Jul 25, 2008

Darwinism Or Creationism? - What evolution theory do you believe in?

Free Web Hosting, No Ads > The Real World > Life Talk > Science and Nature

free web hosting

Darwinism Or Creationism? - What evolution theory do you believe in?

anonymal
Ok. I am a Christian but somehow I doubt those written in the Bible. Creationism says we all live because God was responsible for creating us, the world and everything. But this statement has no scientific basis. No experiments nor hypotheses made, just a conclusion. Well, you, do you believe in creationism or the scientific theories of evolution? Read below about the ORGANIC EVOLUTION OF MAN:

QUOTE
The ®Evolution of Theory
The theory of evolution is one of the great intellectual revolutions of human history, drastically changing our perception of the world and of our place in it. Charles Darwin put forth a coherent theory of evolution and amassed a great body of evidence in support of this theory. In Darwin's time, most scientists fully believed that each organism and each adaptation was the work of the creator. Linneaus established the system of biological classification that we use today, and did so in the spirit of cataloguing God's creations.

In other words, all of the similarities and dissimilarities among groups of organisms that are the result of the branching process creating the great tree of life (see Figure 1), were viewed by early 19th century philosophers and scientists as a consequence of omnipotent design.
Image of Tree of Life
Figure 1: A phylogenetic "tree of life" constructed by computer analysis of cyochrome c molecules in the organisms shown; there are as many different trees of life as there are methods of analysis for constructing them.

However, by the 19th Century, a number of natural historians were beginning to think of evolutionary change as an explanation for patterns observed in nature. The following ideas were part of the intellectual climate of Darwin's time.

* No one knew how old the earth was, but geologists were beginning to make estimates that the earth was considerably older than explained by biblical creation. Geologists were learning more about strata, or layers formed by successive periods of the deposition of sediments. This suggested a time sequence, with younger strata overlying older strata.
* A concept called uniformitarianism, due largely to the influential geologist Charles Lyell, undertook to decipher earth history under the working hypothesis that present conditions and processes are the key to the past, by investigating ongoing, observable processes such as erosion and the deposition of sediments.
* Discoveries of fossils were accumulating during the 18th and 19th centuries. At first naturalists thought they were finding remains of unknown but still living species. As fossil finds continued, however, it became apparent that nothing like giant dinosaurs was known from anywhere on the planet. Furthermore, as early as 1800, Cuvier pointed out that the deeper the strata, the less similar fossils were to existing species.
* Similarities among groups of organisms were considered evidence of relatedness, which in turn suggested evolutionary change. Darwin's intellectual predecessors accepted the idea of evolutionary relationships among organisms, but they could not provide a satisfactory explanation for how evolution occurred.
* Lamarck is the most famous of these. In 1801, he proposed organic evolution as the explanation for the physical similarity among groups of organisms, and proposed a mechanism for adaptive change based on the inheritance of acquired characteristics. He wrote of the giraffe:

"We know that this animal, the tallest of mammals, dwells in the interior of Africa, in places where the soil, almost always arid and without herbage, obliges it to browse on trees and to strain itself continuously to reach them. This habit sustained for long, has had the result in all members of its race that the forelegs have grown longer than the hind legs and that its neck has become so stretched, that the giraffe, without standing on its hind legs, lifts its head to a height of six meters."

In essence, this says that the necks of Giraffes became long as a result of continually stretching to reach high foliage. Larmarck was incorrect in the hypothesized mechanism, of course, but his example makes clear that naturalists were thinking about the possibility of evolutionary change in the early 1800's.

* Darwin was influenced by observations made during his youthful voyage as naturalist on the survey ship Beagle. On the Galapagos Islands he noticed the slight variations that made tortoises from different islands recognizably distinct. He also observed a whole array of unique finches, the famous "Darwin's finches," that exhibited slight differences from island to island. In addition, they all appeared to resemble, but differ from, the common finch on the mainland of Ecuador, 600 miles to the east. Patterns in the distribution and similarity of organisms had an important influence of Darwin's thinking. The picture at the top of this page is of Darwin's own sketches of finches in his Journal of Researches.

* In 1858, Darwin published his famous On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, a tome of over 500 pages that marshalled extensive evidence for his theory. Publication of the book caused a furor - every copy of the book was sold the day that it was released. Members of the religious community, as well as some scientific peers, were outraged by Darwin's ideas and protested. Most scientists, however, recognized the power of Darwin's arguments. Today, school boards still debate the validity and suitability of Darwin's theory in science curricula, and a whole body of debate has grown up around the controversy (see the WWW site Talk.Origins for an ongoing dialogue). We do not have time to cover all of Darwin's evidence and arguments, but we can examine the core ideas. What does this theory of evolution say?


