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Pope Francis Declares Evolution and Big Bang Theory Are Right

HughPickens.com writes: The Independent reports that Pope Francis, speaking at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, has declared that the theories of evolution and the Big Bang are real. "When we read about Creation in Genesis, we run the risk of imagining God was a magician, with a magic wand able to do everything. But that is not so," said Francis. "He created human beings and let them develop according to the internal laws that he gave to each one so they would reach their fulfillment." Francis explained that both scientific theories were not incompatible with the existence of a creator – arguing instead that they "require it." "Evolution in nature is not inconsistent with the notion of creation, because evolution requires the creation of beings that evolve." Experts say the Pope's comments put an end to the "pseudo theories" of creationism and intelligent design that some argue were encouraged by his predecessor, Benedict XVI who spoke out against taking Darwin too far.

669 comments

  1. Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Haleluja ...

    1. Re: Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      First is the Big Bang and then the sperm and egg evolve into a baby!

    2. Re:Haleluja ... by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      So now that we've ticked off evolution in the list, the next step will be abiogenesis, once we'll manage to witness some funny stuff in lab?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    3. Re:Haleluja ... by Triklyn · · Score: 2

      the time scales involved are staggering. and corruption would always be suspect.

      I don't have that kind of time booboo.

    4. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Francis explained that both scientific theories were not incompatible with the existence of a creator – arguing instead that they "require it." "Evolution in nature is not inconsistent with the notion of creation, because evolution requires the creation of beings that evolve." Experts say the Pope's comments put an end to the "pseudo theories" of creationism and intelligent design that some argue were encouraged by his predecessor, Benedict XVI who spoke out against taking Darwin too far.

      If the Pope is (according to the Catholic Church) the infallible representative of God on this earth, then logically now, how can two popes say two different things? Two contradictory statements cannot both be correct, and one contradiction is enough to reject the status of infallible. Remember, being "God's infallible spokesman" or "God's infallible representative" is where he derives the authority to say things like "don't use birth control" that faithful Catholics everywhere are expected to comply with.

      Though as an aside, I wonder how long it will take the hardcore Darwinists to realize in greater numbers that a chain of cause and effect, if traced back to its beginning, must eventually have a prime mover, an uncaused cause? Anything else means either circular logic (invalid), or rejecting the notion of cause following effect that all of scientific thought is based on. That's without getting into the information theory objections to evolution (DNA contains lots and lots of highly organized information that doesn't just happen - if you find an encyclopedia you can safely assume someone wrote it). Or the whole irreducible complexity deal - (blood clotting requires some 30 chemicals in just the right proportions and cannot have come about through gradual changes - remove one of those and the smallest cut causes the organism to bleed to death, remove another and the clotting never stops and all blood turns solid). Oh then there's the way they came up with punctuated equilibrium not from first principles, but in an ad-hoc effort to save their theory when they found the fossil record doesn't show the gradual progression they predicted - it shows species suddenly appearing.

      Too many hardcore Darwin supporters aren't familiar with these ideas, don't have answers for them, and get angry (instead of scientifically curious) when you ask about them. That's the same thing religious people do when you point out contradictions in the Bible - they get angry. How ... scientific. People who are secure in what they believe realize how important these questions are and try to provide good answers for them. That should be a bare minimum for any sort of science.

    5. Re:Haleluja ... by Talderas · · Score: 4, Informative

      If the Pope is (according to the Catholic Church) the infallible representative of God on this earth, then logically now, how can two popes say two different things?

      If you want to argue about papal infallibility it's probably wise that you understand papal infallibility and ex cathedra before uttering idiotic statements like what I quoted.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    6. Re: Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen. I hope at least a few intelligent readers read your post carefully before one of the "angry" ones mods it down.

    7. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simplify too much... The Pope is infallible only in a certain aspects (regarding the belief itself and few related topics) and pretty much not generally infallible. Being a representative of God, he is also a monarch, a politician, a human being, etc. And no, he is not a "God's spokesman". When he speaks about birth control - he has pretty much enough authority (in catholic metric), the birth and the death are clearly in God's domain. When he speaks about science, politics, finance or some other human topic - he does not have an authority, only an influence (well, a lot of it, but still distinct from an authority). (IANACatholic)

    8. Re:Haleluja ... by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 4, Informative

      If the Pope is (according to the Catholic Church) the infallible representative of God on this earth, then logically now, how can two popes say two different things?

      Papal infallibility only pertains to Catholic doctrine, and nothing else. If you asked the Pope what the weather was going to be like next week, and he said it was going to be rainy, but it ended up being sunny, it wouldn't violate papal infallibility.

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    9. Re: Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But creation of the world - Genesis - *is* part of Catholic doctrine, so how can statements on it not be covered by Papal Infallibility?

    10. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm quite certain abiogenesis has already been observed, it's just a matter of reproducing it reliably.

    11. Re: Haleluja ... by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      You need to stop acting like you understand something when you clearly don't.

      The pope is not infallible.

      You simply will not have it held against you on judgement day if he is wrong and you follow that bit of being wrong.

      And of course ... A corrupt pope a while ago is the one who made that decree, So throwing your responsibilities to behave properly out the window just because 'the pope says its ok' is pretty stupid and I doubt it would fly come judgement day. You don't let your children get by with that sort of logic, neither would 'the father'

      With that said, there is nothing in science that conflicts with catholism (which is the only one I know well enough to comment on). And for the record just because Hawking has an opinion it doesn't magically become fact OR science.

      --
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    12. Re: Haleluja ... by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

      Because Catholics do not believe that everything a pope says is to be considered infallible.

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    13. Re:Haleluja ... by stealth_finger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or the whole irreducible complexity deal - (blood clotting requires some 30 chemicals in just the right proportions and cannot have come about through gradual changes - remove one of those and the smallest cut causes the organism to bleed to death, remove another and the clotting never stops and all blood turns solid).

      Of course it can. Creatures without the right chemicals in the right places bleed to death from minor injury before getting chance to reproduce. Others with solid blood never get to reproduce either. The ones with the right balance survive long enough to pass the traits onto the next generation. If some god had set the chemical balance right then why does it fuck up in a bunch of different circumstances? Blood clots are a thing and so is haemophilia, it's not either too thin to clot, just right or too thick to move like some Goldilocks porridge deal. This is as redundant as the pathetic something as perfect as the human eye (which is far from perfect) or any eye for that matter don't just pop into existence argument.

      What species are shown as 'just appearing' with no previous chain? Citation very much needed.

      You need to get over the idea that everything has to be made by someone(thing) because who the fuck created your creator? The God God? And then who made him? It's turtles all the way down no matter how you look at it.

      You also need to have the confidence to say 'I/We don't know' instead of attributing all unknowns to some god.

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    14. Re:Haleluja ... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      If that is actually possible or within the grasp of the human race in the foreseeable future. And that would still not explain intelligence or consciousness, which are currently not explained by physics at all. (Not that I argue for religion. I am an atheist. But physicalism is indeed far to limited a model for observable reality. Religion just does an "embrace and extend" attack on that observation and wants you to believe a lot of BS.)

      --
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    15. Re:Haleluja ... by shortscruffydave · · Score: 1

      If the Pope is (according to the Catholic Church) the infallible representative of God on this earth, then logically now, how can two popes say two different things? Two contradictory statements cannot both be correct, and one contradiction is enough to reject the status of infallible.

      This confirms that God is indeed a woman - what other being could make a statement as being an absolute truth, then change their mind and state categorically that the opposite is true?

    16. Re:Haleluja ... by stealth_finger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If the Pope is (according to the Catholic Church) the infallible representative of God on this earth, then logically now, how can two popes say two different things?

      Papal infallibility only pertains to Catholic doctrine, and nothing else. If you asked the Pope what the weather was going to be like next week, and he said it was going to be rainy, but it ended up being sunny, it wouldn't violate papal infallibility.

      How convenient, he's only infallible on things that can't be proven.

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    17. Re:Haleluja ... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      It depends on the mode of speech. There is "ex cathedra", which is the "infallible" mode where the Pope directly speaks the will of God. In normal mode, he is just a person. And even in "ex cathedra", God could just want to test his creation.

      The whole thing is BS of course. No, this is a very good thing as it allows people that are unfortunately burdened with the respective pope-listening variants of Christianity to view a lot more questions rationally.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    18. Re:Haleluja ... by geminidomino · · Score: 3, Informative

      And if you want to enlighten people about their misunderstandings of your religion, it's probably wise to know the difference between a "statement" and a "question," and, at a bare minimum, decency requires not conflating ignorance of internal concepts like "ex cathedra" to stupidity.

      Otherwise, you come across as just another thumpin' asshole.

    19. Re:Haleluja ... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      But physicalism is indeed far to limited a model for observable reality.

      Howso? You speak of "intelligence" and "consciousness", but the behavior I see of humans and other animals is quite adequately explained by a physicalist, neurological explanation. Sensory transducers tickle certain nerves, via the network of the nervous system other nerves fire in a chain and eventually make muscles move (or gland secrete or whatever). That these muscle movements in a human being sometime hit keyboard keys to spell out "I am a conscious being!", or cause complex vocalizations, is fundamentally no more mysterious than any other observable behavior of an organism with a brain.

      Does this objective account explain my own subjective internal experience of life? The question is meaningless -- no set of observations of the external, objective universe have bearing on my internal, subjective experience. And if other beings have internal, subjective experiences, they are by definition not part of the external, objective, observable universe, and it's a fallacy to seek explanations of the unobservable in the observable. Indeed it seems a fallacy to seek explanations (in the causal sense) of the unobservable at all...

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    20. Re: Haleluja ... by cellocgw · · Score: 1

      Because Catholics do not believe that everything a pope says is to be considered infallible.

      That prompts two responses.
      First, your sentence is a variant of "no true Scotsman." What's the point of having a pope if every Catholic gets to interpret matters religious on their own?

      Second: on the bright side, unlike a certain other religion popular the world around, you can say something against the pope and not get assassinated by religious leaders for doing so.

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    21. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Though as an aside, I wonder how long it will take the hardcore Darwinists to realize in greater numbers that a chain of cause and effect, if traced back to its beginning, must eventually have a prime mover, an uncaused cause?

      How quaint that you think you are the first person to propose this. Too bad scientists have already addressed it.

    22. Re: Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First: Because its nice to know we have one.

    23. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How convenient, he's only infallible on things that can't be proven.

      That's just as ignorant a comment as the original comment that started it all. Papal infallibility refers specifically to Catholic Dogma; a Pope's comments on the particular interpretation of their belief system is considered a part of the dogma. In addition, his declaration of certain comments by others as heretical excludes certain principles of Catholic dogma. The Pope cannot declare that the Earth is flat because that has nothing to do with Catholic dogma, it only deals specifically with the morality and the nature of Christ and God within the Catholic belief system.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_infallibility#Instances_of_infallible_declarations

      Seriously, the understanding of anti-religious people of the nature of religion and how it works is pretty piss poor. If you have something against a particular group/organization/belief system, it's better to base it on a true understanding of how they work and not on some stereotype or ridiculous caricature of that group; that's bigotry just as bad as racism.

    24. Re:Haleluja ... by Gavrielkay · · Score: 2

      Though as an aside, I wonder how long it will take the hardcore Darwinists to realize in greater numbers that a chain of cause and effect, if traced back to its beginning, must eventually have a prime mover, an uncaused cause?

      Even if you could somehow prove that the beginning wasn't a massive but happy accident, you would still have zero proof that the "uncaused cause" had anything to do with a personal god. And anyway, why can your "uncaused cause" not need a cause but everything else does? You can't have a logical argument when you're willing to break your own rules to justify your beliefs.

      DNA contains lots and lots of highly organized information that doesn't just happen

      No one said DNA just happened; they say that small chemical changes from simpler molecules happened over millions or billions of years that led to DNA. Your alternative is that some sort of highly intelligent, powerful being just happened. That does not solve your logic problem.

      Too many hardcore Darwin supporters aren't familiar with these ideas

      We're not "Darwin supporters," we're people who can look at scientific evidence and form conclusions that don't require magical thinking. Darwin isn't right because he was Darwin, he was merely the most recognizable person involved in elucidating those ideas. Religion argues from authority, not science.

    25. Re:Haleluja ... by juancn · · Score: 2

      And if you want to enlighten people about their misunderstandings of your religion, it's probably wise to know the difference between a "statement" and a "question," and, at a bare minimum, decency requires not conflating ignorance of internal concepts like "ex cathedra" to stupidity.

      Otherwise, you come across as just another thumpin' asshole.

      It's complicated. Many old religions have two components: the popular beliefs and the philosophical part of them. This is true of Catholicism (do not confuse with Christianism), Buddhism, etc.

      The philosophical part is complicated. It's not something that you just explain in a couple of sentences on Slashdot, it will take some studying to get the meaning right of many concepts, such as "ex cathedra" or "metaphysical causality".

      Going back on the topic of the article, you could read a great comment at the bottom of this story: http://arstechnica.com/science... that gives (IMHO) a great summary of on what the Catholic Church believes regarding evolution and big bang.

    26. Re:Haleluja ... by neoritter · · Score: 1

      The AC posited a question, but it was a rhetorical question. As he attempted to answer it right afterwards, saying in essence that the Pope is not infallible.

    27. Re: Haleluja ... by neoritter · · Score: 1

      Catholics don't get to interpret religious doctrines on their own. That's the WHOLE point of the Protestant schism! The Pope can say 2+2 = fish all day long, but if he's not speaking Ex Cathedra, no Catholic is going to think he's undeniably correct.

      As for the second point, you're mostly right. The most the Pope would've ever done in history was excommunicate you. Though some nations would've put you on trial and burned you after the Church had their heresy trial. But that's more about what you're saying, not who you're talking about.

    28. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Though as an aside, I wonder how long it will take the hardcore Darwinists to realize in greater numbers that a chain of cause and effect, if traced back to its beginning, must eventually have a prime mover, an uncaused cause? Anything else means either circular logic (invalid), or rejecting the notion of cause following effect that all of scientific thought is based on. That's without getting into the information theory objections to evolution (DNA contains lots and lots of highly organized information that doesn't just happen - if you find an encyclopedia you can safely assume someone wrote it). Or the whole irreducible complexity deal - (blood clotting requires some 30 chemicals in just the right proportions and cannot have come about through gradual changes - remove one of those and the smallest cut causes the organism to bleed to death, remove another and the clotting never stops and all blood turns solid). Oh then there's the way they came up with punctuated equilibrium not from first principles, but in an ad-hoc effort to save their theory when they found the fossil record doesn't show the gradual progression they predicted - it shows species suddenly appearing.

      The great thing about science is we can say, "I don't know, but here are some possibilities." So what's your point with the prime mover thought experiment? The Big Bang happened, and we don't know why. Why does that automatically mean that your god or anybody else's god did everything their holy books claim?

      Also, for the blood clot thing it's possible for certain advantages to become necessary over time. Jawless fish, for example, accomplish blood clotting with only six of the ten proteins Behe claimed were necessary.

      Too many hardcore Darwin supporters aren't familiar with these ideas, don't have answers for them, and get angry (instead of scientifically curious) when you ask about them. That's the same thing religious people do when you point out contradictions in the Bible - they get angry. How ... scientific. People who are secure in what they believe realize how important these questions are and try to provide good answers for them. That should be a bare minimum for any sort of science.

      Anecdotally, I got scientifically curious and spent 30 seconds on Wikipedia to find your claims have long since been disproven. My new favorite quote: a Scientific American writer called irreducible complexity "a full-blown intellectual surrender strategy." If anything, I always thought the complexity of life was a huge point against Creationism. Scientists have identified 6,000 species of red algae (not green or brown algae, mind you, which comprise another 6,500 species together). 16,000 species of mushrooms, only 4% of which are edible. 120,000 (!) different species of flies. Are you kidding me? Why would a creator need to create that many?

      Scientists might say "I don't know" a lot, but that never, ever means, "I don't know, and nobody will ever know for the rest of eternity, therefore my deity did it."

    29. Re:Haleluja ... by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      who the fuck created your creator? The God God? And then who made him? It's turtles all the way down no matter how you look at it.

      That's the whole point. It cannot be turtles all the way down, at some point reality must have some base that is uncaused, and from which everything (causality itself included) arises. Aristotelian philosophy called this a "prime mover", since it's the first thing that "moves" (causes change) to anything else. And then it defined the word "god" as meaning "a prime mover".

      Christianity took the idea, which in itself isn't problematic, and said "Oh, nice! We'll take this 'god' of theirs and confuse things by saying it refers to our desert tribal god of war rather than to a generic, neutral, philosophical concept as originally intended! Sweet!" And since then things became very confused indeed. But that's about it.

      --
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    30. Re:Haleluja ... by neoritter · · Score: 1

      That's all well and good, but if something can't exist that's unobservable; then the assumption must be made that our ability to observe the universe is absolute.

    31. Re:Haleluja ... by Talderas · · Score: 4, Informative

      Which is true, the vast majority of the time. The Pope is only considered infallable when claiming ex cathedra which is almost exclusively used for the canonization of saints. There are fewer than 15 acknowledged papal statements that are considered ex cathedra and consequently infallable. It was a rhetorical question made from a flawed premise that ended at the right conclusion. That's of course discarding any sort of argument against papal infallibility made from within the Catholic Church or other Christian faiths.

      However, as juancn stated, the philosophy of the church and faith is a deeply complicated matter that a few simple sentence cannot do justice. Terms rarely as blanket statements and are usually far more nuanced than people realize. Religious orders themselves have influenced things in various ways. The Jesuits have always been an interesting order to follow and it certainly doesn't hurt that Pope Francis is the first Jesuit elected to the Papacy.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    32. Re:Haleluja ... by neoritter · · Score: 1

      Agree pretty much. Maybe I'm splitting hairs, or maybe I'm projecting the arguments of others with regards to this subject. But it seems to me that his conclusion would mean that the Pope is and was never infallible. Whereas, given the correct information, the correct statement is, the Pope is sometimes infallible.

    33. Re: Haleluja ... by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      You simply will not have it held against you on judgement day if he is wrong and you follow that bit of being wrong.

      The moral problem isn't that being held against someone on judgment day. The moral problem is the notion of a "judgment day".

      According Aquinas and other Christian authors, both ancient and recent, during it and afterwards all the saved will rejoice and cheer in utter delight seeing all the condemned, including their own children, spouses, parents etc. being thrown into a furnace of eternal suffering, because it'll be "just". And that'll be so because God will fuck up every saved's minds so that they don't give a damn about billions if not trillions of people being tortured for perpetuity, because "glory" of "justice" being served and whatever.

      Oh, and the condemned will all have their minds fucked so as to also believe what they're going through is "just", so that none among them will ever be able to think along the lines of "at least I'm not serving as wired-like zombie under a sadistic tyrant". Nope, they all will "know" they've been infinitely sinful and hence that their infinite torture is somehow "right".

      There are modern Christians who reject all of the above? Yep. But not surprisingly, they aren't considered true Christians by the older churches, being instead labeled heretics and, yeah, condemned to Hell by the later unless they repent and start looking forward towards becoming after-death sadistic torture cheerleaders themselves.

      So, uhm, no.

      --
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    34. Re:Haleluja ... by neoritter · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I feel like the one complements the other. The Christian God is an omnipotent and omniscient deity. In order to be such a deity, said deity would more than likely have to be the "prime mover." The Jews believed that God created existence well before having a lot of interaction with Greek philosophy.

    35. Re: Haleluja ... by lgw · · Score: 1

      Well, not spouses - former spouses maybe. "Till death do we part" and all that.

      When you live with injustice your whole life, powerless to resist in any meaningful way, the thought that your oppressors will be punished in the afterlife is quite appealing, and appears in almost every religion. It also serves an important role in society, by limiting the bad behavior of many believers, including a few fairly unpleasant kings over the centuries. Don't knock it.

      --
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    36. Re: Haleluja ... by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "Second: on the bright side, unlike a certain other religion popular the world around, you can say something against the pope and not get assassinated by religious leaders for doing so."

      At least not anymore. But you can get ex-communicated which a catholic believes is a one way ticket to an eternity of torture and suffering after an eyeblink short stay on Earth.

    37. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All religions do eugenics, including the godless religion of political correctness. The catholic church defines itself as a eugenic state. No scientist would claim they could create a better human than nature, but every priest, politician and witch doctor does just that. After 12,000 years of civilization guided by eugenics, the species has been devolved into a zombie state, already dead, and only awaiting the coup de grace.

    38. Re:Haleluja ... by Kjella · · Score: 1

      How convenient, he's only infallible on things that can't be proven.

      Well duh the pope can't dictate reality. But the pope's interpretation of the Bible is like the Supreme Court's interpretation of the constitution, it is the ultimate authority and binding for the whole Catholic Church. He can amend it too, as long as it doesn't contradict the scripture. And he's also the executive leader, not much separation of powers there. Basically, papal infallibility means his word defines the church's doctrine by divine authority. The addendum is of course that anyone who contradicts the Pope is a heretic, which is why Catholics and Protestants were battling it out - they believed in the same book but didn't recognize the Pope as supreme dictator.

      --
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    39. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or you can watch this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWsgxCVYtAI

    40. Re:Haleluja ... by shaitand · · Score: 1

      Intelligence is already reasonably well explained, we use our understanding of intelligence to build our own intelligent systems. Just the other day I watched a human built intelligence given a virtual joystick and fed images of the screen and given no concept of a game (beyond using the score as a simple feedback mechanism) figure out how to play most Atari games better than humans can.

      These kind of systems aren't even really that complex, they are just hard for us to follow because they work like ant hills, with lots of very simple pieces doing very simple things and the intelligence is a complex result that emerges when you add it all up. Even if you understand them they are difficult to really own. A good mechanic knows the machine inside and out and can model it's behavior in his head. That is much harder with intelligence because you can't break down it's stages into the behavior of the 2-6 elements our conscious mind is capable of considering at once.

      Consciousness, is simply an emergence phenomenon of a sufficiently intelligent system.

    41. Re:Haleluja ... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      "eugenics"

      You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    42. Re:Haleluja ... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      The question was ignorant, as two minutes of Googling would show. However, to respond in such a brusque way without offering an explanation is just lazy and rude:

      The Pope's proclamations are only considered infallible when speaking "ex cathedra", in other words from the Chair of St. Peter, in his role as the apostolic leader of the whole Church, in communion and in agreement with the bishops of the world, on matters of faith and morals.

      Papal infallibility as described here has been invoked exactly twice in all of Church history, in both cases to officially declare doctrine that had already been universally agreed and believed by Catholics for centuries: The Doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, and the Doctrine of the Assumption of Mary.

      Other than in his official capacity as the Vicar of Christ, the Pope's pronouncements are no more "infallible" than anyone else's, although one should expect that when he's talking about Catholic Doctrine, he would (or at least should) know what he's talking about.

      This declaration is not news to anyone who knows anything about Catholic teaching. Pope John-Paul II said much the same thing, and the idea of evolution of life was hypothesized as far back as St. Augustine (and probably earlier... I bet the Greeks considered it). The nature of a logical and objective universe being the creation of God has always been consistent with Catholic teaching. Just read Thomas Aquinas. However, given how poorly Catholic teaching is understood, even among Catholics, and how much the Bible literalists and other fundamentalists have distorted the "common wisdom" of what Christians actually believe (especially in the U.S.), it is useful for His Holiness to point this out.

      --
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    43. Re:Haleluja ... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      "eugenics"

      You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.

      The study of people named Eugene?

      --
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    44. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only nature can do genetics, creating species in tune with their environment (nature). All religious and political organizations preferentially allow those supportive of the administration to reproduce (statistically). The genetically evolved survive, the eugenically modified don't, in the long run. It's only obvious to be on the side of nature, as most science is, since nature always wins.

    45. Re:Haleluja ... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Well, there were some Popes named Eugene, so you might be on to something...

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P...

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    46. Re:Haleluja ... by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      It's complicated. Many old religions have two components: the popular beliefs and the philosophical part of them. This is true of Catholicism (do not confuse with Christianism), Buddhism, etc.

      Sure it is. But that doesn't make it any less dickish calling the guy an idiot.

    47. Re: Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your argument relies on a faulty assumption, that change CANNOT be gradual, it's there or its not. The same argument was said to me in college about the human eye not able to be a gradual change.

      I reject that assumption without evidence. Hell, we can see change all the time. There's freaks of human nature with various abnormalities. Parts of the body we don't know what they do, etc.

      You're drawing faulty conclusion.

    48. Re: Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I miss when they used to feed you motherfuckers to lions.

      Good times.

    49. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How convenient, he's only infallible on things that can't be proven.

      ....aaaaaaand, that's religion.

      (captcha = jackass)

    50. Re:Haleluja ... by pitchpipe · · Score: 1

      If the Pope is (according to the Catholic Church) the infallible representative of God on this earth, then logically now, how can two popes say two different things?

      If you want to argue about papal infallibility it's probably wise that you understand papal infallibility and ex cathedra before uttering idiotic statements like what I quoted.

      To paraphrase: If you want to argue about jibberish, it is probably wise that you understand the jibberish whereof you speak, otherwise you may sound like you are speaking jibberish.

      --
      Look where all this talking got us, baby.
    51. Re:Haleluja ... by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      the assumption must be made that our ability to observe the universe is absolute.

      It doesn't follow. If there are things which are only observable to us indirectly, the argument fails.

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    52. Re:Haleluja ... by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      That's the whole point. It cannot be turtles all the way down, at some point reality must have some base that is uncaused

      That's one hell of an assumption. That any form of infinite regress is necessarily impossible is just an assertion without an argument. Contra the Greeks and other until Cantor, infinities do not entail logical inconsistencies and are in fact realized in the universe.

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    53. Re:Haleluja ... by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      what other being could make a statement as being an absolute truth, then change their mind and state categorically that the opposite is true?

      A man, obviously. Oh, was that supposed to be a rhetorical question?

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    54. Re:Haleluja ... by neoritter · · Score: 1

      If it's observable indirectly, it's still technically observable though. I find what directly contradicts this axiom to be dark matter and dark energy. Both have never been observed, so how can they exist. If science is supposed to function based on what is observable, then how can we extrapolate theories and universal models that have unobservable things in them?

    55. Re:Haleluja ... by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      Even if you could somehow prove that the beginning wasn't a massive but happy accident, you would still have zero proof that the "uncaused cause" had anything to do with a personal god. And anyway, why can your "uncaused cause" not need a cause but everything else does? You can't have a logical argument when you're willing to break your own rules to justify your beliefs.

      I think there are few more critical assumptions you didn't mention, which also should be unpacked. First, is the one you allude to, which is that infinities are necessarily illogical and self-contradictory, which is patently false. Second, that the cause of the universe can be regarded automatically as the cause of life on Earth, rather than as merely establishing the conditions for that cause. I don't think that's at all clear given that "causes" apparently require a background such as the universe in which to occur.

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    56. Re: Haleluja ... by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      At least not anymore.

      Also, if there are no draconian Islamic theocracies enforcing capital apostasy laws within, say, the next 100 years, then they will have beaten Catholicism in that race by several hundred years.

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    57. Re:Haleluja ... by OzoneLad · · Score: 1

      What's the cheat code to get Papal God Mode?

    58. Re:Haleluja ... by cheesybagel · · Score: 2

      It is called a retcon. God does it all the time. Stan Lee at Marvel did it all the time.

    59. Re:Haleluja ... by Immerman · · Score: 1

      In God's defense (S)He could potentially (depending on the particular category of deity being discussed) change the fundamental nature of the universe on a whim so that the superficially mutually exclusive claims were both absolutely true when made. I believe I've heard the joke "If Man ever understands all the rules, the rules will immediately be changed to something even more incomprehensible" made of both women and the cosmos.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    60. Re:Haleluja ... by Zalbik · · Score: 1

      That's the whole point. It cannot be turtles all the way down,

      Why not?

      at some point reality must have some base that is uncaused

      Why must there have been a base? If that base could be uncaused, why couldn't the universe just be uncaused?

    61. Re:Haleluja ... by Tom · · Score: 1

      Or the whole irreducible complexity deal

      Which is a big strawman and there are plenty of good books out there that you can read that deal with it quite nicely. "Seven Clues to the Origin of Life" by Cairns-Smith is the first one that came to my mind and has the advantage of being very short.

      when they found the fossil record doesn't show the gradual progression they predicted

      You are aware of what fossils are and how astonishing it is that we manage to find so many in such good condition at all, yes? Complaining about gaps in fossil records is a little like whining that there are holes in the walls of the ruins of Pompeii.

      (DNA contains lots and lots of highly organized information that doesn't just happen - if you find an encyclopedia you can safely assume someone wrote it)

      If you equate DNA to an encyclopedia, you have just created an impossible-to-ever-beat world record holder for the most disorganized and messy encyclopedia. All we know points to DNA being an amazing information storage, but also one of the strongest evidences of evolution we have, because if DNA had been designed for humans, or even for mammals or heck even for species living today, the designer was incredibly drunk.

      Too many hardcore Darwin supporters aren't familiar with these ideas, don't have answers for them, and get angry (instead of scientifically curious) when you ask about them.

      There are stupid people everywhere, but if you bring up a valid point, you have pretty good chances that someone will check them out. However, practicioners in a field get upset when the 500th troll comes with the same stupid pseudo-argument they've already debunked hundreds of times and thinks he is entitled to being listened to.

      Don't confuse becoming angry about being bothered with the same bullshit over and over again with becoming angry about the content of it.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    62. Re:Haleluja ... by Zalbik · · Score: 1

      That's all well and good, but if something can't exist that's unobservable; then the assumption must be made that our ability to observe the universe is absolute.

      No, the assumption must be made that the universe only consists of observable things.

      i.e. that unobservable things do not exist (note: unobservable, not unobserved)

    63. Re: Haleluja ... by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      He didn't say every Catholic gets to interpret matters on their own. He said that not everything a pope says is considered infallible.

    64. Re:Haleluja ... by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      The Greeks were more subtle that you give them credit. It isn't "any form", it's one specific form: the totality of everything. You can have several infinite regresses within it, but not for the whole of it. For example, nothing prevents the universe having infinite causality and thus no beginning in time, so much so that's exactly what Aristotle thought was the case. However, the totality of the universe's set of causes and effects themselves is located "within" the finite set of formal causation extending from Physical laws down to the the basic axioms of logic, and stopping there. In other words, the "first mover" isn't physical, it's at least meta (beyond, outside) physical, and probably beyond even that.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    65. Re:Haleluja ... by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Why not?

      Try it with any discipline. Do like a children and ask from any established knowledge "why?". Then to that answer ask "why?" Proceed a few cycles and you'll reach a point in which you start looping. That's the analogue of the first mover in that knowledge set. If the set you're looking at is "all knowledge about everything", the same will apply: you reach a base point that loops over itself. That's an actual first mover. (And there can be many such.)

      Doing this however yields very little information, something like this (using jargon): "a first mover is simple being in pure actuality acting over pure potentiality". And that's it, everyone goes back home happy as there's nothing else to say on the subject. Which is indeed what Aristotle himself did. He spent a few pages on the subject and then moved on to more interesting stuff as there wasn't much else to do with this other than thinking "Neat, that's solved! So, what's next in my todo list?"

      This is also why Christians trying to generalize from this Aristotelian "god" to their tribal one makes no sense really.

      Why must there have been a base? If that base could be uncaused, why couldn't the universe just be uncaused?

      Ah, that's easy! Because the universe is composed of changing stuff, and we're trying to thing that which causes changes but doesn't suffer any change. For example, math fits. All the in-universe changes happen under mathematical laws that don't change no matter how much the stuff "under" them goes around crashing all over itself.

      See also my reply to the person who commented above your comment.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    66. Re:Haleluja ... by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Not really. Aristotle assumed this philosophical god of his had some form of "knowledge", yes. However, he concluded it had only knowledge about itself, not about anything else, and particularly not about the stuff over which it caused change to happen. The universe and us existing would be unknown and utterly indifferent to it.

      Besides, Aristotle doesn't limit the concept of a first mover to be unique. You can have several first movers, each one completely indifferent to anything but itself, they all causing stuff other than themselves to move, and their different moving abilities interacting with each other to cause, among other things, us. And they'd be ignorant of each other too, since they, being first movers, aren't moved by anything, including other first movers, so there's no way for them to detect other first movers.

      For an analogy, think of this like different physical laws interacting while they (the laws themselves) don't change in any way due to such "external" interactions. That basically covers it, except for the fact that first movers are way more "general", so to speak, than "mere" physical laws.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    67. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How convenient, he's only infallible on things that can't be proven.

      Much like the statement: "The boss is always right..." is true. Because it is his perogative to be right... not because the facts necessarily support everything he says.

    68. Re:Haleluja ... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      You are falling for a circular argument: If you assume all that is going on in the black box is physical, then all that is observable at its interface must be due to physical effects. Intelligence is an interface-behavior not explained by physics. Consciousness cannot be an illusion, because having an illusion requires consciousness.

      Your second paragraph does not make any sense. You basically claim that no observations can be made if an interface is present and all observations have to go though it. Well, here is news for you: All observations are subject to this limitation, there are no possibilities for "direct" observation in this universe.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    69. Re:Haleluja ... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      There are exactly no things that are observable directly. If your argument holds, then solipsism is the only remaining model that fits the data.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    70. Re:Haleluja ... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but that is nonsense. Unless you subscribe to solipsism?

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    71. Re:Haleluja ... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Have a look at the actual research: There is, in fact, not even a theory how a machine with human-like intelligence could work. There is certainly not any technology that could implement it. All AI does at this time is fake it in very restricted, limited circumstances. The other often overlooked problem is that human-like intelligence is only observable together with consciousness (assuming people have that regularly), and may hence be intricately linked to it or in fact aspects of the same thing. This gets conveniently overlooked.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    72. Re:Haleluja ... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      And before I forget, "emergent behavior" is just a less clear way of saying "it seems to be definitely there, but we have no clue what it is and why it is there". As soon as some behavior is understood, it is not emergent anymore. So (I guess without intending to), you just agreed with me that consciousness is not understood. The thing is though, that consciousness is not an emergent behavior, as it has never been observed in a constructed system (and neither has intelligence of the human-like variant or better).

