• Review of what creationism is.

    From RonO@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jan 7 15:30:01 2024
    As sad as it may be, a lot of TO regulars need to rethink their beliefs.
    A lot of you want to deny that the ID perps are creationists when
    nearly all of them have admitted to being Biblical creattionists. They
    all believe in the same creator.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creationism

    There are all kinds of creationists. That has been known since I
    started reading TO back in 1993. For some reason some TO regulars want
    to cling to a definition that only includes the YEC scientific type creationists. The scientific creationists gave creationists a bad name
    because they weren't just Biblical creationists, but they were science
    deniers. The ID Perps continued the science denial, but changed the
    name of what they were supporting. Everyone should know that the ID
    perps were creationists because Nelson and Kenyon were YEC type
    scientific creationists. Kenyon wrote up some of the legal briefs for
    the scientific creationist Supreme Court case. He didn't stop being a creationists just because he joined up with the other ID perp creationists.

    Before the scientific creationism ploy started in the 1960's there
    probably had been theistic evolutionist Biblical creationists for around
    a century. Not all Christians rejected biological evolution. When the anti-evolution laws were being passed in the 1920's theistic evolution
    had been accepted by multiple Christian sects in the US and they were
    against those laws. There were already old earth and young earth
    creationist factions in the Methodist church in the 19th century, and
    they decided to coexist because inaccurate Biblical accounts of nature
    just didn't matter to what was considered to be the important tenets of
    the faith. My take on why they decided to pass on the issue is because
    issues like geocentrism had died, and there was no use arguing about how
    old the earth was based on Biblical accounts. The Greeks had started estimating the circumference of the earth a couple centuries before
    Christ was born, and it didn't make sense to go along with
    fundamentalist thinking that was trying to bring back flat earth
    creationism. The Bible had been written by people that had adopted the flat-earth geocentric cosmology of their neighbors who had been
    civilized for a longer period of time. That is the reason why the Bible
    is a flat earth geocentric text. If the Bible had been written today it
    would be quite different, and we would still get somethings wrong.

    So if you are in denial of what creationism actually is, you should read
    the Wiki link.

    Ron Okimoto

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Robert Carnegie@21:1/5 to RonO on Sun Jan 14 08:05:23 2024
    On Sunday 7 January 2024 at 21:32:33 UTC, RonO wrote:
    As sad as it may be, a lot of TO regulars need to rethink their beliefs.
    A lot of you want to deny that the ID perps are creationists when
    nearly all of them have admitted to being Biblical creattionists. They
    all believe in the same creator.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creationism

    There are all kinds of creationists. That has been known since I
    started reading TO back in 1993. For some reason some TO regulars want
    to cling to a definition that only includes the YEC scientific type creationists. The scientific creationists gave creationists a bad name because they weren't just Biblical creationists, but they were science deniers. The ID Perps continued the science denial, but changed the
    name of what they were supporting. Everyone should know that the ID
    perps were creationists because Nelson and Kenyon were YEC type
    scientific creationists. Kenyon wrote up some of the legal briefs for
    the scientific creationist Supreme Court case. He didn't stop being a creationists just because he joined up with the other ID perp creationists.

    Before the scientific creationism ploy started in the 1960's there
    probably had been theistic evolutionist Biblical creationists for around
    a century. Not all Christians rejected biological evolution. When the anti-evolution laws were being passed in the 1920's theistic evolution
    had been accepted by multiple Christian sects in the US and they were
    against those laws. There were already old earth and young earth
    creationist factions in the Methodist church in the 19th century, and
    they decided to coexist because inaccurate Biblical accounts of nature
    just didn't matter to what was considered to be the important tenets of
    the faith. My take on why they decided to pass on the issue is because
    issues like geocentrism had died, and there was no use arguing about how
    old the earth was based on Biblical accounts. The Greeks had started estimating the circumference of the earth a couple centuries before
    Christ was born, and it didn't make sense to go along with
    fundamentalist thinking that was trying to bring back flat earth
    creationism. The Bible had been written by people that had adopted the flat-earth geocentric cosmology of their neighbors who had been
    civilized for a longer period of time. That is the reason why the Bible
    is a flat earth geocentric text. If the Bible had been written today it
    would be quite different, and we would still get somethings wrong.

    So if you are in denial of what creationism actually is, you should read
    the Wiki link.

    I've glanced at it today. But let's remember that Wikipedia
    can be edited by anybody, although many articles are
    protected from mischievous interference.

    I think it's appropriate and important to reserve the unqualified
    word "creationism" in biology to refer to "special creationism";
    briefly, that God, or someone like him, created each species
    in essentially its current form. That species, or rather,
    the creationist's "kinds", do not change.

    I set these conditions, because "evolutionary creation/ism"
    and "theistic evolution" can be completely indistinguishable
    from natural evolution in terms of observable science;
    this is official, and therefore it is impossible for a scientific
    test to demonstrate an absence of God's secret intervention
    or his mysterious power of predestination. So if EC and TE
    are "creationism" then it is impossible to criticise "creationism".
    And since a large party of Christians and others declare
    (and may or may not sincerely believe) that cows for instance
    exist because God built cows from the ground up as the bible
    more or less says, it isn't unfair to concentrate on that
    type of "creationism" particularly.

    I rarely see the origin or stars and planets described
    as literal creation. Perhaps I'm overlooking it, or
    perhaps religious speakers believe that such claims
    are less likely to be believed when astrophysics
    can say quite a lot about natural processes.
    Claims are made that the universe itself, and its
    natural principles which allow atoms, molecules, and
    living things to be formed, are creations, in reality.

    "Intelligent design" is a lie which was created by
    teachers of special creation when special creation
    "science" was proved to be a lie. Its claim is the same
    as evolutionary creation, perhaps theistic evolution -
    that whether or not the bible Book of Genesis is
    actual truth, the development and the current state
    of living things on Earth did not and could not
    happen without God being involved in it. The lie
    !is to say that scientific evidence supports the claim
    that God did the creation and/or the evolution.

    Often, if you scrape the paint on an intelligent
    designist, special creation is exposed underneath.
    But the purpose of ID isn't SC exclusively, it is
    to create doubt of whatever kind that living things,
    and particularly humans, weren't made by one or
    more gods - doubt, therefore, that it is reasonable
    to live without thinking about those gods. That's
    also why EC accepts all scientific evidence about
    the not-in-Genesis process of evolution, accepts
    that the bible teaches nonsense about this, but
    insists that God had to be involved anyway.

    Alfred Russel Wallace is represented as finally
    believing that life on the Earth was entirely
    produced by natural processes except that, by <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Russel_Wallace>

    "natural selection could not account for mathematical,
    artistic, or musical genius, metaphysical musings,
    or wit and humour. He stated that something in
    "the unseen universe of Spirit' had interceded at
    least three times in history: the creation of life from
    inorganic matter; the introduction of consciousness
    in the higher animals; and the generation of the higher
    mental faculties in humankind."

