This makes the same faulty presumptions that the YEC's make is assuming
you know the purpose and plan of God's Creation. They deny death before
the fall of Adam simply by saying "God wouldn't do that" which is really
just an emotional appeal.
By this logic, even if God did start with a clean genome, why would he
then put us on a planet already inhabited by evil? Why not on another
planet where we could be His "final and greatest creation" just enjoying
fellowship with Him? Why do we emerge from the dust of the ground after
billions of years of "Nature red in tooth and claw"? The lamb wasn't
slain at the fall of Adam but "from the foundations of the world".
See Peril in Paradise by NASA Rocket Scientist Dr. Mark Whorton that
explores this topic in depth at
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1932805230/sr=8-1/qid=1141396031/ref=pd
_bbs_1/103-4288614-0631024?%5Fencoding=UTF8 .
Cheers
John Walley
-----Original Message-----
From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] On
Behalf Of drsyme@cablespeed.com
Sent: Friday, March 03, 2006 8:44 AM
To: David Opderbeck
Cc: glennmorton@entouch.net; asa@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: Special Creation
Its illogical in the sense that;
if Man is God's final and greatest creation, and that Man
was made to have a relationship with God here on Earth and
that this was to be eternal, then why wouldnt you start
with a fresh and perfect genome? It is the creation of
imperfection that I think is a contradiction, therefore
illogical.
On Fri, 3 Mar 2006 07:25:21 -0500
"David Opderbeck" <dopderbeck@gmail.com> wrote:
> i*t seems illogical, i.e. not surviving Occam's razor as
>you suggest, that
> the genome of this new creature would include
>preexisting pseudogenes,
> useless gene duplications, fatal mutations, etc.*
>
> I'm not sure it's illogical. In fact, it would be
>exactly what we'd
> logically expect if God used something like a cloning
>process to genetically
> engineer Adam using gentic material from an earlier
>hominid. I do agree
> that it doesn't survive Occam's razor, but I don't think
>of that as a test
> of logic, but rather a test of plausibility among
>competing alternatives.
> The simplest explantion isn't *always* the true one,
>though. Remember, even
> a pure TE position feels the blade -- Occam's razor
>would also cut out God
> as having any role at all in evolution.*
>
> *
> On 3/3/06, jack syme <drsyme@cablespeed.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>> If as Ross suggests, God fashioned Adam out of the dust
>>of the earth,
> (even if he used existing materials), it seems
>illogical, i.e. not surviving
> Occam's razor as you suggest, that the genome of this
>new creature would
> include preexisting pseudogenes, useless gene
>duplications, fatal mutations,
> etc.
>>
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: David Opderbeck
>> To: jack syme
>>
>> Cc: glennmorton@entouch.net ; asa@calvin.edu
>> Sent: Thursday, March 02, 2006 8:52 PM
>> Subject: Re: Special Creation
>>
>>
>> The thread that touched all this interesting discussion
>>off was the
> announcement that Alan Templeton's work has falsified
>the RTB model. Having
> now had a chance to skim through Ross/Rana's "Who Was
>Adam," I'm not clear
> on why that is necessarily so.
>>
>> As I understand it, the problem for RTB's model arising
>>from Templeton's
> work would be that, although the genetic evidence still
>supports the recent
> (~100,000 years) emergence of "humans" as RTB define
>them (home sapiens
> sapiens) from a smal population migrating out of a
>Africa, it also suggests
> those modern humans interbred with indigenous
>populations of hominids that
> had migrated out of Africa in two earlier waves ~1.5MYA
>and ~750,000 years
> ago. Such interbreeding would suggest the indigenous
>populations were
> "human" as well, and thus human-kind is too ancient to
>trace back to a
> single Adam and Eve less than 150,000 years ago.
>>
>> But Ross/Rana seem to suggest, as I had earlier on the
>>list, that God may
> have used existing genetic material from earlier
>hominids when He formed
> Adam out of the "dust of the Earth." If God did this,
>then our genome would
> reflect the history of those earlier hominids, including
>those two earlier
> waves of African migration. The "replacement" theory
>could then still
> possibly be correct. Obviously, this wouldn't survive
>Occam's Razor, but
> neither would just about any theory that seeks actual
>historical events in
> Gen. 1 and 2.
>>
>> I realize there are other possible problems with the RTB
>>model, but it
> seems to me that the Templeton data doesn't kill it
>completely. Have I
> completely missed something here, or could that body in
>the cart be shouting
> "I'm not dead yet?" I admit I'm no genetic
>anthropologist.
*****
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Received on Fri Mar 3 09:32:58 2006
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