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    73. Re: Haleluja ... by tolkienfan · · Score: 1

      Actually, you don't fully understand causation. I know this because nobody does. Also, the nature of time itself isn't understood. How can there even BE a BEFORE the beginning of time for the act of creation to occur in?

    74. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you trying to inflame Catholic passions there? Catholicism "do not confuse with Christianism"!?!? Do not confuse with Baptist and Methodist churches would be valid, but all of Western Christianity broke off from the Catholic church or its offshoots. That said, the simple version of "ex cathedra" is that the Pope is a human leader of the church, but that some statements are considered divinely inspired. Such statements cannot be contradicted, while those that come from human reasoning from accepted truths are subject to revision.

      With regard to contraception, the justification for that rests on a great deal of doctrine that can be summed up as couples being open to contraception via intercourse. For a more detailed version, I'd recommend JPII's Theology of the Body.

    75. Re:Haleluja ... by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      Dark matter and dark energy are both indirectly observable, via gravitation and the time dependency of the FLRW scale factor/red shift of distant objects, respectively. Either indirectly observable things are "still technically observable" or they aren't - you can't have it both ways.

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    76. Re:Haleluja ... by neoritter · · Score: 1

      "Dark matter is a kind of matter hypothesized in astronomy and cosmology to account for gravitational effects that appear to be the result of invisible mass. Dark matter cannot be seen directly with telescopes; evidently it neither emits nor absorbs light or other electromagnetic radiation at any significant level. It is otherwise hypothesized to simply be matter that is not reactant to light..."

      Well something is throwing off our computations, there most be something out there we can't see or detect through instrumentation. Yes, that's clearly scientific...

    77. Re:Haleluja ... by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      There are exactly no things that are observable directly.

      In which case - the stated argument is even weaker. The distinction between "direct" and "indirect" you're making isn't at all useful, though, since it ignores the real differences between, say, detection of a distant galaxy and detection of that galaxy's dark matter halo.

      The point is that, it could be true that only observable things exist, but that our (or anyone's) ability to observe the universe is not absolute.

      If your argument holds, then solipsism is the only remaining model that fits the data.

      "My argument" is merely that the sole existence of observable things is compatible with the capacity for observation being limited. Consideration of non-interacting light cones should be enough to establish this proposition.

      Solipsism could be true or false regardless of whether or not both observable and non-observable things exist, or whether or not powers of observation may be absolute.

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    78. Re:Haleluja ... by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      How convenient, he's only infallible on things that can't be proven.

      In other words you don't understand what that means in pretty much any way.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    79. Re:Haleluja ... by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      Dark matter is a kind of matter hypothesized in astronomy and cosmology to account for gravitational effects

      So you concede the point that dark matter, whatever it is, is indirectly observable, because of its gravitational field.

      Well something is throwing off our computations, there most be something out there we can't see or detect through instrumentation. Yes, that's clearly scientific...

      Yes, it is. In fact, that is exactly the reasoning which led to the discovery of Neptune, as well as the discovery of Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole in the center of our galaxy. The hypothesis that there is nothing in Neptune's orbit was falsified by detection of Neptune's gravitational field. Later, the hypothesis that Neptune exists was corroborated by direct observation via telescope. With Sagittarius A*, we first observed stars orbiting the galactic center with extremely high velocities (like, 70% the speed of light). Further observations indicate the presence of an object of 4 million solar masses packed into a space the size of Uranus' orbit.

      The story with dark matter is much the same. We've observed its gravitation, we've used its effect on observables like the galactic rotation curve to more-or-less determine the spatial distribution of the source matter, but we've been completely unable to account for that matter by regular electromagnetic astronomy. At this point, the hypothesis that the matter was being blocked out by dust, for example, has been almost totally falsified. The hypothesis that the matter is some massive compact halo objects, like naked black holes, has also been almost totally falsified. Hypothetical changes to general relativity are complicated, unwieldy and have difficulty accounting for the anomaly without giving wildly incorrect predictions about visible matter. Alternate theories of gravitation also fail to explain the large-scale dark matter filaments along which galaxies cluster. This leaves the weakly interacting massive particle hypothesis as by far the most likely to date - and even now astronomers and particle physicists are hard at work attempting to falsify it.

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    80. Re:Haleluja ... by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

      How convenient, he's only infallible on things that can't be proven.

      In other words you don't understand what that means in pretty much any way.

      Unable to make mistakes or be wrong. Why what do you think it means?

      --
      Wanna buy a shirt?
      https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
    81. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That the Pope is infallible is obviously false, because Germany won the World Cup.

    82. Re:Haleluja ... by Unipuma · · Score: 1

      How convenient, he's only infallible on things that can't be proven.

      Welcome to religion, you must be new here...

    83. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Something to do with Annie Lennox before she became a haggard old cow?

    84. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " (DNA contains lots and lots of highly organized information that doesn't just happen - if you find an encyclopedia you can safely assume someone wrote it)."

      What encyclopedia? Did you ever read an encyclopedia that is only 10% filled with actual articles and the rest filled up with garbage?
      You seem to deliberately leave out the realities that science found because they do not suport your fatasy. Well, tough luck, deal with it. Maybe read some about the subject.
      In the meantime try not to demonstrate your ignorance.

      "Too many hardcore Darwin supporters aren't familiar with these ideas, don't have answers for them, "

      How can you expect someone to answer a question that is based on cherrypicked or plainly wrong facts?
      You can't and that's why this is the prime tool for people like you to suck them up in your god fantasy.

    85. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This Unitarian-Universalist LOVES THIS POPE! POPE FRANK IS THE BEST POPE EVER!!!! I wanna blast a doobie with his Holiness.

    86. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It's complicated. Many old religions have two components: the popular beliefs and the philosophical part of them."

      Bene Gesserit call the the first one the Missionaria Protectiva. It spreads "infectious superstitions on primitive worlds, thus opening those regions to exploitation by the Bene Gesserit."

      The name might be original for Frank Herbert but the concept even predates the Roman Catholics.

      The second one we might call, oh, I don't know, the TRUTH - as we know it. Sound like Pope Frank is trying to drag the Church, kicking and screaming, toward the later. GOD BLESS POPE FRANK!

    87. Re: Haleluja ... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      There are matters of Catholic doctrine, that Catholics are pretty well stuck with, and there's everything else, which Catholics get to interpret on their own, although there is frequently a strong majority view or lots of discussion. As for why the Pope...why the Dalai Lama? Why an Ayatollah? Why a monarch? These are leadership positions that do not rely on being infallible.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    88. Re: Haleluja ... by cellocgw · · Score: 1

      Like I said, No True Scotsman.

      --
      https://app.box.com/WitthoftResume Code: https://github.com/cellocgw
    89. Re:Haleluja ... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      I still don't understand why this is news. How is this different from what the previous FIVE Popes proclaimed on the subject?

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    90. Re:Haleluja ... by rhyous · · Score: 1

      So you you prove that man can create life in a lab (abiogenesis), what do you think that proves?

      Here is all it proves:

      Intelligent beings (in this case man) can create life.

      Now 100% of your scientific abiogenesis tests required intelligent design (humans). So since in your test, the life didn't begin without intelligent intervention because it required intelligent humans to set up the lab and create the perfect environemnt, did you not just demonstrate that life on earth was also likely created by an intelligent being?

    91. Re:Haleluja ... by doccus · · Score: 1

      If the Pope is (according to the Catholic Church) the infallible representative of God on this earth, then logically now, how can two popes say two different things? Two contradictory statements cannot both be correct, .....

      THey're both right. There is no conflict.THe church's position has long been supportive of the slow evolution of the universe and *some* of the basic tenets of Darwinism, simply because any idiot can see that it is true. When Benedict spoke of "not taking Darwinism too far", he was referring to the *overapplication* of it.. the misuse of the whole "survival of the fittest" concept, especially in areas that it has no validity - such as applied by Hitler etc ... Humanity, it can be argued, has entirely sidestepped evolution the very minute we developed self-aware intelligence. The very act of cooking food sidesteps it, for instance. The Church's position is that man only became a self conscious entity wben we became a "living soul". There is no reason to asume that the body didn't already exist in a more prehistoric form before that point, wherein the basic temnets of evolutionary adaptation still applied.

    92. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Something doesn't need a cause if nothing exists before it. Perhaps a quantum vacuum spontaneously arose (from nothing...similar to theories about our own universes matter coming into being) that formed the basis for an intelligent being to develop. If DNA, capable of storing 700 terabytes of data in a single gram, can form over just a few billion years, just imagine what being could have potentially evolved before us for an almost unlimited number years or more and it discovered how to create or set us in motion after itself.

      Science argues from science. Does that make it circular logic? Science and religion as very different things and cannot be completely reconciled, but when science simply dismisses all possible ideas simply because we can't yet test or observe something could be dangerous.

    93. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The God God? And then who made him?..."

      Comsological Argument: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmological_argument

    94. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If the Pope is (according to the Catholic Church) the infallible representative of God on this earth, then logically now, how can two popes say two different things?"

      The Pope has to stamp a Papal Bull as infallible. He is not considered to be infallible as a person. As far as I know, this was a statement that he released and not a papal bull.

    95. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the pointy-hat man says about religious belief holds little weight with me personally; I can read just as well as he can. If God cannot create living beings except through scientifically understood physical processes, then how does the Pope explain his divine inspiration? Is that supernatural, or does God text him?

    96. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe if you had read the whole post you wouldn't have come off as a thumpin' asshole yourself. That whole post was making that argument not asking a question.

    97. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you read what Pope Francis said, he is also saying that species don't just appear out of nowhere (i.e. no "magic wand"). In fact that is the basis of what he is saying. There is nothing that doesn't come from something. At some point there had to be something at the beginning of the chain which didn't come from something else otherwise there would have been no way for the chain to start. This idea comes from the medieval philosophy of Thomas Aquinas and is the same idea as the big bang. What Francis is saying is that if there was a big bang, there had to be a big banger. This guy does a decent job at explaining it.

      http://www.wordonfire.org/resources/video/thomas-aquinas-and-the-argument-from-motion/4534/

    98. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even Steven Hawking in his new book which tries to come up with an alternative doesn't dispute the uncaused cause argument. You are smarter than Steven Hawking?

    99. Re:Haleluja ... by Gavrielkay · · Score: 1

      I dispute trying to claim that it makes sense in a logical argument to claim that the universe couldn't have come form nothing but a supreme being could have. You win no logic argument by saying things can't exist without a cause, therefor god exists without a cause. Or that the universe is too special, complex or perfect or whatever but somehow a god isn't too much of any of that to have come from nothing.

      I really hate when religious folks try to use science and logic to prove their magical thinking as though scientists and atheists somehow just forgot how those things worked and are going to be completely stumped by it. "You can't have something without a cause, therefor god" is not a logical argument. If you believe in a supreme being or beings of some sort, I don't care. Trying to argue that one is necessary to explain the universe when logically that just leaves you having to explain how an even more complex supreme being came from nothing is not persuasive to anyone who isn't already persuaded.

    100. Re:Haleluja ... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      Intelligence is an interface-behavior not explained by physics. Consciousness cannot be an illusion, because having an illusion requires consciousness.

      Please define "intelligence" and "consciousness" in the context of the observable universe. The only way I can see "intelligence" is to see an organism engage in complex problem-solving behavior, and the only way I can see "consciousness" is to see an organism respond to stimuli. Both of these are accounted for quite well by physicalism.

      You basically claim that no observations can be made if an interface is present and all observations have to go though it.

      I didn't say anything about an "interface".

      I'll try to state it another way: I (using the word "I" for linguistic convenience and declining to open up a can of worms about the "self" at this time...) observe a physical, objective, world. For the sake of getting shit done, I assume such a world exists, that I'm not a brain in a vat or a butterfly dreaming I'm a man or the like, and that such world more-or-less corresponds to my observations; but we should not that this is an axiom and not a conclusion.

      Phenomenon in this world, including the fascinating behavior of a certain ape species, seem to occur in patterns we can call "supervenience" and/or "reductionism" (where the same phenomenon can be looked at at different depths), and "causality" (where phenomenon follow each other in time sequence). It seems they could all in principle be explained as the complex dance of particles and fields acting over time.

      I also observe a mental, subjective, internal world. Or perhaps it would be more accurate to say in the act of perceiving the external world and in perceiving memories, the existence of perception is implied.

      This perception is part of the given, and it is singular and indivisible -- atomic, in a word. (In the philosophical sense, not the chemical sense!) As it cannot be divided, trying to investigate it by reductionist means goes nowhere. As it is singular and there are no other objects of its type to interact with it, causality is meaningless. This perception "just is". I perceive (or at least, something perceives, darn the metaphysical assumption coded into our grammatical conventions!) therefore perception exists. Perception is not part of the external, observable world, and so seeking some explanation for it out there is not meaningful.

      Is there perception that is similar to but divided from that which is given as "my" experience? The question has no possible answer. If there was such perception, by its nature I would be unable to know it, since it is divided from the perception that I have (or that is "me", if you like).

      Sure, as a practical and ethical matter, I make the assumption that there is such perception and that it is associated with at least some of the humans and other organisms I see "out there". It seems a bad thing when suffering comes into "my" perception and a good thing when pleasure comes into it; if there might be other perceptions it would be consistent to regard the suffering that comes into them as bad. Not knowing, I adopt a precautionary attitude.

      But fundamentally, it's unknowable and unobservable. And trying to create an explanation within observable reality for something that can never be observed is inherently a fallacy, a metaphysical confusion.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    101. Re:Haleluja ... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      if something can't exist that's unobservable; then the assumption must be made that our ability to observe the universe is absolute.

      But our ability to observe the observable universe, over time, is absolute by definition. If we don't and never will have the ability to observe it, it's not part of the observable universe; if it's part of the observable universe, we have or will have the ability to observe it.

      Any hypothetical "unobservable universe" -- again, over time, meaning not just "that which we currently cannot observe" but "that which we can never observe" -- is not meaningful, except perhaps as a philosophical amusement if your tastes run that way. Non-falsifiable hypotheses don't get us far.

      (I am, of course, allowing for the usual sorts of indirect observation here.)

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    102. Re:Haleluja ... by neoritter · · Score: 1

      An unobservable universe, I think is absolutely meaningful. Provided of course that it actually has an effect on our universe.

    103. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution does not try to address the origin of life; it just describes a mechanism for life changing once it already arose. If you want to believe a creator did that, that's fine. Abiogenesis is another possibility, but is not covered by evolution.

      DNA was probably not the first genetic material; RNA seems to be more likely. Your analogy is flawed because encyclopedias cannot make copies of themselves, but RNA can. Once something can make copies of itself (with some errors) it's not unreasonable to assume that over vast amounts of time, it will get more complex.

      Irreducible complexity is silly. First of all, clotting doesn't require proteins in just the right amounts - most factors can have levels between 30% and 250% of normal and the person is mostly normal. You can get as low as 5% and only have mild hemophilia. You're also ignoring the vastly more simplified clotting systems in other organisms, which certainly could have been the basis for our clotting cascade.

      Punctual equilibrium makes sense too - it's not a last-minute effort to "save their theory". Certain periods will have more selective pressure, due to environmental factors or in response to a new adaptation in predator/prey relationships. Gene duplication, though somewhat rare, is a mechanism for sudden changes to occur. You're also incorrect about the fossil record; in some areas it does show gradual progression, while in others there are somewhat sudden (on a geological time scale) changes.

      You seem to have a lot of misconceptions, but if you're willing to learn, I'd suggest visiting this site and reading up on it: http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/

    104. Re:Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There hve only been two ex cathedra declarations; the assumption of Mary to heaven, and the immaculate conception of Mary.
      Technically every cannonization is ex cathedra, but that is a pronouncement on a fact, not an assertion of dogma.

      Outside of those, a pope is a priest with specific training and background. Differing views between them can and do happen. There is a legitimate amound of wiggle room in many Catholic debates, with a range of acceptable responses.

  2. Tip of the iceberg by xonen · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There's actually a lot of potentional scientific correct stuff in the Bible. Yet, discussing them usually gets frowned upon by either team - it seems (for atheist scientists) a lot easier to discard the bible as 'rubbish' instead of an historical document - where the religious camp tends to take this same history book too literal, despite all translation issues.

    Genesis conforming our current Big Bang theory is already a nice start. But, it also hints of more scientific knowledge already known back in the days we call 'stone age'.

    A good example of this are Mozes' hygienic laws - about washing hands, seperating raw from cooked food, refraining from eating animals which carry nasty parasites (pigs) etc.

    To stretch the imagination more, more stories possibly have some scientific origin. Let me mention a few (without claiming this is correct, but hopefully also without hilarious laugther):

    * The arch of Noah - might well have been a spaceship from another planet or solar system, colonializing earth with humans and various animal species.

    * Adam and Eve may tell us about genetic engineering - and hence being banned from paradise (animals have no worries apart the current moment) by the knowledge gained (our brains improved by genetic engineering).

    * Jesus might have been a space traveller with a good first-aid kit - hence the miracle curings.

    * Ascension tells us how he (Jesus) left with his spaceship.

    * Even our fossile records supports theories of an alien origin of mankind - there is the famous 'missing link' between apes and humans, especially recent fossiles. Admittingly there are plenty other explanations for that.

    * The reasonable recent human races (homo sapiens, neanderthalers, denisovan) might hint to a humanlike race already spreading accross the universe, and colonizing earth with astronauts from various planets.

    * The bible distinguishes between 'The Lord' and 'God' - where the Lord is an actual impersonification of a man. Such Lord may well be some space traveller, or otherwise well-educated person, and is mistaken for God only by misinterpretation.

    Etc etc. It's easy reply to this with a 'what the f* did you smoke'. However, keeping all options open is what a scientist ought to do. We may have well been interpreting the Bible the wrong way all along. The better reader already noticed that some of the theories mentioned above conflict eachother. However, seeking a scientific explanantion makes more sence than believing in miracles and an almighty God.

    There is so much in history that we don't know, and can only guess. Thinking that we are the first intelligent species and culture that lives on this 4-billion year old earth may be very naive.

    To put that in perspective: We will probably be able this, or next century latest, to colonize other planets. We will also be able to send robotic vehicles to other star systems. Chances are, that in the next 500-1000 years, we will be able to geo-engineer another planet (Mars). We may be able to send deepfrozen life and DNA in a robotic space ship to another star. We may be able to send bacterial life to other planets. We even may be able to send animal embryo's to other planets. This is all only limited to our imagination, technically this all seems possible in theory.

    Now, if you accept this is possible, by us. Then it is reasonable to assume it happened before. It may be reasonable to speculate that earth is actively colonized, possible after being geo-engineered first for millions of years to make it suitable for human life forms.

    Surely the Pope won't like this last speculative thoughts. Yet, it's just a scientific-plausible theory. And we may actually have a record of exactly such in our very own Bible.

    --
    A glitch a day keeps the bugs away.
    1. Re:Tip of the iceberg by jgtg32a · · Score: 5, Funny

      Keeping an open mind is good but make sure your brain doesn't fall out.
       
      What state are you in, your dealer appears to have some great stuff?

    2. Re:Tip of the iceberg by itzly · · Score: 4, Informative

      might well have been a spaceship from another planet or solar system, colonializing earth with humans and various animal species.

      Unless they populated Earth with every single lifeform, that wouldn't be possible, since all lifeforms have a single family tree.

    3. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "impersonification "?? That's not even a word! GTFO!

    4. Re:Tip of the iceberg by dablow · · Score: 1

      Not sure if he's trolling, but this post is soo full of shit....Lol Lets say for the sake of argument you are 100% correct, God was a space alien with advanced tech.........that means that he was a mortal being (or at least started off as one) bound to the same law of physics that we are. We could, in theory, achieve the same level of knowledge and power as he did (since there was nothing magical about him). How exactly is is he then worthy of worship or awe from us? Also wtf why play stupid games, create us and leave us in a state of ignorance, refusing to clarify anything and being an absent land lord? And leave us a (easily) demonstruably false book as a guide? Also how do know which space God is the real one? Zeus? Space Zombie Jesus? Buddha? Allah?

    5. Re:Tip of the iceberg by MightyYar · · Score: 5, Funny

      Thank you, I was just thinking: "You know, if there were space aliens in here, this whole book would be even more believable."

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    6. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's easy reply to this with a 'what the f* did you smoke'. However, keeping all options open is what a scientist ought to do. We may have well been interpreting the Bible the wrong way all along.

      This is not how Science works. Science makes and observation and attempts to explain it. The Bible explains nothing in nature and no amount of re-interpreting changes that fact.

    7. Re:Tip of the iceberg by idji · · Score: 1, Troll

      What a load of Mormon-like nonsense!!! They like to think of Jesus as a space traveller. You said nothing valuable here, just read your Mormon-like beliefs into the text where it suited you, and ignored everything else (like divine sea monsters in Genesis 1:21 that translators gloss over with "large sea creatures", "big fish" or "whales").

    8. Re:Tip of the iceberg by portwojc · · Score: 1

      Unless they populated Earth with every single lifeform, that wouldn't be possible, since all lifeforms have a single family tree.

      Perhaps all life is in the same family tree? The environment it grows in shapes it to the needed design for the best chance of survival.

    9. Re:Tip of the iceberg by SJHillman · · Score: 1

      " How exactly is is he then worthy of worship or awe from us?"

      Throughout history, the more technologically advanced societies tend to think they deserve awe, and in some cases outright worship, from the much more primitive tribes they encountered. Why should we think this kind of mindset is limited to humans? Why couldn't an alien species share the same philosophy or take it even further?

    10. Re:Tip of the iceberg by SJHillman · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's how we know Scientology is real. I'm not saying it's because of aliens, but.... aliens.

    11. Re:Tip of the iceberg by grub · · Score: 2


      Sounds like he just watched Prometheus.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    12. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The laws laid out by Moses didn't have anything to do with being hygienic.
      Pigs aren't the only animals that can carry parasites. Deer carry parasites, and they're kosher.

      Also, the bit about washing your hands in water is immediately followed by sacrificing a dove to cure a disease. What's scientific about that?

      There's as much science in the bible, especially the old testament, as there is pizza.

    13. Re:Tip of the iceberg by dablow · · Score: 1

      That is not universally true. When the West conquered the Americas, they did not try to pass themselves as Gods. The natives at first thought they where Gods, but the first arrow shot at them in the name of science quickly disproved that idea. And there are more examples throughout history. Also any space alien with the technology to come to Earth, terraform it, plant a sentient species on it would also know that eventually their gig would come up when said species reached a certain level of understanding and knowledge.

    14. Re:Tip of the iceberg by khr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There's actually a lot of potentional scientific correct stuff in the Bible

      As they say, even a stopped clock is right twice a day.

    15. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
    16. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There is actually a lot of potentially correct values of fundamental physical constants in pi.

    17. Re:Tip of the iceberg by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Is there a difference between trolling and insanity? The guy's off his rocker, he might be this guy. I parodied those people in Nobots.

    18. Re: Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Consider at the time that doves may have been a carrier of a disease at the time. Hell if we know since historical accuracy is almost a myth going back that far.

    19. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know it has fallen out of practice here on slashdot to call people on it but it's pretty obvious to even the most dim-witted individual that... YHBT.

    20. Re: Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FML I said at the time at the beginning and end. Hrrrrnggg

    21. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hmmm pie.

    22. Re:Tip of the iceberg by jamiesan · · Score: 3, Funny

      The aliens were just here for a picnic, and they spilled some of their primordial soup.

    23. Re:Tip of the iceberg by FictionPimp · · Score: 4, Informative

      (Full disclosure, I'm an atheist) Actually, god was afraid we would steal his power. That's why he kicks us out.

      And the LORD God said, "The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and live forever."

      - Genesis 3:22

    24. Re:Tip of the iceberg by VAXcat · · Score: 5, Funny

      HA! That reminds me of what Terry Carr, a science fiction writer, once said, that if the Bible was released as an Ace Double, it would have been titled "War God of Israel", with the flip side called "The Thing with Three Souls".

      --
      There is no God, and Dirac is his prophet.
    25. Re:Tip of the iceberg by linuxgurugamer · · Score: 1

      Which bible? There are almost as many versions as there are religions.

    26. Re:Tip of the iceberg by tehcyder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's easy reply to this with a 'what the f* did you smoke'

      Saying "I'm not insane" is not, in itself, a proof of sanity.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    27. Re:Tip of the iceberg by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Is there a difference between trolling and insanity?

      Yes, trolls choose to do what they do.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    28. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Jason+Levine · · Score: 5, Informative

      The bible distinguishes between 'The Lord' and 'God'

      The reason for this is much more mundane. In the original Hebrew, God has many names depending on whether God is being referred to as someone who judges sins, as merciful, etc. These don't all translate perfectly from Hebrew to English so sometimes "Lord" is used and sometimes "God" is used - depending on the translation. No need to bring in space aliens and further complicate matters when a simple translation explanation will do.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    29. Re:Tip of the iceberg by tibit · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The main problem with using the bible here is that it has no predictive power at all. It's all the classical case of "hindsight is 20-20". We can't read into the bible as to what to look for in future scientific endeavors. All we can do is do science the right way, and then try to use it and claim "hurr durr see bible was right - here here and there". The revisionist approach many religious people seem so fond of can be reduced to: the religious text X must be right, let's see if we can fit it to our current understanding of reality. I shouldn't need to state the obvious problem here: any time spent on such revisionism is a big waste and has nothing but faint entertainment value. If you're easily amused, that is.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    30. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, the Bible never attempts to be a scientific textbook yet people are saddened when they find this out!

    31. Re:Tip of the iceberg by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      I love primordial soup. Too bad that it's so hard to find good primords today.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    32. Re:Tip of the iceberg by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      I'd rather have a clock that loses a second a day. At least it's useful.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    33. Re:Tip of the iceberg by itzly · · Score: 1

      All lifeforms use DNA and protein synthesis using almost identical mechanisms. It is extremely unlikely that these mechanisms evolved in parallel, so they must have shared a common ancestor.

    34. Re:Tip of the iceberg by nucrash · · Score: 1

      And all this time, I theorized that Jesus was a time traveler from an alternate future who was sent back to try and advance civilization only to screw up the Roman Empire and accidentally plunge the world into dark ages. Unfortunately no one else came back to stop him. :/

      --
      Place something witty here
    35. Re:Tip of the iceberg by morgauxo · · Score: 1

      This reads like you have been watching the history channel. If you have opened your mind to those posibilities I suggest you watch this: http://alturl.com/t6iaq. Try to view it with the same open mind. Then make your own decision. I can' t tell you what to believe.

    36. Re:Tip of the iceberg by risom · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There's actually a lot of potentional scientific correct stuff in the Bible.

      The point about science is the process, not the result. There may be correct content in the bible, but that does not make it scientific.

    37. Re: Tip of the iceberg by morgauxo · · Score: 1

      Then using their corpse in a ritual would NOT be the hygenic thing to do.

    38. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 0

      The Bible explains nothing in nature and no amount of re-interpreting changes that fact.

      Except of course the book of Ezekiel and Erich von Daniken.

      Not saying the Pope should begin the beatification process for von Daniken. But von Daniken was right in recognizing that the limitations of the language and mental maps of the bible's writers needs to be taken into account when trying to process biblical books within a contemporary frame of thought.

      Plus, von Daniken was the first to describe a quadcopter. That's got to be worth something.

      If only the Time Lords had imposed a ban against visiting the Middle East during the biblical period, there would be a lot fewer miracles for us to fret over. Blame all this Creationism hoohahrah on Doctor Who.

      --
      Will
    39. Re:Tip of the iceberg by CaptainDork · · Score: 2

      Scientology is the religion of taking advantage of the protections afforded religions as a way of dodging taxes.

      The LGBT community should declare their on religion in a like manner and then thumb their noses at state, federal, and local laws.

      Sorta like Scientology does.

      Why aren't the unthinking assholes who cry, "sanctity of marriage," going after the Scientologists?

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    40. Re:Tip of the iceberg by invid · · Score: 1

      The danger of a free society is that people are allowed to believe whatever they want to believe in. This means you'll get a lot of people believing things, not because it is the most likely thing to be true (the standard scientific explanation) but because it sounds cool (god or ancient aliens created us). It's fine if a few people believe these fringe theories that fly in the face of scientific evidence, but there's a tipping point where if you have enough people disregarding science, you could get something like the Islamic State.

      --
      The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
    41. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      If you wanted to avoid hilarious laughter, you failed with Noah's Flying Saucer.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    42. Re: Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try primordial alphabet soup. Only has four letters though.

    43. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, keeping all options open is what a scientist ought to do.

      That's what they ought to do, yes. But you'll find that scientists have their own authorities, hierarchies, popular and unpopular notions, orthodoxies, and emotional reactions to possibilities they are unwilling to consider. They also often have a need for grant money that no one gets by straying too far from the mainstream. They also have a need to earn degrees that are quite difficult to obtain by rocking the boat. They also have a need to publish in journals that make not just factual decisions but also editorial choices (and may have advertisers).

      It's not exactly popular to point that out because a lot of people cling to this superhero image of scientists as the Ultimate Seekers of Truth, brave in their quest for knowledge wherever it leads, etc. In fact questioning that is a great way to get modded down however gently you do it. But the fact is scientists are really quite human and suffer from all of the problems we can observe in any other endeavor that is largely a group activity.

    44. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Sigmon · · Score: 2

      It's always amusing to me when people spout off stuff like this... "The God of the bible could have been a space alien"... and you think you're saying something profound. I don't think you understand or grasp the concept of God as described in the Bible. You are attacking YOUR concept of God - not what HE claims to be. Many of you have this concept of an old man in the sky with white hair and a long white beard throwing down lightning bolts and such... and humans have a bad habit of anthropomorphizing God. You have trouble conceiving the idea of God (rightly so) - and you ask questions like "If God created the universe then when was God created?" But when you ask questions like that - note that you have made an assumption... that assumption is that there was a TIME in which God did not exist.... But think.. think.. think.. You slashdotters are supposed to be more scientifically astute. We now know (thanks mostly to Einstein) that time and space are linked. They're not two different things. If God created the universe (space)... He must also have created TIME. Do you get that? Can you even conceive the idea? I'm not asking if you BELIEVE it... I'm asking if you can even conceive of it. All I'm saying is this: If you're going to argue against the concept of God the creator (and by all means, feel free).. please try to understand the concept of God as described in the Bible... and argue against that... not what church leaders or even Popes say. Of course, that's going to require you to actually put fourth a little effort: Read the Bible. Study the history of where it came from. Understand what it is - and what it's not. It's not a science text book. It doesn't have ALL the answers to everything. It IS a collection of history, laws, stories, parables, poetry and testimony to what people have witnessed. There's a great deal of mystery in that book... but that doesn't mean it's all invalid. (BTW: I think these 'creationists' that read the Genesis creation account as 6 literal 24-hour days are idiots. They don't understand what the bible is either.)

    45. Re:Tip of the iceberg by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

      True.

      And the translations are astroturfing.

      I am reminded of one that removed the "thee" and "thou."

      Of course, we should take it literally.

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    46. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which version of Genesis would you like to go with? You do know the bible contains multiple conflicting versions...

      I do like how you've taken the Ark story and turn it into a bastardized panspermia myth. The idea that earth was colonized by super beings from outer space sounds awesome! I'll put on the shelf next to my book of native american creation myths.

      As for the bible, it's a train wreck. You can take the bible and make ANYTHING out of it. It's theological mess, it's a moral mess, it's self contradictory mess. This is why we've got X denominations of Christians who can't decide on any single part of the bible. For every part that you like, you'll find some other group who has issue with it.

      However, our fossil record does not contain any evidence of alien origin. We have an embarrassment of riches when it comes to transitional fossils and genetic evidence and radiometric dating that shows that genetically and chemically we're all related. You have lots of DNA in common with an oak tree, and a bunny, and a fish, and a chimpanzee, etc. I'll grant you that maybe some comet crashed to earth 4.5 billion years ago that had a strand of DNA in it and whole process got kicked off. However, until we start catching comets and examining them for evidence of genetic materials or the precursors therein, it's just a hypothesis without any evidence.

      Making the argument that the Earth as been geo-engineered for humans is preposterous. 2/3's of it is covered with water we can't drink! Large swaths are covered with desserts and mountain ranges. There are earthquakes and volcanoes, etc.

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    47. Re:Tip of the iceberg by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      The arch of Noah - might well have been a spaceship from another planet or solar system, colonializing earth with humans and various animal species.

      The flood myth doesn't require space aliens; it could just be a mangled retelling of the Black Sea deluge. Maybe Noah was just the guy who happened to visit the Bosporus at the right time to realize what was happening and say "holy shit!" Then, faced with the incredulity of the superstitious idiots in his soon-to-be-flooded village, it's completely reasonable that he'd resort to a "because God told me so" argument to get their cooperation.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    48. Re:Tip of the iceberg by juanfgs · · Score: 0

      Giorgio is that you?

    49. Re:Tip of the iceberg by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Lets say for the sake of argument you are 100% correct, God was a space alien with advanced tech.........that means that he was a mortal being (or at least started off as one) bound to the same law of physics that we are.

      He could have been born into a species which exists at a more advanced level than we do, with a different physical basis. But let's go ahead and assume that's true.

      We could, in theory, achieve the same level of knowledge and power as he did (since there was nothing magical about him). How exactly is is he then worthy of worship or awe from us?

      Who is this "we"? You and I, or descendants of today's humanity? If it's the latter, then awe at least still might apply.

      Also wtf why play stupid games

      Yes, this is the part that bothers me, too. But lots of parents do this, and lie to their offspring thinking it's for their children's own good when it's really for theirs.