    I don't know if he was completely certain of this, and
    it is in the context of conversion to "Spiritualism".
    A version of it which lets you go to the afterlife with
    your pets, I infer. Spiritualism can be and not be
    conventional theism. What I'm interested in here
    is the apparent belief that life can be natural, and
    evolution can be natural, but "consciousness", and
    "human-ness", must be in, or must be created by, a
    supernatural "universe of Spirit" - whose existence
    again is proved by the existence of consciousness.
    I'm not convinced by this, but I think it justifies me
    in counting Wallace as an evolutionary creationist.
    And this is evolution's John the Baptist we're looking at.
    How can he be a "creationist" creationist?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From RonO@21:1/5 to Robert Carnegie on Mon Jan 15 20:35:30 2024
    On 1/14/2024 10:05 AM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Sunday 7 January 2024 at 21:32:33 UTC, RonO wrote:
    As sad as it may be, a lot of TO regulars need to rethink their beliefs.
    A lot of you want to deny that the ID perps are creationists when
    nearly all of them have admitted to being Biblical creattionists. They
    all believe in the same creator.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creationism

    There are all kinds of creationists. That has been known since I
    started reading TO back in 1993. For some reason some TO regulars want
    to cling to a definition that only includes the YEC scientific type
    creationists. The scientific creationists gave creationists a bad name
    because they weren't just Biblical creationists, but they were science
    deniers. The ID Perps continued the science denial, but changed the
    name of what they were supporting. Everyone should know that the ID
    perps were creationists because Nelson and Kenyon were YEC type
    scientific creationists. Kenyon wrote up some of the legal briefs for
    the scientific creationist Supreme Court case. He didn't stop being a
    creationists just because he joined up with the other ID perp creationists. >>
    Before the scientific creationism ploy started in the 1960's there
    probably had been theistic evolutionist Biblical creationists for around
    a century. Not all Christians rejected biological evolution. When the
    anti-evolution laws were being passed in the 1920's theistic evolution
    had been accepted by multiple Christian sects in the US and they were
    against those laws. There were already old earth and young earth
    creationist factions in the Methodist church in the 19th century, and
    they decided to coexist because inaccurate Biblical accounts of nature
    just didn't matter to what was considered to be the important tenets of
    the faith. My take on why they decided to pass on the issue is because
    issues like geocentrism had died, and there was no use arguing about how
    old the earth was based on Biblical accounts. The Greeks had started
    estimating the circumference of the earth a couple centuries before
    Christ was born, and it didn't make sense to go along with
    fundamentalist thinking that was trying to bring back flat earth
    creationism. The Bible had been written by people that had adopted the
    flat-earth geocentric cosmology of their neighbors who had been
    civilized for a longer period of time. That is the reason why the Bible
    is a flat earth geocentric text. If the Bible had been written today it
    would be quite different, and we would still get somethings wrong.

    So if you are in denial of what creationism actually is, you should read
    the Wiki link.

    I've glanced at it today. But let's remember that Wikipedia
    can be edited by anybody, although many articles are
    protected from mischievous interference.

    I think it's appropriate and important to reserve the unqualified
    word "creationism" in biology to refer to "special creationism";
    briefly, that God, or someone like him, created each species
    in essentially its current form. That species, or rather,
    the creationist's "kinds", do not change.

    That was only one form of creationism that the scientific YEC wanted to
    teach in the public schools. When the anti-evolution laws were being
    passed in the 1920's there were Biblical creationists against those laws because they didn't have an issue with biological evolution. There was
    already the belief that some god created the extant species using
    biological evolution.

    Before TO adopted scientific creationist type YEC there were already
    theistic evolutionist creationists, old earth creationists, and even
    flat-earth creationists that could be young or old earth or geocentric
    or heliocentric. Pagano wasn't flat-earth, but he was an old earth
    geocentric creationist, and an IDiot. These are just the Biblical creationists. A definition of creationist was and still is someone that believes in a creator god. Hindu are creationists as noted in the Wiki.

    The Wiki makes the same claims, and you can look up the history and
    examples yourself. These types of creationists had all existed before
    the YEC scientific creationist made YEC an issue.

    The ID perps are Biblical creationists, and always have been.



    I set these conditions, because "evolutionary creation/ism"
    and "theistic evolution" can be completely indistinguishable
    from natural evolution in terms of observable science;
    this is official, and therefore it is impossible for a scientific
    test to demonstrate an absence of God's secret intervention
    or his mysterious power of predestination. So if EC and TE
    are "creationism" then it is impossible to criticise "creationism".
    And since a large party of Christians and others declare
    (and may or may not sincerely believe) that cows for instance
    exist because God built cows from the ground up as the bible
    more or less says, it isn't unfair to concentrate on that
    type of "creationism" particularly.

    Behe and Denton are theistic evolutionists. Denton has Deistic leanings
    and his designer might have just gotten the ball rolling with the Big
    Bang and it may have unfolded into what we have today, but Behe thinks
    that his designer has been helping things along to the extent that his
    designer has been tweeking lifeforms for billions of years in order to
    create what we have today.

    They are both still Biblical creationists.

    Ron Okimoto

    I rarely see the origin or stars and planets described
    as literal creation. Perhaps I'm overlooking it, or
    perhaps religious speakers believe that such claims
    are less likely to be believed when astrophysics
    can say quite a lot about natural processes.
    Claims are made that the universe itself, and its
    natural principles which allow atoms, molecules, and
    living things to be formed, are creations, in reality.

    "Intelligent design" is a lie which was created by
    teachers of special creation when special creation
    "science" was proved to be a lie. Its claim is the same
    as evolutionary creation, perhaps theistic evolution -
    that whether or not the bible Book of Genesis is
    actual truth, the development and the current state
    of living things on Earth did not and could not
    happen without God being involved in it. The lie
    !is to say that scientific evidence supports the claim
    that God did the creation and/or the evolution.

    Often, if you scrape the paint on an intelligent
    designist, special creation is exposed underneath.
    But the purpose of ID isn't SC exclusively, it is
    to create doubt of whatever kind that living things,
    and particularly humans, weren't made by one or
    more gods - doubt, therefore, that it is reasonable
    to live without thinking about those gods. That's
    also why EC accepts all scientific evidence about
    the not-in-Genesis process of evolution, accepts
    that the bible teaches nonsense about this, but
    insists that God had to be involved anyway.

    Alfred Russel Wallace is represented as finally
    believing that life on the Earth was entirely
    produced by natural processes except that, by <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Russel_Wallace>

    "natural selection could not account for mathematical,
    artistic, or musical genius, metaphysical musings,
    or wit and humour. He stated that something in
    "the unseen universe of Spirit' had interceded at
    least three times in history: the creation of life from
    inorganic matter; the introduction of consciousness
    in the higher animals; and the generation of the higher
    mental faculties in humankind."

    I don't know if he was completely certain of this, and
    it is in the context of conversion to "Spiritualism".
    A version of it which lets you go to the afterlife with
    your pets, I infer. Spiritualism can be and not be
    conventional theism. What I'm interested in here
    is the apparent belief that life can be natural, and
    evolution can be natural, but "consciousness", and
    "human-ness", must be in, or must be created by, a
    supernatural "universe of Spirit" - whose existence
    again is proved by the existence of consciousness.
    I'm not convinced by this, but I think it justifies me
    in counting Wallace as an evolutionary creationist.
    And this is evolution's John the Baptist we're looking at.
    How can he be a "creationist" creationist?


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Robert Carnegie@21:1/5 to RonO on Mon Jan 15 19:46:08 2024
    On Tuesday 16 January 2024 at 02:37:40 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/14/2024 10:05 AM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Sunday 7 January 2024 at 21:32:33 UTC, RonO wrote:
    As sad as it may be, a lot of TO regulars need to rethink their beliefs. >> A lot of you want to deny that the ID perps are creationists when
    nearly all of them have admitted to being Biblical creattionists. They
    all believe in the same creator.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creationism

    There are all kinds of creationists. That has been known since I
    started reading TO back in 1993. For some reason some TO regulars want
    to cling to a definition that only includes the YEC scientific type
    creationists. The scientific creationists gave creationists a bad name
    because they weren't just Biblical creationists, but they were science
    deniers. The ID Perps continued the science denial, but changed the
    name of what they were supporting. Everyone should know that the ID
    perps were creationists because Nelson and Kenyon were YEC type
    scientific creationists. Kenyon wrote up some of the legal briefs for
    the scientific creationist Supreme Court case. He didn't stop being a
    creationists just because he joined up with the other ID perp creationists.