Darwin's Theory
Darwin's theory of evolution has four main parts:
1. Organisms have changed over time, and the ones living today are different from those that lived in the past. Furthermore, many organisms that once lived are now extinct. The world is not constant, but changing. The fossil record provided ample evidence for this view.
2. All organisms are derived from common ancestors by a process of branching. Over time, populations split into different species, which are related because they are descended from a common ancestor. Thus, if one goes far enough back in time, any pair of organisms has a common ancestor. This explained the similarities of organisms that were classified together -- they were similar because of shared traits inherited from their common ancestor. It also explained why similar species tended to occur in the same geographic region.
3. Change is gradual and slow, taking place over a long time. This was supported by the fossil record, and was consistent with the fact that no naturalist had observed the sudden appearance of a new species. [This is now contested by a view of episodes of rapid change and long periods of stasis, known as punctuated equilibrium].
4. The mechanism of evolutionary change was natural selection. This was the most important and revolutionary part of Darwin's theory, and it deserves to be considered in greater detail.
The Process of Natural Selection
Natural selection is a process that occurs over successive generations. The following is a summary of Darwin's line of reasoning for how it works (see Figure 2).
o If all the offspring that organisms can produce were to survive and reproduce, they would soon overrun the earth. Darwin illustrated this point by a calculation using elephants. He wrote:


"The elephant is reckoned the slowest breeder of all known animals, and I have taken some pains to estimate its probable minimum rate of natural increase; it will be safest to assume that it begins breeding when 30 years old and goes on breeding until 90 years old; if this be so, after a period from 740 to 750 years there would be nearly 19 million elephants descended from this first pair."
o
Process of Natural Selection
Figure 2: The Process of Natural Selection
* This unbounded population growth resembles a simple geometric series (2-4-8-16-32-64..) and quickly reaches infinity.
* As a consequence, there is a "struggle" (metaphorically) to survive and reproduce, in which only a few individuals succeed in leaving progeny.
* Organisms show variation in characters that influence their success in this struggle for existence. Individuals within a population vary from one another in many traits. (Animal behavioralists making long-term studies of chimps or elephants soon recognize every individual by its size, coloration, and distinctive markings.)
* Offspring tend to resemble parents, including in characters that influence success in the struggle to survive and reproduce.
* Parents possessing certain traits that enable them to survive and reproduce will contribute disproportionately to the offspring that make up the next generation.

To the extent that offspring resemble their parents, the population in the next generation will consist of a higher proportion of individuals that possess whatever adaptation enabled their parents to survive and reproduce.

The well-known example of camouflage coloration in an insect makes for a very powerful, logical argument for adaptation by natural selection. Development of such coloration, which differs according to the insect's environment, requires variation. The variation must influence survival and reproduction (fitness), and it must be inherited.

During the early and middle 20th Century, genetics became incorporated into evolution, allowing us to define natural selection this way:


Natural Selection is the differential reproduction of genotypes.
Natural Selection Requires...
For natural selection to occur, two requirements are essential:
1. There must be heritable variation for some trait. Examples: beak size, color pattern, thickness of skin, fleetness.
2. There must be differential survival and reproduction associated with the possession of that trait.
Unless both these requirements are met, adaptation by natural selection cannot occur.

Some examples:
o If some plants grow taller than others and so are better able to avoid shading by others, they will produce more offspring. However, if the reason they grow tall is because of the soil in which their seeds happened to land, and not because they have the genes to grow tall, than no evolution will occur.
o If some individuals are fleeter than others because of differences in their genes, but the predator is so much faster that it does not matter, then no evolution will occur (e.g. if cheetahs ate snails).
In addition, natural selection can only choose among existing varieties in a population. It might be very useful for polar bears to have white noses, and then they wouldn't have to cover their noses with their paws when they stalk their prey. The panda could have a much nicer thumb than the clumsy device that it does have.

When we incorporate genetics into our story, it becomes more obvious why the generation of new variations is a chance process. Variants do not arise because they are needed. They arise by random processes governed by the laws of genetics. For today, the central point is the chance occurrence of variation, some of which is adaptive, and the weeding out by natural selection of the best adapted varieties.

Evidence of Natural Selection
Let's look at an example to help make natural selection clear.

Industrial melanism is a phenomenon that affected over 70 species of moths in England. It has been best studied in the peppered moth, Biston betularia. Prior to 1800, the typical moth of the species had a light pattern (see Figure 3). Dark colored or melanic moths were rare and were therefore collectors' items.
Image of Peppered Moth
Figure 3. Image of Peppered Moth

During the Industrial Revolution, soot and other industrial wastes darkened tree trunks and killed off lichens. The light-colored morph of the moth became rare and the dark morph became abundant. In 1819, the first melanic morph was seen; by 1886, it was far more common -- illustrating rapid evolutionary change.

Eventually light morphs were common in only a few locales, far from industrial areas. The cause of this change was thought to be selective predation by birds, which favored camouflage coloration in the moth.

In the 1950's, the biologist Kettlewell did release-recapture experiments using both morphs. A brief summary of his results are shown below. By observing bird predation from blinds, he could confirm that conspicuousness of moth greatly influenced the chance it would be eaten.