      And leave us a (easily) demonstruably false book as a guide?

      Well, not all forms of Christian believe that the book is The Word Of God. At least some of them just think it contains interpretations of a few things he said, and a lot of other stuff people wrote about the faith. A lot of Christians believe that Jesus was basically human, and didn't have foreknowledge, so he had to deal with stuff as it happened to him, and he wasn't really God at the time so anything he supposedly said which is in the book is not the word of God either, not precisely.

      This is part of what's so fun about arguing with Christians, you have to figure out what they believe every single time.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    50. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is kindof what the previous poster was implying. The aliens might have never claimed
      to be god but were instead assumed to be god and they may or may not have played on that.

    51. Re:Tip of the iceberg by operagost · · Score: 2

      There are different translations. The Catholic-sponsored translations, along with the original KJV, included some seldom-referenced books of questionable origin called the apocrypha. That's the closest I'll allow to claiming there are different versions of the Bible.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    52. Re:Tip of the iceberg by tom17 · · Score: 1

      "All lifeforms use DNA and protein synthesis using almost identical mechanisms. It is extremely unlikely that these mechanisms evolved in parallel, so *it's extremely likely that* they have shared a common ancestor."

      FTFY

    53. Re:Tip of the iceberg by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

      Well yes, all that may be true. And it may be that the reason that William of Ockham's had no beard is that it was chewed off by squirrels every morning.

      I blatantly stole that from some slashdotter's sig. Sorry for the lack of attribution. I don't remember who you are.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    54. Re:Tip of the iceberg by operagost · · Score: 2

      Actually, LORD is used whenever the tetragrammaton (YHWH) appears in the Hebrew. This stems from the Jewish tradition of reading YHWH as adonai, which translates to "lord", as saying the name of God is forbidden.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    55. Re:Tip of the iceberg by ThisIsAnonymous · · Score: 1

      There's actually a lot of potentional scientific correct stuff in the Bible

      Uh...so what? There's probably more scientifically correct stuff in Star Trek...does that tell us anything about God, the big bang, or anything else for that matter...

    56. Re:Tip of the iceberg by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      There is nothing quite like watching someone argue against a belief system with a piece of an opposing belief.

      There's nothing quite so ironic as a science denier posting on the internet.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    57. Re:Tip of the iceberg by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      This is not how Science works.

      You mean science isn't all on board with that whole "Jesus was an alien" thing? Shit, I chose the wrong career :(

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    58. Re:Tip of the iceberg by penguinoid · · Score: 1

      Similarly,

      Now the whole world had one language and a common speech. ... The Lord said, “If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them. Come, let us go down and confuse their language so they will not understand each other.”

      -Genesis 11:1-7

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
    59. Re:Tip of the iceberg by wooferhound · · Score: 1

      So, the pope is saying that God Created Evolution . . .

      --
      We are Dead Stars looking back Up at the Sky
    60. Re:Tip of the iceberg by LoRdTAW · · Score: 1

      * The reasonable recent human races (homo sapiens, neanderthalers, denisovan) might hint to a humanlike race already spreading accross the universe, and colonizing earth with astronauts from various planets.

      One argument against this is that why would an advanced civilization land here and instantly forget where they are from? Where did their ship go? I somehow doubt they would erase their past and forget things like language, technology and civilization. That or we can again postulate a silly theory: They bred a group of dummies and dumped them off on earth as a survival experiment. And they are either still monitoring their experiment remotely through an automated system or periodic visits (UFO's).

      I would guess that if you took a group of us and dumped us on a planet you can be damn sure we would be rebuilding civilization to the best of our ability. Even if we couldn't replicate the advanced technology of today we could at least work with simple machines and build things like aqueducts. That or we would all kill each other.

    61. Re:Tip of the iceberg by dablow · · Score: 0

      Yes but he also makes the claim that he Bible is full of scientific knowledge and a good historical document therefore we should not be quick to dismiss it. That is obviously and demonstrably false. http://skepticsannotatedbible.... There is only 1 real use for the bible, unfortunately I think the paper would be a little rough on my skin.....

    62. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, too, researched Clinical Immortality in Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri.

    63. Re:Tip of the iceberg by andyring · · Score: 1

      Even if your ideas are true (and who is to say they aren't), an initial starting point is still required.

    64. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 0

      There is nothing so absurd as the phrase "science denier". So sorry my earlier post rattled your cage. Go back to sleep, comfortable in your belief in Science and that everything proposed as a theory must be true, because everybody-- except the real scientists-- say it is.

      --
      Will
    65. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Nevynxxx · · Score: 1

      If God created the universe (space)... He must also have created TIME.

      Could you please explain how something goes from "not created" to "created" without time? How does causality work without time?

    66. Re:Tip of the iceberg by metrix007 · · Score: 1

      You should be embarrassed. You don't understand why, so I'll just be embarrassed for you.

      --
      If you ignore ACs because they are anonymous - you're an idiot.
    67. Re:Tip of the iceberg by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      Making the argument that the Earth as been geo-engineered for humans is preposterous. 2/3's of it is covered with water we can't drink! Large swaths are covered with desserts and mountain ranges. There are earthquakes and volcanoes, etc.

      Basically, God was an amateur at geo-engineering.

    68. Re:Tip of the iceberg by grimJester · · Score: 1

      The guy was just afraid the evolution of the species would be screwed up if individuals were immortal.

    69. Re: Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All life is related. Unless viruses are alive. Most genes share a single tree, and organisms are related by the similarity of their genetic forest. The tree of life is a simplification, that mostly works, like 3.14 mostly works for pi.

    70. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 1

      Ah! Good, you do know how to qualify your statements. I like the way you have backed off from declaring that parallel evolution is impossible, and now say it is extremely unlikely. Good for you. Now learn to say it the correct way the first time.

      There are always alternative hypotheses that may be true. Any theory is never more than a best guess, that could be wrong. If you are totally sure about something, you are not doing science, you are doing belief.

      Healthy belief systems are valuable and need at least as much pruning and nurturing as scientific theories. But do not conflate the two: they are different.

      --
      Will
    71. Re: Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is what it sounds like when the doves cry...

    72. Re: Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Battlestar Galactica. I'm not saying it was a documentary, but..

    73. Re: Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, we scientists are firmly in the Jesus is a well dressed zombie camp who became our first extra-terrestrial lord and savior.

    74. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you're the pope.

    75. Re:Tip of the iceberg by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      Hey, take it easy! The other commenter interpreted the bible as I also think that it should be interpreted, ie as a storybook. In my humble opinion, nothing prevents the biblical characters would be aliens, because imagine how a person from that time would react when he see a being completely out of the ordinary. Even our earliest ancestors thought the sun would be a "god".

      But having said that, do not think I'm saying that was exactly what happened, I'm just saying it's a good theory as any other.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    76. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >There's actually a lot of potentional scientific correct stuff in the Bible

      And this establishes nothing about the truth of the rest of the books. It is like saying Smallville is a town in New York, therefore Superman is real.

    77. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure PP just said exactly that?

    78. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Jason+Levine · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And "Adonai", in turn, is spoken as Hashem (literally "The Name") whenever it isn't used in prayer.

      If you were saying the prayer over bread, you'd say:

      Baruch atah Adonai, elohainu melech ha'olom hamotzi melech min ha'aretz.

      If you were just reading the same prayer (but weren't about to actually eat bread), you'd say:

      Baruch atah Hashem, elohainu melech ha'olom hamotzi melech min ha'aretz.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    79. Re: Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a deeply religious person, I suggest you stoop giving us a bad name by grossly misusing the word "theory".

    80. Re:Tip of the iceberg by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      Read what I will say carefully. What II will suggest is NOT the "absolute truth", it is only a possibility.

      Imagine something in "2001 Space Odyssey" style, the very beginning of the film. Some intelligence gets down here, do some experiments with the most promising species and goes away to wait for the results. A few thousand years later it returns and finds a primitive society we know as Romans, and decides to try a more direct approach. But the approach do not occur well as she expected, and its representative is killed by the natives. Then the intelligence decides to wait until the natives evolve enough to be able to a contact, perhaps a few more thousand years in the future.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    81. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or the Bible Belt.

    82. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Creedo · · Score: 1

      Of course, that's going to require you to actually put fourth a little effort: Read the Bible.

      Been there, done that. It's a fairy tale with no more validity than any other religion. Special pleading for your favorite deity is a fallacy. Waving hands and whispering "mystery" is silly.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    83. Re:Tip of the iceberg by lexlthr · · Score: 1

      WHAT - THE - FUCK! By far the strangest post I've ever read on this site.

    84. Re:Tip of the iceberg by neoritter · · Score: 1

      Or a highly advanced race of aliens has been seeding our psyche for millennia, all so that when we become advanced enough, they can use us in their age old war against another highly advanced race of aliens that, along with the aforementioned race stayed behind to guide our development, as other even more advanced races moved out to the galactic rim so that us younger races could grow and mature!

    85. Re:Tip of the iceberg by towermac · · Score: 1

      You threw in divine. It's "great" sea monsters. You ever seen a blue whale or giant squid? They're pretty monstrous.

      When scientists run down religion just for the sake of it, it's actually worse than the other way around, because we like to think we know better.

    86. Re:Tip of the iceberg by laie_techie · · Score: 1

      What a load of Mormon-like nonsense!!! They like to think of Jesus as a space traveller. You said nothing valuable here, just read your Mormon-like beliefs into the text where it suited you, and ignored everything else (like divine sea monsters in Genesis 1:21 that translators gloss over with "large sea creatures", "big fish" or "whales").

      That poster never identified himself as Mormon. Additionally, your understanding of Mormon beliefs is flawed. Mormons do not believe that Jesus is a space traveler. We believe he was born in Bethlehem (in the land of Jerusalem) to Mary. He learned line up line and precept on precept. Please visit mormon.org to learn what we really believe instead of parroting what our enemies claim we believe.

    87. Re:Tip of the iceberg by neoritter · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure who really started it, and I think that point is irrelevant at this point. But I'm willing to bet Christians don't do the "hurr durr see bible is right" because they want to shoe horn in their perception of reality into it. I think it's more, an atheist or some other person shouts, the Bible is false because X in it is scientifically impossible!

      Somehow atheists and Christians have rested some of the arguments on whether accounts in the Bible are scientifically accurate. So when science backs up the Bible, Christians are "hurr durr Bible is right"; and when science doesn't back it up, atheists are like, "hurr durr Bible is wrong."

    88. Re:Tip of the iceberg by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      when it says... "like one of us" ... then presumably the "one true god" still had compatriots at that time, it was before he threw the rest of them out in the 82nd psalm. Aside from the devil (clearly another god) and the archangels (clearly gods too) how many of these other gods are there supposed to have been and where are they now ?

      --
      Nullius in verba
    89. Re:Tip of the iceberg by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 0

      This is the first generation in history where a significant albeit small portion of the populace rejects the idea of a Creator. Would you agree that the creation of the United States by highly intelligent people, who firmly believed in God, wrecks your theory? Also, which scientific fact do you believe proves that a Creator does not exist?

    90. Re:Tip of the iceberg by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      The Romans did the same, Pluto, Mars, Venus... it's all the same god.

      --
      Nullius in verba
    91. Re:Tip of the iceberg by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      So sorry my earlier post rattled your cage.

      You didn't rattle my cage and you're not sorry if you did.

      Science and that everything proposed as a theory must be true

      Who the hell claims everything merely proposed as a theory is true?

      The GP was arguing about evolution, which is more than a theory proposed as true. It's one with mounds of evidence. At this point it's basically a fact.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    92. Re:Tip of the iceberg by nytes · · Score: 1

      Considering that pi is infinite and non repeating, every physics constant (to varying degrees of precision), in addition to my social security number and the longitude and latitude of where you live, is in there somewhere.

      --
      -- I have monkeys in my pants.
    93. Re:Tip of the iceberg by itzly · · Score: 1

      Of course, nothing is ever sure in science so the qualification is usually implied. People say all the time things like: if you drop that vase it will break, and don't bother to qualify it with the obligatory "assuming that gravity will still work the way we've observed it doing before". Slashdot is an informal medium, so you're supposed to read between the lines. None of this, however, takes anything away from my original point that it is impossible that humans have been put on this planet, unless these same aliens also put all our 'siblings' on this planet that have a significantly similar cellular structure.

    94. Re:Tip of the iceberg by ZombieBraintrust · · Score: 1

      There is the Torah. There are the Gnostic Gospels. There is the Book of Mormon. There are people who have put their faith in all of these. At some level you have to make a decision on what is and isn't scripture.

    95. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is incorrect on multiple levels. God knew man would take and eat of the tree. As God created man with free will, and God knows all things, He knew man would eat of the tree. Why? Because only a free-willed individual could love, as real love requires a decision and not automation. For love to exist, it must have an opposite, which we call evil or "sin".

      "Actually, god was afraid we would steal his power." No idea where you could come up with this idea.

    96. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Gavrielkay · · Score: 1

      Well, the bible was written by people who were able to observe their world. It would be ridiculous to think that they would get nothing right. Harry Potter books have train stations and owls and school kids in them which are all provably real things. Just because some reality happens to be mixed into your fantasy it doesn't make every word true, though.

    97. Re:Tip of the iceberg by invid · · Score: 1

      I, personally, would love to believe in a Creator. That would be so cool, to have some all powerful being who is looking over us. However, I'm not going to believe in something because I want to believe in it. I believe in what evidence points to as being most likely to be true.

      --
      The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
    98. Re:Tip of the iceberg by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      Genesis conforming our current Big Bang theory is already a nice start.

      It would be if it was true, but Genesis gets the origin of the Universe so hopelessly wrong that it is obvious its writers knew nothing about cosmology, geology, chemistry, physics or evolutionary biology, which would be completely in line with them having a similar level of knowledge to everybody else around at that time.

      In fact, at the time the Bible writers were talking about the Earth being supported on pillars and being like a tent with windows in the sky to let the rain in, the Greeks were already beginning to come up with reasons why it must be a sphere. It doesn't look to me like the Bible writers had any kind of special knowledge at all.

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    99. Re:Tip of the iceberg by neoritter · · Score: 1

      As is being quoted, "like one of us." Angels and God are both immortal, therefore if humans become immortal too, then humans would be "like one of us." That statement in no way implies that Angels and God are the same type of thing. It's like if I was talking to a chimp and said, "if dogs grow opposable thumbs then they'll be like one of us."

    100. Re:Tip of the iceberg by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      However, keeping all options open is what a scientist ought to do.

      Wrong. Science should only keep options open if they are not contradicted by the real World. For example, no scientist keeps the option of the Earth being flat open because there is a mountain of evidence that says it is not flat. The Biblical account of creation is flatly contradicted by evidence from reality.

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    101. Re:Tip of the iceberg by SillyHamster · · Score: 1

      The main problem with using the bible here is that it has no predictive power at all.

      Why are you looking for scientific predictions from a history book?

      On the flip side, if the history book is accurate with regards to science, what does that tell you about the history it describes?

    102. Re:Tip of the iceberg by neoritter · · Score: 1

      Let me rephrase this and make this even more accurate...

      The quote is: ""The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and live forever."

      The commonality that I'm talking is being strictly qualified right there in the passage. Angels and God both know of good and evil. That's the commonality that humans now possess along with Angels and God.

    103. Re: Tip of the iceberg by JustOK · · Score: 1

      DNA is only 3 letters.

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    104. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually ready some the descriptions of battles in the Old Testament. they describe "angels" flying in to assist Israel and throwing "bouts of fire" at their enemies". If you ride the flight of fancy earlier in this thread that can be guessed at to be fighter planes and rockets, lasers or nukes. The last being the simplest explanation for the fertile land between the Tigris and the Euphrates becoming suddenly miles of nothing but sand. Just one of the "theories" I've heard over the years.

      The ancient books in most cultures (that we have access to at least) all have stories of flying ships and/or god-like beings showing up and teaching/gifting/destroying. Who's to say that the stories are completely bogus? We find things we never imagined or thought were impossible all the time. It's kind of cool to think it might have happened and that the flying folks could come back. Of course we should also be a bit worried if they do, we have done some things to this planet they may not agree with. 8^)

      It's Halloween, you need some ghost stories.

    105. Re:Tip of the iceberg by tepples · · Score: 1

      Which version of Genesis would you like to go with?

      That depends on whether or not you like Phil Collins and whether or not you still want to play Master System games.

    106. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't get me wrong, creative speculation is all nice and such but I wouldn't call the majority of the ideas you mention 'scientific'.

    107. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      From what I've seen, Christians generally do hate Scientologists.

      Not for being religions wackjobs, mind you, but for being the wrong kind of religious wackjob.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    108. Re:Tip of the iceberg by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      the simplest explanation for the fertile land between the Tigris and the Euphrates becoming suddenly miles of nothing but sand.

      "The simplest" explanation is the climate only marginally suited for intensive agriculture, and humans farmed the holy hell out of it until it was worn out, salted, and desert. We witnessed almost the same thing happen on the prairie in the US (dust bowl). Fortunately, we had progressed beyond the state of agricultural science of 5000 years ago.

      Who's to say that the stories are completely bogus?

      I come from the other direction: who's to say that the stories have any credibility at all? People have vivid imaginations.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    109. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing bio-complex is getting through the OORT Cloud, not happening....

    110. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Torah is simply the first 5 books of the Old Testament.

    111. Re:Tip of the iceberg by gx5000 · · Score: 1

      The day we find Alien Trash and technology buried deep, I'll consider it.
      Until then, weirdos choosing to believe X Y and Z can calm their T*tts, life's tough enough without it.

      --
      End of Line.
    112. Re:Tip of the iceberg by gx5000 · · Score: 1

      What I want to know is where are all the Natives Protesting this Church that states that
      the Red Man was White but they angered God.... /facepalm

      --
      End of Line.
    113. Re:Tip of the iceberg by budgenator · · Score: 1

      The chirality of aminoacids in known lifeforms does point in that direction, it's far from a given fact. We just don't know that all life forms have a single progenitor, that's one of the reasons everybody goes GaGa over every Martian meteorite found in Antarctica and every space probe to Mars has included some kind of life detection apperatice.
      Not every "spacecraft" is manmade, we might all be desended from space aliens for all we know.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    114. Re:Tip of the iceberg by budgenator · · Score: 1

      All lifeforms use DNA and protein synthesis using almost identical mechanisms. It is extremely unlikely that these mechanisms evolved in parallel, so they must have shared a common ancestor.

      And you said that is such a strong authorative tone, too bad,

      A retrovirus is a single-stranded RNA virus that stores its nucleic acid in the form of an mRNA genome (including the 5' cap and 3' PolyA tail) and targets a host cell as an obligate parasite. Retrovirus

      you're completely wrong. Not all lifeforms use DNA. I'm not even sure there is a solid definition of what a lifeform is, Viruses certainly push the envelope.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    115. Re:Tip of the iceberg by TigerPlish · · Score: 1

      So in short, all of Creation was created by P-Funk, and documented in The Mothership Connection?

      Now *that* I can groove to!

      --
      The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
    116. Re: Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same as psychics. Say 100 bullshit things, latch on to the 30% coincidentally is correct.

    117. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with treating the bible as a document with a lot of "potentially correct scientific stuff" is that I can treat anything that way. Yes, look at last week's tabloids. There are some correct statements, some good advice, etc...but when there is also a significant amount of crap/hogwash/bs, the document loses any real value as a source of knowledge...because if I am left to decide which is which, why do I need the bible anyway? And regarding the information that is correct, why is it (for example) still valuable to know that a kosher diet probably reduced chances of foodbourne illness, when today, we know much more precisely what reduces foodbourne illness?

    118. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Relative to whom?

    119. Re:Tip of the iceberg by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      All we can do is do science the right way, and then try to use it and claim "hurr durr see bible was right - here here and there". The revisionist approach many religious people seem so fond of can be reduced to: the religious text X must be right, let's see if we can fit it to our current understanding of reality. I shouldn't need to state the obvious problem here:

      Well, arguably this is precisely what we do with the history of science, too. We teach the history of science as if it's one clear trajectory of progress -- when in reality, we cherry-pick the stuff we like from most early "scientists" and ignore all the weird crap they spewed that doesn't make any sense to us today (and often which they thought at the time was just as "scientific" or whatever their contemporary description would be).

      So, if we're not allowed to find proto-scientific understandings in historical texts, let's be consistent and stop acting like all of the "scientists" in history knew exactly what they were doing and had a modern scientific method and understanding. They did not.

      any time spent on such revisionism is a big waste and has nothing but faint entertainment value. If you're easily amused, that is.

      Religions often were partially based on attempts to understand the natural world, just as science attempts to. If you want to understand how earlier people really thought (and potentially realize that maybe in some cases a different perspective or worldview might have value), you need to consider what role these ideas played.

      If you believe all study of history, including the history of "science," is stupid... well, then at least you're consistent.

    120. Re:Tip of the iceberg by budgenator · · Score: 1

      (Full disclosure, I'm an atheist) Actually, god was afraid we would steal his power. That's why he kicks us out.

      And the LORD God said, "The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and live forever."

      - Genesis 3:22

      No the not entirely correct, the Gods were afraid is just as correct, Genesis I could refer to a parthenon through the word Elohim, You don't want to ask who made the people in the land of Nod or who Lilith was.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    121. Re:Tip of the iceberg by TopherC · · Score: 1

      There's actually a lot of potentional scientific correct stuff in the Bible. Yet, discussing them usually gets frowned upon by either team - it seems (for atheist scientists) a lot easier to discard the bible as 'rubbish' instead of an historical document - where the religious camp tends to take this same history book too literal, despite all translation issues.

      I need to disagree with your referring to the Bible as a "history book." Even though it contains a lot of historical narratives (combined with folklore), the purpose of the authors never (?) seems to be to document some piece of history but rather to highlight some moral idea, to explore our relationship to God, to help a nation have hope and stay together in times of exile, to stir up questions and provoke thought, etc. The stories told are never recent events at the time of writing, but reflect strongly and relate to the political landscape of the times they were written in. Also the style of writing is generally distinct from the style of other ancient-contemporary documents that were written to preserve history.

      What I feel is a more helpful approach to the Bible is to read it like it were poetry. What analogies are being used? What is this really about? How does this change my ideas or motives? I know this conflicts with a "literal" interpretation, so I know many will violently disagree with this idea, but I can't fathom why. The Bible contains a wide range of conflicting theological opinions. We don't read cookbooks like they are philosophical treatises, and we don't read science fiction like a newspaper. Why do so many people ... Okay I'll stop. No, I won't. Consider for example the book Job, a non-historical narrative, that challenges the theology of divine retributive justice, and how that relates to the new-vs-old thought in the New Testament. Then think about the two creation myths in Genesis not as right-or-wrong histories but as stories that provide windows into human nature and the human condition.

      I like the rest of your ideas. It's important to keep an open mind. Just make sure you're equally open to conflicting ideas and avoid falling into the trap that because something's possible, or because you believe it for some reason, it's true. Every good theorist hopes for the day their theory gets taken seriously enough to be experimentally proven false. Maybe in religion we should all hope for a time when we understand things well enough to realize our former beliefs were all poppycock. It's hard to find a higher (philosophical) aspiration than that.

    122. Re:Tip of the iceberg by itzly · · Score: 1

      Large swaths are covered with desserts

      That's actually a good indication of divine creation if that were the case.

    123. Re:Tip of the iceberg by budgenator · · Score: 1

      The main problem with using the bible here is that it has no predictive power at all. It's all the classical case of "hindsight is 20-20". We can't read into the bible as to what to look for in future scientific endeavors.

      So it's kind of like climate modeling?

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    124. Re:Tip of the iceberg by itzly · · Score: 1

      Imagine the world as a minecraft game. It's possible to make a map before you start the game engine.

    125. Re: Tip of the iceberg by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      But you create DNA with A, C, G, & T.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    126. Re:Tip of the iceberg by itzly · · Score: 1

      Just like Lord Voldemort.

    127. Re:Tip of the iceberg by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      These same aliens also put all our 'siblings' on this planet

      They could still just leave one thing, though. See a nice planet, launch some archaea into the atmosphere, check in in a few billion years...

      Or maybe even just some amphiphiles and oligonucleotides, they will probably do fine without any supervision.

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    128. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Livius · · Score: 1

      The easy explanation is that the Bible was metaphorical.

    129. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Livius · · Score: 1

      The Bible can't be false because it's metaphorical.

    130. Re:Tip of the iceberg by ZombieBraintrust · · Score: 1

      Exactly, it is a version of the Bible with 5 books.

    131. Re:Tip of the iceberg by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Well the Ark of Noah episode is actually a rather blatant ripoff of the Epic of Gilgamesh. Well perhaps ripoff is too strong a word since the Jewish people allegedly also migrated from Mesopotamia and the story was probably transmitted orally along the ages. It's in Summerian and Akkadian myth.

    132. Re:Tip of the iceberg by neoritter · · Score: 1

      To a certain extend true, but ultimately irrelevant to the people that think disproving something in the Bible invalidates Christianity.

    133. Re:Tip of the iceberg by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Supposedly the angels, also created by God, are immortal too. Calling them gods is extreme. They are supposedly supremely powerful but still servants of God. Although since they possess free will they can rebel. As that other dude you talked about.

      What I find a lot more fascinating is the story about angels from the sky killing a Dragon. Since this matches more or less Japanese myth as well. For the story to spread that far it must be pretty old.

    134. Re:Tip of the iceberg by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 0

      IMHO, there are only two Genesis stories. One informs us of a Creator, the other starts with "In the Beginning there were particles ..." The latter posits that the reason we are having this conversation is because the orientation and energy states of certain particles in the Big Bang made it inevitable. That to me takes more blind faith than the former.

    135. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Nah, it's just that as an omnipotent being he realized what a colossal bore life without adversity would become. Plus there's those laws of thermodynamics - they're kinda necessary to keep the whole ball rolling and doing interesting things on its own, but they also means you've got to either leave stuff in an unstable high-energy state or drop by every couple years to wind up the celestial clockspring to avoid having the whole thing freeze into a cold lifeless rock.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    136. Re:Tip of the iceberg by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      AFAIK the Orthodox also include the apocrypha. Blame Martin Luter for including it in a separate part of this translation of the Bible (probably couldn't be assed to translate the entire thing in one volume) and maybe the Jews because it actually isn't in their Ancient Testament (whoops). Allegedly the earliest copies are in Greek.

      Heck I dunno.

    137. Re: Tip of the iceberg by jae471 · · Score: 1

      GACT

    138. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Tom · · Score: 1

      There's actually a lot of potentional scientific correct stuff in the Bible.

      If you read between the lines too much, you forget that what's written is actually the stuff on the lines.

      There are many funny examples in philosophy of how you can interpret a text to mean the opposite of what the author intended, or whatever else you want.

      But evidence is against you. Linguistic analysis holds strong evidence that old texts are largely literal and not metaphorical - and certainly not metaphorical in the sense of requiring twenty jumps to conclusion to arrive at a meaning. Text comparison shows that as far as we can ascertain, at that time, place and culture, if they wrote "heaven", they meant the blue thing above them with the clouds, not a parallel dimension.

      Your eric-van-daeniken-esque interpretations are close to funny, but I fear you didn't mean them as satire, which a) makes me feel sad and b) proves your 2nd point wrong because it clearly demonstrates that our brains aren't really all that evolved. Or at least yours. ;-)

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    139. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should definitely read - Stanislaw Lem "The Star Diaries: 8th Voyage" - apparently and audiobook is here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ZdVW0_Pwrs

    140. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://books.google.ch/books?id=ptFMg34aHo8C&pg=PT30&lpg=PT30&dq=%22honorable+earthling%22&source=bl&ots=Qwtm-NrDJf&sig=OAt4s7LUf_czZ66F17Vz5GfqBkE&hl=pl&sa=X&ei=H3RRVL2pE-T5yQOt1oLQBw&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=%22honorable%20earthling%22&f=false

    141. Re:Tip of the iceberg by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I hate to tell you but that site is no more accurate that someone trying to claim their religion is real. It makes assumption in specific ways in order to contrive its explaining away.

      False implies you take it for fact. The problem is that the majority of what i first saw while skimming through it can be explained away as false too. Don't get caught up into belief around it.

    142. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Bible predicts your fate in the afterlife.

      Unfortunately, by the time you are in a position to determine the accuracy of those predictions, it will be too late for you to make any practical use of this predictive power.

      Kind of a catch-22, there.

      (on a serious note, many mainline denominations of Christianity consider all the "kingdom of God" talk to be metaphors about inner emotional/experiential states that one can achieve in this life. In some cases, they are thought of as apocalyptic descriptions of the second sacking of Jerusalem (70 A.D.) with a few time-sensitive analogies who's meanings have been lost to us. But these non-crazy versions of Christianity don't get the kind of media attention that the fundamentalist varieties do).

    143. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The Thing with Three Souls"

      Under it would be with smaller letters "as defined by a church committee."

    144. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would've bought that!

    145. Re:Tip of the iceberg by tibit · · Score: 1

      It's hard to claim whether something is possible or not if you don't even know what the text means in the first place. Taken at face value it reads like patent nonsense. So you have to "interpret" the text. Once you do that, all bets are off.

      To me, the question of whether anything in the bible is accurate (scientifically, historically, etc.) is essentially moot. The text, as-is, is not usable in answering any such questions. It's almost meaningless in this respect.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    146. Re:Tip of the iceberg by tibit · · Score: 1

      Cha-ching. This also means that it can't be true, and it can't be anything in between. It's utterly useless in that sense.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    147. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Large swaths [of Earth] are covered with desserts....

      I wish!

    148. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Adonai means "our Lord"? I am sure Adon means "sir"

    149. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL. Someone has been watching too much of the History channel!

      captcha: blunder

    150. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "* The arch of Noah - might well have been a spaceship from another planet or solar system, colonializing earth with humans and various animal species."

      WTF are you talking about? +5 informative? Seriously? Have you even read the story? It's a kids fantasy fairytale and has no references to anything space or spacelike. It is purely your own fantasy.
      To the crowd that gave a +5 to this post: +5? Seriously? WTF..

      "Etc etc. It's easy reply to this with a 'what the f* did you smoke'. However, keeping all options open is what a scientist ought to do."

      I have a yellow gazelle living on my ceiling.
      My gazelle is no more real or important than your god.
      Deal with it.

      And if you want to get scientific, why not show some evidence that could support your fantasy? In the end, science is not about keeping an open mind, it is about accepting all evidence and dealing with that. You do not show any evidence and only fantasy so there can be no talk about science.

      Sure, it is possible that the earth was colonized by some space species but there is just no actual evidence. It could have just as well been that mother earth created life by osmosis. Or that my gazelle sneezed the universe into existence, as it keeps telling me.
      In short, you can fantasize anything you want but unless you go out and find a piece of reality that actually shows the fantasy to be true you are not doing any science.

    151. Re:Tip of the iceberg by invid · · Score: 1

      IMHO, there are only two Genesis stories. One informs us of a Creator, the other starts with "In the Beginning there were particles ..." The latter posits that the reason we are having this conversation is because the orientation and energy states of certain particles in the Big Bang made it inevitable. That to me takes more blind faith than the former.

      Just to be clear, you're saying that "there just happens to be a Being capable of creating universes" is more likely than "there just happens to be particles and laws of the universe that can eventually lead to intelligence". Well, at this point argument is really impossible.

      --
      The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
    152. Re:Tip of the iceberg by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      What would cause a person to make an insane choice?

    153. Re:Tip of the iceberg by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      I can be totally sure about something, and then find I was mistaken. I don't see why a scientists can't be totally sure about some things.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    154. Re:Tip of the iceberg by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      From some stuff I read, it sounds like European scientists several centuries ago thought they could learn about the world both from the world itself and from the Bible. That really didn't last very long.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    155. Re:Tip of the iceberg by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Ask a physicist of appropriate speciality about time as it relates to the Big Bang. Last Stephen Hawking book I read claimed that time didn't exist "before" the Big Bang.

      Ask the same physicist about causality. It sure isn't what it used to be.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    156. Re:Tip of the iceberg by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 0

      Your contention that rational thought has sprung unaided from chaos is untenable. Does anyone really believe that everything came from nothing? You are like someone looking through a window without questioning the existence of the window.

    157. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm i thought he, she or it (just to cover all grounds ) just didn't want man to eat his apples.
      So kids, you take apple and get send out of eden... better stick with *nix and not throwing in your own windows

    158. Re:Tip of the iceberg by rhyous · · Score: 1

      Or It is extremely unlikely that these mechanisms evolved in parallel, so *it's extremely likely that* all lifeforms were created using the same Biological programming language: i.e. DNA.

      And there might be other biological programming languages. Would it not be possible for us to detect that instead of DNA, a similar bio-technology would work on a planet with different temperatures and atmosphere.

      Our programming language, DNA, works on this planet, but a separate language works on other planets.

      Recently the number of earth like palnets was estimated to be 8.8 billion. http://www.nbcnews.com/science...

      If different bio-programming languages allow life on other planet types than earth, then the number of possibly inhabited planets becomes nearly infinite.

    159. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

      Let's swap out all the sand with brown sugar and all the scorpions with gummy bears and the venomous snakes with licorice!

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    160. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

      Can't I have both? Rocking out to Phil Collins while playing R-Type and Phantasy Star sounds awesome!

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    161. Re:Tip of the iceberg by operagost · · Score: 1

      The "Gnostic Gospels" aren't all gnostic, and most of them aren't gospels. And the Book of Mormon is not called "the Bible" even by Mormons.

      If you're going to stretch this out to such lengths, then the Qur'an is also "the Bible" and maybe the Bhagavad Gita and the Satanic Bible are "the Bible".