    Before the scientific creationism ploy started in the 1960's there
    probably had been theistic evolutionist Biblical creationists for around >> a century. Not all Christians rejected biological evolution. When the
    anti-evolution laws were being passed in the 1920's theistic evolution
    had been accepted by multiple Christian sects in the US and they were
    against those laws. There were already old earth and young earth
    creationist factions in the Methodist church in the 19th century, and
    they decided to coexist because inaccurate Biblical accounts of nature
    just didn't matter to what was considered to be the important tenets of
    the faith. My take on why they decided to pass on the issue is because
    issues like geocentrism had died, and there was no use arguing about how >> old the earth was based on Biblical accounts. The Greeks had started
    estimating the circumference of the earth a couple centuries before
    Christ was born, and it didn't make sense to go along with
    fundamentalist thinking that was trying to bring back flat earth
    creationism. The Bible had been written by people that had adopted the
    flat-earth geocentric cosmology of their neighbors who had been
    civilized for a longer period of time. That is the reason why the Bible
    is a flat earth geocentric text. If the Bible had been written today it
    would be quite different, and we would still get somethings wrong.

    So if you are in denial of what creationism actually is, you should read >> the Wiki link.

    I've glanced at it today. But let's remember that Wikipedia
    can be edited by anybody, although many articles are
    protected from mischievous interference.

    I think it's appropriate and important to reserve the unqualified
    word "creationism" in biology to refer to "special creationism";
    briefly, that God, or someone like him, created each species
    in essentially its current form. That species, or rather,
    the creationist's "kinds", do not change.
    That was only one form of creationism that the scientific YEC wanted to
    teach in the public schools. When the anti-evolution laws were being
    passed in the 1920's there were Biblical creationists against those laws because they didn't have an issue with biological evolution. There was already the belief that some god created the extant species using
    biological evolution.

    Before TO adopted scientific creationist type YEC there were already
    theistic evolutionist creationists, old earth creationists, and even flat-earth creationists that could be young or old earth or geocentric
    or heliocentric. Pagano wasn't flat-earth, but he was an old earth
    geocentric creationist, and an IDiot. These are just the Biblical creationists. A definition of creationist was and still is someone that believes in a creator god. Hindu are creationists as noted in the Wiki.

    The Wiki makes the same claims, and you can look up the history and
    examples yourself. These types of creationists had all existed before
    the YEC scientific creationist made YEC an issue.

    The ID perps are Biblical creationists, and always have been.

    I set these conditions, because "evolutionary creation/ism"
    and "theistic evolution" can be completely indistinguishable
    from natural evolution in terms of observable science;
    this is official, and therefore it is impossible for a scientific
    test to demonstrate an absence of God's secret intervention
    or his mysterious power of predestination. So if EC and TE
    are "creationism" then it is impossible to criticise "creationism".
    And since a large party of Christians and others declare
    (and may or may not sincerely believe) that cows for instance
    exist because God built cows from the ground up as the bible
    more or less says, it isn't unfair to concentrate on that
    type of "creationism" particularly.
    Behe and Denton are theistic evolutionists. Denton has Deistic leanings
    and his designer might have just gotten the ball rolling with the Big
    Bang and it may have unfolded into what we have today, but Behe thinks
    that his designer has been helping things along to the extent that his designer has been tweeking lifeforms for billions of years in order to
    create what we have today.

    They are both still Biblical creationists.

    I don't think one can be a real "biblical creationist"
    unless one is asserting that the story in the bible
    specifically about God creating the things, by which
    mainly I mean animals, is how the things, as they
    are now, came to be.

    I've been saying that the real bible text doesn't
    have tenses, but the popular although unintelligible
    English "Authorised Version" does have, and there
    it's clear, in my opinion, that what God "was" doing
    in the story was creating the living things that "are".
    So on day one, or, let's see, day four, five, and six,
    Beings were brought into being that are identical
    to current living specimens, practically speaking,
    Or, current at the time of writing. That's what
    creationism really means: creation, and then
    no evolution. Which is quite wrong, of course.

    The tweaking creator that you say Behe holds to
    would bewilder public school students, and they
    are not what the bible describes. That doesn't
    matter to me, but it matters to the people who
    are supposed to fall for this. I expect that they'
    regard Behe as a dirty wvolutionist.

    A thing that still does matter to me is that you must
    not call Alfred Russel Wallace a creationist, and you
    have done so, by defining the term too loosely.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From RonO@21:1/5 to Robert Carnegie on Tue Jan 16 06:11:56 2024
    On 1/15/2024 9:46 PM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Tuesday 16 January 2024 at 02:37:40 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/14/2024 10:05 AM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Sunday 7 January 2024 at 21:32:33 UTC, RonO wrote:
    As sad as it may be, a lot of TO regulars need to rethink their beliefs. >>>> A lot of you want to deny that the ID perps are creationists when
    nearly all of them have admitted to being Biblical creattionists. They >>>> all believe in the same creator.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creationism

    There are all kinds of creationists. That has been known since I
    started reading TO back in 1993. For some reason some TO regulars want >>>> to cling to a definition that only includes the YEC scientific type
    creationists. The scientific creationists gave creationists a bad name >>>> because they weren't just Biblical creationists, but they were science >>>> deniers. The ID Perps continued the science denial, but changed the
    name of what they were supporting. Everyone should know that the ID
    perps were creationists because Nelson and Kenyon were YEC type
    scientific creationists. Kenyon wrote up some of the legal briefs for
    the scientific creationist Supreme Court case. He didn't stop being a
    creationists just because he joined up with the other ID perp creationists.

    Before the scientific creationism ploy started in the 1960's there
    probably had been theistic evolutionist Biblical creationists for around >>>> a century. Not all Christians rejected biological evolution. When the
    anti-evolution laws were being passed in the 1920's theistic evolution >>>> had been accepted by multiple Christian sects in the US and they were
    against those laws. There were already old earth and young earth
    creationist factions in the Methodist church in the 19th century, and
    they decided to coexist because inaccurate Biblical accounts of nature >>>> just didn't matter to what was considered to be the important tenets of >>>> the faith. My take on why they decided to pass on the issue is because >>>> issues like geocentrism had died, and there was no use arguing about how >>>> old the earth was based on Biblical accounts. The Greeks had started
    estimating the circumference of the earth a couple centuries before
    Christ was born, and it didn't make sense to go along with
    fundamentalist thinking that was trying to bring back flat earth
    creationism. The Bible had been written by people that had adopted the >>>> flat-earth geocentric cosmology of their neighbors who had been
    civilized for a longer period of time. That is the reason why the Bible >>>> is a flat earth geocentric text. If the Bible had been written today it >>>> would be quite different, and we would still get somethings wrong.

    So if you are in denial of what creationism actually is, you should read >>>> the Wiki link.

    I've glanced at it today. But let's remember that Wikipedia
    can be edited by anybody, although many articles are
    protected from mischievous interference.

    I think it's appropriate and important to reserve the unqualified
    word "creationism" in biology to refer to "special creationism";
    briefly, that God, or someone like him, created each species
    in essentially its current form. That species, or rather,
    the creationist's "kinds", do not change.
    That was only one form of creationism that the scientific YEC wanted to
    teach in the public schools. When the anti-evolution laws were being
    passed in the 1920's there were Biblical creationists against those laws
    because they didn't have an issue with biological evolution. There was
    already the belief that some god created the extant species using
    biological evolution.

    Before TO adopted scientific creationist type YEC there were already
    theistic evolutionist creationists, old earth creationists, and even
    flat-earth creationists that could be young or old earth or geocentric
    or heliocentric. Pagano wasn't flat-earth, but he was an old earth
    geocentric creationist, and an IDiot. These are just the Biblical
    creationists. A definition of creationist was and still is someone that
    believes in a creator god. Hindu are creationists as noted in the Wiki.

    The Wiki makes the same claims, and you can look up the history and
    examples yourself. These types of creationists had all existed before
    the YEC scientific creationist made YEC an issue.

    The ID perps are Biblical creationists, and always have been.