Recapture Success
light moth dark moth
non-industrial woods 14.6 % 4.7 %
industrial woods 13 % 27.5 %
Local Adaptation - More Examples
So far in today's lecture we have emphasized that natural selection is the cornerstone of evolutionary theory. It provides the mechanism for adaptive change. Any change in the environment (such as a change in the background color of the tree trunk that you roost on) is likely to lead to local adaptation. Any widespread population is likely to experience different environmental conditions in different parts of its range. As a consequence it will soon consist of a number of sub-populations that differ slightly, or even considerably.

The following are examples that illustrate the adaptation of populations to local conditions.
o The rat snake, Elaphe obsoleta, has recognizably different populations in different locales of eastern North America (see Figure 4). Whether these should be called geographic "races" or subspecies is debatable. These populations all comprise one species, because mating can occur between adjacent populations, causing the species to share a common gene pool (see the previous lecture on speciation).


Image of Rat Snakes

Figure 4: Subspecies of the rat snake Elaphe obsoleta, which interbreed where their ranges meet.
o Galapagos finches are the famous example from Darwin's voyage. Each island of the Galapagos that Darwin visited had its own kind of finch (14 in all), found nowhere else in the world. Some had beaks adapted for eating large seeds, others for small seeds, some had parrot-like beaks for feeding on buds and fruits, and some had slender beaks for feeding on small insects (see Figure 5). One used a thorn to probe for insect larvae in wood, like some woodpeckers do. (Six were ground-dwellers, and eight were tree finches.) (This diversification into different ecological roles, or niches, is thought to be necessary to permit the coexistence of multiple species, a topic we will examined in a later lecture.) To Darwin, it appeared that each was slightly modified from an original colonist, probably the finch on the mainland of South America, some 600 miles to the east. It is probable that adaptive radiation led to the formation of so many species because other birds were few or absent, leaving empty niches to fill; and because the numerous islands of the Galapagos provided ample opportunity for geographic isolation.


Image of Finches
Figure 5
Stabilizing, Directional, and Diversifying Selection
Finally, we will look at a statistical way of thinking about selection. Suppose that each population can be portrayed as a frequency distribution for some trait -- beak size, for instance. Note again that variation in a trait is the critical raw material for evolution to occur.

What will the frequency distribution look like in the next generation?
Categories of Natural Selection
Figures 6a-c

First, the proportion of individuals with each value of the trait (size of beak, or body weight) might be exactly the same. Second, there may be directional change in just one direction. Third (and with such rarity that its existence is debatable), there might be simultaneous change in both directions (e.g. both larger and smaller beaks are favored, at the expense of those of intermediate size). Figures 6a-c capture these three major categories of natural selection.

Figure 7

Under stabilizing selection, extreme varieties from both ends of the frequency distribution are eliminated. The frequency distribution looks exactly as it did in the generation before (see Figure 6a). Probably this is the most common form of natural selection, and we often mistake it for no selection. A real-life example is that of birth weight of human babies (see Figure 7).

Under directional selection, individuals at one end of the distribution of beak sizes do especially well, and so the frequency distribution of the trait in the subsequent generation is shifted from where it was in the parental generation (see Figure 6b). This is what we usually think of as natural selection. Industrial melanism was such an example.

Figure 8

The fossil lineage of the horse provides a remarkable demonstration of directional succession. The full lineage is quite complicated and is not just a simple line from the tiny dawn horse Hyracotherium of the early Eocene, to today's familiar Equus. Overall, though, the horse has evolved from a small-bodied ancestor built for moving through woodlands and thickets to its long- legged descendent built for speed on the open grassland. This evolution has involved well- documented changes in teeth, leg length, and toe structure (see Figure 8).

Under diversifying (disruptive) selection, both extremes are favored at the expense of intermediate varieties (see Figure 6c). This is uncommon, but of theoretical interest because it suggests a mechanism for species formation without geographic isolation (see the previous lecture on speciation).


Summary
Darwin's theory of evolution fundamentally changed the direction of future scientific thought, though it was built on a growing body of thought that began to question prior ideas about the natural world.

The core of Darwin's theory is natural selection, a process that occurs over successive generations and is defined as the differential reproduction of genotypes.

Natural selection requires heritable variation in a given trait, and differential survival and reproduction associated with possession of that trait.

Examples of natural selection are well-documented, both by observation and through the fossil record.

Selection acts on the frequency of traits, and can take the form of stabilizing, directional, or diversifying selection.

Notice from truefusion:
The evolution theory copied from: http://www.globalchange.umich.edu/globalch.../selection.html Warning issued

 

 

 


Reply

pixieloo
I believe in the biblical creation. God created the world in 6 days. I believe in micro evolution, but not macro evolution.

Science, as defined by dictionary.com, is "The observation, identification, description, experimental investigation, and theoretical explanation of phenomena."

We use science to explain things, but we're not always right.

Science is used to measure the natural, not the supernatural.

If you're questioning what the Bible says about creation, go to
http://www.answersingenesis.org/

Reply

biscuitrat
I just fail to see how Creationism has any evidence though -- PHYSICAL evidence. We can prove the age of fossils by carbon-dating. Is it some weird concidence that humanoids are unearthed with small changes within a few thousand years of each other? Is it hard to believe that an animal will change and adapt to its new environment? We humans do it all the time. People in the desert learn to use water sparingly, can tolerate heat. Even viruses mutate and change. Was it really in God's plan that the newest strain of influenza is difficult to track because of mutations in its genetic code?