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    162. Re:Tip of the iceberg by ZombieBraintrust · · Score: 1
      2 Timothy 3 14 to 16

      You, however, continue in the things you have learned and become convinced of, knowing from whom you have learned them, and that from childhood you have known the sacred writings which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness

      At some level you need to decide if the Book of Mormon is scripture. You need to decide if the New Testiment is scripture. Or you can read it litterally and decide all text is inspired by God... even slashdot posts. Or you could read it more litterally and decide that only the sacred texts that were read by the literal person Timothy was writing too count.

    163. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Millennium · · Score: 1

      The Bible, and even the Old Testament, paints for us a God with many sides to His personality. We see him cracking puns, playing games, quoting references, and occasionally straight-up trolling people: a far cry from the solemn graybeard that many people, believers and otherwise, like to paint Him. In some aspects, the God of the Bible isn't so different from a modern geek.

      I bring this up because the verse you mention is one of the very first times that He swipes a reference, and from the serpent, no less (see Genesis 3:5). I take this to be a note of bitter sarcasm, more than anything else. He had been painted into a corner by the very system He had set up (and the work of yet another master of trolling), and the only way out was straight through. But that meant doing some things that He clearly was not happy about doing.

    164. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Thinking that we are the first intelligent species and culture that lives on this 4-billion year old earth may be very naive."

            FIRST???!! What do you mean first? What arrogance!

    165. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Thinking that we are the first intelligent species and culture that lives on this 4-billion year old earth may be very naive."

            INTELLIGENT??!! US??!! ! ! Right, whatever floats your boat.

    166. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because Scientologists will hunt you down, defame you, bankrupt you, ruin your life, and possibly murder you if you criticize them. Gays won't.

    167. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More generally, "Adherents of $THIS_RELIGION despise $THAT_RELIGION", where the two religions are not the same. Also, that sense of sameness can be quite specific. I've seen Baptists who froth at Methodists about as strongly as I would have expected them to froth at Muslims. Religion makes some people very, very creepy - best to eschew all of them

      - T

    168. Re:Tip of the iceberg by markass530 · · Score: 1

      " The arch of Noah - might well have been a spaceship from another planet or solar system, colonializing earth with humans and various animal species."

      So what you're saying is you watched ancient aliens for the first time yesterday

    169. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Large swaths are covered with desserts and mountain ranges.

      Please point me at the large swatch of earth covered with desserts. Yum!

    170. Re:Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Large swaths are covered with desserts and mountain ranges.

      Please point me at the large swatch of earth covered with desserts. Yum!

      Damn you... This article had exactly 666 comments. You just ruined it.

  3. Only YEC denies it by halivar · · Score: 4, Informative

    This has been mainline Christian thought, even among evangelicals, for decades. YEC's get the spot-light because they're zany, but this has already been accepted for a good while now.

    1. Re:Only YEC denies it by aBaldrich · · Score: 5, Informative

      The summary is wrong as usual. Francis did not say that these two theories are Truth. Nobody claims that a falsifable theory is The Truth, nor that it is "right". The Pope only said that they are not in contradiction with the common christian faith. Nothing less... and nothing more.

      --
      In soviet russia the government regulates the companies.
    2. Re:Only YEC denies it by damienl451 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Many evangelicals will be willing to grant some kind of natural selection that you'd have to be blind not to accept. They won't insist that the earth was created a couple thousand years ago. But my experience is that you'd better not say that you accept evolution unless you want all the zany people, whether young or old earth, to start trying to talk you out of it every opportunity they get. In the average evangelical church, an outspoken "evolutionist" would be marginalized and de facto excluded from positions of leaderships.

      Yes, most churches won't come out and say that you need to be a YEC or a OEC. But they'll still have that double standard that someone who talks about Adam and Eve being directly, physically created by God will never have any problem, while those who point out that it's scientifically inaccurate will be labeled intolerant, divisive, unfit for leadership, etc.

      Around 30% of evangelicals accept evolution. And that's with a very generous definition of evolution that allows for God to guide the process. If you ask people whether they think evolution is true and that was due to natural processes, i.e. the scientific consensus, you're down to 8%. I'm wondering if the Pope is not also leaving the door open to that when he says "evolution requires the creation of beings that evolve".

      And note that many among the 30% are not the most committed people. If you were to look at the leadership and other influential people in churches, the percentage would be a lot lower.

    3. Re:Only YEC denies it by AmiMoJo · · Score: 0

      It's a tiny concession, and mainstream Christianity still clings to the idea that none of it would be possible without a creator God to kick it all off.

      If it were really about accepting science the pope would accept the scientific method and reasoning too. The classic example of this is the argument that the big bang needed something to start it. That something must have existed before the universe, and must not have required a creator itself otherwise it would just be turtles all the way down. So the obvious question is why be willing to believe that God did not require creating, yet he universe did? It's basic logic and reasoning, but still rejected because it conflicts with dogma.

      From a atheist's point of view the difference between someone who believes god is special and always existed and someone who believes that things in the Bible are a literal historical record is just a question of the degree of delusion/irrationality. The pope hates relativism so by his standard both are as bad.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    4. Re:Only YEC denies it by halivar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      As a church-goer, I can tell you that, yes, an out-spoken evolutionist will be met with awkward silence. Not because anyone disagrees with him, but because they all are thinking the same thing: "Oh, deal Lord, he's going to get crazy old Mrs. Doddard stated again on fossils again. How can I get out of here politely?" It's the same awkward silence you'd get discussing anything contentious at all. Politics, flu vaccines, or even theology (I'm a Presbyterian, and even still discussing Calvanism is a crap-shoot of accidentally starting an argument). Modern churches, even here in the deep south are pretty diverse places, and the general policy seems to be "if you think this is going to start an argument, and is not vitally important, don't talk about it."

      I don't doubt your 30%, though it does not reflect the evangelicals I know (and, like I said, very conservative deep south; perhaps skewed because my acquaintances run in the young adult range).

    5. Re:Only YEC denies it by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This has been mainline Christian thought, even among evangelicals, for decades. YEC's get the spot-light because they're zany, but this has already been accepted for a good while now.

      You can read in Hawking's "A Brief History of Time", his popular science book from the 80's, his conversations with the Pope in the 70's during which the Pope "concedes" time after the Big Bang to science. Hawking gets a little happy about then explaining how time didn't exist until just an infinite moment after the Big Bang, but that's besides the point.

      No, the theologically interesting part here is:

      we run the risk of imagining God was a magician, with a magic wand able to do everything. But that is not so.

      The bit about magicians and magic wands are a throw away softening statement as nobody has ever imagined the Abrahamic God as requiring magic devices. More concisely then:

      we run the risk of imagining God was ... able to do everything. But that is not so.

      That may well be the most controversial thing a Pope has ever said. And has the potential to re-focus Christians on what Jesus was talking about - they've become lost in Old-Testament vengeance in the most recent millennium. Long gone are the days of Constantine not being able to fight wars of conquest because his army was full of Christian pacifists.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    6. Re:Only YEC denies it by Payden+K.+Pringle · · Score: 1

      >So the obvious question is why be willing to believe that God did not require creating, yet he universe did?

      The universe has cause and effect and requires it for everything. I don't think it's a stretch of logic to say the universe requires that of itself as well.

      Applying that to God doesn't make sense because then we are saying that God is subject to the same things that the universe is. Which is kind of opposite the whole concept of God. i.e. Supernatural (read: doesn't follow nature's laws).

      It's logical to apply the universe's inner workings to itself as a whole, but it's not to apply them to something that is supposed to be beyond them by definition (at least as most religions look at it).

    7. Re:Only YEC denies it by tehcyder · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Modern churches, even here in the deep south are pretty diverse places, and the general policy seems to be "if you think this is going to start an argument, and is not vitally important, don't talk about it."

      I cannot see the point of an organisation that you go to voluntarily (i.e. excluding work) where you aren't allowed to have any meaningful discussions.

      Even going out for after work drinks you're likelyto argue about football, politics or something.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    8. Re:Only YEC denies it by Pedrito · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As someone who lives in the U.S. South (Arkansas), this is not the belief of most evangelicals. My wife is a devout Christian and our church is an evangelical church (though not like most that you're probably familiar with. Our church is very into being Christians and not so much talking about how Christian they are. They spend the vast majority of their money helping people in poverty while meeting in a Boys & Girls Club gym instead of building a real church.) But among the religious around here, there's very little belief in evolution or the big bang. That said, the local Christian university (John Brown University) has a pretty good evolutionary biology program. So there's some hope for the future, but not as much as I'd like. Science is definitely taking a back seat with evangelicals in the South. It's a pretty tragic state for the future of science in this country. The South certainly won't be contributing a lot to modern cosmology or evolutionary biology.

    9. Re:Only YEC denies it by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      The universe has cause and effect and requires it for everything.

      Not according to quantum mechanics.

      Which is kind of opposite the whole concept of God

      But now you just made up arbitrary atrributes for god, without providing any reasoning why they might apply to him. We are back to wondering why you would say god is special and does not require a case, when you maintain that the universe does. Surely a simpler explanation, with an equal amount of evidence and logic to it, would be that the universe itself simply has the special property of being able to exist without a cause.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    10. Re:Only YEC denies it by halivar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's not about being allowed; it's about not being a bore. I have vigorous and enthusiastic debates with religious friends, including about evolution, but I know my audience. I only argue with friends and random strangers on the internet.

    11. Re:Only YEC denies it by halivar · · Score: 2

      I would like to tut-tut your church's backward thinking, except it sounds like they do more for their fellow man than I do. TBH, it doesn't sound too tragic; I wish I was less into right-thinking and more into right-doing.

    12. Re:Only YEC denies it by Zocalo · · Score: 1

      Sure, but having God's representative on Earth make the claim is meant to carry a little more weight than the concensus view of a bunch of Cardinals and Bishops, isn't it? Something about the Pope's word supposedly being infallible to Catholics, or some such? Between this, acknowledging the child abuse issue, and the more accepting view of non-heterosexuals he expressed a few days back we've possibly got one of the most progressive Christian leaders of all time leading the largest denomination of the same. Best of all, I don't think he's done yet, and even as an atheist I think that's a great thing. The more conservative members of the conclave are probably wondering if they might have made a huge mistake about now, and it does make a hugely refershing change to see that religion can be progressive after all the fundamentalist crap being used as a cloak for all sorts of personal agendas (because it sure isn't religion) that is nearly all we've been hearing about on that front for the last decade-and-change.

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    13. Re:Only YEC denies it by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      we run the risk of imagining God was ... able to do everything. But that is not so.

      That may well be the most controversial thing a Pope has ever said.

      Yes, that was the only part of the entire affair which gave me pause. Wait, what? Isn't God's infallibility and omnipotence kind of central to the religion? Everything which happens is according to A Plan which guides us to an inevitable conclusion? That does everything but throw the whole schmeer out the window. If God can't do anything, then he's not infallible, and if the Pope's authority is derived from his connection to God... well, you see where this is going.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    14. Re:Only YEC denies it by halivar · · Score: 1

      Sure, but having God's representative on Earth make the claim is meant to carry a little more weight than the concensus view of a bunch of Cardinals and Bishops, isn't it?

      "Well, I didn't vote for you!"</constitutional-peasant>

    15. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that's why mainstream Christianity is losing it.

      I don't care what scientists tell you, the Bible is the word of G*d, and is infalliable, so it overrides any human observation. There's no evidence for macro-evolution, and the big bang is the just moment G*d created the universe from nothing.

      The more the masses keep losing their way, the more problems G*d will bring to the world. The apocalypse is getting closer (ebola, global warming, the wars in the middle east). And sadly all these nonbelievers are going to become a part of Satan's army when the final judgement comes.

      If you are interested in hearing more of what I have to say, about how you can join the glorious kindgom of G*d, just reply and I'd be glad to share with you the eternal truth. Thank you for listening, and G*d bless you.

    16. Re:Only YEC denies it by halivar · · Score: 1

      Interestingly enough, nothing you posted has anything to do with the gospel of Christ. Being right about evolution or the big-bang is of no spiritual benefit to you whatsoever.

    17. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a church-goer, I can tell you that, yes, an out-spoken evolutionist will be met with awkward silence. Not because anyone disagrees with him, but because they all are thinking the same thing: "Oh, deal Lord, he's going to get crazy old Mrs. Doddard stated again on fossils again. How can I get out of here politely?" It's the same awkward silence you'd get discussing anything contentious at all.

      You misspelled "boring, irrelevant and self-aggrandizing" as "contentious". Religion is probably the least awkward way to tell you "shut up already".

    18. Re:Only YEC denies it by mrchaotica · · Score: 1, Funny

      (I'm a Presbyterian, and even still discussing Calvanism is a crap-shoot of accidentally starting an argument)

      ...Especially an argument about the proper spelling of "Calvinism!"

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    19. Re:Only YEC denies it by halivar · · Score: 1

      To the stake with you, heretic.

    20. Re:Only YEC denies it by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 1

      I'll grant that the Pope is stepping away from the old doctrine that the Creator was like some guy in a toy shop putting together the Universe like a kid with a giant set of Legos putting together something a little bit complex. That's a big step. It begins the process of healing the rift between the Catholic churches (and all the Protestant and evangelical spin-offs) and the Gnostics and other panentheists (with their understanding that Deity might reside within the Creation, rather than there being some kind of barrier between us lowly earthern creatures and the heavenly beings).

      But the Big Bang of science is not understood as something that happened separately from some heavenly realm that exists independent of it. The Big Bang states that the Universe gave birth to itself, and by implication gave birth to any gods or other form of Deity that may be around today. It is going to take a great many more steps before the Roman Catholic Church will be able to accept that premise. And it will have to apologize for persecuting a lot of the heretics it has created, starting with the Gnostics, on its way to that acceptance. However there is nothing in the teachings of Jesus or in that covenant that conflicts with a Big Bang approach to spirituality. The understanding of Jesus would shift a little-- Big Bang Christianity would necessarily become more tolerant for one thing-- but it is not unreasonable to think that institutions, including religions, should evolve along with the rest of the Universe.

      --
      Will
    21. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whether God can do "anything" has been discussed by Catholic theologians for centuries. Just look at the work of Thomas Aquinas, such as those dealing with the omnipotence paradox.

    22. Re:Only YEC denies it by cyberchondriac · · Score: 2

      Yeah, but that doesn't stir the pot half as much, which is good for business. Better to whip all the demagogues (on either side of the argument) into a frenzy and enjoy the fireworks...apparently.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    23. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has been mainline Christian thought, even among evangelicals, for decades. YEC's get the spot-light because they're zany, but this has already been accepted for a good while now.

      Mainline is a christian movement comprising a minority of American christians, mainstream is a different term. You use the first to falsely describe the second

    24. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this has been the Catholic church's stance for at least my entire life. I grew up in a Catholic family, went to Catholic school, I was taught evolution, I was taught the universe started in a big bang, I was taught the story of creation in the bible, I was taught (and this was repeated and stressed) "The Bible is not a book of science."

      The stance has been that much of the 'science' type of things that some take away from the bible (like the story of creation) are just stories to relay that God did something, not how it was done.

      If you have watched Religulous (while it is biased of course) if you watch the bit with the Catholic priest, he talks about how it is a bunch of stories in the bible. The ideas that many people have about the Catholic church's teachings are actually based on the ideas of other Christian religions. Of course their ideas have evolved over time, and they may not do a good job of explaining their stance even within the church itself.

      I haven't been in a church in years, nor have I been to a mass in more than a decade.

    25. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're confusing management with micromanagement. Management doesn't require omnipotence, but it can certainly implement A Plan which guides us to an inevitable conclusion. Anyway that's not even the story. Free will comes into play in complex ways. The theology of this is actually quite interesting, but doesn't lend itself to simple sound-bitey summaries. In short: Christianity doesn't say God is omnipotent, no.

    26. Re:Only YEC denies it by Talderas · · Score: 1

      Papal infallibility is very rarely invoked outside of the canonization of saints. There's a handful that invoke infallibility with 11 officially recognized, through the entire existance of the church, but only the Immaculate Conception and Assumption of Mary are well known. There are a set of conditions by which a statement by a Pope can be declared infallible. In general, unless the Pope says that it must be done by the whole church it's not considered infallible.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    27. Re:Only YEC denies it by neoritter · · Score: 1

      If it were really about accepting science the pope would accept the scientific method and reasoning too.

      Oh, you mean the modern scientific method that the Catholic Church basically wrote the book on how to do? Robert Grosseteste, Roger Bacon, William of Ockham (Occam's Razor), Albertus Magnus, Theodoric of Freiberg, Jean Buridan. None of those name's rings a bell. Or when you were studying the history of scientific progress in the Western world were you asleep?

    28. Re:Only YEC denies it by s122604 · · Score: 1

      Wide is the path to destruction, and many shall find it!

    29. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I cannot see the point of an organisation that you go to voluntarily (i.e. excluding work) where you aren't allowed to have any meaningful discussions.

      Even going out for after work drinks you're likelyto argue about football, politics or something.

      That's a sign that you need to find another church.

    30. Re:Only YEC denies it by neoritter · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand the Catholic Churches issue with Gnosticism... Gnostics said matter is evil. The simple version of why this conflicts with Catholicism is this: if matter is evil, then Jesus Christ could not be true God and true man, for Christ is in no way evil. Thus many Gnostics denied the Incarnation, claiming that Christ only appeared to be a man, but that his humanity was an illusion. At a more basic level it also contradicts the Bible, "And God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good" Genesis 1:31 If everything God created was good, how can matter be evil?

      Now I'm not asking you to agree with the logic or the explanation as to why it's wrong. My point is to illustrate that their problem with Gnostics had nothing to do with some aversion to science or philosophic thought.

    31. Re:Only YEC denies it by Creedo · · Score: 1

      Oh, you mean the modern scientific method that the Catholic Church basically wrote the book on how to do?

      That's some specious reasoning, there. Of course Catholics were involved with the development of science. But it certainly wasn't a church function.
      That being said, I think that the OP was not being clear. It is not that the pope doesn't accept the scientific method and reasoning in general. It's just that he uses compartmentalized thinking to avoid applying those principles to certain cherished beliefs. Unfortunately, this sort of thinking is fairly common, even among those who understand science and skepticism, and it's not limited to religious thought.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    32. Re:Only YEC denies it by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I fully appreciate Christian scholar's contribution to science. It's just a shame it was tainted by a requirement to integrate it with Christian beliefs. For example, Descartes famously had to acknowledge god in his Meditations on First Philosophy, even though the only reasonable conclusion would have been to assume there was no god.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    33. Re:Only YEC denies it by neoritter · · Score: 1

      It's just that he uses compartmentalized thinking to avoid applying those principles to certain cherished beliefs. Unfortunately, this sort of thinking is fairly common, even among those who understand science and skepticism, and it's not limited to religious thought.

      At which point, his argument becomes irrelevant. But if I can add to this, I don't think whether the Pope or Catholics have "compartmentalized thinking" is really relevant. You use the scientific method when you want to prove or disprove natural events or processes. I don't see why you'd use it to determine if X belief is heretical to Catholicism. In the same way, you wouldn't use the scientific method to determine if X law is unconstitutional. The Constitution are your axioms that are used to logically derive your laws. The Catholic church clearly uses the scientific method when it comes to natural events. They use it when studying the stars, biology, etc. And they use it when determining if someone requires an Exorcism or if a miracle is real. Granted they may not be AS thorough and not seek to find a natural explanation for one of those events once they've exhausted what modern science can tell us. But their not going: "you say she's frothing at the mouth and convulsing? Throw some holy water on her." No they're going: "[same situation]? Take her to a doctor first and let's see if there's a medical issue here before we start shouting Bible passages and throwing holy water on her."

    34. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I read that I thought, "Did he read the "Rama" series!?"

      Spoiler Alert ("Rama" series by Arthur C. Clarke and Gentry Lee):

      That's how the trilogy ends! The ships are out taking samples of God's work to see how is 'initial spark of creation' (i.e.: big bang) is doing...

      (Said in my best "Dune" voice-over, "Against my better judgement...I like this new Pope.")

    35. Re:Only YEC denies it by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      The Big Bang states that the Universe gave birth to itself, and by implication gave birth to any gods or other form of Deity that may be around today.

      No, it doesn't. You might want to read up on the origins of the Big Bang theory, and the Catholic guy who invented it. It's entirely possible to believe that a being outside the space-time continuum created our universe with a bang -- or laid an egg which hatched, or farted or sneezed out the Cosmos.

      I don't accept any of these theories, mind, but there's nothing directly contradictory about believing in a creator outside the continuum created in the Big Bang; indeed that's what some multiverse theories (e.g., black hole cosmology) amount to, though of course they're not speaking of a conscious creator.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    36. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why is it "being a bore" to discuss something that may start an argument? the fact that it may start an argument guarantees the subject is of interest, and thus you are not being a bore in bringing it up.

      If the people around you do not find challenging or intellectually stimulating ideas interesting, it is not you that is the bore, but them.

    37. Re:Only YEC denies it by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      The theology is only interesting as an example of how contorted the reasoning can get when you start with "we want to believe X" even when contradictions crop up like "if god's omnipotent then how can anyone be held accountable for malice ?". I'll say one thing for the theologians - they are creative.

      --
      Nullius in verba
    38. Re:Only YEC denies it by dissy · · Score: 1

      There is a saying I picked up somewhere that feels especially apt
      "There are three things you never discuss with coworkers: Politics, Religion, and The Great Pumpkin"

      I'm glad we aren't all anonymous psychopaths only out looking for peoples buttons to push needlessly.

    39. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please don't don't confuse Catholics and evangelicals. There really is no comparison and we Catholics are already confused enough. No assistance from you is required.

    40. Re:Only YEC denies it by Creedo · · Score: 1

      The Catholic church clearly uses the scientific method when it comes to natural events.

      And you miss the point. The church STARTS by asserting that a whole host of events, both historical and on-going, are not natural events. Those events are ignored in terms of the scientific method.
      And they often only pay lip service to claims of scientific evaluation. It doesn't take much digging around in the miracle claims for beatification, things like eucharistic miracles and the ever present Marian visitations(just for a few random examples) to see that a lot of "evidence" is just hand-waving over dubious claims.

      You use the scientific method when you want to prove or disprove natural events or processes. I don't see why you'd use it to determine if X belief is heretical to Catholicism.

      Hmm, all of those papal encyclicals, catechisms and other teachings are obviously out of date, then, since they often make claims about physical processes which are very much in the area of scientific investigation. You should mention this to your bishop, so he can pass it on.

      They use it when studying the stars, biology, etc.

      Ah, that's why they have jettisoned the idea of a single couple as the genesis of the whole human race as it's scientifically untenable. Oh, wait, they didn't. That's defined in Humani Generis:

      When, however, there is question of another conjectural opinion, namely polygenism, the children of the Church by no means enjoy such liberty. For the faithful cannot embrace that opinion which maintains that either after Adam there existed on this earth true men who did not take their origin through natural generation from him as from the first parent of all, or that Adam represents a certain number of first parents.

      So, no, a basic fact of human evolution is ignored because of its theological implications. That's not a scientific viewpoint.

      Granted they may not be AS thorough and not seek to find a natural explanation for one of those events once they've exhausted what modern science can tell us.

      They don't even go that far. Hell, they've even regressed in modern times, since JPII gutted the office of the Promotor fide(better known as the Devil's Advocate). It wasn't rigorous before; now it's a rubber stamp. And don't get me started on exorcisms.
      I was a Catholic and active in apologetics for many years. This nonsense was a large part of what made believing in that church an untenable position.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    41. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True but you still choose what arguments you're willing to have.

      I will happily argue with a person, or two, from my parish about scientific questions. I do not choose to take on the entire coffee and donuts crowd after Mass at the same time.

      The Catholics sitting in my home on an evening of drinking beer and eating a good meal can be reasoned with, even though I know I will likely never convince them of anything if they disagree. They know and understand that I am a self described "bad, doubting Catholic" and accept me for my homebrewing skills anyway.

      The Sunday after Mass folks are the ardent follower crowd. The ones who still think women shouldn't be on the alter (to do anything but clean) and can't understand why we "gave up' the Latin Mass. They think because a camel herder thought the world was flat as he laid on the ground at night, the world is flat!! They can't accept that a political movement may have found it necessary to demonize the Egyptians for one reason or another that all the Jews working in Israel were slaves and had to saved by a magician. They cannot, in any way, shape or form believe most of them were immigrant labors who paid in beer and food. This is not the crowd you take on by yourself. You eat your donuts and drink you coffee/juice, toss in $5 or $10 bucks and go home.

      If you didn't learn in Kindergarten to choose your battles you probably never will.

    42. Re:Only YEC denies it by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      I don't go to the movies to have a meaningful discussion. I do that after the movies.

      Same with church.

    43. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the average evangelical church, an outspoken "evolutionist" would be marginalized and de facto excluded from positions of leaderships.

      So what? Who in their right mind would want a leading position in a church? Any position at all?

    44. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christian pacifists.they would be the mostly Republican and occasional Democratic congress and senate people then ?

    45. Re:Only YEC denies it by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Minor point - the constitutional "axioms" are (theoretically) the rules which *constrain* the laws - if something can be logically derived from the constitution then there's no need for an additional law restating the same thing.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    46. Re:Only YEC denies it by budgenator · · Score: 1

      So it's better for Christians to allow some 6,000 year old Pagan Drivel to contaminate their faith on the say-so of a crotchety old lady with a fifth-grade reading level? Sometimes you just have to say "Citation Please", but say it with love.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    47. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Learn how to use apostrophes before you start dissing other people's education, you bead-jiggling pedo.

    48. Re:Only YEC denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I cannot see the point of an organisation that you go to voluntarily (i.e. excluding work) where you aren't allowed to have any meaningful discussions. "

      That's the power of indoctrination. They will make you see.

    49. Re:Only YEC denies it by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      If your churchmates don't really care about the science, that's not really bad. Having a false opinion of something because you never looked into it and never needed to is pretty much harmless. We've all got tons of such opinions. People on slashdot usually have more or less considered opinions on science, but that's because they get interested in it. If somebody's busy trying to make sure poor people have enough to eat, I don't really care about their scientific opinions.

      The problems is if they get vocal and insistent about their false opinions, and you said nothing about that. It also appears that any of them who do get interested in science have opportunities to do so.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    50. Re:Only YEC denies it by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      It's not necessarily compartmentalized thinking, but the natural limits to science. If you can find a way to do objective measurements, you can make a science out of it. Bill James applied scientific methods to baseball and baseball stats (which are objective measurements, although there was a certain amount of subjectivity in making some of them).

      If we had some objective means of determining the morality of something, we could have a scientific theory of ethics and morals. We don't. Therefore, to say anything meaningful about morals, we have to come up with something outside the process of science.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    51. Re:Only YEC denies it by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Huh? Past the "cogito, ergo sum", there's nothing you're going to figure out from first principles that applies to the real world. (That's not even from first principles, since there's no logical reason anything has to exist. It's an observation that's really hard to get out of.) Anything Descartes came up with in the second Meditation and later was going to be based on his prior beliefs, and I suspect he had a strong desire to come up with some sort of reason to believe the world is real (IIRC, in the Sixth Meditation).

      I'm also curious how, using the principle of the Meditations, he was supposed to come to the conclusion that there was no God.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    52. Re:Only YEC denies it by Creedo · · Score: 1

      If we had some objective means of determining the morality of something, we could have a scientific theory of ethics and morals.

      And if the Catholic church made no formal claims about anything physical, this would be a valid critique. It is not. The church makes claims about evolutionary history(see Humani Generis, the Catechism, etc), miracles(see virtually any beatification process), mental illness(see any "possession" case), decay(see the silliness about incorruptible bodies), etc. This is ignoring such silliness as transubstantiation("this process is physical, but can't be detected pretty much by meaningless distinctions about substance and accident").

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
  4. Intelligent Design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In fact what he said is the "Intelligent Design" - that he put in laws to guide the evolution

    1. Re:Intelligent Design by Z00L00K · · Score: 2

      Which in a way is to try to please everybody.

      I think that what he tries to do is to defuse the debate entirely and take a pragmatic approach to it. We don't need more religious wars right now.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    2. Re:Intelligent Design by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      "Intelligent Design" is the conjecture that certain biological structures could not have emerged through the process of evolution and therefore (a non-sequitur reasoning method) an unspecified "designer" employed unspecified methods to implement the "design" of these structures. Not only is the conjecture completely untestable (as undefined mechanisms cannot be tested), but many of the supposed "irreducibly complex" structures are not actually irreducibly complex. A common failing of "design" advocates is an assumption that biological structures always emerge through purely additive processes, when in fact a process that removes redundant structures could leave behind structures that could not have existed in partial form on their own (but that could have existed in partial form along with the no-longer-present redundant structures).

    3. Re:Intelligent Design by gx5000 · · Score: 1

      The TRUTH NEVER PLEASES EVERYONE.....

      Consensus produces palatable lies for general consumption, not truth.

      --
      End of Line.
  5. Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 0, Troll

    It's funny how this charlatan thinks he has the authority to declare evolution true.

    And yet he probably believes that by saying a few magic words a cracker and grape juice become the literal body of a guy dead for two thousand years.

    1. Re: Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except he didn't declare it true - he said God created human beings then evolution took over, which is just as implausible as YEC and is similarly not demonstrated by the evidence we have.

    2. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Scientific reasoning tells me there are reasons religious beliefs are common throughout human societal history. That same scientific reasoning tells me that, because of its place in our societal history, hatred of those based on their practice of religion is more irrational than the practice of religion itself.

    3. Re: Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by dywolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      that's not what he said.
      he said what the Church has said for some time now: if evolution does exist, it exists God created it.
      Regardless of certain American Catholics who have more in common with evangelicals in their rejection of the science, the Catholic Church itself has not had a conflict with scientific theory for some time now.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    4. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by umafuckit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't personally give a shit what the pope thinks. However, it's clear that millions of other people very much do give a shit. In this instance, the pope is obviously trying to discourage creationism and reduce the friction between science and religion. At least some creationists are likely to listen to the pope and accept what he's saying, in a way that they wouldn't listen to scientists. So I don't see this as the pope giving his seal if approval to the theories in question. Instead, he's giving his seal of approval for catholics to accept the theories. Given that the religion isn't going away any time soon, I consider this to be of value.

    5. Re: Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree. In tribal societies, theYs vs Them aspect of religion may well have been an advantage. If the whole tribe 'believes' in Gumuthua the lake God, then they will be more willing to fight/kill/wipe out that other tribe that believes in Tomothea the tree God. The winners take all the resources and their genes, including the propensity to 'believe', get propagated.

    6. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      A blanket hatred to somebody based on believes is irrational; such blanket hatred would itself be a believe.
      That does not mean that a dislike, or perhaps even hatred, of any individual religion is irrational.
      History tells us that eventually, all religions will end: None of the earlier religions are still being practiced.
      Assuming there are common reasons earlier religions have ended, these reasons also apply to the world's current religions.

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    7. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religion is the root of the majority of the world's problems, especially when it comes to oppression. More and more people are starting to see that, and the atheistic segment of the population is growing at an unheard of rate.

      Personally I hope that religion can some day be abolished completely. Nothing good can come of it. Morals and ethics existed long before religion. I believe it was simply invented as a tool of oppression, because that is the only thing it has ever been used for.

      Good try. No one believes that though no matter how many times you say it.

    8. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by ZombieBraintrust · · Score: 1

      Religion isn't the root. Human nature is the root of the worlds problems. People do evil stuff. People like oppressing other people. They find reasons for doing so.

    9. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eliminate people and solve the problem at the root.
      See it's easy.

    10. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      I would probably have been better to say that intolerance of those that are religious is irrational for someone that takes a scientific view of the evolution of socital beliefs. That they are decreasing in practice is irrelevant to that point.

    11. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      unless you see separation of the in group from the out group as the sole purpose of religion.

      --
      Nullius in verba
    12. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't consider that a scientific analysis of religion and its place in societal development.

    13. Re: Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty much this.

      Religion is a very effective survival strategy for civilizations up to just shy of the Industrial age (when they gain the ability to quickly traverse enough distance that short of converting the whole world you can't realistically avoid encountering people who have a different religion from your own).

      Ceremonies strengthen community (everyone can can relate to the shared experience of attending the big ones), tradition simplifies passing complex knowledge to subsequent generations (don't ask why we gather the single men and women together to throw trinkets for one of each to catch at a wedding juts do it), and attributing disasters beyond the understanding of the society to a comprehensible entity that can be appeased provides hope in desperate times (while still leaving an out when the appeasement fails to work).

    14. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by gx5000 · · Score: 1

      Hatred is a strong Word but Religion has held us back long enough no ?

      --
      End of Line.
    15. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Scientific reasoning tells me there are reasons religious beliefs are common throughout human societal history. That same scientific reasoning tells me that, because of its place in our societal history, hatred of those based on their practice of religion is more irrational than the practice of religion itself.

      Yes, there is a reason why there is a tendency for a common belief in a society: the strongest group of believers killed off those with 'heretical' beliefs.

      Persecution of the jews, slaughter of the cathars, persecution of the catholics (in protestant europe), burning of 'witches', the spanish inquistion, ..

      If you didn't conform to the majority belief then you were cast out or simply eliminated. This tended to result in 'common religious beliefs' and does not indicate that these are 'correct' or even useful.

      However, particular beliefs have changed over time, which is why there are thousands of different 'churches' each with their own dogma.

    16. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Is that your scientific analysis?

    17. Re:Don't wear a condom, it thwarts God's will by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That same scientific reasoning tells me that, because of its place in our societal history, hatred of those based on their practice of religion is more irrational than the practice of religion itself.

      If you want to take a stab at atheists, at least have the common courtesy to do it to our face. A courtesy I at least will extend to you.

      I don't hate your brethren because of what they believe in, I hate them because of what they try to force unto others as a result of that belief.

  6. Take that, Christians! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    At last! This pope looks like an atheist next to some of the Christians I know...

    1. Re:Take that, Christians! by SJHillman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nah, the Pope just has his priorities in order. "Argue about shit that doesn't matter a whole lot to the church or God" is waaay down the Pope's list, but waaay up the list of many people who just like to argue because it gives them a sense of superiority.