    I set these conditions, because "evolutionary creation/ism"
    and "theistic evolution" can be completely indistinguishable
    from natural evolution in terms of observable science;
    this is official, and therefore it is impossible for a scientific
    test to demonstrate an absence of God's secret intervention
    or his mysterious power of predestination. So if EC and TE
    are "creationism" then it is impossible to criticise "creationism".
    And since a large party of Christians and others declare
    (and may or may not sincerely believe) that cows for instance
    exist because God built cows from the ground up as the bible
    more or less says, it isn't unfair to concentrate on that
    type of "creationism" particularly.
    Behe and Denton are theistic evolutionists. Denton has Deistic leanings
    and his designer might have just gotten the ball rolling with the Big
    Bang and it may have unfolded into what we have today, but Behe thinks
    that his designer has been helping things along to the extent that his
    designer has been tweeking lifeforms for billions of years in order to
    create what we have today.

    They are both still Biblical creationists.

    I don't think one can be a real "biblical creationist"
    unless one is asserting that the story in the bible
    specifically about God creating the things, by which
    mainly I mean animals, is how the things, as they
    are now, came to be.

    Just go to Reason to believe. They are old earth biblical creationists,
    and they claim to be IDiots. They are building a model of how their intelligent designer created everything. They aren't Biblical
    literalists because they add things that they claim the Bible just does
    not mention, and they reinterpret some things where they claim the
    literal interpretation is wrong. They claim that the Bible is true if interpreted properly. It is just a fact that there are all kinds of
    Biblical creationists. Behe and Denton believe in the same creator as
    the Reason to Believe IDiots, and the ICR scientific YEC creationists.

    https://reasons.org/about

    Ron Okimoto

    I've been saying that the real bible text doesn't
    have tenses, but the popular although unintelligible
    English "Authorised Version" does have, and there
    it's clear, in my opinion, that what God "was" doing
    in the story was creating the living things that "are".
    So on day one, or, let's see, day four, five, and six,
    Beings were brought into being that are identical
    to current living specimens, practically speaking,
    Or, current at the time of writing. That's what
    creationism really means: creation, and then
    no evolution. Which is quite wrong, of course.

    The tweaking creator that you say Behe holds to
    would bewilder public school students, and they
    are not what the bible describes. That doesn't
    matter to me, but it matters to the people who
    are supposed to fall for this. I expect that they'
    regard Behe as a dirty wvolutionist.

    A thing that still does matter to me is that you must
    not call Alfred Russel Wallace a creationist, and you
    have done so, by defining the term too loosely.


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  • From Robert Carnegie@21:1/5 to RonO on Thu Jan 18 15:56:46 2024
    On Tuesday 16 January 2024 at 12:12:40 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/15/2024 9:46 PM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Tuesday 16 January 2024 at 02:37:40 UTC, RonO wrote:
    Behe and Denton are theistic evolutionists. Denton has Deistic leanings
    and his designer might have just gotten the ball rolling with the Big
    Bang and it may have unfolded into what we have today, but Behe thinks
    that his designer has been helping things along to the extent that his
    designer has been tweeking lifeforms for billions of years in order to
    create what we have today.

    They are both still Biblical creationists.

    I don't think one can be a real "biblical creationist"
    unless one is asserting that the story in the bible
    specifically about God creating the things, by which
    mainly I mean animals, is how the things, as they
    are now, came to be.
    Just go to Reason to believe. They are old earth biblical creationists,
    and they claim to be IDiots. They are building a model of how their intelligent designer created everything. They aren't Biblical
    literalists because they add things that they claim the Bible just does
    not mention, and they reinterpret some things where they claim the
    literal interpretation is wrong. They claim that the Bible is true if interpreted properly. It is just a fact that there are all kinds of
    Biblical creationists. Behe and Denton believe in the same creator as
    the Reason to Believe IDiots, and the ICR scientific YEC creationists.

    https://reasons.org/about

    What you seems to be describing actually is
    them telling multiple inconsistent lies at the
    same time. This is not "creationism". It is
    'lying". And I think you said yourself, often,
    that their real aim is to sell the Garden of
    Eden story. Talk about "irreducible complexity"
    is only a disguise for that. And this isn't to say
    that they believe the Garden of Eden story
    themselves. People as stupid as that would
    not cause so much trouble.

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  • From RonO@21:1/5 to Robert Carnegie on Thu Jan 18 20:13:58 2024
    On 1/18/2024 5:56 PM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Tuesday 16 January 2024 at 12:12:40 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/15/2024 9:46 PM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Tuesday 16 January 2024 at 02:37:40 UTC, RonO wrote:
    Behe and Denton are theistic evolutionists. Denton has Deistic leanings >>>> and his designer might have just gotten the ball rolling with the Big
    Bang and it may have unfolded into what we have today, but Behe thinks >>>> that his designer has been helping things along to the extent that his >>>> designer has been tweeking lifeforms for billions of years in order to >>>> create what we have today.

    They are both still Biblical creationists.

    I don't think one can be a real "biblical creationist"
    unless one is asserting that the story in the bible
    specifically about God creating the things, by which
    mainly I mean animals, is how the things, as they
    are now, came to be.
    Just go to Reason to believe. They are old earth biblical creationists,
    and they claim to be IDiots. They are building a model of how their
    intelligent designer created everything. They aren't Biblical
    literalists because they add things that they claim the Bible just does
    not mention, and they reinterpret some things where they claim the
    literal interpretation is wrong. They claim that the Bible is true if
    interpreted properly. It is just a fact that there are all kinds of
    Biblical creationists. Behe and Denton believe in the same creator as
    the Reason to Believe IDiots, and the ICR scientific YEC creationists.

    https://reasons.org/about

    What you seems to be describing actually is
    them telling multiple inconsistent lies at the
    same time. This is not "creationism". It is
    'lying". And I think you said yourself, often,
    that their real aim is to sell the Garden of
    Eden story. Talk about "irreducible complexity"
    is only a disguise for that. And this isn't to say
    that they believe the Garden of Eden story
    themselves. People as stupid as that would
    not cause so much trouble.


    You are obviously wrong. The Reason to believe creationists believe in
    the same Biblical creator as all the ID perps at the Discovery Institute
    who have admitted that their designer is the Biblical designer. There
    are just a lot of different types of creationists. As you already know
    there are Hindu creationists, so they do not have to believe in the same creator, they just have to believe in a creator to be a creationist.
    Telling the truth is not required for being a creationist. You should
    recall that Hovind admitted that he was lying, but when he was caught
    telling the same lie, he just claimed that he was forgiven. There are
    just many different types of creationists.

    Ron Okimoto

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  • From Ernest Major@21:1/5 to Martin Harran on Fri Jan 19 18:14:16 2024
    On 19/01/2024 17:43, Martin Harran wrote:

    Grading for Ron's definition of a creationist:

    Technical accuracy: 10/10
    Usefulness: 0/10


    I suggest that "technical accuracy" be replaced by "precision".

    Ron's fault is to insist that there's one true definition of creationism
    (and that the true definition is not the one in widest usage). An
    accurate definition of creationism recognises the variation in usage.

    My preferred definition is "religiously motivated rejection of
    substantial portions of the scientific consensus, especially as related
    to biology, geology and cosmology, or the promotion thereof".

    --
    alias Ernest Major

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  • From Robert Carnegie@21:1/5 to RonO on Fri Jan 19 11:27:14 2024
    On Friday 19 January 2024 at 02:17:44 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/18/2024 5:56 PM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Tuesday 16 January 2024 at 12:12:40 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/15/2024 9:46 PM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Tuesday 16 January 2024 at 02:37:40 UTC, RonO wrote:
    Behe and Denton are theistic evolutionists. Denton has Deistic leanings >>>> and his designer might have just gotten the ball rolling with the Big >>>> Bang and it may have unfolded into what we have today, but Behe thinks >>>> that his designer has been helping things along to the extent that his >>>> designer has been tweeking lifeforms for billions of years in order to >>>> create what we have today.

