@sanabas. How the earth formed is vital for evolution since so far it is the only source of life in this universe. iF ther is no satisfactory naturalistic method for earth forming, then ther is no way life here could have evolved in the first place.
You're a known moron,
Moderator Action: Flaming.
Please read the forum rules: http://forums.civfanatics.com/showthread.php?t=422889
and equally known to simply ignore questions even when you specifically start a thread for the purpose of having them asked. (
http://forums.civfanatics.com/showthread.php?t=215749 and
http://forums.civfanatics.com/showthread.php?t=305661 both have questions I'm still waiting to have answered) So really, I should just ignore your post. But it's specifically addressed to me, I think trying to educate people is a good thing, others might be reading, and they might be willing to think about this stuff, so I will answer. Maybe it'll even inspire you to answer some of my questions from your thread.
How the earth formed has nothing at all to do with evolution. All we need to know is that it's here. Which it obviously is. Doesn't matter how it formed, whether by a 'satisfactorally naturalistic method' (and I suspect satisfactory means definitely not naturalistic) or whether the Magratheans built it, or something else. Have things that self-replicate on a planet, have variability in that self-replicating population, and evolution happens. There's countless examples of things evolving under thoe conditions where the initial conditions were man made, or the selection is done artificially. It's still cumulative selection, it still results in the population evolving.
It is relevant to creationism, because it might help with being able to argue 'evolution does happen, but only because god set it up that way.' Exactly the same deal for abiogenesis. It's separate to evolutionary theory, it's interesting in its own right, and it is relevant to creationism.
I do have a question for evolutionists. Where did all the info come from? If we evolved simple life forms then there surely must be millions of mutations that have added the info to our genome. We are talking about specified information that has to arise, since just simple copying mistakes will not work since they are random and do not give the specified order that we see in our genome. Or better yet, show proof of ho w the first life even formed out of dumb chemicals.
As mentioned, abiogenesis is a separate issue. And the answer is 'we have some guesses, but we don't know.' Even if we had an example in the lab of it happening, the answer to whether that's how 'life' first appeared on the planet would still be 'we don't know'. Same way I can show a chimpanzee in the zoo is my very distant relative, as are you. But I can't prove that you're my 137th cousin, 10 times removed. My inability to construct a family tree to ascertain that level of detail doesn't prove we're not related. We can figure out we're related by other methods. In my case because of scientific evidence, you can figure it out because we're both direct descendants of Adam & Eve, both direct descendants of Noah, and therefore some sort of cousin. In the same way, inability to say 'this is exactly how life first arose' doesn't prove that it was created by someone else.
As for info, first you'd need to give me a workable definition of info, otherwise your question is meaningless. I also suggest you look at
http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Lenski_results_challenge_creationism and explain to me why this is not an example of information (however you end up defining it) being added.
It would also help if you understood one key fact: Evolution, natural selection, cumulative selection, THESE THINGS
ARE NOT RANDOM. I posted it a few pages ago, that you can look around, you can see how awesome the existance of humans, earthworms, all sorts of stuff is, and tell yourself 'there's no possible way this all evolved by chance'. And you'd be absolutely, 100% correct. It didn't all evolve by chance. Because evolution is not random. Not understanding this, or deliberately misrepresenting it, is the key to most creationist dribble. So why not learn it, and actually make some cogent arguments?
I'm seriously tempted to take up ATPG's challenge, and see how convincing, how internally consistent, and how compatible with evidence I can be as a pretend creationist. I reckon I could actually do a decent job of it, though I might end up inventing my own religion.