    2. Re:Take that, Christians! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bingo.

  7. So What? by juanfgs · · Score: 1

    Catholicism has taught that the evolution and big bang theory are right in sunday school for ages now and that the genesis is symbolic. At least that's what I was taught when I was a kid.

    1. Re:So What? by dablow · · Score: 1

      ...which in turn makes you wonder how do you determine which parts of the Bible are symbolic and which are literal? If it's all symbolic, then it stands to reason that God and Jesus are symbolic as well. If not who gets to make that call? The Pope?

    2. Re:So What? by aBaldrich · · Score: 2

      Saint Theophilus, bishop of Anthioch between the years 169 and 183, wrote that the book of Genesis includes several images and symbols that were difficult to understand by people outside christianity, and he strongly disadvised the text to be read in public or to new joiners so that they would not be confused.

      --
      In soviet russia the government regulates the companies.
    3. Re:So What? by njnnja · · Score: 1

      If not who gets to make that call? The Pope?

      Ummm...exactly. The Bible is obviously an important part of the Catholic belief system but it's the institution of the Church that has the final say. Catholicism is what the Catholic Church, with the Pope at its head, says it is. It may seem tautological but it actually isn't. For example, for many Protestant (especially Evangelical) sects, a layperson could make an effective argument about a controversial subject by saying "Here is what it says in Bible...", while an argument that appeals to an authority such as a pastor would not be (theologically) persuasive. But to a Catholic, the only real trump card is "The Church says..."

    4. Re:So What? by Teresita · · Score: 1

      Catholicism has taught that the evolution and big bang theory are right in sunday school for ages now..

      Maybe a modified version of those theories. For instance, the modern synthesis of descent with variation has no supernatural guidance, but the Catholic version does. The big bang theory indicates that time began to operate 13.7 billion years ago, the Catholic version insists that the words "cause" and "effect" had meaning prior to that.

    5. Re:So What? by juanfgs · · Score: 0

      Well, I'm not here to discuss theology. Just the truth about what the doctrine has said. I'm an agnostic myself.

      What I can assure is that this pope is a skilled politician, and he'll probably get the best reputation since John Paul II . He called the vote on gay marriage because he knew it wouldn't pass, but "hey, it's not my fault, I TRIED!". And several other acts like acting "humble" by choosing the cheapest luxuries in his life.

    6. Re:So What? by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      But isn't this the same reason that evangelicals have traditionally distrusted Catholicism, and one of the main selling points of fundamentalist Christianity? Catholicism is pretty much the exemplar of organized religion: doctrine is determined by the church hierarchy rather than the text of the Bible, which of course has been prone to all kinds of abuse, and the dependency on church membership for salvation gives the institution immense secular power. With fundamentalism, on the other hand, all that matters is accepting Jesus as lord and savior, and following the text of the Bible, which has been static for many centuries (ignoring the translation issue for now) and isn't prone to tampering by present-day authorities. (My understanding was that this is one of the same attractions of Islamic law elsewhere in the world.) Given the history of the Catholic church in medieval Europe, I can see why this would be attractive to the spiritually-minded (which I am definitely not).

    7. Re:So What? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      For instance, the modern synthesis of descent with variation has no supernatural guidance, but the Catholic version does.

      While that's true, it's something of a misrepresentation of the situation. Catholics (and many other religious people, and most Christians) believe that everything is influenced by their God. Depending on how excited they are about this, they may insist that God is capable of producing any individual result, or that he is responsible for every outcome, but His Hand is supposed to be everywhere, or at the very least, everywhere necessary for His Plan. With All Appropriate Capital Letters, of course.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:So What? by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Old Testament: a history of the Jewish people and their mythology.
      New Testament: factual account of the life of Jesus Christ and the subsequent adventures and writings of his followers.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    9. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...which in turn makes you wonder how do you determine which parts of the Bible are symbolic and which are literal?
      If it's all symbolic, then it stands to reason that God and Jesus are symbolic as well.

      Not really. While I'm an agnostic atheist myself my bible studies have been rather limited but from what I take from it a large part of Christianity revolves around the old testament being misinterpreted and thus God sent his son to earth to correct things.
      A good Christian should typically disregard the old testament in favor of the new. (Where as someone who disregards the new testament and follows the old would be a more closely aligned with Jewish lore.)
      That the Catholic church embraces the big bang theory shouldn't come as a surprise as the idea was originally suggested by a Catholic priest by the name Georges Lemaitre and in a reasonably clean way preserves the idea of a genesis in a world were science had shown that the Earth wasn't created the way the Bible tells. That the Catholic church embraces an idea that they can take credit for should hardly come as news.

      If not who gets to make that call? The Pope?

      Sure, why not. According to catholics the Pope is the human that has closest connection with God. In matters of interpreting Gods word the Pope would have the final say unless God himself comes back to earth and claims differently.
      The protestants will naturally protests, according to them the relationship with God is a personal thing and no other human can claim to know your relation to God better than yourself.

      With that said I wouldn't throw too much shit on the current pope. From what I have read he actually takes a stance towards a church more in line with current science and morals where the previous popes have been way to conservative and reluctant to say anything at all.
      A pope that actually is concerned with what is good and right rather than just clinging on to traditional values is a good thing.
      I can't say if he is closer to God than other humans, but it is pretty clear that he is closer to God than the previous popes.

    10. Re:So What? by njnnja · · Score: 1

      All of these are excellent points and I was going to go into it in my earlier post but I got too lazy to do it, so I'm glad that you did. What I would add is that in all religions there is a tension between "true believers" who think that a religion should avoid hierarchies and stay out of public life, versus the "help the people" group that thinks that a religion *has* to be out in the world where the people are.

      The problem with the "true believers" approach is that hiding up in a monastery and saying prayers 20 hours a day doesn't seem to do much to help actual people in real suffering, and to a lot of religious people, that is important. Further, its insularity can lead to total inflexibility and stagnation, or even just irrelevance to the outside world. OTOH, the problem with the "help the people" group is that the more a religion has contact with the outside world, there are more temptations and that will lead to more corruption.

      The Catholic Church has tended towards the more worldly, "help the people" view, and the Jesuits even more so (of which the current Pope is a member of). But as a result, it has often gotten involved in real world power struggles and fallen to the corruption that a more "pure" religion is less susceptible to. However, it also has a strong component of "true believers," with an option to lead a monastic life, while even clergy that deal directly with the public live a life that is very different from the public that they interact with (vows of poverty, chastity, etc). That flexibility to do both has probably been a big part of why the Catholic Church has lasted as long as it has.

    11. Re:So What? by danaris · · Score: 1

      If not who gets to make that call? The Pope?

      Ummm...exactly. The Bible is obviously an important part of the Catholic belief system but it's the institution of the Church that has the final say. Catholicism is what the Catholic Church, with the Pope at its head, says it is. It may seem tautological but it actually isn't. For example, for many Protestant (especially Evangelical) sects, a layperson could make an effective argument about a controversial subject by saying "Here is what it says in Bible...", while an argument that appeals to an authority such as a pastor would not be (theologically) persuasive. But to a Catholic, the only real trump card is "The Church says..."

      Except that, as I understand it, the Pope doesn't get to just declare which parts of the Bible (which has been accepted doctrine for well over a millennium) are true, which are false, and which are metaphor or allegory as it suits him. He can make pronouncements either about things that aren't directly covered by the Bible, or about rather specific pre- or proscriptions that it makes. If he wants to start chopping up the Bible, though, declaring large chunks to be something other than what has already been decided, I'm pretty sure he has to call some kind of doctrinal convention, like (IIRC) the Council of Carthage in the 4th century.

      However, I'm neither a Catholic nor a particular scholar in these matters, so feel free to correct me if you have better information :-)

      Dan Aris

      --
      Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
    12. Re:So What? by danaris · · Score: 1

      For instance, the modern synthesis of descent with variation has no supernatural guidance, but the Catholic version does.

      While that's true, it's something of a misrepresentation of the situation. Catholics (and many other religious people, and most Christians) believe that everything is influenced by their God. Depending on how excited they are about this, they may insist that God is capable of producing any individual result, or that he is responsible for every outcome, but His Hand is supposed to be everywhere, or at the very least, everywhere necessary for His Plan. With All Appropriate Capital Letters, of course.

      I think far too many people—not just atheists, but theists of whatever sort who are less familiar with the thinking of Catholics—miss this important point. It's not that God specifically decided to control evolution, and left other stuff alone—it's that He, through whatever means, guides everything, all the time, in accordance with His plan.

      Though one thing I've always been somewhat fuzzy on is to what extent free will—both of humans and of Satan—really enters into the equation. Sometimes, it seems like Satan or humans acting badly can mess up God's plan, and other times it seems like everything they try to do just plays back into God's hands. And I'm not aware of any specific blanket pronouncements on the subject within standard doctrine, either clearly stating that humans do have free will or that we don't.

      Just part of why I'm much more fond of the theology in the Curse of Chalion series by Lois McMaster Bujold. Not only do humans have explicit free will there, the Gods can't even interfere in the material world in more than tiny, subtle ways without humans deliberately surrendering their free will to one or more of the Gods...

      Give me something clearly defined like that any day, over the mishmash that is Christian doctrine and theology. ^_^

      Dan Aris

      --
      Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
    13. Re:So What? by rmandevi · · Score: 1

      And that's the problem with a lot of churches today.

      The concept is "Sola Scriptura", that the entirety of revelation is found between the covers of the Bible. But if you read that Bible, Jesus never promised us a book. He promised us a Church led by the Holy Spirit. That's why we have a Pope and a hierarchical Church--there is exactly one truth out there, so you need a unified voice to express it. And mind you, not everything that comes out of the Pope's mouth is absolute truth; he's a person just like you and I, and he gets things wrong from time to time (and there have been some downright evil popes in history, but I digress...). If he's declaring a dogma, the Holy Spirit prevents him from being wrong. With everything else, he's as fallible as everybody else, which is why popes can contradict each other.

      Some churches base their beliefs on the Bible. The Catholic Church canonized a Bible to contain many of their beliefs. Reading a Bible will teach much, but it takes divine intervention to properly interpret it.

      --
      People who live in glass houses shouldn't walk and text.
    14. Re:So What? by Talderas · · Score: 1

      The following is written as a non-Christian who has studied and attempted to understand Christianity.

      If all you want is to be a Christian then all you need is the New Testament. The Old Testament is for use in the study of Christianity for explaining the old order, explaining God, and providing the prophecies of the Messiah's coming.

      Generally speaking, I disregard any arguments about Christians as soon as people start bringing up the Old Testament. They're latching on to what they believe are inconsistencies because they don't understand how the faith is structured. It's only useful as an argument against specific Christians who have previously invoked the Old Testament and I don't consider "The Bible says..." to be invoking the Old Testament.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    15. Re:So What? by Creedo · · Score: 1

      The Catholic Church canonized a Bible to contain many of their beliefs.

      Yup, it's a tight bit of circular logic that apologists like Keating attempt to ignore by making silly claims about a "lawful spiral" and other such nonsense.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    16. Re:So What? by Creedo · · Score: 1

      It's only useful as an argument against specific Christians who have previously invoked the Old Testament and I don't consider "The Bible says..." to be invoking the Old Testament.

      In other words, it's only useful against the vast majority of Christianst. If you've studied Christianity and haven't realized that, you might want to dig a bit deeper.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    17. Re:So What? by dablow · · Score: 1

      That reasoning makes not sense, and again you are back to cherry picking the parts of the Bible you like and don't like (ex God is angry and kills people indiscriminately not liked thus ignored, God will send us a savior liked thus not ignored) Besides the New Testament is also loaded with inconsistencies and erroneous scientific information. http://infidels.org/library/mo...

    18. Re:So What? by dablow · · Score: 1

      So why do we pay any more attention to the Pope than any other Bible thumper out there? He is as you say, human. And as far as I know does not have a direct line of communication with God, so how is he any more special than anybody else on the planet? Because of divine intervention? Funny how God would intervene to make sure he gets his nonsensical book but won't intervene when the evil Popes where starting wars or murdering political opponents? Or at the very least clean up what he fucks up, as a human! Again it makes no sense whatsoever.

    19. Re:So What? by njnnja · · Score: 1

      Except that, as I understand it, the Pope doesn't get to just declare which parts of the Bible (which has been accepted doctrine for well over a millennium) are true, which are false, and which are metaphor or allegory as it suits him.

      Actually the Pope can do just that, when he speaks ex cathedra. It only applies to certain fields (e.g., he can't just say the sky is green and that becomes Catholic doctrine), but something like interpreting the literal-ness of the Bible would count. Of course, Popes don't make ex cathedra pronouncements frequently, precisely because it's like using a sledgehammer. So you are correct that usually doctrine gets made in communion with the Bishops in councils, conferences and the like.

    20. Re:So What? by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      I was challenged to read the bible and as I had kind of wanted to do it for a while and had never got around to it I did. The challenger had, it turned out, only intended that I read the new testament, but to be honest I found the old testament to be a much better read. For a start, how often does one read a book from an iron age perspective - it was fun just to see things through their eyes, see what mattered to them. It was also interesting to see how the religion grew and solidified the Israeli power base. I also enjoyed seeing bits of 17th century english (I read the KJ version) that had survived to present day in different forms that I have used without thinking about the meaning too much

      My reading only solidified my opinion that it was all made up to secure political advantage and power, as a piece of manipulative politics it was pretty well constructed, YMMV

      I have started reading the Koran, but I did not get very far - I should find a better translation, the one I have is hard to follow and there don't seem to be as many internet resources to help understand what's being said as there were for the bible (at least, not as good as biblehub.com which I found really helpful), but my initial impression is that it's very similar to the old testament

      I also started to read the book of mormon, but it was so obviously artless crap that I gave up

      --
      Nullius in verba
    21. Re:So What? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      I'll admit I'm not deeply versed in Christian theology, much less Catholic, but as I understand it God supposedly granted humans free will (kinda essential that you have a choice or the whole "you should act/believe this way" thing loses all significance), while the angels were explicitly bound to/manifestations of God's will. The logical implication being that, as an angel, Lucifer had no free will and thus at least up to the point when he was cast out from the Host he could only have been acting in accordance to God's will: ergo the existence of Satan was part of God's plan, and he may very well still be completely bound to God's will, and that the conflict is an illusion for the benefit of humanity.

      That interpretation is actually less of a break from the Old Testament, wherein Lucifer was just an extremely unpleasant Persian king, Satan is only mentioned a couple of times in passing, and God is as terrible as he is great. If we presume the same God presided over the writing of the New Testament, then one might conclude that he decided he was making things a little too complicated for us poor befuddled mortals and rewrote things into a nice simplistic story of GOoD versus dEVIL wherein we all have a clear well-lit path in front of us as to what we *should* do, and a evil foil forever tempting us away from that path so that we must forever exercise our free will, and our inevitable failings in the face of a far more powerful enemy are easily forgiven. Of course presuming that Satan is still bound to God's will there's never really any question as to who will win - the conflict is for our benefit. Perhaps God has use for souls with a lifetime of practice struggling to do good in the face of temptation.

      I'm sure the fact that the fact that this change in the story also casts the Church into the more sympathetic role of "Defenders of Goodness" rather than just the earthly agents of Yahweh the Great and Terrible is simply coincidence. Especially in light of the centuries of continuing economic oppression and aggressive military expansion that followed.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    22. Re:So What? by danaris · · Score: 1

      That interpretation is actually less of a break from the Old Testament, wherein Lucifer was just an extremely unpleasant Persian king, Satan is only mentioned a couple of times in passing, and God is as terrible as he is great.

      Another part of the Old Testament that doesn't get talked about much, but intrigues me greatly is the degree to which it seems to be telling the story of (the followers of) a God who is, at first, fighting for supremacy against various other Gods, but who eventually emerges triumphant. Again, I'm not enough of a theological scholar to be able to speak with any real authority about this, but stuff in the Exodus story (the Egyptian priests being able to perform what were clearly supernatural feats, despite the fact that Moses was able to defeat them), through to Kings (Elijah calls down fire from heaven, while the priests of Baal are unable to do anything similar), and various phrasings (like "you shall have no other God before me") all seem to suggest it.

      Dan Aris

      --
      Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
    23. Re:So What? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Was it something about a hand-grenade?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  8. In other words, by pdhenry · · Score: 0

    In other words, the Pope is a Deist.

  9. thank goodness that argument is settled. by nimbius · · Score: 5, Funny

    As a theoretical physics doctoral candidate I've spent many a night staring into the ceiling hoping the pope would confirm the fundamental compoent of everything from my undergraduate education to my last twelve grant proposals. My boyfriend, a medical doctor, is equally relieved to understand his approach to antibiotics has been validated in the context of the theory of evolution and not as medical science once assumed to 'the aetherous ichor of daemons betwixt these foul realms.'

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
    1. Re:thank goodness that argument is settled. by Kevin+by+the+Beach · · Score: 1

      I like applying some relativistic physics to the creation story.... Let's say you are along for the ride during the big bang...(play along please). From our spot, getting blown out into the cosmos at speeds that ignore our current universal constants... it could have felt like it took seven days to get here, and yes I would have sat back, took a look around, and said it was good.

    2. Re:thank goodness that argument is settled. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know this is offtopic, and please don't take this the wrong way, but after reading your post I immediately thought to myself "Yay! Gays in the sciences!"

      But then I realized you could be a woman. And then I started wondering about the relative proportions of gays and women in the sciences. Will you contribute a single not-so-randomly-sampled data point? Which group do you fall into?

  10. Trying hard... by sTERNKERN · · Score: 1

    ..to salvage anything they can. Science has been going forward in the last few thousand years, while chatolics (and basicly all religions) stood still. Magic is fading, so they have to make small tweaks to look at least a bit credible.

    1. Re:Trying hard... by mcgrew · · Score: 2

      The only magic that exists is David Copperfield trickery, and I say that as a Christian. Miracles aren't magic, they are occurrences with incredibly low probabilities (like several that have happened to me, including my surviving an "unsurvivable" auto wreck).

      The bible doesn't contradict science, although many religious people unfortunately do.

    2. Re:Trying hard... by tehcyder · · Score: 2

      The only magic that exists is David Copperfield trickery, and I say that as a Christian. Miracles aren't magic, they are occurrences with incredibly low probabilities (like several that have happened to me, including my surviving an "unsurvivable" auto wreck).

      That is absurd. The whole point about Jesus performing miracles was that they proved he was the Son of God, i.e. a supernatural or magic being.

      If they're just lucky flukes or party tricks, they're meaningless.

      As an atheist, I don't understand how you could call yourself a Christian without believing in the divinity of Jesus.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    3. Re:Trying hard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I admit that I was raised in a protestant (evangelic lutheran) country so I don't know the catholic doctrine that well... But "Miracles aren't magic but occurences with incredibly low probabilities" sounds like all kinds of fishy to me.

      When I hear the word "miracle", I think of how Jesus walked on water, spoke tongues, managed to feed massive amounts of people with a couple of fishes or was raised from the dead... These aren't "statistically unlikely scenarios", these are god intefering in a way that temporarily throws all known laws of nature out the window. This can be called "magic".

      When a doctor says that the patient has one in ten thousand chance of waking up from coma and the patient wakes up... That's not a miracle. The hospital isn't keeping the patient alive "because a miracle might occur".

      If you say that god operates only through statistically unlikely scenarios occurring (in the numbes we expect them to occur), you're just renaming luck or possibly fate as god. I find it very hard to believe that any church doctrine operates on this principle.

    4. Re:Trying hard... by jamiesan · · Score: 1

      So now you don't have all that tedious mucking around in hyperspace!

    5. Re:Trying hard... by rherbert · · Score: 1
      I think they're all done by time travelers.

      Water into wine? Kool-aid.

      Elijah vs. Baal prophets trying to start wood on fire? Bazooka.

    6. Re:Trying hard... by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      Wait, so you're telling me that Jesus flew down to Earth in the Heart of Gold?

    7. Re:Trying hard... by Talderas · · Score: 1

      I probably understand Christianity's structure better than most Christians and I don't consider myself a Christian but I probably don't understand it better than most priests or pastors who have dedicated their lives to studying the scripture.

      I believe that most people with a rabid hatred of Christianity are driven to it by some negative experience involving a person acting as a Christian. I hold this belief because the arguments I see them consistently making do not make any sense if you've studied the structure of Christianity. They are frequently wrong and if you press them on it they tend to fall back towards it being the practitioners.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    8. Re:Trying hard... by Creedo · · Score: 1

      Miracles aren't magic, they are occurrences with incredibly low probabilities

      Well, you should explain to all of your miracle-believing friends that they are completely wrong.

      The bible doesn't contradict science, although many religious people unfortunately do.

      By your own logic, the bible is riddled with errors, as it supposedly documents MANY impossible, not improbable, events. It takes an almost completely figurative reading of the bible to come up with the idea that it's not contradicting science.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    9. Re:Trying hard... by gx5000 · · Score: 1

      They'll need to rip out all of the Supernatural parts of the Bible one day and
      focus on the message of Peace, Tolerance and respect, or be doomed to the
      same fate as many other Religions of the Past.......Remember, Zeus was a Party God !

      --
      End of Line.
    10. Re:Trying hard... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      "Supernatural" is not a synonym for "magic."

    11. Re:Trying hard... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      "Magic" has some connotations that many people don't like. Let's just consider the possibility that God has worked a very small number of miracles that go against natural law. That wouldn't affect scientific progress or scientific discoveries, since the miracles can be disregarded as misperceptions or lies. The laws of nature would have to be understood as the laws of nature when God isn't directly mucking with things, but since true miracles are extremely rare that would not be a problem.

      When we find that so many things can be explained scientifically, and that lots of things that apparently cannot be explained scientifically are mistakes or hoaxes or such, it's tempting to think that everything can be explained scientifically, and this is indeed a good assumption to make. That doesn't mean it's always true.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  11. next thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually the Big Bang theory was coined under the name if the Primeval atom by the belgian and jesuit priest Georges LemaÃf®tre (seehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georges_LemaÃf®tre).

  12. 'he' created humans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (r)evolution turns into total deception in the wink of an eye... new queen of the nile must be a guy too? phewww

  13. Evolution isn't earth-origin theory. by jehan60188 · · Score: 2

    The theory of evolution isn't Earth-origin theory. Why can't people understand that?

    1. Re:Evolution isn't earth-origin theory. by silentcoder · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It is also not abiogeneses theory.

      Religious people tend to lump these together because most creation myths cover both Earth-origin (and Universe-origin mind you) as well as life-creation.
      All of them assuming that life-creation basically got right to present-day creatures from the start (with a few rare stories where a particular new species is created in a myth in an almost evolution-life story).
      In the case of the Christian creation myth in particular - no such exceptions exist, so for Christian creationists big-bang, solary-system formation and evolution are all intruding on something they explain with a single (unscientific) story.
      Hence they tend to lump the science together as well.

      Of course this is ironic and silly - abiogenesis at this stage has no firm answers or theories, it has a few ideas but none have any significant supporting evidence yet.
      Evolution was hailed as a scientific breakthrough since first published and been validated with only minor corrections ever since.
      The Big Bang (like black holes) on the other hand was despised by scientists when they first realized that Einstein's theories had it as a possibility, physicists do not like singularities and to them the Big Bang theory was little more than creationism ! The fact that popes had embraced it by the 1960's actually HARMED It's acceptance in science.
      It wasn't until decades later as the evidence mounted that the big bang theory became mainstream science - something helped in no small part by the growing evidence for black holes (another hated singularity).
      Indeed the hypotheses that black holes in one universe are the big bangs of another universe was first proposed because it would take a universe with two types of known singularities and at least reduce it to ONE singularity, and importantly - one we understand a lot more about !
      If that hypotheses is true - then the "other side" of the big bang theory isn't a mystery - it's a black hole in another universe created by a supermassive star collapsing under it's own gravity.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    2. Re:Evolution isn't earth-origin theory. by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Because nobody can understand something they don't want to understand.

    3. Re:Evolution isn't earth-origin theory. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      All of them assuming that life-creation basically got right to present-day creatures from the start (with a few rare stories where a particular new species is created in a myth in an almost evolution-life story).

      That depends on how literally you read the bible, and how well you assume it was translated between the first writings (or probably, oral retellings of prior traditions) and the first writings which we have today. There has been substantial drift since those writings, why not before? If you just read "day" as "period" in the Christian creation myth, it becomes less ludicrous. It could be valid enough, then, from the right viewpoint. Maybe night is defined by sleep. And it leaves out whole stories of how things were done, but that's not surprising.

      I'm not putting forth any theories here, but if the Earth were "created" (made over) by a superior being (alien with technology we have yet to develop) and seeded with life forms which evolved into what we see today, a few retellings slanted towards particular political aims could have resulted in the Holy Bible that we know and, uh, love, today.

      I don't believe that there's necessarily any validity to Christian mythology, but there's no particular reason to believe that it's completely wrong either. The parts which seem to correspond to known historic events don't support the rest of the material, but at least it shows that some of what's in there isn't bullshit. Sadly, the parts which clearly are certainly make it much more difficult to take any of it seriously, when examined objectively. Each claim has to be examined individually, which makes it basically worthless.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:Evolution isn't earth-origin theory. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is that not a mystery - where did the first star collapse into a black hole, and from what did that form?

      Does that also allude to an astrophysicist pickup line - I'd like to make a big bang in your black hole?

    5. Re:Evolution isn't earth-origin theory. by jae471 · · Score: 1

      If that hypotheses is true - then the "other side" of the big bang theory isn't a mystery - it's a black hole in another universe created by a supermassive star collapsing under it's own gravity.

      So... Turtles all the way down, then

    6. Re:Evolution isn't earth-origin theory. by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >So... Turtles all the way down, then

      Mmm, I hadn't thought about that but yes actually.

      Of course, every good scientist who mentions this hypotheses also tells you that it's (currently at least) impossible to prove and shouldn't be taken as fact, it's possible but we don't know.That's perhaps the most important difference between science and religion: science is never afraid to admit ignorance.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    7. Re:Evolution isn't earth-origin theory. by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Well I was talking about creation myths in general and about what they usually have in common and why this leads people to conflate together three theories with completely different histories and status in science. Hell one is a biological theory expressed in words and another is a physics theory expressed in mathematical equations.

      I wasn't particularly concerned about whether any specific creation story could be read in a way that is more accurate.

      I'm also well aware that within Christianity genesis is an area of significant debate - the official Catholic faith has accepted the scientific view for a long time - so do many Calvinists as well while others cling to an extremely literal interpretation flat out contradicting scientific evidence.
      The main difference seems to be in just how directly involved they believe God to be in every moment of their lives. The reason the "evolution was God's tool" interpretation is rejected by the fundamentalists is because it means God used a tool that does *not* require constant intervention.
      Their God is a bureaucrat and the suggestion that he may not be editing every file at every moment (or at least, doesn't HAVE to be) is problematic to their definition of power.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
  14. Of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...he would say it. Science cannot prove the big bang happened - all the matter of the universe cannot possibly have just winked into existence on it's own and then exploded into the universe.

    Something, God, had to create that matter and allowed it to do what it did.

    1. Re:Of course... by ledow · · Score: 1, Troll

      As an opinion that has been held by many a scientist, that's fine.

      We don't know what went bang. We can't even begin to have the language to discuss multi-dimensional physics and what happened before time began. There's a dark area from a certain part in time backwards. Though people may argue where that area is, they can't argue that beyond it is the unknown.

      Those people who choose to refer to the unknown as "God"... that makes sense. You can understand that. Whether you personally agree or not, it's a logical, consistent, unproveable but not unreasonable belief.

      The problem comes when people draw the dark areas to be 6000 years ago, or the bounds of the Earth. The problem comes when people who believe in a "God" (of whatever name, concept or type) but not in the Bible and are attacked for that.

      That's always been the problem. Unfortunately, those people will also ignore the Pope too. The Bible doesn't mention Popes, except through the same interpretation as it mentions just about anything else if you try hard enough to twist the words.

      As an atheistic/agnostic person of a scientific bent, I have always accepted the "There's space for a God in the unknown" arguments. That's fine. No problem at all. Some pretty major scientists believe the same, not that that's an influence or accreditation in any way.

      But the ideological problem you get is that, historically, the dark area has shifted further and further back in time and in space and still people hold onto it. At one time the skies were the raft of the gods because they were unreachable and unknowable to the peoples of the time. That slowly gets pushed back until the boundary of the unknown is so far away as to be ludicrous, from mere memory to recorded history to inference from dinosaur bones, to carbon dating, to universe expansion, and further back.

      And, actually, we have a number of theories of why the Big Bang happened. Nobody studying it really believes that something in the middle of nothing clicked its ethereal fingers and in no time the universe came into being. The theory is that that are substrates and energy fields permeating outside the universe and that when those waves of energy collide, matter, space and time can occur as a result of the fallout. It's kind of what the Higgs Boson is all about - a particle that results from Higgs fields that permeate everything.

      If and when we prove that, the dark area will shrink back again and I'm sure the religious will still continue to point at the square millimeter that is left and say "Ah ha! God could still be in there!", and so on, ad infinitum.

      The recognition of this slowly grows over time. The papacy refused to believe Copernicus at one point. But he was right. So they accepted, and shifted God back two spaces again. It happens all the time, and has happened for thousands of years.

      Nobody wants religious people to have no place in which to put their God, if they want to believe in him. But equally, we don't really want God sitting on the front porch where he's easily disproved by everything around him either.

      Being logical is not incompatible with religion. Never has been. However being illogical is incompatible with science.

    2. Re:Of course... by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      Fine, call it god for all I care. But to go from there to explaining why this thing would have an opinion on world politics is just jumping the shark.

      --
      Nullius in verba
    3. Re:Of course... by gx5000 · · Score: 1

      That "something" might have been Nothing.
      Attributing that event or non event to God or any God is just nonsensical and part of your upbringing only.
      The "Magic Man done it" approach is not an answer, it's a cop out.
      It has no basis in reality. Everything could just have been here all along....

      The Big Bang and the instant inflation could be a cycle of events that we cannot understand via our short lifespans...

      There are more interesting creation myths on the shelves anyways.. http://www.desy.de/gna/interpedia/greek_myth/creation.html

      "In the beginning there was only chaos. Then out of the void appeared Erebus, the unknowable place where death dwells, and Night. All else was empty, silent, endless, darkness. Then somehow Love was born bringing a start of order. From Love came Light and Day. Once there was Light and Day, Gaea, the earth appeared."

      The Greeks were awesome.

      --
      End of Line.
    4. Re:Of course... by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      Being logical is foundational to religion. Axiomatically, logic governs our existence, if the same logic did not also govern the existence of any fantastic god-like being then there would be no basis for that being to relate to us. For example, if there were separate god logic and human logic and god says "I promise you XXX" then the promise means nothing if there is some hidden mechanism by which a promise might not be binding on god.

      --
      Nullius in verba
  15. Not actually a new stance by dywolf · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have a feeling this only seems newsworthy because most folks here are more acquainted with American Catholicism, which tends be very very influenced by American protestentism (ie, evangelicals) and thus very very conservative in some areas (especially science).

    The Catholic Church has not been opposed to these things for some time, regardless of the feelings of certain members of the Church who didn't bother to learn their Catechism very well. Granted, the Church does an end run around them by essentially saying "if it is so, then it is so because God made it so", which is fairly standard religious belief around and not really out of hte ordinary.

    But the point is, the Church's actual teaching is that there is no conflict between the Church's spiritual beliefs and teachings and these sciences, and thus the Church does not reject these scientific theories.

    --
    The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    1. Re:Not actually a new stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've always wondered why American Protestantism is so conservative compared to American Catholicism. In Europe for example Protestantism is a lot more moderate and accepting.

    2. Re:Not actually a new stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I was raised Catholic in the United States. I am 34 years old, and I clearly remember sitting in church about 20-25 years ago and the priest saying the story of genesis is just a story, the earth was not created in 6 days, etc

    3. Re:Not actually a new stance by fph+il+quozientatore · · Score: 1

      There are catholics with very conservative views such as "the world was created 5000 years ago", and catholics that are very progressive and modern in their views. The real problem is that the second type does not call out the first as cranks and forces them to change their views, but rather they shrug and consider it a minor matter.

      Christians, even catholics, keep saying "why don't the moderate muslims ostracize Al Qaeda and this kind of extremisms?", but they behave exactly in the same way in this respect.

      In my view, this is part of the problem. They give the message that it's ok to believe all kind of unsubstantiated things "because God says so and it's written in the bible", and that is a very dangerous message to pass, especially to young people who should rather be taught how to think with their own head.

      --
      My first program:

      Hell Segmentation fault

    4. Re:Not actually a new stance by wisnoskij · · Score: 1
      Specifically, the Catholic Church made that stance their official one over a decade ago.
      They have been very involved in science from the beginning, they do not take that shit lightly and have a history of believing whatever the scientific consensus comes up with and steering their belief structures around that. In fact it was a Catholic Priest who came up with the theory of the Big Bang.

      I have a feeling this only seems newsworthy because most folks here are more acquainted with American Catholicism

      But how is that right? Isn't the whole point of Catholicism that that the church in Italy is in charge. Period. You don't go native and just teach whatever you want.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    5. Re:Not actually a new stance by sribe · · Score: 0

      The Catholic Church has not been opposed to these things for some time, regardless of the feelings of certain members of the Church who didn't bother to learn their Catechism very well.

      True, and John Paul made some of that very explicit. *BUT* Benedict did backpedal a bit.

    6. Re:Not actually a new stance by MobyDisk · · Score: 4, Informative

      American protestentism (ie, evangelicals)

      You seem to be equating protestant Christianity with evangelical Christianity with literal biblical interpretation. Don't do that.