    They are both still Biblical creationists.

    I don't think one can be a real "biblical creationist"
    unless one is asserting that the story in the bible
    specifically about God creating the things, by which
    mainly I mean animals, is how the things, as they
    are now, came to be.
    Just go to Reason to believe. They are old earth biblical creationists,
    and they claim to be IDiots. They are building a model of how their
    intelligent designer created everything. They aren't Biblical
    literalists because they add things that they claim the Bible just does
    not mention, and they reinterpret some things where they claim the
    literal interpretation is wrong. They claim that the Bible is true if
    interpreted properly. It is just a fact that there are all kinds of
    Biblical creationists. Behe and Denton believe in the same creator as
    the Reason to Believe IDiots, and the ICR scientific YEC creationists.

    https://reasons.org/about

    What you seems to be describing actually is
    them telling multiple inconsistent lies at the
    same time. This is not "creationism". It is
    'lying". And I think you said yourself, often,
    that their real aim is to sell the Garden of
    Eden story. Talk about "irreducible complexity"
    is only a disguise for that. And this isn't to say
    that they believe the Garden of Eden story
    themselves. People as stupid as that would
    not cause so much trouble.

    You are obviously wrong. The Reason to believe creationists believe in
    the same Biblical creator as all the ID perps at the Discovery Institute
    who have admitted that their designer is the Biblical designer. There
    are just a lot of different types of creationists. As you already know
    there are Hindu creationists, so they do not have to believe in the same creator, they just have to believe in a creator to be a creationist.
    Telling the truth is not required for being a creationist. You should
    recall that Hovind admitted that he was lying, but when he was caught
    telling the same lie, he just claimed that he was forgiven. There are
    just many different types of creationists.

    My point is that actual creationism is a claim that
    "things were created and there is no evolution".
    That's still the prime anti-evolution claim, in biology
    anyway, and it should be the prime topic in talk.origins.
    I don't think that religious believers are really
    satisfied with a less definite claim against
    evolution which isn't in their foundational books.
    They do bring other arguments, however.
    But the one that they care about is an act of
    creation of each species.

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  • From RonO@21:1/5 to Ernest Major on Sat Jan 20 08:54:11 2024
    On 1/19/2024 12:14 PM, Ernest Major wrote:
    On 19/01/2024 17:43, Martin Harran wrote:
    Grading for Ron's definition of a creationist:

    Technical accuracy: 10/10
    Usefulness: 0/10


    I suggest that "technical accuracy" be replaced by "precision".

    Ron's fault is to insist that there's one true definition of creationism
    (and that the true definition is not the one in widest usage). An
    accurate definition of creationism recognises the variation in usage.

    It is the TO fault to claim that there is only one true definition of creationist. What do you think that this is about? I am the one that
    is claiming that there are all kinds of creationists, and what matters
    is that they all believe in a creator. How can anyone be so wrong about
    what this issue is about?

    It is just a fact that the main reason why IDiots exist is because they
    are creationists of one sort or another. It is their common trait.
    Pretty much all of the ID perps at the Discovery Institute have admitted
    that their designer is the Biblical creator.

    Ron Okimoto


    My preferred definition is "religiously motivated rejection of
    substantial portions of the scientific consensus, especially as related
    to biology, geology and cosmology, or the promotion thereof".


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  • From RonO@21:1/5 to Martin Harran on Sat Jan 20 08:46:58 2024
    On 1/19/2024 11:43 AM, Martin Harran wrote:
    On Tuesday, January 16, 2024 at 3:47:40 AM UTC, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Tuesday 16 January 2024 at 02:37:40 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/14/2024 10:05 AM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Sunday 7 January 2024 at 21:32:33 UTC, RonO wrote:
    As sad as it may be, a lot of TO regulars need to rethink their beliefs. >>>>> A lot of you want to deny that the ID perps are creationists when
    nearly all of them have admitted to being Biblical creattionists. They >>>>> all believe in the same creator.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creationism

    There are all kinds of creationists. That has been known since I
    started reading TO back in 1993. For some reason some TO regulars want >>>>> to cling to a definition that only includes the YEC scientific type
    creationists. The scientific creationists gave creationists a bad name >>>>> because they weren't just Biblical creationists, but they were science >>>>> deniers. The ID Perps continued the science denial, but changed the
    name of what they were supporting. Everyone should know that the ID
    perps were creationists because Nelson and Kenyon were YEC type
    scientific creationists. Kenyon wrote up some of the legal briefs for >>>>> the scientific creationist Supreme Court case. He didn't stop being a >>>>> creationists just because he joined up with the other ID perp creationists.

    Before the scientific creationism ploy started in the 1960's there
    probably had been theistic evolutionist Biblical creationists for around >>>>> a century. Not all Christians rejected biological evolution. When the >>>>> anti-evolution laws were being passed in the 1920's theistic evolution >>>>> had been accepted by multiple Christian sects in the US and they were >>>>> against those laws. There were already old earth and young earth
    creationist factions in the Methodist church in the 19th century, and >>>>> they decided to coexist because inaccurate Biblical accounts of nature >>>>> just didn't matter to what was considered to be the important tenets of >>>>> the faith. My take on why they decided to pass on the issue is because >>>>> issues like geocentrism had died, and there was no use arguing about how >>>>> old the earth was based on Biblical accounts. The Greeks had started >>>>> estimating the circumference of the earth a couple centuries before
    Christ was born, and it didn't make sense to go along with
    fundamentalist thinking that was trying to bring back flat earth
    creationism. The Bible had been written by people that had adopted the >>>>> flat-earth geocentric cosmology of their neighbors who had been
    civilized for a longer period of time. That is the reason why the Bible >>>>> is a flat earth geocentric text. If the Bible had been written today it >>>>> would be quite different, and we would still get somethings wrong.

    So if you are in denial of what creationism actually is, you should read >>>>> the Wiki link.

    I've glanced at it today. But let's remember that Wikipedia
    can be edited by anybody, although many articles are
    protected from mischievous interference.

    I think it's appropriate and important to reserve the unqualified
    word "creationism" in biology to refer to "special creationism";
    briefly, that God, or someone like him, created each species
    in essentially its current form. That species, or rather,
    the creationist's "kinds", do not change.
    That was only one form of creationism that the scientific YEC wanted to
    teach in the public schools. When the anti-evolution laws were being
    passed in the 1920's there were Biblical creationists against those laws >>> because they didn't have an issue with biological evolution. There was
    already the belief that some god created the extant species using
    biological evolution.

    Before TO adopted scientific creationist type YEC there were already
    theistic evolutionist creationists, old earth creationists, and even
    flat-earth creationists that could be young or old earth or geocentric
    or heliocentric. Pagano wasn't flat-earth, but he was an old earth
    geocentric creationist, and an IDiot. These are just the Biblical
    creationists. A definition of creationist was and still is someone that
    believes in a creator god. Hindu are creationists as noted in the Wiki.

    The Wiki makes the same claims, and you can look up the history and
    examples yourself. These types of creationists had all existed before
    the YEC scientific creationist made YEC an issue.

    The ID perps are Biblical creationists, and always have been.

    I set these conditions, because "evolutionary creation/ism"
    and "theistic evolution" can be completely indistinguishable
    from natural evolution in terms of observable science;
    this is official, and therefore it is impossible for a scientific
    test to demonstrate an absence of God's secret intervention
    or his mysterious power of predestination. So if EC and TE
    are "creationism" then it is impossible to criticise "creationism".
    And since a large party of Christians and others declare
    (and may or may not sincerely believe) that cows for instance
    exist because God built cows from the ground up as the bible
    more or less says, it isn't unfair to concentrate on that
    type of "creationism" particularly.
    Behe and Denton are theistic evolutionists. Denton has Deistic leanings
    and his designer might have just gotten the ball rolling with the Big
    Bang and it may have unfolded into what we have today, but Behe thinks
    that his designer has been helping things along to the extent that his
    designer has been tweeking lifeforms for billions of years in order to
    create what we have today.