I have my own religious beliefs, but Evolutionism clouds all of that. I think it's a pretty sound opinion that evidence leads to a well-believed fact. Faith and science are not the same things. Faith essentially means that one "believes". Science comes from the Latin "scio" which means "I know/understand". And that's how it should be. I'm entirely opposed to teaching theology in a science classroom because of what it implies. In Kenya, evangelists are lobbying to remove the archeological finds of a generation from a national musem - but why? Because it interferes? Or because it's true.

So many scientists these days are both religious and curious. There's no harm in religion itself, but using it to promote something that has no basis, except for in one's heart, and in doing so, harming the work of countless hundreds of scientists, is the part I can't agree with. Intelligent Design defies one of the laws of matter, in that it indicates that matter was created/destroyed. The same works for Creation.

It's just one of those things that seems to bother me, that people say they believe in the 6-day creation, but if so, how does that explain so many other things like dinosaurs, mammoths, prehistoric man? If man was created in their original form, why are we unearthing so many remains today? Creationism is not a fact, but a belief that will never cease to confuse me.

 

 

 


Reply

Maou_Tsaou
Genesis is a very intresting collection of writings.
Something that most Literalists fail to see about the Creation stories (2 of them) is that the second one is told from the point of the loosers of the Neolithic revolution.
I find this important.
Man decides he knows more than God.
This takes Man out of the 'garden' state in which he formally had lived where the enviroment provided what was required, each to it's season.
Shortly Cain kills Able, (the Farmers knock off the Nomads because they need the land for their agraculture) and we're into City building, which means our civilation.
Gen4; "And the LORD had respect unto Abel and to his offering".
From this we get the Jewish and therefore the Christians strange fasination with blood IMHO. Things like ritualistic canabalisam, via communion. Or the whole Scapegoat concept.
To state a belief and stick with it through faith is a respectable stance, but attempting to make others accept your views on faith is at best, totally misguided.
A basic idea of Science is to not tear down a theory without having something better to replace it with. Also each and every claim in a theory must be falseafiable.
This means that claims such as "The Earth was created with the appearence of age." are compleatly lacking in scientific merrit. Under those conditions any test would show the Earth to be older than 6000years. This isn't scientifc at all. This is someone telling me "I accept/grew up with/etc. that God created the Earth when Ulsher said He did. I require no further proff so neither should you."
This is the fundamental problem between the aproaches in my opinion.
A Litteral interpratation dosn't cut it.

1 Kings 7:23, 23 ¶ And he made a molten sea, ten cubits from the one brim to the other: it was round all about, and his height was five cubits: and a line of thirty cubits did compass it round about.

So if this is the literal word of God then He can't do math!
Pi is 3.1415........
But God aparently says it's just 3.
Screw the decimal.
I guess we were created in His image.




Maou

Reply

Striker9
ok let me leave some of my thoughts on this one... first of all, I believe in creation and not Darwinism. I find alot of none sense in what Darwin proposed. It's true that evolution happens but not to the extent that might change an ape to a human being. Usually mutation is restricted to a few genes that turn into alleles (positive mutation) or they might produce a disfunctional gene that wouldn't express a functional protein (enzyme, hormone, constructive protein... etc). So my point is that mutation, and thus evolution, is at the micro level and not a macro level; a fish can never pass through an evolution stage to develop wings and fly! and you will never see an elephant swimming deep inside the oceans. But, adaptation is a totally different thing, it's sort of multiple mutations which a species undergoes to adapt to the surrounding environment, but such kind of mutation/evolution/adaptation would just extend the abilities of an animal and not create new ones (such as development of wings or extra limbs or something like that). Moreover, how does evolution explain the difference of chromosome numbers between species that are supposed to be descending from one single species. What I know is that Darwin claimed that ALL species are originally a single celled creature which evolved and evolved and gave all the present species. But even chromosomal mutation conserves the number of chromosomes in an organism. So if we assume that humans descended from apes, then they should have had the same chromosome number within the nucleus of their cells, which is not the case, and therefore humans do NOT descend from apes.

Also, when you look into organisms and their detailed organs and functions and all that, you will notice how delicate they are. Take the human brain for example, it represents the most wonderful illustration of organization and neatness. Do you really think such a delicate organ could have been created on its own? There HAVE TO be some super power that is able to construct and CREATE such an organ and give it its various precise functions. And as long as I'm concerned, God is this super power that must have created the amazing brain and all other microscopic and macroscopic animals, plants and everything found in this endless universe. Now it's not the time to discuss the existence of God but there are many clues that prove His existence.

Reply

Saint_Michael
Aah the greatest debate of all time, but I have to side with Darwin just because of the fact there are so many variations to one species, like the monkey, cow, human, spider, rabbit. On top of that, scientists have made so many connections to the evolution of man thanks to the remains of Lucy and of course the commonalities between dinosaurs and birds and other reptiles alike. However, another theory has been coming up in the years and has garnered huge support.