      Most Protestant Christians in America do not take the creation story as literal and do not believe that you can add-up the ages of the people in the bible to conclude that the earth is ~6,000 years old. As a non-denominational Protestant Christian, I've attended Nazarene, Adventist, Lutheran, Baptist, Presbyterian, and Episcopal churches. So far as I know, none of them took literal interpretations of the creation story. I believe they all agree with the Catholics on this topic.

      Regarding evangelicals: The term merely means people who believe in the gospels and follow Jesus. That's really all Christians, so the term doesn't mean much. But it definitely doesn't mean "fundamentalist" or "literal interpretation."

    7. Re:Not actually a new stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      American Protestantism goes right back to the Puritan settlers. If you looked at European Protestantism back in the day you'd find exactly the same kind of conservatism you see in American Protestants today. They left Europe with their Protestantism as it was at that time, and occupied themselves with their own business for a few hundred years. A fairly homogeneous group except for the slaves (whom they ignored) and the natives (whom they killed) so their beliefs didn't change much. Whereas in Europe Protestantism evolved considerably more through exposure to the greater variety of culture throughout Europe and to the influences of empires.

    8. Re:Not actually a new stance by Type44Q · · Score: 1

      which tends be very very influenced by American protestentism (ie, evangelicals)

      You're thinking of fundamentalists. Protestants aren't (necessarily) evangelicals (nor are evangelicals necessarily even fundamentalists).

      I feel like pointing out that it wasn't very long ago (25yrs?) that fundamentalists and evangelicals were considered fringe weirdos here in the States (except, perhaps, in areas where inbreeding tends to be less frowned upon). Also, while you might expect the literacy rate to be nominal amongst mainstream Protestants (and apparently it is), illiteracy is sky-high among evangelicals and fundamentalists.

      So the moral of the story might be that the less likely you are to possess the ability to read the Bible, the more likely you are to actually believe its contents. ;)

    9. Re:Not actually a new stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regarding evangelicals: The term merely means people who believe in the gospels and follow Jesus. That's really all Christians, so the term doesn't mean much. But it definitely doesn't mean "fundamentalist" or "literal interpretation."

      Horseshit. Type "define:evangelical" into google and look at the full definition. Find any other definition in any other dictionary. Look at the Wikipedia article. You are not Humpty-Dumpty and do not get to redefine words or otherwise play semantic games in arguments.

      While Protestants may be in line with a more liberal interpretation of Genesis, the entire point of Protestantism was to place a higher value on scripture than Catholic catechism. Fundamentalism takes this even further. It may be bad form to equate the two, but it's disingenuous as well to suggest that they have nothing to do with each other.

      They're really all Christians...

      The easiest way to start an argument between two Christians is to ask them anything about what they believe. There's a different version of Christianity for every Christian on the planet. The most common shared belief is that any behavior of theirs is justified by their faith.

    10. Re:Not actually a new stance by IrquiM · · Score: 1

      Evangelicals are the ones trying to force christianity down your throat! (i.e. following the great commission)

      --
      This is blinging
    11. Re:Not actually a new stance by hibiki_r · · Score: 5, Informative

      Maybe we live in different Americas? Here in Missouri, if it says Baptist at the door, you can expect young earth creationism. And the worst part is, that's not even the worst of what they'll teach you. A friend of mine was OK with the YEC bullshit, but she ended up leaving her church, and really, her family, when she figured out the kinds of things that were being taught to her daughters.

    12. Re:Not actually a new stance by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      I rarely reply to ACs, but since I actually based my statement on the very same Google search the AC recommended, I feel compelled to reply so everyone is clear on the definition.

      Horseshit. Type "define:evangelical" into google and look at the full definition.

      ok!

      Google search for define: evangelical

      1. of or according to the teaching of the gospel or the Christian religion.

      The first two hits below that are:
      What is an Evangelical? which says

      world-wide Protestant movement maintaining that the essence of the gospel consists in the doctrine of salvation by faith in Jesus

      and What is an evangelical which says

      The term "evangelical" comes from the Greek word euangelion, meaning "the good news" or the "gospel."

      How is that different from my short definition of "people who believe in the gospels and follow Jesus?"

      The rest just misquotes me and wanders into randomness so I won't bother replying to that part.

    13. Re:Not actually a new stance by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the reply, I was hoping to hear about other people's experiences. My experience with Baptists might be way off. I hesitated to list that one but I thought it might trigger a reply that might help me understand better.

      1) I live in northern Maryland, so maybe things are different as you go north. I have relatives who live in Kentucky and I'm actually afraid to ever discuss this with them.
      2) I attended a Baptist church as a kid, so maybe I just didn't know what they believed. The church also split at some point and maybe that was the kind of stuff it was over, I don't know.

      I looked up the baptist church on Wikipedia to see if I could find their core beliefs and a quick search didn't show me anything involving literal interpretations or evolution. Wikipedia has an article that shows belief in literal creationism, amongst Christians, is almost 50/50 split and has a breakdown by denomination.

    14. Re:Not actually a new stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Up until the 80's the Southern Baptists did not follow the creed which stresses biblical inerrancy. The conservative wave that swept thru the nation during the Reagan administration though led to a purge within Southern Baptist seminaries of traditional moderate Baptist teachers. Now Southern Baptists have a creed that echos Dominionist theory. However, there are some churches within the Southern Baptist convention that still subscribe to the moderate ideals that were developed in the 60's and 70's. These ideals stress the separation of church/state issues, rejection the concept of biblical inerrancy, and embracing some parts of evolutionary theory (man is the exception) and the cosmological theory of the origin of the universe. This has caused a bit of a schism in the Southern Baptist Convention for the last 30 years or so. It's entirely possible, though, that the GP's experience with the Baptists was different than yours. I know the pastor of my father's Baptist church in Texas is not what is known in Baptist circles as a reconstructionist. He is solidly in the moderate camp.

    15. Re:Not actually a new stance by dywolf · · Score: 1

      it was a mental shortcut i admit, though it does describe the majority of such folks that i have met who talked on such matters: self-described evangelical protestants who think evolution is a lie from satan.

      granted ive spent the several yers living in the deep south.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    16. Re:Not actually a new stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Acceptance of Evolution tends to be associated with mainline churches, which tend to thrive in cities full of people with higher educations and liberal political leanings.

      Rejection of Evolution tends to be associated with fundamentalist churches, which tend to thrive in rural areas and in cities primarily full of blue collar workers (or people who otherwise don't have higher educations) and conservative political leanings.

      So, one's experience of "what most Christians believe" depends greatly on which kind of area they live in.

      Incidentally, both groups will claim the word "evangelical," these days.

    17. Re:Not actually a new stance by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Informative, thanks.

      I was brought up under biblical inerrancy too, but that didn't mean biblical literacy. I'm unclear if my family was sane, or if the common interpretations have changed.

    18. Re:Not actually a new stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      perhaps then instead of the term Fundies we should use 'fuckwits' instead?

    19. Re:Not actually a new stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      evangelical
      adjective
      adjective: evangelical

              1.
              of or according to the teaching of the gospel or the Christian religion.
              synonyms: scriptural, biblical;
              fundamentalist
              "evangelical Christianity"
                      of or denoting a tradition within Protestant Christianity emphasizing the authority of the Bible, personal conversion, and the doctrine of salvation by faith in the Atonement.
                      synonyms: evangelistic, evangelizing, missionary, crusading, proselytizing;
                      informal: Bible-thumping
                      "an evangelical preacher"
                      zealous in advocating something.

      noun
      noun: evangelical; plural noun: evangelicals

              1.
              a member of the evangelical tradition in the Christian Church.

      I said the full definition. If you read the Wikipedia article, you will also see that the term has primarily been synonymous with fundamentalist, and strongly associated with people actively seeking converts to their particular branch of christianity. If you read even further, you can find all sorts of information about the evangelism various protestant denominations. The repeated themes are: emphasis on scripture up to and including biblical literalism, revivalism, and actively spreading the faith.

      Thanks for lying, asshole: I expect no less from Christians.

    20. Re:Not actually a new stance by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      I meant literalism, not literacy.

    21. Re:Not actually a new stance by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      The Catholic Church teaches that evolution happened. The Pope just said it did. Therefore, any Catholics who believe otherwise are already considered wrong by the mainstream church. What more do you ask? Should there be a modern-day Inquisition in which Catholics who are Young-Earth Creationists are forced to recant?

      As far as telling people to believe goes, I can attest to at least one Catholic school offering at least one course in theology in the lower grades, which my friend who took it described as arguing (and much preferable to the Biblical History, aka "whobegat", class). This suggests that they were trying to encourage people to think about their faith.

      I've noticed an idea among some Christians that it's okay if you lose your belief for now, because you're having some sort of spiritual or spiritual-related problem, and that presumably when that's resolved you'll regain it. I don't know how common this is with Catholics.

      Really, there's a whole lot of Christians who are very reasonable about most things.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  16. SQUIRREL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Made ya rant :)

  17. Cool, but nothing new by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Vatican has accepted Evolution doesn't conflict with theology for decades now, and the Big Bang theory was was proposed by a Catholic Priest.

    The problem is, most of the biblical literalists don't consider Catholicism to be a valid branch of Christianity.

    1. Re:Cool, but nothing new by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      ...the Big Bang theory was was proposed by a Catholic Priest.

      I hadn't heard that before, can you link a source? I do know that atheists vehemently opposed that theory, because until then the accepted theory was the "solid state universe" that always existed and exists forever, and the big bang theory postulated that it had a beginning and will have an end.

    2. Re:Cool, but nothing new by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Georges Lemaître. Apparently his being a priest led to some accusations that he was using science to promote Christian dogma.

    3. Re:Cool, but nothing new by Sique · · Score: 1

      The name of the guy is Pater Georges Lemaître, a belgian Jesuit.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    4. Re:Cool, but nothing new by quenda · · Score: 1

      The problem is, most of the biblical literalists don't consider Catholicism to be a valid branch of Christianity.

      Branch? Not so much a branch, as the trunk, I would have said.

    5. Re:Cool, but nothing new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Incidently...just like the pope!

    6. Re:Cool, but nothing new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correct!

      Even the term "Big Bang" was coined as a ridicule [by Fred Hoyle if memory serves]..one of those cases when the supposedly ridiculous name bounces back and becomes a mainstream term...

      Source of this claim: article in the book "Ethymologicon"

      Cheers,
      Evtim

      Sorry for the AC; have spent some mod points in this discussion

    7. Re:Cool, but nothing new by onkelonkel · · Score: 1

      "steady state universe" - sorry for the nitpick

      --
      None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
    8. Re:Cool, but nothing new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bonus points to any who get the following quote:

      "He could have been Pope, Ted. But the fecking Jesuits have it all tied up"

    9. Re:Cool, but nothing new by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Modern Protestant denominations are mostly offshoots of Catholicism. The Orthodox branch of Christianity isn't really.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  18. everybody knows we were created by our moms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    duh? good neighbors http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUeNtM6qakk bad "weather' https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=wmd+weather+media+censorship

  19. This pope reminds me of ballmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    anything for a headline!

  20. The metaphysics of evolution are a different story by davide+marney · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Behind the theory of classic evolution lies a metaphysical explanation for the universe: that life "progresses", from simple to complex, from the more fundamental to the more sublime, from problem to solution. The metaphysics of evolution is very much rooted in the philosophy of positivism and progressivism. It is anti-religious not in the sense that it is against the idea of a God, necessarily, but in the sense that the concept of a God is not needed to explain the natural world. God is irrelevant.

    One does not hear debate on the metaphysics of evolution very often, and that is a shame. The philosophy of Progressivism, to me, seems more like wishful thinking, than a real explanation of why things are the they way they are. Is progress absolute? Certainly any objective evaluation of history, with its long record of extinctions, would seem to argue otherwise.

    Regarding the Bible's metaphysics, however, there is absolutely nothing in common between progressivism and traditional Christian teaching. The very first chapter of the very first book lays it all on the line: God said, "Let there be light. And there was light..." and so on, for 65 more books. The doctrine of the Bible is that "in Him we live and move and have our being." This couldn't be more orthogonal to the doctrine of positivism.

    So, while the Pope may rightly observe that a changing creation is still a creation, I'm not sure that really gets to the heart of the matter, which is a metaphysical argument about origins.

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
  21. This has been doctrine for decades. by wiredog · · Score: 3, Informative

    Why are people getting so excited?

    1. Re:This has been doctrine for decades. by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      My thought exactly. Pope John Paul officially blessed evolution and big bang over 20 years ago.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    2. Re:This has been doctrine for decades. by Allasard · · Score: 2
      And a Catholic priest proposed the Big Bang in the first place:

      Georges_Lema%C3%AEtre

      It was ejected by the scientific community for a while since it was too close to a 'creation' story.

      This is not news for people who have been paying attention to such things.

    3. Re:This has been doctrine for decades. by noldrin · · Score: 3

      Plus 60+ years ago Pope Pius XII declared no conflict with evolution, and this was built on top of earlier papal doctrines from 1909 and 1893 and that stated it had no objection to evolution and non-literal interpretation of the book of Genesis outside of human creation.

    4. Re:This has been doctrine for decades. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're getting excited because there are still a lot of people in this country (USA) that insist evolution is false. I've had conversations with people I consider intelligent insist that evolution is completely untrue. There are states with large enough groups of people insisting schools and textbooks cover creationism and intelligent design that we still hear about it all the time. We're excited because maybe this is the catalyst that will cause all of that nonsense to stop. As others have said, the church has never really been against evolution for the past few decades, but it has never really come out in favor of it either. I, for one, am hoping to hear edicts follow this statement instructing church leaders to start teaching what the pope just said.

    5. Re:This has been doctrine for decades. by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Indeed - and as I dimly recall the biblical story has the children of Adam and Eve venturing out into the world and fining other people, which would suggest that whatever creation was done on Adam and Eve was something other than the simple sculpting of flesh. Or that the legend passed through a culture that was more squeamish about incest than it was about plot holes in it's creation myth.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    6. Re:This has been doctrine for decades. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It took the news some time to travel to the colonies..

  22. Bazinga by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didn't know The Pope watched the Big Bang Theory.

    I wonder who his favorite character is?

  23. Still Nonsense though by gsslay · · Score: 0

    You might think this is a step forward, but his proclamation still makes a nonsense of evolution. Evolution has no "internal laws". We have not reached "fulfilment", or indeed any kind of end point to the journey.

    1. Re:Still Nonsense though by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      We have not reached "fulfilment", or indeed any kind of end point to the journey.

      And who is saying we have, except your burning straw man?

    2. Re:Still Nonsense though by gsslay · · Score: 1

      The pope says we have. "He created human beings and let them develop according to the internal laws that he gave to each one so they would reach their fulfillment."

      His problem is that he wants his proclamation to mean something to each individual, a sentiment safely within religions' comfort-zone. Yet evolution means very little for individuals, only to species. So he's come out with a fudge that tries to gloss over the distinction and invents these "internal laws" that pre-defines the direction of evolution towards an end goal of fulfilment. That's not what evolution is.

      So according to the infallible one, either I have reached my fulfilment, or human beings have. Which one is it? And how is this distinguished from a god with a magic wand?

    3. Re:Still Nonsense though by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      No human is infallible.

  24. This has been Catholic doctrine for decades by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This shouldn't be news to anyone, as this has been Catholic doctrine for decades. But most Catholics ignore the pope anyway, which is why this *seems* like news.

  25. of course he supports them by slashdice · · Score: 4, Informative

    fact: what we now call the "big bang" was proposed by Georges Lemaitre, a Catholic preist, in 1927. the alternative "steady state" (basically, the universe always existed) was primarily supported by Anglicans and atheists. The big bang theory was a big fuck you to both of them. I'm glad Pope Frank is keeping it real and isn't afraid to bitch slapping the Anglicans and atheists.

    --
    Copyright (c) 1990 - 2014 Dice. All rights reserved. Use of this comment is subject to certain Terms and Conditions.
    1. Re:of course he supports them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The big bang theory was a big fuck you to both of them.

      Makes sense to me. Such a boring show could only be some religious program in disguise.

    2. Re:of course he supports them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      George Lemaitre was Belgian, so this bug fuck you to both of you makes sense in a H2G2 kind of way.

    3. Re:of course he supports them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean bitch slapping people who died 80 years ago? Where are the atheists that believe in the "steady state" these days? Oh, you were just trying to revise history to match your current beliefs, similar to how you read the bible.

  26. Re:The metaphysics of evolution are a different st by itzly · · Score: 2

    Evolution doesn't progress from simple to complex, but it just spreads in random directions. However, if you start really simple (by necessity) then it is very likely that you'll see increased complexity over time.

  27. Does this change anything? by olau · · Score: 2

    Will the pope declaring this really have an effect on people who are deeply entrenched in anti-scientific teachings? It seems more likely to me that these people will reject the pope. Or find a way to twist his words so as not to contradict them.

    1. Re:Does this change anything? by Shados · · Score: 1

      It will affect church going catholics to some extent. Which means in the US, it will matter very little, and well, having been raised catholic north of the border, very few people I knew rejected evolution as it is...

      But hey, baby steps.

    2. Re:Does this change anything? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will the pope declaring this really have an effect on people who are deeply entrenched in anti-scientific teachings? It seems more likely to me that these people will reject the pope.

      One Facebook commenter I read suggested the Pope was the Anti-Christ, so your intuition is correct.

  28. Who's his favorite character... by Ronin+Developer · · Score: 2, Funny

    On "The Big Bang Theory". Mine is Penny. LOL

    1. Re:Who's his favorite character... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure it's Bawwy.

    2. Re:Who's his favorite character... by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Aren't you being Penny-wise and pounding-foolish?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    3. Re:Who's his favorite character... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pennywise? That was Pope "They All Float Down Here!" Benedict, wasn't it?

    4. Re:Who's his favorite character... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My favorite character is Penny's mouth.

  29. Fine tuned..... by dablow · · Score: 1

    Bla bla bla......the fine tuned hypothesis which has been disproved over and over and over. He is basically saying that a creator is required because how else would you get the exact exact exact conditions required in the universe to support life. Never mind that basically 99.9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999%+ (the actual number would consume all the storage available on the Earth to write down and then some) of the universe is INSTANTLY lethal to life as we know it. But it's sooo perfectly fine tune for life looool

    1. Re:Fine tuned..... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Your number would suggest that one part in 10^78 of the universe is instantly lethal.

      Going by mass, given that there's an estimated upper limit of 10^82 atoms in the universe, you'd suggest that 10^4 (10,000) atoms are non-lethal. Going by volume, 3.4x10^80 m3 would mean that there are 340 cubic metres in the universe that aren't immediately lethal to humanity.

      I may be out by a fctor of 10 here, but we're certainly way short of al the storage in the world.

    2. Re:Fine tuned..... by dablow · · Score: 1

      10^82 is the upper limit estimate on the number of atoms in the observable universe. Who knows what the real figure is for the entire universe. Also I think you are thinking about it in terms of planets, asteroids, moons etc. which require atoms to exist....While I was talking about the volume of the universe as a whole, which includes spacetime, which is devoid of atoms.

    3. Re:Fine tuned..... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      I addressed the volume of the universe. This is a value we have a reasonable accurate figure for. 4,600,000,000 ly or 440,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000m. That gives a total volume of 4/3.pi.r^3, which is 35 with another 79 zeroes after it. 1/(10^77)% of that is smaller than many buildings.

    4. Re:Fine tuned..... by dablow · · Score: 1

      Are you sure 4.6 billion ly? Or did you mean 46 billion ly? And as far as I can tell there does not see seem to be any consensus on it's size. or even shape (you assumed it being a sphere). In any case my numbers where chosen for effect rather than their accuracy. The point is the vast vast vast vast vast vast majority of our universe is lethal to us, so this idea that it was fine tuned for us is illogical.

    5. Re:Fine tuned..... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The point is the vast vast vast vast vast vast majority of our universe is lethal to us, so this idea that it was fine tuned for us is illogical.

      Well, the obvious counterargument is that this planet is fine-tuned for us, that it's all we need, and the rest is irrelevant to us. Or perhaps that by the time we decide to leave this planet, the rest will also be ideal for our purposes. (Like maybe we'll discover some means of FTL that doesn't work near large masses, so all that empty space will be useful to us just as a means of getting around rapidly.)

      I don't believe anything in particular, just saw that there was an obvious counterargument.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:Fine tuned..... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      4.6 billion, 46 billion - it's still only a few orders of magnitude we're talking about.

      Give me reasonable estimated numbers for the size of the universe, and the habitable volume of the universe that makes your (100-10^-77)% instantly lethal even remotely accurate.

    7. Re:Fine tuned..... by dablow · · Score: 1

      Are you trying to argue that my statement of the majority of the universe being lethal to life is not true? Because I already conceded that the numbers I pulled out of my ass where just to drive the point home, not the actual real values.

    8. Re:Fine tuned..... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      And yes, I realise that 99.9999 etc was an exageration. I just got a bit irked by your claim that the actual figure wouldn't be storable. This is Slashdot though; You should expect some pedantry :) Sorry.

    9. Re:Fine tuned..... by dablow · · Score: 1

      Even the majority of Earth is lethal to us. We can't live in oceans, can't live where it's too cold or to hot....Basically without technology we can pretty much only survive sub-Saharah Africa and other similar locations. Also if you created the universe and want to fine tune it for life, why set the laws in such a way that you need to make a lot of void to allow for space travel.....in fact why not make it 1 gigantic garden of Eden that stretches for billions and billions of light years?

    10. Re:Fine tuned..... by dablow · · Score: 1

      Well I do admit it was a little over the top lol

    11. Re:Fine tuned..... by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Actually that's one of the great mysteries in science - it seems that even slight variations in the constants governing the relative strengths of the forces in our universe would make it impossible for things like atoms and planets to ever form, much less chemistry complex enough to beget life *anywhere*. If those constants were determined by chance you would need to create countless billions of random universes to get even even one that could support sufficiently complex arrangements of energy to give life a chance to emerge.

      There are some highly speculative hypotheses to explain that - mostly involving various mechanisms by which countless universes could be formed from a single "seed", or by which causality can be twisted back on itself so that the eventual emergence of life becomes a deciding factor in determining those constants. For the most part though most professional cosmologists simply fall back on "that's just the way it is" or even "God did it", many aren't even being glib about it.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  30. Since 1909 by michaelmalak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nothing new since the 1950 Humani Generis by Pope Pius XII that defined the relationship between evolution, immortal souls and faith. And that was just final infallible confirmation of what the Vatican Biblical Commission determined in 1909 in its On The Historical Character of the First Three Chapters of Genesis.

  31. Strange that this is news by blogagog · · Score: 1

    It is strange that this is news since the Pope in the 1960s said the same thing.

  32. Re:The metaphysics of evolution are a different st by shrewdsheep · · Score: 0

    I would argue that this is precisely what the discussion revolves around. It is not (too) difficult to reconcile science with biblical teaching. However, accepting the science allows for an interpretation without god. This makes it harder to believe and this is what causes resistance. It is simpler to believe if you have "proof" (i.e. science is wrong).

  33. Refreshing by Peter+Simpson · · Score: 0

    On one hand, Religion, with its [many versions of the] One True Book of Divine Origin (which may not be questioned, even a little bit, on pain of death), filled with many tales of dubious historical accuracy and many internallly inconsistent moral pronouncements (you should NOT immediately kill all witches, homosexuals, and people who don't believe the same as us, even though the book says the Lord clearly instructed you to do this).

    On the other hand, Science. Trying to come up with a logical explanation for how we got here and why those lights in the sky keep moving around. Also, why we get sick and die and how do we stop doing that?

    And the guy who is in charge of [one brand of] the fairy tales, whose job it is to interpret them...is saying the fairy tales aren't all there is in life. Science and rational thinking, questions which can't yet be answered, and fairy tales are all important, but you have to figure out for yourself how important each one of them is to you. And while you're doing that, be nice to each other and help those who are less fortunate.

    Maybe there is hope for this world after all.

    If we can only ignore those guys who are convinced their brand of the fairy tales tells them to kill everyone who doesn't think the way they do... [sigh]...

    1. Re:Refreshing by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      (you should NOT immediately kill all witches, homosexuals, and people who don't believe the same as us, even though the book says the Lord clearly instructed you to do this).

      Sometimes god is delivering instructions. Sometimes someone is claiming that god delivered instructions. The bible is unclear as to which the author felt was the case in each situation, probably not least because of the centuries of translation, adaptation, and manipulation. Some of those apparent contradictions probably aren't supposed to be contradictions at all, but they are now.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Refreshing by Peter+Simpson · · Score: 1

      (you should NOT immediately kill all witches, homosexuals, and people who don't believe the same as us, even though the book says the Lord clearly instructed you to do this).

      Sometimes god is delivering instructions. Sometimes someone is claiming that god delivered instructions. The bible is unclear as to which the author felt was the case in each situation, probably not least because of the centuries of translation, adaptation, and manipulation. Some of those apparent contradictions probably aren't supposed to be contradictions at all, but they are now.

      This is going to come as a shock to those who believe that "God said it. It's in the Boble. I believe it. End of discussion."

  34. Re:The metaphysics of evolution are a different st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't this kind of "progress" implie some intentional direction behind the whole process? A classical feature we attribute to an intelligent entity?
    For me it sounds like those people, in a way, substituted the term "God" with "Evolution".

  35. Then how is Earth 6000 years old? by Kartu · · Score: 1

    Then how is Earth 6000 years old? Isn't it what Bible states?
      http://creation.com/6000-years

    1. Re:Then how is Earth 6000 years old? by KermodeBear · · Score: 1

      That depends on if you're someone who takes every word literally (which is very precarious once you learn about the evolution of Biblical texts) or someone who is happy to take a large part of the Bible as metaphor. As an example, the beginning of Genesis famously states that the world took 6 days to create and that the 7th day was rest.

      Only the most literal of readers would believe that it took six actual days; something that isn't even possible, since a "day" is a full revolution of the earth, and that wasn't even created on the first "day". It's metaphor, trying to explain how the world was created in stages.

      Once can view the Garden of Eden story as metaphor as well, how the human psyche moved from an animal state of innocence (unable to comprehend advanced concepts like shame, guilt, etc.) and to a state where it can comprehend more complex ideas.

      Then there's all of those laws; a lot of them pertain to sanitation so that you don't get sick or spread illness. When the Plague was ravaging Europe, the Jewish people had a much lower infection rate because they followed these rules.

      Some parts of the Bible are pretty interesting and insightful, and even if it gets some things wrong in a scientific sense - especially if taken literally - some things may not be quite as wrong as a lot of people think.

      I say this as a Pagan-ish type, by the way; I have no personal reason to put parts of the Bible in a positive light.

      Once must also take into consideration that the people who put forth those ideas were doing the best they could with the knowledge they had. I'm sure that in 500 years people will look back at us and say, "Wow, those guys sure were dumb, why didn't they see X, Y, and Z for what it really was?"

      One book that does provide a very good treatment of where science and religion overlap is The Universe in a Single Atom by His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama. One of the core concepts of the book is what I described above; old religious texts were written a long time ago and those people didn't know all of the things we do now. He promotes science as a good thing, and says that if science can prove that a certain religious law, theory, philosophical point, etc., can be proven wrong by science, then it is the religion that should change.

      He also talks about how science and religion exist to answer fundamentally different questions. Science tells us "how" something happens, but religion helps us answer what it means in a philosophical sense.

      It's an excellent book and well worth reading by religious, non-religious, science, and non-science alike.

      --
      Love sees no species.
  36. The big bang theory matches creationism perfectly by GuB-42 · · Score: 1

    The universe growing from a singularity, the fact that we don't know what happened before. I am an atheist but I think may be the scientific theory that is the most compatible with the idea of a creator.

  37. God is grasping at straws. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those people who choose to refer to the unknown as "God"... that makes sense. You can understand that. Whether you personally agree or not, it's a logical, consistent, unproveable but not unreasonable belief.

    Yeah, label the unknown as "God" while you could label it as, you know, "unknown". It is an argumentum ad ignorantiam. This kind of God is ever dwindling as we come up with more and more answers to questions where God was previously hiding in. Of course there are always new questions where God could hide in. But yeah, grabbing at any floating object to prevent you from drowning...

  38. Re:The big bang theory matches creationism perfect by itzly · · Score: 1, Troll

    Of course, as soon as you introduce the concept of a deity guiding the universe in any way, you have an incompatibility. And without guiding, the whole point of the existence of a creator is pointless.

  39. Re:Actually You Don't Know What You're Talking Abo by rasmusbr · · Score: 1

    The Vatican is not committed to a literal interpretation of the Bible, nor is it committed to any truly allegorical interpretation. The Bible can say X and the Vatican can say Y and it's never going to be a problem as long as the pope and the cardinals and the priests are all reasonably in line. In fact, it probably works even if they aren't reasonably in line.

    Don't waste your time trying to have logical arguments about a subject with people who aren't committed to logic and reason with regards to that subject.

  40. Not suprising at all by pulse2600 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It was a Catholic priest who first developed the idea that became known as the big bang theory, which Einstein did not accept until he saw Msgr Lemaître present his theory at a conference or something. It is unfortunate that some scientists are so anti religion that they ignore the contributions of the Catholic Church and clergy to many of the ideas that they so rabidly defend as "proof" that there is no God or that religion and science are incompatiable.

    1. Re:Not suprising at all by dablow · · Score: 1

      Being Catholic (or any religion) while making a discovery says nothing about the truth value of what the person making the discovery believes in. Darwin was a christian. He is acknowledged as the first person to come up with the theory of evolution. Just because he did does not make his belief in christianity any more valid. It is a logical fallacy called appeal to authority.

    2. Re:Not suprising at all by morgauxo · · Score: 1

      "they so rabidly defend as "proof" that there is no God or that religion and science are incompatiable."

      On the rare occasion I hear of a scientist discussing this at all they are saying that science and religion can be compatible. Of course, they are talking about a much looser interpretation of Genesis than anything the fundies would accept.

    3. Re:Not suprising at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It is unfortunate that some scientists are so anti religion that they ignore the contributions of the Catholic Church "

      It was not the catholic chrch that thought of the idea, it was Lemaitre, which happened to be a catholic.
      Also, genetics started with a monk, Mendel.

  41. Shadow Rule by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All hail the shadow king of western society.

  42. Re:The metaphysics of evolution are a different st by rasmusbr · · Score: 1

    The philosophy of evolution gets boring when you realize that an organism capable of doing philosophy can only ever find itself on a planet where such an organism evolved.

    The philosophy of evolution isn't going to get really interesting until we begin to find evidence of life on other planets, or better yet in other star systems.

  43. No, You Don't Know What You're Talking About by dywolf · · Score: 1

    you didnt even read what i wrote did you?
    in fact, you are the perfect illustration of what i meant.
    you are the one who doesnt know what he's talking about.
    I was talking about -actual- Catholic doctrine.
    You know, since I am one, albeit very poor one that rarely practices and goes to the cafeteria.

    --
    The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    1. Re:No, You Don't Know What You're Talking About by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was talking about -actual- Catholic doctrine.

      Then cite it. From the Vatican's own words in the CCC:

      289 Among all the Scriptural texts about creation, the first three chapters of Genesis occupy a unique place. From a literary standpoint these texts may have had diverse sources. the inspired authors have placed them at the beginning of Scripture to express in their solemn language the truths of creation - its origin and its end in God, its order and goodness, the vocation of man, and finally the drama of sin and the hope of salvation. Read in the light of Christ, within the unity of Sacred Scripture and in the living Tradition of the Church, these texts remain the principal source for catechesis on the mysteries of the "beginning": creation, fall, and promise of salvation.

      How in the hell could that be interpreted otherwise?

    2. Re:No, You Don't Know What You're Talking About by Creedo · · Score: 1

      I was talking about -actual- Catholic doctrine

      The RCC likes to pretend that it accepts evolution. But it puts restrictions on the events(such as insisting on a single couple being the start of the human race) in such ways that it is really incompatible with science. It's just a dodge.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
  44. Not going to change much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Catholicism has been out of the creationist nut race for a long time now. It's basically fringe sects (more or less protestant by definition as they do not want to be Catholic) that have been harping on the various Creationist nonsense.

    It's good that the pope has made a definite statement rather than just being silent about this particular nonsense, but I don't think that this statement will actually affect all that many under his prurisdiction.

    Now if he had made a statement about birth control... That's where catholicism has lost touch with reality. Or divorce/separation. Now those rulings are mostly ignored by Catholics anyway. But where the Catholic Church would do well to shed some hate is abortion and homosexuality. Don't take me wrong: I am all for the Church doing everything they can to minimize abortions. But the current combination of "sex is sin", "contraception is sin" and victim-blaming is not even effective. The highest abortion rates are in the Puritan U.S.A. which criminalize and penalize women, and the lowest ones are in the Protestant to secular Netherlands where abortion is a mostly unencumbered medical procedure and contraceptives and sex are quite accepted.

    When damning the sinners does not work, one needs to refocus on mercy and grace (not to be confused with condescension) as the apparently more effective strategies. Too bad it does not sell well.

    1. Re:Not going to change much by Teresita · · Score: 2

      Well, there will be one change at least, a Darwin fish on the Popemobile.

  45. Pope Francis != Scientist by AndyKron · · Score: 0

    Who gives a fuck if Pope Francis Declares Evolution and Big Bang Theory Are Right? Who gives a fuck what he says on any topic?

  46. perfectly reasonable 2nd policy by slashmydots · · Score: 1

    Since it's basically proven that there are 9 dimensions and heavily theorized that the big bang was an intersection of other dimensions, the whole "7 days" creation thing actually is reasonable. There are more reasons to think time can speed up and slow down than there is to the contrary. If one dimension has an absolute, unchanging feature similar to time then the way matter experiences time in our universe could change without creation taking less than a "day" from the outside observer's point of view. Following that point, if the outside observer was God and he resided in an extra-dimensionary form past the first 4 we know then it makes perfect sense to state that all of creation too one day.