    They are both still Biblical creationists.
    I don't think one can be a real "biblical creationist"
    unless one is asserting that the story in the bible
    specifically about God creating the things, by which
    mainly I mean animals, is how the things, as they
    are now, came to be.

    I've been saying that the real bible text doesn't
    have tenses, but the popular although unintelligible
    English "Authorised Version" does have, and there
    it's clear, in my opinion, that what God "was" doing
    in the story was creating the living things that "are".
    So on day one, or, let's see, day four, five, and six,
    Beings were brought into being that are identical
    to current living specimens, practically speaking,
    Or, current at the time of writing. That's what
    creationism really means: creation, and then
    no evolution. Which is quite wrong, of course.

    The tweaking creator that you say Behe holds to
    would bewilder public school students, and they
    are not what the bible describes. That doesn't
    matter to me, but it matters to the people who
    are supposed to fall for this. I expect that they'
    regard Behe as a dirty wvolutionist.

    A thing that still does matter to me is that you must
    not call Alfred Russel Wallace a creationist, and you
    have done so, by defining the term too loosely.

    Grading for Ron's definition of a creationist:

    Technical accuracy: 10/10
    Usefulness: 0/10


    The definition is the most useful for the current creationist political stupidity because the ID perps have been trying to create their "Big
    Tent" that they claim includes all types of Biblical creationists.
    Trying to claim that ID perps are not creationists is just stupid.

    The whole reason for there to be ID perps and the rubes that want to
    believe them is because they are Biblical creationists. It is what
    nearly all of them have in common. There are some Muslim IDiots, but
    they believe in the same creator as the ID perps. Kalkidas was only
    pretending to be a Hindu IDiot, but there could be some real ones out
    there because Hindus are creationists. Some of them have only one
    creator. We've had Hindu creationists that were anti-evolution posting
    on TO from time to time. Nearly all of them didn't claim to be IDiots,
    they just supported their creationist beliefs.

    Ron Okimoto

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  • From Ernest Major@21:1/5 to RonO on Sun Jan 21 13:35:55 2024
    On 20/01/2024 14:54, RonO wrote:
    On 1/19/2024 12:14 PM, Ernest Major wrote:
    On 19/01/2024 17:43, Martin Harran wrote:
    Grading for Ron's definition of a creationist:

    Technical accuracy: 10/10
    Usefulness: 0/10


    I suggest that "technical accuracy" be replaced by "precision".

    Ron's fault is to insist that there's one true definition of
    creationism (and that the true definition is not the one in widest
    usage). An accurate definition of creationism recognises the variation
    in usage.

    It is the TO fault to claim that there is only one true definition of creationist.  What do you think that this is about?  I am the one that
    is claiming that there are all kinds of creationists, and what matters
    is that they all believe in a creator.  How can anyone be so wrong about what this issue is about?

    I don't think anybody here claims that there is only one type of
    creationist. The dispute is over which range of positions fall under the
    rubric of creationism. There are narrower and broader conceptions of the
    term. You happen to adopt a particularly broad definition (though it is
    within the range of attested usage). Your definition is not incorrect,
    but your insistence that other definitions are incorrect is incorrect.

    Most people here think that your definition is not useful in the context
    of talk.origins.

    The sense of your assertion "what matters is that they all believe in a creator" is ambiguous. If you are asserting that this is the sole
    acceptable, defining criterion this is contradicted by the existence of
    other, narrower, usages of the term. If you are asserting that their
    belief in a creator is what is important, then I expect that many people
    here disagree - the rejection of science, attacks on education, the
    negative impact on the economy, the hostility to human rights, the wish
    to install a fascist regime; all of these are more important issues than whether they believe in a creator.

    It is just a fact that the main reason why IDiots exist is because they
    are creationists of one sort or another.  It is their common trait.
    Pretty much all of the ID perps at the Discovery Institute have admitted
    that their designer is the Biblical creator.

    By your definition you and Martin Harran are creationists. But you are
    not IDiots. So, clearly, belief in a creator is not sufficient to
    account for the existence of IDiots. There must be other necessary
    factors involved.

    And there are few people here who dispute that Intelligent Design
    advocates are creationists. You might note that they are covered by the definition I gave below.

    Ron Okimoto


    My preferred definition is "religiously motivated rejection of
    substantial portions of the scientific consensus, especially as
    related to biology, geology and cosmology, or the promotion thereof".



    --
    alias Ernest Major

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  • From Robert Carnegie@21:1/5 to RonO on Sun Jan 21 07:10:14 2024
    On Saturday 20 January 2024 at 14:57:44 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/19/2024 12:14 PM, Ernest Major wrote:
    On 19/01/2024 17:43, Martin Harran wrote:
    Grading for Ron's definition of a creationist:

    Technical accuracy: 10/10
    Usefulness: 0/10


    I suggest that "technical accuracy" be replaced by "precision".

    Ron's fault is to insist that there's one true definition of creationism (and that the true definition is not the one in widest usage). An
    accurate definition of creationism recognises the variation in usage.
    It is the TO fault to claim that there is only one true definition of creationist. What do you think that this is about? I am the one that
    is claiming that there are all kinds of creationists, and what matters
    is that they all believe in a creator. How can anyone be so wrong about
    what this issue is about?

    No; "creationist" does not mean "There was a creator"
    to most people, or to
    <https://www.dictionary.com/browse/creationist>

    It means "There was no evolution" - or, much more
    loosely, that natural evolution is a scientifically
    unsatisfactory explanation of how things are -
    but while that's wrong, I want to reserve "creationism"
    for the particular error of believing that distinct
    animal species, or distinct plants, were created
    separately, and don't have a common ancestor
    and common descent. That God created biological
    "kinds" that are distinct and that have remained and
    will remain distinct.

    This usually includes making humans separate from
    other apes, and I considered offering that as the acid
    test of a creationist. But I would not want to exclude
    from "creationist" someone who recognises humans
    as apes - or someone who does not talk about human
    origin at all - but who is creationist about other species.
    And of course I include creationists who teach that
    Noah's ark carried a limited number of species, for
    reason of space, which evolved diversely afterwards.
    (The bible says that God brought the animals to the
    ark's location, so they are ones that God chose for the
    purpose. And apparently for a lot of sacrificing after
    the boat found land.)

    This_ excludes_ as "creationist" people who assert
    that God created one primitive life, some type of
    pond scum, and then let evolution proceed, or that
    God created the original life and then made it evolve
    as he wanted.

    And it excludes Alfred Russel Wallace, who believed
    that humans are descended from apes, although as
    an act of spirit intervention.

    And of course there's the separate sense of religious
    doctrine that each single human soul is separately
    created by God, which I'm told is a standard
    Roman Catholic belief. After which, we are punished
    by God for being human.

    A "creationism" in other scientific fields, such as geology
    and astrophysics and cosmology, is harder to distinguish.
    I think it must have an ironically separate meaning there.
    I think that very few people will dispute that stuff is buried
    in rock underground on Earth that was once on the surface,
    and that other stuff on the surface used to be on the inside -
    not once they know about volcanoes. Thus, there is evolution.
    You could believe, as the bible says, that God created each
    celestial object separately - sun, moon, planet, star.
    And it's hard to examine scientifically that the beginning
    of the universe was willed into existence by God.
    If this is a "creationism" then apparently it ignores
    the fact of the universe undergoing evolution, change,
    between its beginning and how things are now.

    It is just a fact that the main reason why IDiots exist is because they
    are creationists of one sort or another. It is their common trait.
    Pretty much all of the ID perps at the Discovery Institute have admitted
    that their designer is the Biblical creator.