That theory is called Intelligent design, in which scientists believe that there was a intelligent cause for why we are the way we are and not because of natural selection. You could say it uses a combination of both theories, but removing the word God altogether in this theory. I found about this theory in my English class when we had to read stories on this debate. Of course, when "God" does show up and tell us everything, fat chance, all the questions we want to be answered will.

In the mean time though I believe the science is more accurate the the religion and that's after taking a semester of mythology in high school, those creation stories are pretty wild.

Reply

mikeyboy63
Christianity says god made the world and everything else in 6 days. Creationism is blasphemy. Christian apologists admitting that their religion is wrong, but trying to hijack the credentials of science by accepting scientific evolution, which is blasphemy, then claiming that any evolutionary process is god's work. 2 million women miscarry each year due to flaws in the design and function of their reproductive organs. God doesn't design very well, does he? God, the abortionist!

Reply

thorne
I view creationaism as ancient people's attempt to explain how we got here, something we've always wanted to know. But we never can truly know how everything came to be the way it is, because we weren't there to see it happen. Instead, all we can do is use the evidence around us and create theories of how it might have all come to be. I view Darwinism as kind of a modern creationism in the sense that it is a more modern way of understanding the beginning of things. It is what I believe because currently, that is what the evidence seems to support. But this does not mean that it is correct, and another theory may come in the future which better explains the things that Darwinism tries to explain. I am not adverse to any such theory; if it is well substiated, it may seem plausible.

Considering this, creationsim is not as plausible given what we know. The earth was created in 6 days...why 6? How do we know this? Where is the evidence? In ancient times, people had only their myths to explain things; science was not evolved yet. But now that we have more objective scientific methods, it would be absurd to ignore them on the basis that it goes against a tradition. It is only in breaking traditions and customs that we can advance.

Reply



Got an Opinion! Express your Views! (no registration):-
Add your Reply/ Opinion/ Views/ Comments/ Suggestion/ Questions/ Queries etc.
Posts with decent grammar & English will be accepted and please refrain from profanities.
For asking a Question, We recommend you to sign-up (for free) so that you can track the topic easily.

Nature of your Post*: Opinion/ Reply/ Comments
Question/Query
Feedback to us.
       
Name   Email
Title/Question*

(Maximum characters: 10,000)
You have characters left.
Confirm Code:

Similar Topics

Keywords : darwinism, creationism, evolution, theory

  1. Creating Clones Via Time Travel
    A theory involving time machines (2)
  2. Gamingevo
    The Evolution Has Begun. (0)
    With everything from Clan controlled wars and challenges, reviews on games suggesting what games
    to/not get, to an addicting message board. If you want to lend us a hand, just pop on in and leave a
    message or two /smile.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":)" border="0" alt="smile.gif" />....
  3. Quick Theory I Have About " Doing Your Best "
    No one agrees with me though :( (11)
    I have this theory about 'doing your best'. When your doing your best, literally you should
    be doing the maximum of your capabilities? So that's 100%! What if your 'not doing your
    best', so your slacking. Isn't it true that your then doing your best in not doing 100% of
    your capabilities, but like 60%? So basically, your doing your best to reach that 60%. Your doing
    100% your best in doing 60% of the maximum of your capabilities. With the punchline at the end:
    Your always doing your best (100%) in everything. Title modified ....
  4. Is Evolution Justified
    Had the theory of evolution been prooved to the satisfaction of human (9)
    Long have man searched for the answer to their existance on earth, but ended with the proposal of
    the evolution theory. Since our life here is greatly affected by how we come by and where we are
    going it is vital we search for more details about this theory whether it is justified or not ,
    should we believe it or not. ....
  5. Adsense And Adwords Related
    More of a theory than actual facts (2)
    Hi people, Well, I've had an average income on adsense of about X / day for the last few
    months. I have a very very low CTR , so I mainly get this income from the about a million pageviews
    / day Anyways, 7 days ago I started using adwords, and here are some funny observations; Day 1:
    Adwords budget of X usd/day ==> Adsense income: Y$ Day 2 - 6: Adwords budget: X+20 usd /day ==>
    Adsense income (each day) ~ 30% increase Day 7-8: Adwords budget: X+40 usd/day ==> Adsense income:
    60% increase Does anyone know if this is coincidence? Or how this work? I have a ....
  6. New Study Shoots More Holes In Common Beliefs About Evolution
    (7)
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070808/ap_on_sc/human_evolution
    http://www.examiner.com/a-870971~Study_Fin..._Evolution.html In yet another case, it has been
    found that species thought to have evolved into other species were actually around at the same time,
    meaning they couldn't have evolved. As the study's co-author, Fred Spoor, says in the
    article, what it paints for evolution is a "chaotic kind of looking evolutionary tree rather than
    this heroic march that you see with the cartoons of an early ancestor evolving into some
    intermediate and eventually unto u....
  7. The Theory Of Life In Our Solar System.
    Life on mars earth and maybe venus. (14)
    me and my dad were talking about life on earth and where it came from. he was telling me what he
    thinks about it and it really does make a little bit of sense. the way he started was by asking me
    what happens whenever you tie a rock to a string and spin it around. the rock wants to draw away
    from the center source of whatever is spinning it. he was telling me that he thinks that the planets
    in out solar system ar doing the same. whether it be inches at a time or maybe even a mile at at
    time. this is what he thinks: all the planets are moving outward. there is a spot ....
  8. What Is A Black Hole (another Theory To Them)
    (15)
    This morning I watched a program about Super Massive black holes and there existence and the
    theories behind them, well they do exist but what's very troubling that every single galaxy in
    the universe has one even our own milk way. Through out program the mention that black hole
    actually have have two cycles feeding and dormant. Basically these two cycles are when a Black hole
    feeds on the everything around it thus sucking it into the viod and lost forever, however, during
    this feeding time the black hole actually pushes the galaxy and everything in it away with it....
  9. Circles Don't Exist?
    a theory of existance (36)
    Ok well I got to thinking. A circle is just an infinite number of angles on a line right? If you
    think about different shapes, the more corners it has, the larger each angle would have to be for it
    to meet back. Well if a circle has an infinite number of sides, that means each angle gets
    infinitely close to 180°. Well this keeps on going 179.9, 179.99999999, until it hits
    179.9-repeating. Well it is mathematically proven that .9-repeating, equals 1. This means every
    angle on a perfect circle is 180 degrees. Well if that is true, that means that circles are just st....
  10. Hacker Evolution (preview Review)
    (6)
    so you want to be a hacker without getting in real trouble then download this game, you take the
    role of a computer hacker and your given those goals that you must complete, I run through the
    tutorial and what they give you is awesome. I will give you a better review once I get into this
    game. But since there is 12 hours left from the time of this post, I thought I bring it up right
    now and then later on give a full review and possibly a walk through for this game as I figure it
    out and what not. Well after trying game out and of course going to the there website to w....
  11. My Theory Of The Universe/space/galaxy/everything
    Somewhat based on a Simpsons episode lol (22)
    Introduction: I have always had a theory on what is outside the universe where we have never been
    and telescopes cannot see. I actually saw a variation of this in the beginning intro to a Simpsons
    episode where they zoomed out until you could see all of the galaxies and then kept zooming out
    until there were lots of galaxies and that turned into molecules which turned back into Homers
    forhead where at that point he says "woahhhh" in a stupid sort of way which makes me laugh. My
    Theory: We don't know whats smaller than a quork (think i spelled that wrong) and we ....
  12. What Happens After Death?
    a theory beyond death or life on this earth (82)
    What do you all think happens after death? I will post my theory after listening to you all. The
    topic starter has the responsibility to get the topic initiated by presenting an interesting
    discussion; not waiting for others to start. One liner is spam to our board. Topic title and
    description MUST be complete. ....
  13. Pro Evolution Soccer 6
    (8)
    I know it has been out for quite some time But I have just bought it and had it delivered to my
    doorstep What do you think of the game? I played the demo and I really liked it and so I bought it
    /smile.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":)" border="0" alt="smile.gif" />....
  14. The Creation Theory
    My standpoint (17)
    ( so noone steals my theroy dated 11/26/07 I THOUGHT THIS UP, at least i am sure i have) *religious
    fanatics, GO AWAY! I don't want flaming for my idea* Dunno if i heard this anywhere or
    parts, but this is how i believe the universe works 1. Everything started and ended with a Black
    Hole. As the Universe Expands, its held together by a Inter-Galactic Black Hole ( The size of a
    galaxy) and when it begins to contract, it merely means the Inter-Galactic Black Hole has
    overpowered the universe 2. Black Holes Keep all things together, like the Inter-Galactic Black....
  15. Avatar The Last Airbender
    My Theory on the season finally (6)
    Ok, i am posting this in general talk because i have been searching through the forums and there is
    no area specified for TV Series... (Only read this if you watch and understand the avatar series)
    I just saw a small 15 second trailer for the Season two finally of Avatar The Last Airbender (
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVI28e66vsI...ted&search= ) and i came up with this idea on how i
    think that these series will end..... By watching that video i see that Zuko has come out of his
    metamorphoses (See Episode: The Earth King) and if you remember, Iroh said that when....
  16. The Early Evolution Of Animals
    Why did animals evolve? (3)
    This is something I've been thinking for some time... Why did animals evolve? A quick search
    through the web about animal evolution may yield information like the "Cambrian explosion", where
    there was a "sudden" proliferation of animal life-forms (where the word "sudden" applies to several
