaneously?
    Can he use a single design for various entries? Of course! But then,
    given what we observe, he would be either as stupid as the hypothetical
    designers of "my new car," or he would be deliberately misleading us into
    thinking that he used ages and evolution. Since you do not want to accept
    these conclusions, please present a lucid explanation how a rational
    designer of living creatures jams a lot of useless stuff into them,
    especially disconnected archaic stuff.
    Dave

    On Thu, 28 Mar 2002 15:14:12 +0000 Vernon Jenkins
    <vernon.jenkins@virgin.net> writes:
    Hi Dave,
    I see nothing wrong with Allen's question. Surely it is one that
    constantly needs to be asked, for people like yourself seem to regard
    such developments as further proof of the truth of The Theory - always
    ignoring the possibility of a reasonable alternative explanation. I am
    surprised that you, as a logician, should regard the matter as
    cut-and-dried.
    Your questioning of the Creator's purposes is also quite out of place.
    Surely, we shall never be in a position to read God's mind or fathom his
    eternal purposes, and we are both foolish and presumptuous when we
    pretend we can. Further, with respect to the possibility of our being
    deceived by Him: may I suggest that it is rather the case that we first
    deceive ourselves - and, thereafter, that God merely helps us on our way!
    However, perhaps that is not the full story, for as you will no doubt be
    aware, the Scriptures present us with certain problems in this area. I am
    thinking particularly of that line in the Lord's prayer that reads
    "...and lead us not into temptation..." (implying that He well might!),
    and the account of the events which ultimately led to King Ahab's demise
    (1Kings:22:1-40).
    I hope you will reconsider your forthright objection and agree with me
    that Allen's question is well deserving of a considered and reasoned
    reply.
    Vernon
    http://www.otherbiblecode.com
      
    "D. F. Siemens, Jr." wrote:
     Allen,On Tue, 26 Mar 2002 20:53:27 -0700 "Allen Roy"
    <allenroy@peoplepc.com> writes:
    > Dr. Collins, why should the relatedness of living things point more
    > to
    > evolution than to a common Designer with distinct creational
    > categories?
    >
    > Musical notes, for example, do not evolve one from another. They
    > have
    > relatedness, but they come from a Composer.
    >
    > An author may write many books, and there may be relatedness between
    > them,
    > but one book did not evolve from the other. The connection was in
    > the mind
    > of the author, etc.
    >
    > Why could this not be true for living organisms? Horses may have
    > many
    > similarities with catfish.
    > Could not the Designer make both using similar ideas without having
    > one
    > evolve from the other?
    >This is hardly a question for a geneticist, so I'll respond as a
    logician with a question growing out of an earlier interchange. What
    could be the purpose of the Creator's introducing a retroviral sequence
    into the genomes of some of the great apes and man? Were they functional,
    of course. But they have no function in gorillas, chimpanzees or humans.
    Of course, God can do anything he pleases. But what could be the purpose
    from God's side? to mislead us? That at least is more likely than that he
    is incompetent and simply messed up, except that would make him
    deceitful. What's your choice: incompetent inclusion? intentional
    deception? using evolution to accomplish his purpose? If all the genetic
    sequences were functional, coding for proteins, controlling coding,
    providing connections for the filaments that pull chromosomes apart in
    mitosis and meiosis, etc., you'd have a point, for it would all fit a
    clear design concept. But the amount of non-coding DNA eliminates the
    notion of intelligent design of much of the genome, even if we find that
    some of it is not junk. As I see it, the situation in the genome is
    similar to that of a demonstration by a mechanized British artillery
    unit. During the demonstration, one soldier stood at attention off to one
    side. Nobody could explain why. But investigation finally revealed that
    his earlier counterpart had held the horses while the rest of the crew
    fired the field piece. His position was left over, not designed in.
    >
    > Is the total number of genes in humans still around 30,000?
    >
    > Allen Roy
    >
    Dave



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