Hey Darwin, nice beard.
No.
No.
Could you expand on that?
Ummm, yes and no. Sorry I can't pick one or the other. Yes in that Jesus became a human being, no in that we all run on genetic code and at a fundamental physical level we are very similar.
I can only speak for myself here.
My conception of soul is what God creates to be linked to the human body. Since the human body will die, the soul will be free and in an 'unnatural' human condition, since humans are/were meant to be physical beings.
DNA is akin to a computer language. I see no real reason why DNA absolutely has to be associated with a soul.
I don't know if non-humans, like dogs, have souls or not. They are definitely lower on the hierarchical chain of being.
Human beings participate in creation. The human soul steps in at the moment of creation. My theological speculation doesn't really extend to animals, like chimps. I have no problem either way, thinking that they have souls or don't have souls would not upset my other opinions.
I don't think there is anything inherently wrong with the eating of flesh. And you're right, it has to do with hierarchy of creation. It isn't just an extension of the brain being more efficient. I think it rather obvious, myself, that humans are on a totally different level than, say, chimps. I suppose that any of you could theoretically persuade me otherwise, although I'd be more likely to be persuaded otherwise if, say, a chimp were to get me thinking a different way.
OK, and thanks for articulating the premise...
I can only speak for myself here. Immutability of the species, to me, means that unicellular life won't/didn't eventually (I know, after millionsandmillionsandmillions of years) evolve into pigs. Of course species are MUTABLE in that species may look different now than they did millions of years ago. The question is if the differences are essential, and that is a subjective word. Horses look different now than they did millions of years ago. In that way there is no immutability. But are they still horses? Yes, so in that way there is immutability. To be completely difficult and pedantic, nobody could possibly believe in immutability of species since everybody and everything looks different.
Thanks for the "if". The invisible hand could be a metaphor for God, or for nature, or for subterranean demonic manipulators.
With your if, I don't know if the future of evolution matters. You addressed this to evolutionary Christians. As a Christian, I believe God became a human being a couple thousand years ago. So we're it. I'm much more interested in the evolution of ideas than the evolution of the human species. I reckon I could have produced offspring with women from 2000 years ago, so for now that is all that matters. The future could be interesting with the creativity and technologically driven abilities to alter and perhaps reconstruct genes and DNA and whatnot. This could make for interesting speculation; as for evolution, this would be more similar to ideas of ancient astronauts tinkering with earthly life than evolution as driven by environmental conditions.
Uhhh...OK...
I don't know. I can understand the theory. Humans did not observe what happened one million years ago, so it's all nice conjecture. And we probably have different definitions for macroevolution.
Well that's an understatement. Or not. It's all a matter of waiting for catastrophe, and predicting when catastrophes will happen is anyone's guess. And when a catastrophe happens, it might possibly wipe us all out, and then it wouldn't really matter.
I don't know if past evoultion was guided by God, so I can hardly know if future evolution will be guided by God.
Depends what you mean by progress. Are we physically different from 2000 years ago? Nutritionally and medicinally and hygenically yeah, and those all have repercussions on our physical stature. But I like your phrase "some kind of a perfection". From a certain perspective any species can be thought of as "some kind of a perfection".
-Elliot
Do you think evolution was directed,guided by the hand of God?
No.
I mean,do you think evolution was meant to produce human beings (since it would have been the way God created) ?
No.
How about the idea that should we rewind the "tape of life",there might not be nothing like us?
Could you expand on that?
Since humans descend from animals (as far as I see,this is a touch piece to swallow for many) do you think that a clear line should be drawn between "animals and man (which would now inevitably be,another species of animals)".
Ummm, yes and no. Sorry I can't pick one or the other. Yes in that Jesus became a human being, no in that we all run on genetic code and at a fundamental physical level we are very similar.
What about soul? Would this require any life,the great string of DNA,to be either entirely with or without soul?
I can only speak for myself here.
My conception of soul is what God creates to be linked to the human body. Since the human body will die, the soul will be free and in an 'unnatural' human condition, since humans are/were meant to be physical beings.
DNA is akin to a computer language. I see no real reason why DNA absolutely has to be associated with a soul.
I don't know if non-humans, like dogs, have souls or not. They are definitely lower on the hierarchical chain of being.
If only humans can have soul (opposed to such living genetical relatives as chimps) at which point does the soul step in?
Human beings participate in creation. The human soul steps in at the moment of creation. My theological speculation doesn't really extend to animals, like chimps. I have no problem either way, thinking that they have souls or don't have souls would not upset my other opinions.
What about human habit of eating meat to grow larger brain,which could be used,as a modern day equivalent for the old argument concerning the hierarchy of creation ("clearly man is superior,with brains such efficient") ?
I don't think there is anything inherently wrong with the eating of flesh. And you're right, it has to do with hierarchy of creation. It isn't just an extension of the brain being more efficient. I think it rather obvious, myself, that humans are on a totally different level than, say, chimps. I suppose that any of you could theoretically persuade me otherwise, although I'd be more likely to be persuaded otherwise if, say, a chimp were to get me thinking a different way.
Considering that homo sapiens might be just another predator,technically unable to be aware of God,without such "help"?
OK, and thanks for articulating the premise...
What about future evolution? Should we still believe in the immutability of the species,which now has to be considered obsolete?
I can only speak for myself here. Immutability of the species, to me, means that unicellular life won't/didn't eventually (I know, after millionsandmillionsandmillions of years) evolve into pigs. Of course species are MUTABLE in that species may look different now than they did millions of years ago. The question is if the differences are essential, and that is a subjective word. Horses look different now than they did millions of years ago. In that way there is no immutability. But are they still horses? Yes, so in that way there is immutability. To be completely difficult and pedantic, nobody could possibly believe in immutability of species since everybody and everything looks different.
I´m trying to say that if evolution was "guided" by an invisible hand,leading to us as an important example,what does future evolution mean?
Thanks for the "if". The invisible hand could be a metaphor for God, or for nature, or for subterranean demonic manipulators.
With your if, I don't know if the future of evolution matters. You addressed this to evolutionary Christians. As a Christian, I believe God became a human being a couple thousand years ago. So we're it. I'm much more interested in the evolution of ideas than the evolution of the human species. I reckon I could have produced offspring with women from 2000 years ago, so for now that is all that matters. The future could be interesting with the creativity and technologically driven abilities to alter and perhaps reconstruct genes and DNA and whatnot. This could make for interesting speculation; as for evolution, this would be more similar to ideas of ancient astronauts tinkering with earthly life than evolution as driven by environmental conditions.
While one human life is not enough to observe macroevolution,we know that it goes on.
Uhhh...OK...
I don't know. I can understand the theory. Humans did not observe what happened one million years ago, so it's all nice conjecture. And we probably have different definitions for macroevolution.
An estimated age of survival for a single species would be a few million years (hard to predict).
Well that's an understatement. Or not. It's all a matter of waiting for catastrophe, and predicting when catastrophes will happen is anyone's guess. And when a catastrophe happens, it might possibly wipe us all out, and then it wouldn't really matter.
Would future evolution also be guided by God?
I don't know if past evoultion was guided by God, so I can hardly know if future evolution will be guided by God.
Unless we assume ourselves to be some kind of a perfection of it,therefore rendered "immutable" (again,boiling down to the fallacy of progress)
Depends what you mean by progress. Are we physically different from 2000 years ago? Nutritionally and medicinally and hygenically yeah, and those all have repercussions on our physical stature. But I like your phrase "some kind of a perfection". From a certain perspective any species can be thought of as "some kind of a perfection".
-Elliot