    millions of years). Others will discuss how both plant and animal life emerged from cellular
    symbiosis, where mitochondria evolved as a permanent fixture. However, what's missing is what
    happened far before that... when did animal cells first evolve? Why did they forsake the ....
  17. 9/11 Free Documentaries
    Plus The 9/11 Conspiracy Theory Movie (Loose Change) (7)
    This month i remembered the 9-11 tragedy, and to tell you the real truth, at 2001, i had no time to
    view all the videos showing the planes crashing with the world trade center big towers, i just saw
    one on the tv, but that one was very short and it did not explain how the hell 2 planes made 2 big
    building fall down like a pick of cards, that my friends, i did not understand, not even after
    hearing so many people saying that it was the fuel or whatever, B.S.!!! So, this month
    i when to search for high quality videos, documentaries, whatever it could really sh....
  18. String Theory And The Ten Dimensions Of The Universe
    Advanced physics theories (10)
    String Theory and the Ten Dimensions of The Universe Recently I have found out about string
    theory. Most of the people on earth only knows that there only exist three dimensions(width, length,
    and height) and a fourth dimension which is the difference of a matter from one time point to
    another. And according to String Theory there exists six more spatial dimensions that are uknown or
    unnoticeable by a person. Basically, String Theory uses vibrating strings with a planck length,
    10^-35m, as a fundamental element of the universal not points. With this, physicists are a....
  19. Tiger Evolution Clan
    By Timegamer ---Runescape Clan--- (0)
    Tiger Evolution Clan By Timegamer Welcome I like to welcome you to my runescape clan. Here I
    will be setting up for you lots of things of which you can do. This is a very trusting and good
    community. We will hold contest, games, parties, and more! This will be a community that you
    will love. We have very good hours at your pace. I am accepting any levels! I am willing to
    train all I can! Community - General In general the community is a nice place to go to. We
    will have a website and soon a forum at which you may post and look at during your time as a....
  20. Time Slows At Light Speed
    I need help understanding this theory (5)
    A freind tried to explain to me that the faster someone travels the slower time passes. Also the
    higher you are the faster time passes. Although what he says is accurate, I am yet to fully
    understand how this works. But cannot be bothered reading any technical science books Can any one
    help me out here?....
  21. Movie Special Effects
    evolution of special effects vs. quality filming (9)
    With the deluge of superhero movies and the evolution of special effects in movies, where does the
    unbelievable become the believable? It appears from recent movies such as x-men 3 that we can now
    make actors younger! Something actors have long strived for, but ultimately will this lead to
    them becoming redundant as the CGI takes over. Perhaps by 'scanning' in an actor's
    features, etc it will not be necessary to hire them. The problem is that as special effects have
    increased in complexity, the viewer has become more critical of the quality. What was exce....
  22. The Race: Oil And Innovation
    The end of oil and the evolution of technology to compensate (3)
    Oil is a tremendous commodity. The few oil barons who have dominion over the entire earth's oil
    supply are making exorbitant amounts of money at the expense of the rest of the world's
    population. As the scarcity of oil rises, so does the price of oil. The capitalist system is such
    that the oil goes to the highest bidder; that is, if China is willing to pay $70 a barrel
    whereas the United States is willing only to pay $65, then the oil company is most benefitted
    by selling the oil to China. Other nations, who need oil as well, are forced to offer gre....
  23. A Clue To Evolution?
    Seahorse found in the ocean (4)
    Well, I'm new to google earth and don't have time right now to figure out how to make a .kmz
    file. So instead, do the following: type in "Galapagos Islands" in the "fly to box". When it gets
    there, make sure you're compas points directly north. Now, is it just me or do the islands
    eerily resemble (with odd colours, too) a giangantic seahorse? Lat = 0°11'4.21"S Long =
    91°23'6.02"W ---- http://www.ravenhurstfallen.com ....
  24. Pro Evolution Soccer 5 Cheats
    how to earn more points (0)
    can anyone please help me to earn more points quickly? i've tryed every possible ways but no
    success.......
  25. Evolution Theories
    (21)
    I have a theory about the next evolution of *person* sapiens (correct terminology for humans). Well
    actually 3 theories. Theory one: Humans will not evolve one more time before the end of the
    world. But instead deevolve because we have had it in the spot light for far to long. *person*
    sapiens have been the most dominent creatures on the planet. Theory two: Humans have evolve
    thousands of times already. Every time we get smarter and smarter and make a great stride in any
    field whether it is Science (mostly science though) to Language Arts. Like the first human in s....
  26. What Is This? Evolution Or Russian Fiction?
    (8)
    You tell me. I've never heard of anything like this before, and I'm not one to trust
    anythingt hat comes from a russian site (just from experience). Anyone prove/disprove? Enlighten
    me: QUOTE Terrible mutations may turn humans into plants or animals 12/20/2005 17:02 Herbal
    cells may settle down and parasitize on the organism of a human or an animal Geneticists say that
    mutations seriously change the set of chromosomes, and people with mutations can thus hardly be
    called humans. In Yerevan in the former Soviet republic of Armenia, 18-year-old girl Narine....
  27. Fifa Vs Pro Evolution Soccer
    Vote ! (23)
    Well, IMO, PES is much better then FIFA. It is just more playable... Dunno, FIFA is kinda more made
    to look better but not to be interesting to player... EA just can not make good game without bugs
    and lag... Engine is really *BLEEP*... Ur PC must rox to play this game normally and see all
    details... on the other hand, PES is more playable, players are faster, ball is faster, everythig is
    faster... it is more realistic, it had some problems with licence, so names of players were not
    correct, but I heard that they fixed it in PES5 which came to my country few days ago ( S....
  28. The Evolution Of Trees, Somthing To Ponder
    Warning: Crude Humor! (4)
    The Evolution of trees i saw this image on a website and had to ponder about maybe thats how it
    happens when everyone is asleep at night and or no one is looking, i dunno i think it proves the
    evolution theory to be meaningless. but the trees though makes me wonder about the lord of the
    rings movie with the walking talking trees hmmmm /unsure.gif' border='0'
    style='vertical-align:middle' alt='unsure.gif' /> /unsure.gif' border='0'
    style='vertical-align:middle' alt='unsure.gif' /> Link aloud, please be aware *CRUDE HUMOR
    INSIDE*! Don't click if you d....
  29. Improper Use Of Evolution
    (35)
    You know how you go to certain topics, and they read: Evolution vs. Creation or something of the
    sort? Well, I sorta wanted to ramble about this. It bothers me, because Evolution is something that
    happens, while Creation is how something began. Correct? Generally, when people think of the term
    evolution, they think of humans evolving from monkeys. While this is one explination of how humans
    came to be, it's not describing evolution as a whole. I think some of us tend to become selfish,
    thinking that humans are the only ones that change can occur in, because our m....
  30. Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell Chaos Theory
    multiplayer, online and co-op! (12)
    Will you be getting Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell Chaos Theory? I know I will I am a big fan of
    Splinter Cell Stealth Action Redefined and Splinter Cell Pandora Tomorrow. Some of the new features
    on Chaos Theory look awesome! For example Chaos Theory will be the first (at least I think)
    multiplayer stealth game. Also Chaos Theory will be online just like Pandora Tomorrow. Another new
    feature is co-op. So now two people can go through the game together. I am sure there are more new
    smaller features like Sam Fisher having a knife, but that is the only one I know. So ....