    IDists are liars. "Intelligent design" is a set of lies
    that attack evolution. IDists whose engagement
    is more than just having been told that "life is
    intelligently designed" do not believe in ID, I am
    confident. It's most likely that apart from ID,
    they express young-world creationism, but they
    may not really believe in that, too. They may only
    do it to be paid, or to be welcome in church.

    An evolution that is controlled by God is doctrinally
    consistent with ID. This does not matter, because
    ID is not a doctrine that matters. ID is a fake position
    with other teaching or belief hidden behind it.

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  • From RonO@21:1/5 to Ernest Major on Sun Jan 21 09:19:38 2024
    On 1/21/2024 7:35 AM, Ernest Major wrote:
    On 20/01/2024 14:54, RonO wrote:
    On 1/19/2024 12:14 PM, Ernest Major wrote:
    On 19/01/2024 17:43, Martin Harran wrote:
    Grading for Ron's definition of a creationist:

    Technical accuracy: 10/10
    Usefulness: 0/10


    I suggest that "technical accuracy" be replaced by "precision".

    Ron's fault is to insist that there's one true definition of
    creationism (and that the true definition is not the one in widest
    usage). An accurate definition of creationism recognises the
    variation in usage.

    It is the TO fault to claim that there is only one true definition of
    creationist.  What do you think that this is about?  I am the one that
    is claiming that there are all kinds of creationists, and what matters
    is that they all believe in a creator.  How can anyone be so wrong
    about what this issue is about?

    I don't think anybody here claims that there is only one type of
    creationist. The dispute is over which range of positions fall under the rubric of creationism. There are narrower and broader conceptions of the term. You happen to adopt a particularly broad definition (though it is within the range of attested usage). Your definition is not incorrect,
    but your insistence that other definitions are incorrect is incorrect.

    What do you think that you are claiming when you claim that the ID perps
    are not creationists? When you limit creationiist to YEC fundies TO is
    the one limiting the definition of creationist. Someone tried to expand
    the TO definition so that it would include ID perps, but they could not
    do it. It is just a fact that the ID perps are creationists, not only
    that, but nearly all of them have admitted to being Biblical
    creationists. They are ID perps because they are Biblical creationist,
    but they call it intelligent design in order to lie about the issue.


    Most people here think that your definition is not useful in the context
    of talk.origins.

    It is the only definition that matters and is relevant to TO in terms of
    the ID scam. The ID scam has their "Big Tent" claims were all types of creationists are welcome. Most of the ID perps are old earth
    creationists of one type or another, but most of the rubes that support
    the effort have always been the same TO fundy type of YEC Biblical
    creationist.

    Most of the ID perps are not IDiots because they support YEC fundies.
    They are IDiots because they believe in the same creator, but have
    different beliefs about what that creator created.


    The sense of your assertion "what matters is that they all believe in a creator" is ambiguous. If you are asserting that this is the sole
    acceptable, defining criterion this is contradicted by the existence of other, narrower, usages of the term. If you are asserting that their
    belief in a creator is what is important, then I expect that many people
    here disagree - the rejection of science, attacks on education, the
    negative impact on the economy, the hostility to human rights, the wish
    to install a fascist regime; all of these are more important issues than whether they believe in a creator.

    It is direct and true. What is ambiguous about claiming that they all
    believe in the same Biblical creator? Even the Muslim IDiots have the
    same creator. There is no ambiguity about that.


    It is just a fact that the main reason why IDiots exist is because
    they are creationists of one sort or another.  It is their common
    trait. Pretty much all of the ID perps at the Discovery Institute have
    admitted that their designer is the Biblical creator.

    By your definition you and Martin Harran are creationists. But you are
    not IDiots. So, clearly, belief in a creator is not sufficient to
    account for the existence of IDiots. There must be other necessary
    factors involved.

    IDiots are obviously creationists with different political and religious
    views. What do you not get? YEC fundies are creationists with
    different political goals and religious beliefs. TO has always known
    that there were different types of creationists. Ever since I started
    reading TO back in 1993 they were already dealing with YEC, OEC and even various theistic evolutionist creationists. Denton and Behe are
    thesitic evolutionist creationists, but Denton had deistic views and
    claims that it all may have unfolded into what we have today, but Behe
    is a tweeker and thinks that his creator was involved in guiding the
    evolution of life on this planet. These types of creationists already
    existed long ago on TO. Harran and I are both some type of thesitic evolutionist, but I understand how dishonest and stupid the ID perp's
    political scam is. There is no creation science to teach in the public schools. Everyone should know that after the failure of scientific creationism. The ID perps tried a name change, but it failed in Federal
    court, and Phillip Johnson finally admitted that there was no ID science
    to teach.


    And there are few people here who dispute that Intelligent Design
    advocates are creationists. You might note that they are covered by the definition I gave below.

    What do you think that the squabble about the definition of creationism
    is due to? Where have you been?

    Denton doesn't fit that definition, and neither does Behe. Behe doesn't
    reject the scientific consensus, he just claims that his creator fits in
    there somewhere. Denton accept everything, he has claimed that his
    creator may have gotten the ball rolling with the Big Bang and it all
    unfolded into what we have today. The only thing that they both deny is
    that we know everything at this time, and every scientist worth calling
    a scientist would agree with them.

    Ron Okimoto



    Ron Okimoto


    My preferred definition is "religiously motivated rejection of
    substantial portions of the scientific consensus, especially as
    related to biology, geology and cosmology, or the promotion thereof".




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  • From RonO@21:1/5 to Robert Carnegie on Sun Jan 21 09:31:17 2024
    On 1/21/2024 9:10 AM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Saturday 20 January 2024 at 14:57:44 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/19/2024 12:14 PM, Ernest Major wrote:
    On 19/01/2024 17:43, Martin Harran wrote:
    Grading for Ron's definition of a creationist:

    Technical accuracy: 10/10
    Usefulness: 0/10


    I suggest that "technical accuracy" be replaced by "precision".

    Ron's fault is to insist that there's one true definition of creationism >>> (and that the true definition is not the one in widest usage). An
    accurate definition of creationism recognises the variation in usage.
    It is the TO fault to claim that there is only one true definition of
    creationist. What do you think that this is about? I am the one that
    is claiming that there are all kinds of creationists, and what matters
    is that they all believe in a creator. How can anyone be so wrong about
    what this issue is about?

    No; "creationist" does not mean "There was a creator"
    to most people, or to
    <https://www.dictionary.com/browse/creationist>

    It means "There was no evolution" - or, much more
    loosely, that natural evolution is a scientifically
    unsatisfactory explanation of how things are -
    but while that's wrong, I want to reserve "creationism"
    for the particular error of believing that distinct
    animal species, or distinct plants, were created
    separately, and don't have a common ancestor
    and common descent. That God created biological
    "kinds" that are distinct and that have remained and
    will remain distinct.

    There are many variations of the definition due to what the issues have
    been, but before there were YEC anti-evolution scientific creationists,
    a creationist was just someone that believed in a creator. You can't
    get stuck in a rut with definitions that are no longer accurate in terms
    of the anti-evolution creationism.

    There have been old earth and young earth creationists for centuries.
    After biological evolution became an option there were some old earth creationists that accepted biological evolution to one degree or another.

    The Reason to believe IDiots are old earth anti-evolutionists, and so
    are most of the ID perps, but not all the ID perps are anti-evolution creationists, but they are still ID perps because they believe in the
    same creator as the other ID perps.

    After Darwin flat earth creationism came back as a fundy belief.

    You should just believe the Wiki on this one. Hindu and Muslim are creationists. Hindu's just believe in another creator or creators.
    Muslims believe in the same creator as the ID perps and the
    anti-evolution scientific creationists.

    Ron Okimoto


    This usually includes making humans separate from
    other apes, and I considered offering that as the acid
    test of a creationist. But I would not want to exclude
    from "creationist" someone who recognises humans
    as apes - or someone who does not talk about human
    origin at all - but who is creationist about other species.
    And of course I include creationists who teach that
    Noah's ark carried a limited number of species, for
    reason of space, which evolved diversely afterwards.
    (The bible says that God brought the animals to the
    ark's location, so they are ones that God chose for the
    purpose. And apparently for a lot of sacrificing after
    the boat found land.)