    Even if that's not accurate, it's just stupid to say that time and physics have always behaved exactly like we observe them to right now because...well no logical reason at all actually. It's more likely that they didn't always behave the same way.

  47. I'm Catholic, this isn't really news. by jitterman · · Score: 1

    I don't agree with every stance of the Church, but this is one that has been held true from my earliest recollection (I'm middle-aged). Evolution and scientific origins of the cosmos are entirely legit, and that gives me hope that in time other reasonable and logical viewpoints might be adopted.

    --
    For conscience is the wound, and there's naught to staunch it
  48. Evolution != salvation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Surely the purpose of Christianity is that we need saving? If we evolved, evolution states that we are continually improving and therefore do not need saving, or salvation. Instead, Christianity states that we need saving through Christ's sacrifice.

    At what point could Adam turn round to God and say "Hey! Why are you holding ME accountable when my monkey dad ISN'T?"

    It doesn't make sense. I think the Pope is wrong.

    1. Re:Evolution != salvation by onkelonkel · · Score: 1

      "evolution states that we are continually improving "- No it certainly doesn't. There is no direction or purpose implied by evolution.

      --
      None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
  49. Theories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Theories can't be right, they are just theories.
    For every thesis there is a counter thesis.
    Wheels within wheels.

  50. Huh? Duh? by TheCarp · · Score: 1

    I might be surprised, but aside from being an atheist, I grew up catholic and went to catholic schools. It was a private Catholic school, run by one of the church's religious orders, where I had high school biology and learned about evolution....that was 20 years ago now.

    --
    "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
  51. Non-linear time by redelm · · Score: 1

    What conflict? I never saw any, except for strict literalists (blasphemers) who believe that G-d's "Days" necessarily are the same as ours with 1440 minutes. What if They average 3 billion of our years? Not necessarily linearly constant either. Space is not, why should time be?

    1. Re:Non-linear time by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      What conflict? I never saw any, except for strict literalists (blasphemers) who believe that G-d's "Days" necessarily are the same as ours with 1440 minutes. What if They average 3 billion of our years? Not necessarily linearly constant either. Space is not, why should time be?

      In that case, the people who wrote the bible (and/or any subsequent translators) should have been a bit more careful in their use of language.

      Unless stated otherwise, a "day" is 24 hours.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    2. Re:Non-linear time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless stated otherwise, a "day" is 24 hours.

      A Day is not intrinsically 24 hours. We could divide the day in 100 parts and call it one an hour without any problems. The Jews did just that. And many civilisations throughout the ages have used different divisions of the passage of time in a day.
      Divide the day in 24 parts is an egyptian legacy. They were the first to divide the day in 12 equal parts and the night in 12 equal parts.
      But calling an hour the 24th part of the day it's just a convention nothing more. And scientifically it's wrong since the the length of a day varies as the earth goes along its orbit around the sun. It would be funny to have hours that are not constant.

    3. Re:Non-linear time by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the translations were mostly done at a time when the only literate people were those already thoroughly steeped in the traditions of the church, and most of them were only barely literate by modern standards. Plus different languages often don't have analogous words - do you really want a translation that takes three paragraphs to (badly) translate a single word? Hell, look at how badly even such a simple concept as karma (cause and effect as a single indivisible concept) has been mangled by time and translation

      As it happens the oldest known versions of Genesis uses a Hebrew word that only loosely translates to "day", as I recall (dimly) a more accurate translation might be "a non-specific period of time", and at the time of writing had several different context-sensitive meanings, most of which had fallen out of use by the time it was translated from Hebrew to... Latin, or whatever the next dominant language was. Do you really expect a bunch of semi-literate priests to be able to keep track of that kind of thing? Or to really care that much about accuracy in the technical details of a moralistic back-story?

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    4. Re:Non-linear time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      plus my understanding of the original text was that the word that has been translated into day is more precisely translated as "period of time" but i could have just dreamed that.

    5. Re:Non-linear time by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      And yet when it says "no queers" or "priests must be men" it means exactly that.

      You can't have it both ways.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    6. Re:Non-linear time by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Hey, it's not my book, I just absorb knowledge about it for the sake of argument.

      As for no gays, I think it's actually just as vehement (not very) about not eating shellfish nor mixing clothes made from different kinds of fibers. And I couldn't swear that there's actually anything that explicitly states that priests can only be men. Don't confuse the book with the way individuals and organizations cherry-pick details (or make them up completely) to further their own agendas.

      Also don't confuse the book that exists today with what was originally written. Hell, the whole "thou shall not suffer a witch to live" that caused so much trouble was a blatant "reinterpretation" of the passage to satisfy the superstitions of that old ex(?)-satanist King James when he declared himself pope.

      For that matter even with the exact original wording in front of you, you'd need to know the cultural context within which is was written if you really want to understand the intent.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  52. Tip of the iceberg [missing link] by birdspider · · Score: 1

    There is no missing link.

    Its just a line of fosills from A..B...C......H..I...N...V...X..YZ, and whenever there is a fossil discovered to be - say - put in between I and N you have 2 new "gaps".
    Which in turn get popularized as "the (new) missing link".

    Yes the fossil record is not complete (that would require a unbroken chain from FossilA to FossilZ - an by its nature fossilised stuff is rare (enough) to not be complealty avaliable).

    # I'm no expert - and the missing link stuff via media is getting to me - so here is my layman clarification. Also the Letters A-Z have only illustrative purposes here. #

  53. Gpd gives himself a face-palm, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    heaves a great sigh, and thinks to himself, "about time, they finally get it."

  54. Of course . . . he's a Jesuit by PeeAitchPee · · Score: 1

    Members of the Society of Jesus (SJ) -- the Jesuits -- have long embraced science . . . in fact, they have made numerous significant contributions to the development of science. Science and Christianity, and particularly science and Catholicism, are certainly not mutually exclusive.

  55. Re:The metaphysics of evolution are a different st by TheMeuge · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure that really gets to the heart of the matter, which is a metaphysical argument about origins.

    But the question is "does it matter"?

    This is obviously not news to Christians outside of the US. But this statement making the news in the US is a step in the right direction.

  56. Wait another week... by damn_registrars · · Score: 0

    Not long ago the Catholic Church was going to be OK with gay marriage and some limited forms of birth control, until they decided a week later that they still aren't. We ought to let the dust settle more on this one before we start congratulating the church on a sudden outbreak of common sense.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Wait another week... by Immerman · · Score: 1

      He's at least the third Pope to come out in support of evolution, I think the dust has long since settled, except around the fundamentalists and those who like to ignorantly poke fun at the religious.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  57. Richard Dawkins and Lawence Krauss by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    These comments seem to indicate that the Pope thinks that Evolution and Cosmology don't provide any support for atheism as proposed by Dawkins or Krauss (as reported in a new book by Amir Aczel). Aczel also criticizes their claims, saying they are unscientific. He manages to bring mathematicians Cantor and Gödel into his argument in "Why Science Does Not Disprove God." http://www.amazon.com/Why-Scie...

  58. Science is man's description of God's creation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    God created evolution as well as everything else. Man just describes it's mechanisms and put names to them.

  59. Re:The metaphysics of evolution are a different st by davide+marney · · Score: 1

    Hm, are you really sure about this? The tagline of evolution isn't, "survival of those who just happend to be here, in no particular order, and for no particular reason", but "survival of the fittest." "Fitness" is properly a design principle, I would argue; it is an optimization (selection) with a purpose (survival). Adding millions of years and hundreds of genetic mutations to the equation doesn't change any of that.

    Even your statement that "very likely you'll see increased complexity over time" betrays (if that's not too strong a word) a hidden assumption of progress. Why very likely? If truly random, why not equally unlikely?

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
  60. I would like to meet the Adams dad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem with this is that Adam was formed from the ground. It that is true in the literal sense, that God scooped up the dirt and made him, then Adam is not from evolution. If it is figurative, and we all come from dirt. I would like to see Adams dad. The Ape/Cavedweller who is just one less notch "man" than Adam was.

    Luckily I am not a Catholic, so I don't have to figure this out.

  61. This changes nothing ... by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

    ... that asshole Galileo was still just so wrong and stuff.

    --
    It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
  62. Groupthink by sjbe · · Score: 0

    Not because anyone disagrees with him, but because they all are thinking the same thing: "Oh, deal Lord, he's going to get crazy old Mrs. Doddard stated again on fossils again. How can I get out of here politely?"

    Which means you are de-facto agreeing with "crazy old Mrs. Doddard" because you are remaining silent and accepting her viewpoint. I understand not wanting to get involved with an argument with a crazy person but quietly allowing her viewpoint to remain dogma because confrontation makes you uncomfortable is rather pathetic. Crazy Mrs. Doddard is permitted to inflict her nonsense on everyone else because it is allowed.

    Modern churches, even here in the deep south are pretty diverse places, and the general policy seems to be "if you think this is going to start an argument, and is not vitally important, don't talk about it."

    The technical term for that is groupthink. You are allowing irrational viewpoints without dissension because conflict makes you uncomfortable. Which makes me wonder why you bother going. Why would you repeatedly sit and listen to a bunch of stuff you claim you do not genuinely believe? The church is clearly claiming to tell you the "Truth". If you don't agree with it or if the available evidence doesn't support the claims, why would you repeatedly subject yourself to something you believe to be wrong?

    Oh and I disagree that churches are particularly diverse places. Churches tend to be populated by very like minded people engaged in best example of groupthink I've ever seen.

    1. Re:Groupthink by halivar · · Score: 2

      In describing my church, you also describe Slashdot.

    2. Re:Groupthink by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now I wish I had chosen "The Slashdot Pope" as my username.

    3. Re:Groupthink by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      You mean The Slash Church of the Dotterday Saints?

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    4. Re:Groupthink by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Not because anyone disagrees with him, but because they all are thinking the same thing: "Oh, deal Lord, he's going to get crazy old Mrs. Doddard stated again on fossils again. How can I get out of here politely?"

      Which means you are de-facto agreeing with "crazy old Mrs. Doddard" because you are remaining silent and accepting her viewpoint. I understand not wanting to get involved with an argument with a crazy person but quietly allowing her viewpoint to remain dogma because confrontation makes you uncomfortable is rather pathetic. Crazy Mrs. Doddard is permitted to inflict her nonsense on everyone else because it is allowed.

      Hardly. It's more like " I won't bring this up here because old Mrs. Doddard will then start on her rant. So, by keeping quiet the rest of us can continue our discussion and not get sidetracked by a nutcase. Nowhere did the OP say they wouldn't bring it up if someone else started the conversation or if OMD did, just that there is no reason to start a discussion you know will only end in one person ranting and everyone else looking for an exit.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  63. Re:The big bang theory matches creationism perfect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except the creator gets to set the initial conditions. So in a deterministic universe there is no guiding necessary - the universe inevitably evolves according to the creator's design. And in a nondeterministic one, I don't see how divine intervention is any more incompatible with science than any other source of nondeterminism, such as human free will.

  64. Re:The big bang theory matches creationism perfect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Science is statistics, whether quantum or classical, and chaotic systems. I should say up front that I'm not a deist, but if "God" was interfering how would we ever know? Suppose "God" decided he wanted a hurricane to flatten a city, how would we ever know it was the will of "God" and not just random. If you've read Lorentz you'll know that it is simply not possible to predict the weather because of sensitive dependence on initial conditions. Same with diseases: 10 people have Ebola, 3 survive. Which 3? The scientist will argue that it's totally random (or at least down to variations in immune systems etc.) but there's plenty of room for "the will of God" to be brought in. It does beg the question, why would "God" allow so many assholes to survive, but I believe this is a popular question among religious types and they have some suggestions. Science does not, and cannot, say what will happen to one particle in a large system despite that it can very accurately predict the behaviour of the overall system.

  65. No magic wand? by Roxton · · Score: 1

    Wait a sec. Did the pope just say that God didn't create man fully formed because he *couldn't*?

    1. Re:No magic wand? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Not really. God having rules and tending not to break them is not a restriction on omnipotence in the sense of 'can't' but rather 'won't.' God also binds Himself in terms of covenants, as for example a promise not to bring on a deluge again that destroys everything. God's rule breaking tends to be for a particular purpose. Raising Lazarus, for example, was meant to inspire faith. But rule breaking is rare and seems to require faith in turn since it is unlikely you can persuade God to do that again in your presence just to check up on His capabilities. So, you must accept the testimony from a long time ago that that miracle occurred.

    2. Re:No magic wand? by ZombieBraintrust · · Score: 1

      I think he is arguing agaisnt viewing God as someone like Zues. A humanish being with magical powers. I don't think he is trying to say God can't perform miracles. Though it comes off like that.

  66. It's good to know by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 2

    It's good to know that the Church's beliefs are evolving.

    --
    Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  67. God of the gaps by sjbe · · Score: 1

    he said what the Church has said for some time now: if evolution does exist, it exists God created it.

    Which is basically a riff on the god of the gaps argument.

    ...the Catholic Church itself has not had a conflict with scientific theory for some time now.

    Really? That is not consistent with the evidence as far as I can tell. They've made concessions over time (see god of the gaps) but they still insist that their ethical stance should determine the course of scientific inquiry. The most prominent examples (though hardly the only ones) are in reproductive biology. The church officially opposes the use of embryonic stem cells. Church leaders advocate public health policies (like abstinence) that demonstrably do not work in spite of copious scientific evidence showing that they do not work. In 2009 the pope actually stated that condom use would make the AIDS crisis worse. The church rejects all use of contraception technology in spite of demonstrable benefits supported by scientific evidence.

    1. Re:God of the gaps by Master+Moose · · Score: 1

      Church leaders advocate public health policies (like abstinence) that demonstrably do not work in spite of copious scientific evidence showing that they do not work.

      Not a scientist here :) but I would like to see the studies where the practice of abstinence has not prevented the spread of STIs and unwanted pregnancies.

      Now, I would concede that abstinence often doesn't occur because people generally like to fuck. Maybe I am just being a bit too picky today..

      --
      . . .gone when the morning comes
    2. Re:God of the gaps by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      The "God of the Gaps" is an argument that, since there are things we can't figure out, there must be a God that did it. I think of it as an argument for people who don't think God could do something outside the limits of their imagination. This isn't what the Catholics do. They believe there is a God that created all things, and hence the laws of nature were God's doing, and evolution was God's way of creating species. They don't use evolution as an argument that God exists.

      The "God of the Gaps" argument is more a fundamentalist Protestant argument, where they pick away at evolution until they think they've found a fatal flaw with it, and then say that proves God did it. Even saying that evolution is compatible with Christianity (which the Catholics have said for a long time) removes the God of the Gaps argument.

      In your last paragraph, you fail to provide support for Catholic doctrine being at odds with scientific theory. You provide examples of the Catholic church saying some things are immoral, which is not a conflict with science. The use of embryonic stem cells could be immoral even if it's scientifically useful (consider some of the Nazi experiments on Jews in WWII for a parallel). Contraception could have lots of demonstrated benefits and still be immoral. The church can tell people to do things one way because that's the moral way, while knowing it isn't going to work in almost all cases. You and I don't agree with those moral stances, but they aren't anti-scientific.

      Removing all the cases where the Church says something is possible but immoral, you have one stupid statement by a Pope in 2009. I don't think that comprises evidence that the church is anti-science.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  68. Meh, The Pope? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who cares what the Pope has to say? I'm more interested in Bennett Haselton's thoughts on the matter. ... said no one ever.

    1. Re:Meh, The Pope? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Considering there are more than a billion Roman Catholics in the world, what the Pope says is relevant to them.

  69. Miracles by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Miracles aren't magic, they are occurrences with incredibly low probabilities

    A miracle by definition is an event that cannot be explained by natural or scientific laws. In other words an actual Act of God. It is used colloquially for unlikely events but that is not what a miracle actually is defined as.

    The bible doesn't contradict science, although many religious people unfortunately do.

    Really? People really did turn into pillars of salt? People can actually die for several days and then be reborn? Virgin's can actually give birth?

    1. Re:Miracles by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Well, it's been repeatedly confirmed that yes, virgins *can* give birth - it's extremely rare, but it does happen (more so among some species than others - some animals don't even have males and parthenogenesis is the only reproductive pathway).

      Of course when it does the child is basically a clone of the mother, but if one were to presume that Mary were an XXY individual to begin with, then it's not such a stretch that a child would be born male - her likely elevated testosterone levels might even predispose embryonic development in that direction.

      On the other hand the more likely explanation can be found from looking at the literature of the time, wherein a character being born to a virgin or of incest was a common literary device used to indicate that they were a person of particular significance. Puts the whole virgin birth of a virgin birth immaculate conception thing in context as well - I mean we're not just talking an epic hero, this is the son of God here! Though I suppose a female born by virgin birth might also be more likely than most to develop spontaneous pregnancy.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    2. Re:Miracles by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Oh, and it has been documented that many Yogi masters can slow their metabolism to the point that they would appear dead even to most modern medical practitioners without sophisticated tools, much less Roman soldiers. Would be a handy trick for someone who found themselves being crucified, and Jesus' teachings did have a rather Eastern slant to them...

      Can't think of any explanations for the pillars of salt though.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    3. Re:Miracles by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      People really did turn into pillars of salt?

      People can be perceived to have been. Witnesses see what they see, never the entirety of what happens.

      People can actually die for several days and then be reborn?

      The raised dead weren't reborn, they woke up from a coma so deep that nobody at the time could tell it from death.

      Virgin's [sic] can actually give birth?

      It was thought that parthenogenesis was impossible in sharks, too, but a virgin shark gave birth a couple of years ago. BTW, are you a greengrocer?

  70. Intelligent Design is not science by flyhigher · · Score: 1

    Isaac Newton was a brilliant scientist. Newton is upheld by the Intelligent Design community as a great example of how Christians should engage science because he mentioned God in his book, the Principia Mathematica. But he is also an example of the very problems that become apparent when we use God as a pseudoscientific tool to close a gap caused by our own ignorance. It’s a good lesson for us today. For all his brilliance, Newton made a critical error in reasoning, and that was to apply an “Intelligent Design” answer to a problem he had with gravity. Newton’s laws of motion predicted the orbits of the planets around the Sun. Because he used approximations when calculating the forces of the planets upon each other, he came to the conclusion that the orbits are unstable and would decay after thousands of years. Newton suggested that God occasionally intervened with a miracle, by sending a comet or other object with just the right direction, size, and velocity, to gravitationally nudge the planets back into their correct orbits.

    Years after Newton, Pierre Laplace found better methods to solve Newton’s equations, showing that the planetary orbits are indeed stable. When asked by Napoleon, “Monsieur Laplace, why wasn’t the Creator mentioned in your book on celestial mechanics?”, Laplace replied, “Sir, I have no need for that hypothesis.” Laplace was likely an atheist, but we now know that his findings about planetary motion were true. If he were a believer, he could have just as well said, “We don’t need to explicitly invoke God’s miraculous intervention when describing planetary motion.”

    In the one area where Newton inserted God’s supernatural action as part of a scientific explanation, he was later shown to be wrong, and to add insult to injury, he was shown up by an atheist. Intelligent Design proponents leave out this detail when they talk about Newton.

    Source: http://truecreation.info/

  71. Back to the drawing board by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    If the Pope says (confirming what mainstream Christians have believed for a long time) that homosexuals aren't bad, and now Evolution and Big Bang are consistent with orthodox Catholic thought, what the heck else are we going to build our strawmen attacks out of? ...because you don't really think this will change anyone's mind about how they feel about religion, do you?

    --
    -Styopa
  72. Let me butt in one second. by neoritter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Evolution and the Big Bang Theory have been accepted theories in the Catholicism for just about as long as they were around (last century or so). In fact the Big Bang Theory was proposed by a Catholic priest! Pope John Paul II said that evolution was the most probable theory and referenced a predecessor Pope's words as agreeing with him.

    The article itself thankfully references this fact:

    But Pope Francis’s comments were more in keeping with the progressive work of Pope Pius XII, who opened the door to the idea of evolution and actively welcomed the Big Bang theory. In 1996, John Paul II went further and suggested evolution was “more than a hypothesis” and “effectively proven fact”.

    Though they did seem to want to keep perpetuating the myth that the Church was ever anti-science. When it's just not true.

    1. Re: Let me butt in one second. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ironically, the atheist bloc tend to propagate myths like this without any evidence to support their claims or being open to rational discourse.

    2. Re:Let me butt in one second. by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      "Though they did seem to want to keep perpetuating the myth that the Church was ever anti-science. When it's just not true."

      Galileo would disagree with you.

    3. Re: Let me butt in one second. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look up your history. Galileo was declared a heretic only after an unrelated falling out with the pope (which at the time was more of a corrupt job for noblemen second sons)

    4. Re:Let me butt in one second. by neoritter · · Score: 1

      Galileo is pretty much the only person in the history of the Church's reign over the Western world that could be said to be persecuted. But here's the inconvenient truth of the matter, the Church had no issues with the underlying theory itself. And the kicker is, it was his own academic colleagues that pushed for him being punished. They all were students of Ptolemy's geocentric worldview.

    5. Re:Let me butt in one second. by mspohr · · Score: 1

      Galileo is pretty much the only person in the history of the Church's reign over the Western world that could be said to be persecuted.

      Do you really believe this? I think you misspoke.
      I think that there is over whelming evidence that the Church has routinely and persistently persecuted many people.
      Here's a short list:
      http://amazingdiscoveries.org/...
      A longer discussion here:
      http://www.heretication.info/_...

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    6. Re:Let me butt in one second. by neoritter · · Score: 1

      I guess you can say I misspoke. I thought the qualifier was obvious given the context of the discussion. We're talking about the church being anti-science and persecuting people espousing scientific theories. So the qualifier I should've added was, "...that could be said to be persecuted because of their scientific theory." Persecution of heretics, i.e. Christians who have a different interpretation of Christianity, and of those with differing religious beliefs, would not be a part of what I was talking about.

    7. Re:Let me butt in one second. by mspohr · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the clarification.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    8. Re: Let me butt in one second. by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      The Galileo story was as much about politics and people being thick-headed and stubborn all around as anything else. Name another one. Hint: Bruno doesn't count.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    9. Re:Let me butt in one second. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution and the Big Bang Theory have been accepted theories in the Catholicism for just about as long as they were around

      You mean that Catholicism already accepted Big Bang Theory 13 billion years ago?

    10. Re:Let me butt in one second. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, just since 2007 when it was aired for the first time

    11. Re:Let me butt in one second. by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Galileo is the victim of politics. It was actually the pope that asked Galileo to complete his studies and publish his works. It may sound odd today, considering how we do science so differently from their times, but back then the pope (and much of the RCC) felt stuck with this "heathen" geocentric world view. After all it went back to Aristotele and he was much but not a good christian child. They found auctors, i.e. authorities (the "ones that had it generally right"), for nearly every other field, but just Astronomy (which was pretty big back then, believe it or not) was left to that heathen guy because nobody came up with something better (and to dethrone such an authority, you had to do something pretty spectacular. Usually, though, it only meant that you summarized various authorities to become the new authority).

      So the Pope was originally VERY interested when Galileo started talking about an astronomy model that worked better than the old one AND had no relation to the heathen times. But even the Pope wasn't impossible to fell and political intrigue was pretty big back then. I'd have to look up the details, but iirc the main problem was that some powerful family held various cardinal seats, wanted to overthrow the pope and this could easiest be done by claiming that Galileo (who got a lot of backing from the pope) was in league with the devil for trying to upset the good wholesome Christian doctrine that god created the world as the center of the universe.

      The pope generally had two options: Drop Galileo or fall with him. We know how he decided, and who could hold it against him?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    12. Re:Let me butt in one second. by neoritter · · Score: 1

      No, since 1927 when the theory was proposed by a Catholic priest.

    13. Re:Let me butt in one second. by jonwil · · Score: 1

      I think what the Catholic Church did to Galileo shows that the they were very much anti-science back then.

    14. Re:Let me butt in one second. by neoritter · · Score: 1

      What when half a century earlier they were asking Copernicus to publish his works and others to speak on the subject? Heck, the commissioned Galileo to study heliocentrism in the first place!

    15. Re:Let me butt in one second. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Galileo is pretty much the only person in the history of the Church's reign over the Western world that could be said to be persecuted.

      Not counting gypsies, since they aren't people.

    16. Re:Let me butt in one second. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      What the Catholic Church did to Galileo had nothing to do with science. Galileo attacked and ridiculed the church and pope for saying his works needed more proof (which it did) and that is why what happened did happen to Galileo.

    17. Re: Let me butt in one second. by tolkienfan · · Score: 1

      I've read a substantial volume of atheist literature and blogs, etc. None of it supports your claim. The contrary. Most of the prominent atheist authors point out how valuable christianity has been to science, progress, morality etc. They also point out how much ill has been done in the name of religion, even at the direct instruction of religious leadership. None of this is inconsistent.

    18. Re: Let me butt in one second. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny how you Jesus freaks always seem to gloss over the inconvenient portions of your own history. You know, like the fucking Crusades.

      The only reason the latest Mope is claiming to side with evolution is that he's smart enough to see that major changes will have to be made in order to brainwash coming generations into accepting their horribly flawed Good Book.

      Wouldn't hurt if you catholics could ease up on the whole child molestation thing either. Do all the hand waving about evolution you like, you'll never convince anybody while your priests and bishops are fucking little boys on the side.

    19. Re: Let me butt in one second. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition.

    20. Re: Let me butt in one second. by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      And his punishment for being a heretic was to be given a 47 room mansion with servants and a fully stocked laboratory! Technically house arrest, but would somebody please give me that level of luxurious house arrest?

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    21. Re: Let me butt in one second. by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      The Crusades? You mean, the military reaction after 700 years of terrorism from Islam, that was so concerned with their own eternal salvation that they sucked at being a military?

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    22. Re:Let me butt in one second. by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      Does his edict mean that science can again be taught in schools in the south?

      Wow.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    23. Re:Let me butt in one second. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IT was agreed upon by one Pope and then another Pope determined it to be heathenish in nature and condemned Galileo for his works... I'm not 100% on the facts but I'm pretty sure that's how it went.. It wasn't just one Pope, the 14th century the century that started the Inquisitions saw many Popes; since life expectancy in those days were very short, even for a Pope.

  73. this was said as early as 1950 by a pope by jstitch · · Score: 2

    same thing said in 1950 by Pius XII with its Humani Generis encyclic, not a new thing. Catholic church isn't a fundamentalist one. Benedict XVI didn't went against Darwin, just claimed for not taking him too long so to forget the Creator. Maybe you do not agree with it, but it's a claim of faith, born from t he believes of that man. B. XVI said that there's no oppositon between science and faith (27 september 2009), so he is not a retrograde, the same thing Pius XII said is the same thing catholic church believes.

  74. Re:The metaphysics of evolution are a different st by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    "Fitness", within the context of evolution, relates only to reproductive success rates within a population. If a "simple" structure is sufficient for reproductive success, then the "simple" structure will remain present over time.

    Evolution is not driven by "purpose". Evolution is a consequence of imperfect replication; is not a movement toward a goal.

  75. Wrong God, I think by danaris · · Score: 1

    he said what the Church has said for some time now: if evolution does exist, it exists God created it.

    Which is basically a riff on the god of the gaps argument.

    Unless I'm misunderstanding what the GP said, I don't think it's the God of the gaps, I think it's more along the lines of the "watchmaker God," who set up all the mechanisms to produce the results he wanted, then set them in motion and sat back and watched.

    Can you explain why God creating the mechanism of evolution (as opposed to the development of certain features and/or species) is a riff on the God of the gaps, in which it is posited that the cause for anything we can't yet explain is God's will?

    Dan Aris

    --
    Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
  76. Finally, some rational thought. by LoRdTAW · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Back in 7th grade I was attending Catholic school. We had a teacher who was very, very religious but at the same time a good science teacher. How was this possible? She taught us a few memorable things: first off the creation in genesis took 7 days for god (7 th day was rest, chillin and having a beer hopefully). But who said a day for god is the same for us? In her words she said a day for god could be millions or billions of years to us. That made sense. Another thing that stuck out was that all of the physical processes we see are rules laid out by god. So basically, the laws of physics were created by god. Evolution? A natural process that god created. So here was a very godly woman who also was a firm believer in science because science is a gift from god. So the two can certainly coexist.

    A while back I was talking to a religious guy I know from the local dive bar I used to frequent (religious guy at the bar, go figure. a regular hypocrite was more like it). We got in talking about science and during the course, he bought up the opinion that science is against god. But I bought up the counter of, why would god bestow such an awe inspiring field of study only to restrict us from pursuing it? He gave us a giant sandbox to play in and we refuse it? To me it would be rude to declining a gift from god. He started to see my point and said: "you know that makes sense. don't know if I like it but it makes sense". You could see he sorta understood the point.

    So you can argue that all of science is merely a creation and gift from god. To deny it is to deny gods gift and possibly, god itself. Though there are some who will refuse any of those beliefs, if they are in a position of power be it a school board, politician or preacher, they have a self interest in that denial (control).

    Disclaimer: I am agnostic. I doubt there is a god. Or perhaps there is a god but not in the way we traditionally think, a person. Perhaps the laws behind our universe are god. Or we are a 3d projection of a 2d hologram or inside a giant computer simulation. We don't know and perhaps, we never will know. And if there is a god as we picture, I am sure he/she is not the dick they are made out to be in various man made books. And to be honest, I really don't care either way. I just live my life and enjoy it :-)

    1. Re:Finally, some rational thought. by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      You obviously have had little contact with left-wing thought. You religious people are nothing more than monsters. You yourself don't believe, otherwise you would have capitalized God (you right-wing nutbags are remarkably consistent about such weird thingees). Moreover you Christians drink wine in church, how can you say you're not allowed to go to bars? Those are Muslims - you know, your enemy. Go kill 'em, rah rah rah!

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  77. Finally ... They cant say that I am hereticial by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have had held this belief that god is a scientist and we are but one of his experiments and the system that he set up to "create" us is evolution. so to anyone that said I was being a heretic for not believing that we were created in our current form by him/her directly ... neener neener neener.

    Not that I need the Pope to define my beliefs, hell I am not even catholic.

  78. Sounds like a desperate search for relevancy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Religion is based on ignorance and hypocrisy, as science lifts the veil on how the universe actually works religions will continue to revise its message to attempt to remain relevant.

  79. Re:next thing... by Talderas · · Score: 1

    The Jesuits are pretty awesome.

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  80. Ah, it's so nice of him. by SlashAdotter · · Score: 1

    Ah, it's so nice of him. The problem is though that there is an explicit and direct contradiction between an evolutionary worldview (supported by vast body of evidence) and a creator-based (2000 year old) worldview. His quote "He created human beings and let them develop according to the internal laws that he gave to each one so they would reach their fulfillment." is one of the most ridiculous mix-ups I have ever encountered.

  81. understanding evolution? by schlachter · · Score: 1

    evolution requires the creation of beings that evolve."

    By "beings", I hope he mains simple self replicating single celled organisms, or he's got it wrong.

    --
    My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
    1. Re:understanding evolution? by itzly · · Score: 1

      Single celled organisms are even quite a step up from the very beginnings. Self replicating molecules is where he should look first.

    2. Re:understanding evolution? by reve_etrange · · Score: 1

      simple self replicating single celled organisms

      Not even, just oligonucleotides and amphiphiles.

      --
      .: Semper Absurda :.
    3. Re:understanding evolution? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Actually even that is claiming too much - imperfectly self-replicating molecules is enough.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  82. Re:The metaphysics of evolution are a different st by itzly · · Score: 1

    Even though only the fittest (or 'fit enough') survive, the mutations are random. So, there's no goal or progress. Different individuals have different complexity. Imagine that you introduce a complexity scale, where 0 means the simplest possible, and higher numbers mean increasingly complex individuals/species. Now, when evolution first started, complexity was very near 0, because the first life forms had to have happened by chance, and only simple things can happen by chance. As these organisms start to multiply, and populate the earth, it's very likely that some of the more complex ones produce even more complex offspring, so the upper bound on complexity keeps growing. The lower bound is fixed at zero.

  83. St. Augustine acknowledged evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Pope was only confirming what St. Augustine wrote about in the 3rd century AD. Nothing new here.

  84. That's not the same book. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Happiness for everybody, free, and let no one go away unsatisfied!"

  85. Fundamental god of the gaps by sjbe · · Score: 1

    I think it's more along the lines of the "watchmaker God," who set up all the mechanisms to produce the results he wanted, then set them in motion and sat back and watched.

    A distinction without any real difference. Such an argument presumes the existence of a deity when in fact there is no actual reason to presume such an entity actually is responsible. They are exploiting a gap in our scientific knowledge to claim that a god is responsible for the universe. Over time science has pushed back the boundaries of our knowledge but the churches continue to insist that a supernatural being must be involved somehow in spite of there being no actual evidence to support their position. The church has to varying degrees and at various times actively fought a losing battle against scientific progress when it demonstrated church doctrine/dogma to be false. Periodically they acquiesce to logic and facts and declare that their god must be responsible for the bits we don't understand just yet or that god must have set things up. You don't need to get into a semantic argument to realize the logic is identical to god of the gaps.

    Can you explain why God creating the mechanism of evolution (as opposed to the development of certain features and/or species) is a riff on the God of the gaps, in which it is posited that the cause for anything we can't yet explain is God's will?

    It's just the most fundamental god of the gaps argument. Basically any time we don't understand something and then invoke a deity to explain it we are involving the same logic as a god of the gaps argument. It is an attempt to posit that god (in whatever form) exists and/or is responsible for something based on current gaps in our knowledge. No, we don't know how the universe was created but it doesn't automatically follow that a deity is responsible.

  86. This says more about Big Bang by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Big Bang, which today we hold to be the origin of the world, does not contradict the intervention of the divine creator but, rather, requires it.

    Even the Pope acknowledges that the only way for Big Bang theory to hold merit, is that there's an omnipotent creator who makes it so.