    1. Looking for darwinism, creationism, evolution, theory

Searching Video's for darwinism, creationism, evolution, theory
Similar
Creating
Clones Via
Time Travel
- A theory
involving
time
machines
Gamingevo -
The
Evolution
Has Begun.
Quick Theory
I Have About
" Doing
Your Best
" - No
one agrees
with me
though :(
Is Evolution
Justified -
Had the
theory of
evolution
been prooved
to the
satisfaction
of human
Adsense And
Adwords
Related -
More of a
theory than
actual facts
New Study
Shoots More
Holes In
Common
Beliefs
About
Evolution
The Theory
Of Life In
Our Solar
System. -
Life on mars
earth and
maybe venus.
What Is A
Black Hole
(another
Theory To
Them)
Circles
Don't
Exist? - a
theory of
existance
Hacker
Evolution
(preview
Review)
My Theory Of
The
Universe/spa
ce/galaxy/ev
erything -
Somewhat
based on a
Simpsons
episode lol
What Happens
After Death?
- a theory
beyond death
or life on
this earth
Pro
Evolution
Soccer 6
The Creation
Theory - My
standpoint
Avatar The
Last
Airbender -
My Theory on
the season
finally
The Early
Evolution Of
Animals -
Why did
animals
evolve?
9/11 Free
Documentarie
s - Plus The
9/11
Conspiracy
Theory Movie
(Loose
Change)
String
Theory And
The Ten
Dimensions
Of The
Universe -
Advanced
physics
theories
Tiger
Evolution
Clan - By
Timegamer
---Runescape
Clan---
Time Slows
At Light
Speed - I
need help
understandin
g this
theory
Movie
Special
Effects -
evolution of
special
effects vs.
quality
filming
The Race:
Oil And
Innovation -
The end of
oil and the
evolution of
technology
to
compensate
A Clue To
Evolution? -
Seahorse
found in the
ocean
Pro
Evolution
Soccer 5
Cheats - how
to earn more
points
Evolution
Theories
What Is
This?
Evolution Or
Russian
Fiction?
Fifa Vs Pro
Evolution
Soccer -
Vote !
The
Evolution Of
Trees,
Somthing To
Ponder -
Warning:
Crude
Humor!
Improper Use
Of Evolution
Tom
Clancy's
Splinter
Cell Chaos
Theory -
multiplayer,
online and
co-op!
advertisement



Darwinism Or Creationism? - What evolution theory do you believe in?



 

 

 

 

ADD REPLY / Got an Opinion! Remove these ADs! RAPID SEARCH! Free Web Hosting [X]
Express your Opinions, Thoughts or Contribute more info. to help others.
Ask your Doubts & Queries to get answers, So that "Together We can help others!"
Register FREE for AD-FREE forum, Create your own topics, Ask Questions, track topics, setup subscriptions & notifications and Get a Free Website w/ Email and FTP.
500MB Space *No Ads*, CPanel, FTP, PHP, MySQL, EMails - 100% FREE