  87. Nothing like slashdot by sjbe · · Score: 1

    In describing my church, you also describe Slashdot.

    Really? I've been reading and posting to slashdot a long time and there is almost nothing that readers here agree on much less consider dogma. Some are libertarian and others aren't and they have a healthy active debate about which is right. Some like Apple and other do not. Some like bitcoin and others think it is nonsense. When people on slashdot see a "Crazy Ms Doddard" they point it out with enthusiasm. Honestly I cannot think of many places that are less like a congregation that sits quietly trying to avoid conflict. The ENTIRE point and value of slashdot is that people here question virtually everything and argue loudly about it.

    Find me a mainstream church where there are ongoing debates like the ones here about the correctness of virtually every topic and I'll concede the point.

    1. Re:Nothing like slashdot by halivar · · Score: 1

      The Crazy Mrs. Doddard's here are known by name, and you know when they're going to show up. Most people are content to down-mod and move on. Contrary opinions are often (-1, Troll) with nary a response, or, if someone does, they get modded (-1, something-something) just for touching it. There is absolutely groupthink on Slashdot, and there has been for the 15 years I've been here. Hell, I first learned the term in the context of its application to Slashdot.

  88. Actually, no ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, I've seen the "we can believe in creation *AND* evolution" and it's BS. Here's why:

    The theory of evolution, as a scientific theory, mandates that living organisms develop through a process of natural selection. It is absolutely imperative to the theory that the selection applied as a function of random mutation and selective pressure broad upon by the environment within which the organism finds itself. The moment God is "driving" evolution, it is not *natural* selection. If God set the rules of the universe up to one day produce the human form, then it is not *natural* selection either, but some kind of elaborate design. Supernatural teleology is not science, and can never be by definition, because God is defined to be outside of nature, and science is defined to be the study of nature.

    Science and theism cannot ever be compatible as long as theists maintain that there is some "purpose", "goal" or "finish line". It does not matter how many back-flips you do - there is a fundamental, metaphysical incompatibility between how theism and science define "truth".

    1. Re:Actually, no ... by kuzb · · Score: 1

      >The theory of evolution, as a scientific theory, mandates that living organisms develop through a process of natural selection

      No it doesn't. It only says that natural selection is one possible mechanism by which an evolutionary path is decided. We engage in artificial selection all the time and there's nothing natural about it.

      --
      BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
  89. FINALLY!! by Xeleema · · Score: 1

    Excuse me while I pass the link to this story to every Catholic that has ever told me "You're wrong" when I started explaining the exact same thing over 15 years ago.

    --
    "When I am king, you will be first against the wall..."
  90. Sigh... religion on Slashdot again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems as though religion pops up here from time to time and often the discussion lends itself to ignorant comments from many people who do not know much about what they are talking about (or who unfortunately have been hurt by religious people). Speaking as a Catholic, most Catholics I know accept scientific theories that have not been invalidated, such as the big bang or evolution. What Catholics believe is the notion that God at some point was the Initiator. Who knows what point that was? It's a mystery --- one of many for people who profess religious belief of any type. Personally, I view scientific explanations (especially in the area of cosmology) to be getting us closer to God, not farther.

    On an unrelated note, I hope that educated readers of Slashdot understand that there are religious people on this site, and that most of us do not proselytize or attempt to convert people, and that most of us do not appreciate being called idiots because of our religious beliefs.

    1. Re:Sigh... religion on Slashdot again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >the discussion lends itself to ignorant comments from many people who do not know much about what they are talking about

      yourself for example

  91. There is only one god by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A.K.A The universe
    if shes intelligent or not, who knows?

    Many people believe they are, intelligent.
    If they are I dont know.

    true or false

  92. Re:Haleluja ...Here we go again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Abiogenesis? "pulvis es et in pulverem reverteris". Now do you see it as incompatible with a God? Logic and some guys 3000yrs ago beg to differ. The key is to realize that being independent of the time dimension of your creation gives you some degree of freedom.

  93. Um, No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Religion is the root of the majority of the world's problems, especially when it comes to oppression.

    Untrue - the majority of these issues are tied to resource acquisition with two primary components:
    1) X uses unsavory means to acquire resources Y has

      - X wants something that Y has and needs an excuse to get it. The "powers that be" in each case use propaganda to demonize "the other" party to justify their own actions and gain mass support. At times the propaganda is a shallow twist of a religious ideal by hired pundits (ex. "Y doesn't baptize their babies, therefore they're the spawn of the devil"), at times it's a non religious ideal (ex. "Y does A, B and C, therefore they don't deserve sympathy and need to be forcibly brought to civilization, and it's ok to exploit them and take their resources")

    2) Defence/backlash from Y against X
    - Y is pissed off at being exploited by X and lashes out. Note, this is a reaction that is the direct result of (1). Of course, Y then typically goes way overboard (just like X did). The "powers that be" on Y's side also then start to use the same type of propaganda.

    People come up with excuses for conflict, at times they involve religion (usually contrary to the religions' actual core values which typically focus on charity, being honest and other gooddie gooddie stuff). If you bother to actually look (instead of going along with the "religion's bad, ra ra ra" crowd, you'll find a far greater emphasis on harmony and just trying to be a decent human being in general than you will on conflict.

    Personally I hope that religion can some day be abolished completely. Nothing good can come of it. Morals and ethics existed long before religion.

    You need to do more than a shallow reading of the current state of the world.

    and the atheistic segment of the population is growing at an unheard of rate.

    Yes, and unfortunately they're more zealous than those who believe (the *vast* majority of whom just want to go about their day not bothering and not being bothered).

  94. This has been doctrine for decades. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because he is distancing the church from creationists. Rumor has it the previous guy supported them giving them the leverage to get all that crazy shit done.. This might actually affect the power of creationist.

  95. Only took 359 years to accept Galileo... by js_sebastian · · Score: 1

    Evolution and the Big Bang Theory have been accepted theories in the Catholicism for just about as long as they were around (last century or so). In fact the Big Bang Theory was proposed by a Catholic priest! Pope John Paul II said that evolution was the most probable theory and referenced a predecessor Pope's words as agreeing with him.

    The article itself thankfully references this fact:

    But Pope Francis’s comments were more in keeping with the progressive work of Pope Pius XII, who opened the door to the idea of evolution and actively welcomed the Big Bang theory. In 1996, John Paul II went further and suggested evolution was “more than a hypothesis” and “effectively proven fact”.

    Though they did seem to want to keep perpetuating the myth that the Church was ever anti-science. When it's just not true.

    It only took them until 1993 to admit they were wrong to try Galielo for heresy (for such modern concepts as the idea that celestial bodies are not perfect spheres attached to the vault of heaven), so people who say the Catholic church has a long tradition of being anti-science definitely have a leg to stand on. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    1. Re:Only took 359 years to accept Galileo... by neoritter · · Score: 1

      No not really. To apologize for trying Galileo for heresy is not say that they disagreed with the heliocentric theory nor that they now agree with it. Trying someone for heresy is to try someone for practicing or evangelizing a belief that is contradictory to Church doctrine. The church obviously had no problem with heliocentrism, if they a) didn't persecute Copernicus and in fact an arch-bishop from Rome encouraged him to publish a full version of his theory; and b) didn't persecute Johann Albrecht Widmannstetter who gave a lecture in Rome about it, and who was heard with interest by the Pope and several Cardinals. What happened to Galileo was political shenanigans. Look at the time period he was in, the Protestant reformation was at it's height. The Church at that time was hypersensitive to anyone or anything that challenged their authority. Galileo kind of challenged the Pope's authority while espousing the heliocentric theory. And that's why the Church apologized (however late) for trying him for heresy. It was an overreaction on their part.

    2. Re:Only took 359 years to accept Galileo... by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      It only took them until 1993 to admit they were wrong to try Galielo for heresy (for such modern concepts as the idea that celestial bodies are not perfect spheres attached to the vault of heaven), so people who say the Catholic church has a long tradition of being anti-science definitely have a leg to stand on.

      Interesting. Did you look at your linked article? If you believe the Church did not accept the ideas of Galileo until the pope apologized in 1993, does that mean you also think the Church still endorsed slavery at that point, that they believed that it was fine to go around slaughtering all the natives in the New World whenever you want, etc.? Those are on that list too. Just because the pope apologized in 1993 doesn't mean that's when they accepted heliocentrism.

      When did the Church accept heliocentrism? In 1758, they dropped the general ban on books arguing the truth of heliocentrism. They finally lifted the ban on Galileo's books in the 1820s.

      Interestingly, from a history of science standpoint, the mid-1700s was when the first proof of the Earth's motion was actually empirically measured, in James Bradley's observations of the aberration of light. Bradley first measured this in the late 1720s, but at first didn't understand the results (he was looking for parallax -- the real thing to prove the Earth's motion, as people had been looking for since the 1500s). Later, in the 1740s, he successfully measured and interpreted another aspect of the Earth's motion, the nutation of the Earth's axis.

      So, basically in the decades immediately following the first actual empirical proof of heliocentrism, the Church lifted its ban on books asserting it to be true. (Note that the Church always allowed books which treated heliocentrism as a hypothesis or as a mathematical model, which is what it actually was... until sometime in the mid 1700s.)

      Oh, and stellar parallax was first observed and measured in 1838... just about the time the Church finally lifted the ban on Galileo's writings.

      Galileo was basically found guilty of disobeying an order not to teach heliocentrism as truth, only as hypothesis. He could not prove it was true, but he nevertheless asserted it to be true and wrote a book making fun of powerful people who believed otherwise. We can argue about Galileo's prosecution as a free-speech issue, but frankly he was wrong about the science (he argued for circular orbits against the elliptical ones Kepler had observed, and his only supposed proof of the Earth's motion was a discredited theory of the tides that required there to be only one high tide at noon every day, for example of a few big holes), and he was called out for being a jerk about things he couldn't prove.

    3. Re:Only took 359 years to accept Galileo... by js_sebastian · · Score: 1

      No not really. To apologize for trying Galileo for heresy is not say that they disagreed with the heliocentric theory nor that they now agree with it.

      Indeed it says just that, although of course they changed their mind well before 1993. From the wikipedia article on galileo:

      In 1616, an Inquisitorial commission unanimously declared heliocentrism to be "foolish and absurd in philosophy, and formally heretical since it explicitly contradicts in many places the sense of Holy Scripture."

    4. Re:Only took 359 years to accept Galileo... by js_sebastian · · Score: 1

      It only took them until 1993 to admit they were wrong to try Galielo for heresy (for such modern concepts as the idea that celestial bodies are not perfect spheres attached to the vault of heaven), so people who say the Catholic church has a long tradition of being anti-science definitely have a leg to stand on.

      Interesting. Did you look at your linked article? If you believe the Church did not accept the ideas of Galileo until the pope apologized in 1993

      No, I don't. Strawman argument? ;-) But they never admitted of being wrong to try for heresy one of the founders of modern science until 1993.

      When did the Church accept heliocentrism? In 1758, they dropped the general ban on books arguing the truth of heliocentrism. They finally lifted the ban on Galileo's books in the 1820s.

      Interestingly, from a history of science standpoint, the mid-1700s was when the first proof of the Earth's motion was actually empirically measured, in James Bradley's observations of the aberration of light. Bradley first measured this in the late 1720s, but at first didn't understand the results (he was looking for parallax -- the real thing to prove the Earth's motion, as people had been looking for since the 1500s). Later, in the 1740s, he successfully measured and interpreted another aspect of the Earth's motion, the nutation of the Earth's axis.

      So, basically in the decades immediately following the first actual empirical proof of heliocentrism, the Church lifted its ban on books asserting it to be true. (Note that the Church always allowed books which treated heliocentrism as a hypothesis or as a mathematical model, which is what it actually was... until sometime in the mid 1700s.)

      It's not just helioncentrism. Galileo pointed a telescope at the sky and discovered the moons of Jupiter, craters on the face of the moon, etc, and basically proved that the church's entire view of the cosmos was a childish fanasy that did not pass basic rational scrutiny.

      We can argue about Galileo's prosecution as a free-speech issue, but frankly he was wrong about the science (he argued for circular orbits against the elliptical ones Kepler had observed, and his only supposed proof of the Earth's motion was a discredited theory of the tides that required there to be only one high tide at noon every day, for example of a few big holes), and he was called out for being a jerk about things he couldn't prove.

      There's nothing to argue frankly, the free-speech issue is clear as glass. I don't know what point you are trying to make. Galileo was wrong about some things, so what? The scientific debate was not between Galielo and the church, but between him and other scientists of his time (and the centuries thereafter). The church's only role in this discussion and other scientific and philosophical discussion of that time was to censor, bully, and burn at the stake (not galileo, but Giordano Bruno was burned in 1600) based on arbitrary interpretations of a bunch of old books.

    5. Re:Only took 359 years to accept Galileo... by neoritter · · Score: 1

      Again, look at the time period he was in. When he said in his letters that heliocentrism doesn't contradict the Bible and that said that biblical texts could not always be interpreted literally, he was interpreting the Bible himself. And that was something that the Church was completely against during the Protestant Reformation. It'd politically look bad for them to agree with him because it'd tacitly agree that the lay person could read and interpret the Bible correctly. And that'd be admitting that the Protestants were right.

  96. So "Truth" depends on popularity? by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

    While you are correct that it was a Catholic Priest who came up with the idea of the Big Bang I'm more concerned about the bigger picture.

    The Pope declaring something "true" doesn't change the facts.

    This is a non story.

    1. Re:So "Truth" depends on popularity? by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      I think the important point here is that the Pope is making clear that the theory of evolution and of the Big Bang as currently understood do not contradict Catholic teaching. In fact, LeMaitre was considering Einstein's equations with an eye towards the idea of how they jibe with the idea of God creating the universe when he figured out the new interpretation of what the equations could be saying about the origins of the universe. Einstein himself had always considered the Universe to be in a steady-state.

      I agree that this is a non-story, but given the general ignorance of people about Catholic teaching, including most Catholics, and the way the debate has been grotesquely skewed because of the objectively anti-science Protestants (e.g., the Bible literalists and other fundamentalists), especially in the United States, while it is not news for the knowledgeable among us, it is likely to be news for the average person.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    2. Re:So "Truth" depends on popularity? by neoritter · · Score: 1

      I was typing and going to say that my worry is that someone is going to peg this as when the Church finally agreed with this stuff, and then I'd have to (hopefully calmly explain) the Church as never been dismissive of the theories...but I realized...I already do this all the time...

  97. Jupiter == YHWH the father by tepples · · Score: 1

    In fact, the name of the chief Roman god (Jove or Jupiter) may very well have been influenced by Jehovah, the one Israelite god. Look at "Jupiter" and tell me it doesn't look like a contraction of YHWH and "pater", the Latin word for father.

  98. One thing the JWs got right by tepples · · Score: 1

    So why don't more translations of the Hebrew Scriptures render the nearly 7,000 appearances of the tetragrammaton as "Jehovah"? True, the pronunciation of "YHWH" as "Jehovah" is about as historically inaccurate as the pronunciation of his only begotten son's name as "dzhii-zoss", but it is the most familiar in English.

    1. Re:One thing the JWs got right by chipschap · · Score: 1

      The tradition was, in order to prevent the divine name being pronounced by accident, that the vowels for "adonai" were placed in the letters of the tetragrammaton. If you read that as written it sounds like "yehovah". As I understand it, a dumb Middle-Ages Christian scribe transcribed this as-is without knowing the background, with a "J" which sounds like "Y" in German. In English that got pronounced as "Jehovah."

      So the JWs got it completely wrong. Their religion is named after a nonsense word due to a scribal error. But none of them seem to know it. A couple of times when they've come calling, I've asked them if they know the origin of the word "Jehovah" and I get blank stares.

    2. Re:One thing the JWs got right by tepples · · Score: 1

      If "Jehovah" ought to be discarded due to sound changes and scribal errors, why isn't "Jesus" discarded in the same way?

  99. Haleluja ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They accepted evolution a rather long time ago, just so you know.

  100. This has been doctrine for decades. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Why are people getting so excited?

    Because it's news to them? You're right though, this has been true for ages and is only getting press now.

  101. Tip of the iceberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're not serious, right? Genesis matches BBT?

    Please explain to me where in the theory there is an enumeration of people who fucked their sisters and mothers to create CELESTIAL bodies. I want to know how there is scientific evidence, at all.

    Sure it could be a parallel or the worst allegory ever, but no.

  102. Finally! by dskoll · · Score: 1

    He's (big) bang on! No more aping the creationists; Francis is a dinosaur no more.

  103. God is the magician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Human being(s), who, with a sleigh of hand, made people believe what's written in bible is true. Pure magic trick.

    The trick was to make human look like a God. It was easy thousands of years ago, it's hard now, but it's getting easier, thank God.

  104. Re: the universe always existed by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

    The "big bang" theory and the "steady state" theory aren't mutually exclusive. In fact a universe always existing would explain where the mass for a big bang would come from.

  105. the new community manager by znrt · · Score: 1

    If the Pope says (confirming what mainstream Christians have believed for a long time)

    what mainstream christians?

    i read the pope's quote yesterday, it later came to mind when i stumbled on yet-another-creationism-thread here on slashdot, about michigan state university hosting a conference and such. do us citizens realize that this is a problem with us christians *only*? they are not mainstream at all! that this ongoing charade is possible in a developed country is startling. you won't find such widespread intellectual insult among western christians elsewhere. not even in spain, with an extreme national-catholic background still deeply entrenched in power and pretty low scores in education, does this find a minimum audience. not even on junk tv. in us it spread from the university!? dudes, ...

    that homosexuals aren't bad, and now Evolution and Big Bang are consistent with orthodox Catholic thought, what the heck else are we going to build our strawmen attacks out of? ...because you don't really think this will change anyone's mind about how they feel about religion, do you?

    francisco is cool, exactly the worst pope to have. ratzinger's rancid fundamentalism was just fine, it drove many lost souls away. too bad, the roman catholic church must have had an epiphany, because they realized this too. now they have a celebrity!

    1. Re:the new community manager by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      (Note: you know, it's a lot easier to read your comments and understand them if you use capitalization. US = United states. us = you and me.)

      I think to anyone who's paid any attention, it's obvious that US Evangelical Protestants ("Born Again") Christians are the problem.

      It's not really discussed here because it's entirely too useful to the anti-religious Left to lump all religious people together, and smear them with the label "fundamentalist kooks".

      And, on the far Right, I don't believe most evangelical Christians have put much thought into it. Their world is a ... more black and white place. Either you're one of them, or you're not. I'm a Christian, but because I cheerfully assert that
      a) evolution makes perfect sense.
      b) the bible is a lot of social myth, 'teaching stories' and such but certainly not literally true, and
      c) God cares more about what kind of a person you are, and not so much about whether you go to church every sunday, give tons of cash, nor, wave your faith in other people's faces, ...I'm most *certainly* seen as an apostate in their eyes.(shrug)

      --
      -Styopa
    2. Re:the new community manager by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      francisco is cool

      So is being able to see where a sentence starts. Learn to write properly or don't do it.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    3. Re:the new community manager by znrt · · Score: 1

      Learn to write properly or don't do it.

      learn to read with an open mind or don't do it.

      nah, that was a joke. fact is i write as i please and you are not required to read; nor to be a dick about it, but if that helps you in any way then that's just great. :)

    4. Re:the new community manager by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Spoken like a true hipster faggot.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  106. Clarification on ID by SupraTT+GOP · · Score: 1

    99.9% of the sciencey types don't get what ID is really about. It is too easy and too tempting to dismiss out of hand (and to disrespect) in the Dawkins Fan Club echo chamber, in efforts to garner lay-atheist / GNU Atheist attaboys.

    So, how to distill the fundamental essence underpinning the multiple facets of ID into a brief enough sentence or two that a GNU can get through before even having a chance to give in to the desire to impress his peers and make himself feel important by buttressing his woo-flagging credentials?

    ID is basically an effort to rigorously model various aspects / subsystems of living systems and / or their environments, in rigorously defined contexts, so as to provide an unambiguous analysis of how the given system under consideration changes over time, and what other sorts of systems-with-changes (of more well-understood systems that change, evolve, etc.) the given phenomenon is precisely analogous to- that we can more readily appreciate and wrap our minds around- so as to be able to confidently assess whether or not the systems under consideration evolve / change in ways that fall outside of what would otherwise be considered normal probability bounds. That is to say, ID generally wants to be able to demonstrate that phenomenon X had to have taken place in life's history in precise conditions modeled Y, and that this is inescapable, this is conservative, this is bare minimum, this is indisputable. So now one and all can clearly see that phenomenon X is entirely analogous to rolling 1,000 die 1,000 times and getting all sixes each time. Or entirely analogous to finding an electron outside its orbital 10,000 out of 10,000 times. Or whatever.

    This approach does not invoke potential "miracles" as they are popularly understood. Everything in such investigations has nothing to do with logically impossible events. Such events are possible in principle, which means they should be investigated.

    Of course most ID proponents think the writing is on the wall and that with information (evidence) already available, it is possible (necessary) to intuit that many such known phenomena / events in life's history qualify as being extraordinarily unlikely, as per the way things normally work. But obviously until the formalizations are rigorous enough and the evidence and data are plentiful enough such that no one can disagree without being an evident fool, there is more work to be done. All the while being open to some theories about some phenomena being entirely explicable given the "normal" or "usual" behavior / probability bounds of the systems / contexts in which they are defined / modeled. This is open mindedness. This is the true pursuit of empirical knowledge.

    The popular-atheists and Dawkins-cult movements however will rule out such considerations and investigations from the outset, due to philosophical convictions of which they themselves are blissfully and fervently unaware.

    1. Re:Clarification on ID by kuzb · · Score: 1

      No, that's not what it's defined as at all. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I...

      "Intelligent design (ID) is the pseudoscientific view that "certain features of the universe and of living things are best explained by an intelligent cause, not an undirected process such as natural selection.""

      --
      BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
  107. Always amusing by GrahamCox · · Score: 1

    It's always amusing to watch religious people tying themselves into knots trying to fit reality into their various belief systems. The problem with that (and why it's sorta fun to watch, for a while) is that the ONE thing that cannot be allowed to change is the belief system. Those who would argue that science is just another belief system need to understand that if true, then it's at least the only belief system that is flexible and willing to change in response to reality, rather than vice versa.

    Anyway, it's pretty easy to logically disprove the concept of god as most religions seem to define him/her/it. Most religions, especially the abrahamic ones, state that god is all-loving, omnipotent and omniscient: he knows all, sees all and is all-powerful (and he loves us all too!) Wow, pretty cool god there. But, says a five-year-old child, if god's so great, why does he allow bad things to happen? Either he is omnipotent, and chooses not to do anything about "bad stuff", like preventing a flood that kills thousands, showing he's not all-loving, or he would do, but didn't know it was happening, showing he's not all-knowing, or did know about it, and looked on helplessly, showing he's not omnipotent. Or maybe god's just an asshole. Or maybe he doesn't exist. I know which conclusion I tend towards.

  108. I suppose it's progress by kuzb · · Score: 1

    "Francis explained that both scientific theories were not incompatible with the existence of a creator – arguing instead that they "require it.""

    No, they don't require an intelligence at all. They require appropriate conditions are met. Those conditions do not necessarily imply an intelligence.

    It's like one form of stupid is solved just to make way for another.

    --
    BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
  109. didn't get it by Tom · · Score: 1

    While it's a big step forward, it's also a step in the wrong direction.

    Francis explained that both scientific theories were not incompatible with the existence of a creator â" arguing instead that they "require it."

    Nothing could be further from the truth. In this point, even the most foaming-at-the-mouth, ridiculous pathetic idiot fanatic bible-thumping young-earth creationist is intellectually ahead of the pope. The fanatics fully understand how destructive evolution is to their core ideas and that it is the ultimate destroyer of religion because it explains exactly how life including sentient life like us humans can evolve from simple chemistry, with no other influence, guidance or creation required.

    His withdrawl to "initial creation" is a parlor trick at best, because it requires at least one of two things to be true, both of which we already have strong evidence of being false.
    The first option would be continued "guidance" like intelligent design postulates, but on a more indirect path. Not only is there no evidence whatsoever to any of that, but at the required level of indirection, complexity theory tells us that either god can supersede quantum fluctuations and entropy, or the guidance was basically on the scale "some galaxies would be nice, and organic molecules so life can begin" - nothing even remotely resembling the god personally interested in humanity (or rather: a random small desert tribe somewhere in the middle of nowhere) that the bible paints.
    The second option is determinism - that setting the proper initial conditions has to lead to the current state of affairs and that's what the dude did. There's an excellent argument made by Darwin that tears this idea apart based on complexity - basically it would require the initial state to be many orders of magnitude more complex than the current one, an inversion of entropy.

    But all those are scientific arguments. The stronger argument in this case is from philosophy: Taken the church's past history of arguments and official positions, it is clear that it has never won a single argument against science. All arguments that are resolved (and not still in dispute) have always been resolved in favor of science. Throughout history, the church had to admit more and more that its previous positions were wrong and accept the scientific position. Galileo (Feyerabends argument notwithstanding) was just the most popular example. From this history, there is little reason to put any trust into the arguments where the church maintains its position. If someone had to admit being wrong again and again in the past and has never been demonstrably right, it is safe to assume the trend will continue.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  110. When one goes to the extreme ... by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1

    Ironically, the atheist bloc tend to propagate myths like this without any evidence to support their claims or being open to rational discourse

    There are faults on all sides

    No matter if it's the Church or the atheist bloc, when one goes to the extreme, reason is no longer a valid commodity for them

    Some of those so-called "atheists" are so anti-Christianity that they actually siding themselves with Islamic extremists in opposing anything that has to do with Christ

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re: When one goes to the extreme ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since Islam considers Christ on of the great prophets, your comment is a bit nonsensical. It is also rare that an atheist opposes everything to do with Christ. In the immortal words of Ghandi, "I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ." Now this is not meant as a blanket statement, just an illustration of the sentiment shared by many atheists.

    2. Re:When one goes to the extreme ... by markass530 · · Score: 1

      Some of those so-called "atheists" are so anti-Christianity that they actually siding themselves with Islamic extremists in opposing anything that has to do with Christ

      Citation or GTFO

  111. Sorry, Pope, dude, but you're a liar. by JasonGoatcher · · Score: 1

    The Bible teaches that sin is the reason for death and that Jesus offers eternal life through the redemption by the Holy Spirit. The theory of evolution teaches that there was billions of years of death before human beings came on the scene. So if evolution is true, then Jesus can't save us from death because death exists as a natural event separate from sin, making Jesus' sacrifice meaningless.

    So Pope Francis is either delusional or a liar, because one of the basic tenets of Christianity REQUIRES death to be something caused by sin in order to have any meaning at all.

    Either Christianity is true, or evolutionary theory is true, or maybe neither is true. But Christianity and evolutionary theory are most certainly NOT compatible.

    I suggest Catholics renounce Catholicism and start looking for a new church to attend, because this Pope is obviously unreliable.

  112. The Vatican ... by BrianPRabbit · · Score: 1

    ... Has one of the largest observatories in the world. How is this news?

  113. Citation needed by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Well, it's been repeatedly confirmed that yes, virgins *can* give birth - it's extremely rare, but it does happen

    Find me a single confirmed instance of a human virgin giving birth. (and no the one in the bible does not count as confirmed) Or are you really so dense as to not realize we're talking about human birth here? The claim was that "The bible doesn't contradict science" which is easily and demonstrably false. People try to equivocate and claim this bit or that bit is really just literary license but they always do so at a moment that turns out to be oddly convenient to whatever argument they are making at the time.

  114. Prove it by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Oh, and it has been documented that many Yogi masters can slow their metabolism to the point that they would appear dead even to most modern medical practitioners without sophisticated tools, much less Roman soldiers.

    Citation needed. I don't believe that for a moment unless you can provide a evidence that such an act was performed in front of credible medical practitioners and the results were repeatable and tested. I don't know if you've ever actually seen a dead person but I have and it's not something that could be easily faked.

    I've seen plenty of claims of similarly astonishing claims by martial arts "masters" and other charlatans over the years and virtually none of them stand up to proper scientific scrutiny. Most such claims are either puffery or what amounts to stage magic.

    Can't think of any explanations for the pillars of salt though.

    Because there is no point. The point is that there are plenty of things in the bible that contradict scientific evidence, often quite clearly. You don't even have to look very hard.

  115. Evolution ~ what?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    an un-scientific man with a fish-head hat on, agreeing with "theory" (not fact) isn't exactly anything to shout about.
    What is far more amazing to me, is how many people jump in and get all theological about it, and ignore the point - we've a man saying he thinks there's some miles in the theory - but that doesn't make it fact. even if every person in the world believes a lie, it does not make it the truth.
    To that end, there's far too many questions that can't be answered by current thinking about evolution.
    We all see something going on, and something changing. We consider it reaction to the environment or climate. but that's perhaps our own short-sightedness.
    instead, what if we recognised there was an unseen force, much like electricity or magnetism, or radio waves - that conveys intelligence - and at the same time, is a force that creates life. This is far more panspermia in thinking, but is definitely closer to the truth. With such a notion, it's possible for life to spring forth from nothing, where the conditions for life exist. There's research out there backing these notions up - and suggests that even light itself can carry DNA information.

    http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~sai/DNAPhantom.htm

    Same experimental conditions passed laser light through a frog and into a salamander embryo as I recall, and it grew to be a frog. So where's the evolution in that? Time to re-think your points of view, I'd say. I wonder if the Pope would agree with me?

  116. Difference between science and religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A scientist does not assert that evolution and the big bang are right - just that as theories they best fit the facts available until disproven. The Pope's assertion that they are true is not based on scientific enquiry but on the fact that as Pope, his word is law for his religion and followers must take his word on faith

  117. Indeed this is faith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We can and do verify that evolution occurs in the real world and has happened in our lifetimes many times in many places. Therefore, it's a proven phenomenon and it seems to me to be perfectly reasonable to conclude that this is the means God used to create us. The Big Bang however is quite another matter. We can calculate it but it will always be a matter of faith (and speculation) that it occurred this way since no one can observe it and no one has.

  118. I think the summary is reading his comments wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't the quote "He created human beings and let them develop according to the internal laws that he gave to each one so they would reach their fulfillment." basically a summary of what intelligent design all about? In other words, he is *agreeing* with it, not ruling it out. I think all intelligent design is saying is that things were set in motion by just that, and intelligent designer. And I don't see how the comments quoted here go against that.

  119. Monkey Brain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why does the monkey brain think there has to be a creator? That is false. What is probably always was and will be.

  120. Oh the hilarity of comments in this thread. by bcoker · · Score: 1

    Pro and con. Albeit, the majority con. 90% of you are functionally illiterate. Yet your sabre-rattling goes on, your pyrrhic victory must be won!

  121. All down hill from here by Stubbyfingers · · Score: 1

    I knew the Church was going to start spinning out of control with the science thing the SECOND they let Galileo off the hook.

    As soon as they acknowledged the earth went around the sun---they were on a greased slide straight to hell. :-)

  122. Has anyone checked the weather forecast in Hell? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suspect it is snowing there today ....

  123. Meiosis by Bunio_FH · · Score: 1

    you're wrong Francis - it's called meiosis!. nice effort though...

  124. With evolution, original sin goes away. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since evolution makes the concept of a created Adam and Even impossible, original sin goes away. When original sin goes away, there is nothing that humanity is "burdened" with (by its creator) that it has to be "saved" from (by its creator. Fortunately for Christians, they are used to radically re-interpreting their religion to jury rig it into whatever contexts new admissions of reality forces them to.

  125. So... who wants to tell the creationists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So... who wants to tell the creationists planning this conference? http://science.slashdot.org/st... (and, of course, all the rest of them too)

  126. Look out Vatican! by shiloh.sharps · · Score: 1

    The Westboro Baptist bus is on it's way!

    --
    When you're hammered everything looks like it needs nailed....
  127. Here's the Pope's new version of how it all began by nikkipolya · · Score: 1

    God and his room-mate Chugs were arm wrestling. When...
    Chugs: You're going down, man.
    God: Pprrrrrrrrrrrrr (farts)
    Chugs: Oh, dude, that is sick.(God wins, thanks to the stink)
    God: Yeah! Undefeated! Oh, wait, wait, wait. Here comes another one. Quick, give me your lighter.
    God: Pprrrrrrrrrrrrr (farts outreal loud. A big bang is heard)
    God: You smell that?

    Then, over millions of years, evolution took its course.

  128. i've been saying it for years! by iq145 · · Score: 1

    "GOD" EXISTS, BUT HE'S SIMPLY NOT WHAT PEOPLE THINK "HE" IS. GOD isn't some guy that sits on a throne somewhere up above. God is the word for "everything", and "everything" is what we call "God". All of reality is constructed of him. It was once said "Split a piece of wood, and i am there. Look under a stone, and i am there." That's why i'm sure The Creation Theory and The Evolution Theory are both correct (Both, that's why no one can figure out which is true). God uses evolution as a tool to create with. He creates within all of existence (the Universe, once basically empty). Within this reality, God created us... just as we, in turn, create (computers, for example). "Life" is sort of like "God's Saved Memory"... in the hard disk. An awesome notion is, it is probably going on elsewhere as well, (humanoid-like life, due to convergent evolution). By that i mean other planets. As for The Bible... the above justifies why man can say it's God's word, yet it's written by men. It is and it isn't. As for Jesus? He was a man that was an Indigo or something like that... closest to the core of God/Universe. In other words, God's consciousness resided particularly strongly in him, at least partly, making him "The son of God"... being aware of God's existence as a fact (his soul held a large portion of the "memory"). Others before Jesus, and since, have had the "higher knowledge" as well... maybe just not AS high. God's consciousness exists in all of us, that's what GOD is. Am i nuts? No. i'm just a scientist who knows what he knows. God is just the "essence" of what the universe is. Naturally, like everyone and everything else, i could be wrong. But i maintain we're all tiny pieces of God...