    This_ excludes_ as "creationist" people who assert
    that God created one primitive life, some type of
    pond scum, and then let evolution proceed, or that
    God created the original life and then made it evolve
    as he wanted.

    And it excludes Alfred Russel Wallace, who believed
    that humans are descended from apes, although as
    an act of spirit intervention.

    And of course there's the separate sense of religious
    doctrine that each single human soul is separately
    created by God, which I'm told is a standard
    Roman Catholic belief. After which, we are punished
    by God for being human.

    A "creationism" in other scientific fields, such as geology
    and astrophysics and cosmology, is harder to distinguish.
    I think it must have an ironically separate meaning there.
    I think that very few people will dispute that stuff is buried
    in rock underground on Earth that was once on the surface,
    and that other stuff on the surface used to be on the inside -
    not once they know about volcanoes. Thus, there is evolution.
    You could believe, as the bible says, that God created each
    celestial object separately - sun, moon, planet, star.
    And it's hard to examine scientifically that the beginning
    of the universe was willed into existence by God.
    If this is a "creationism" then apparently it ignores
    the fact of the universe undergoing evolution, change,
    between its beginning and how things are now.

    It is just a fact that the main reason why IDiots exist is because they
    are creationists of one sort or another. It is their common trait.
    Pretty much all of the ID perps at the Discovery Institute have admitted
    that their designer is the Biblical creator.

    IDists are liars. "Intelligent design" is a set of lies
    that attack evolution. IDists whose engagement
    is more than just having been told that "life is
    intelligently designed" do not believe in ID, I am
    confident. It's most likely that apart from ID,
    they express young-world creationism, but they
    may not really believe in that, too. They may only
    do it to be paid, or to be welcome in church.

    An evolution that is controlled by God is doctrinally
    consistent with ID. This does not matter, because
    ID is not a doctrine that matters. ID is a fake position
    with other teaching or belief hidden behind it.


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  • From RonO@21:1/5 to Martin Harran on Sun Jan 21 09:53:13 2024
    On 1/20/2024 12:16 PM, Martin Harran wrote:
    On Sat, 20 Jan 2024 08:46:58 -0600, RonO <rokimoto@cox.net> wrote:

    On 1/19/2024 11:43 AM, Martin Harran wrote:
    On Tuesday, January 16, 2024 at 3:47:40?AM UTC, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Tuesday 16 January 2024 at 02:37:40 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/14/2024 10:05 AM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Sunday 7 January 2024 at 21:32:33 UTC, RonO wrote:
    As sad as it may be, a lot of TO regulars need to rethink their beliefs.
    A lot of you want to deny that the ID perps are creationists when >>>>>>> nearly all of them have admitted to being Biblical creattionists. They >>>>>>> all believe in the same creator.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creationism

    There are all kinds of creationists. That has been known since I >>>>>>> started reading TO back in 1993. For some reason some TO regulars want >>>>>>> to cling to a definition that only includes the YEC scientific type >>>>>>> creationists. The scientific creationists gave creationists a bad name >>>>>>> because they weren't just Biblical creationists, but they were science >>>>>>> deniers. The ID Perps continued the science denial, but changed the >>>>>>> name of what they were supporting. Everyone should know that the ID >>>>>>> perps were creationists because Nelson and Kenyon were YEC type
    scientific creationists. Kenyon wrote up some of the legal briefs for >>>>>>> the scientific creationist Supreme Court case. He didn't stop being a >>>>>>> creationists just because he joined up with the other ID perp creationists.

    Before the scientific creationism ploy started in the 1960's there >>>>>>> probably had been theistic evolutionist Biblical creationists for around
    a century. Not all Christians rejected biological evolution. When the >>>>>>> anti-evolution laws were being passed in the 1920's theistic evolution >>>>>>> had been accepted by multiple Christian sects in the US and they were >>>>>>> against those laws. There were already old earth and young earth >>>>>>> creationist factions in the Methodist church in the 19th century, and >>>>>>> they decided to coexist because inaccurate Biblical accounts of nature >>>>>>> just didn't matter to what was considered to be the important tenets of >>>>>>> the faith. My take on why they decided to pass on the issue is because >>>>>>> issues like geocentrism had died, and there was no use arguing about how
    old the earth was based on Biblical accounts. The Greeks had started >>>>>>> estimating the circumference of the earth a couple centuries before >>>>>>> Christ was born, and it didn't make sense to go along with
    fundamentalist thinking that was trying to bring back flat earth >>>>>>> creationism. The Bible had been written by people that had adopted the >>>>>>> flat-earth geocentric cosmology of their neighbors who had been
    civilized for a longer period of time. That is the reason why the Bible >>>>>>> is a flat earth geocentric text. If the Bible had been written today it >>>>>>> would be quite different, and we would still get somethings wrong. >>>>>>>
    So if you are in denial of what creationism actually is, you should read
    the Wiki link.

    I've glanced at it today. But let's remember that Wikipedia
    can be edited by anybody, although many articles are
    protected from mischievous interference.

    I think it's appropriate and important to reserve the unqualified
    word "creationism" in biology to refer to "special creationism";
    briefly, that God, or someone like him, created each species
    in essentially its current form. That species, or rather,
    the creationist's "kinds", do not change.
    That was only one form of creationism that the scientific YEC wanted to >>>>> teach in the public schools. When the anti-evolution laws were being >>>>> passed in the 1920's there were Biblical creationists against those laws >>>>> because they didn't have an issue with biological evolution. There was >>>>> already the belief that some god created the extant species using
    biological evolution.

    Before TO adopted scientific creationist type YEC there were already >>>>> theistic evolutionist creationists, old earth creationists, and even >>>>> flat-earth creationists that could be young or old earth or geocentric >>>>> or heliocentric. Pagano wasn't flat-earth, but he was an old earth
    geocentric creationist, and an IDiot. These are just the Biblical
    creationists. A definition of creationist was and still is someone that >>>>> believes in a creator god. Hindu are creationists as noted in the Wiki. >>>>>
    The Wiki makes the same claims, and you can look up the history and
    examples yourself. These types of creationists had all existed before >>>>> the YEC scientific creationist made YEC an issue.

    The ID perps are Biblical creationists, and always have been.

    I set these conditions, because "evolutionary creation/ism"
    and "theistic evolution" can be completely indistinguishable
    from natural evolution in terms of observable science;
    this is official, and therefore it is impossible for a scientific
    test to demonstrate an absence of God's secret intervention
    or his mysterious power of predestination. So if EC and TE
    are "creationism" then it is impossible to criticise "creationism". >>>>>> And since a large party of Christians and others declare
    (and may or may not sincerely believe) that cows for instance
    exist because God built cows from the ground up as the bible
    more or less says, it isn't unfair to concentrate on that
    type of "creationism" particularly.
    Behe and Denton are theistic evolutionists. Denton has Deistic leanings >>>>> and his designer might have just gotten the ball rolling with the Big >>>>> Bang and it may have unfolded into what we have today, but Behe thinks >>>>> that his designer has been helping things along to the extent that his >>>>> designer has been tweeking lifeforms for billions of years in order to >>>>> create what we have today.

    They are both still Biblical creationists.
    I don't think one can be a real "biblical creationist"
    unless one is asserting that the story in the bible
    specifically about God creating the things, by which
    mainly I mean animals, is how the things, as they
    are now, came to be.

    I've been saying that the real bible text doesn't
    have tenses, but the popular although unintelligible
    English "Authorised Version" does have, and there
    it's clear, in my opinion, that what God "was" doing
    in the story was creating the living things that "are".
    So on day one, or, let's see, day four, five, and six,
    Beings were brought into being that are identical
    to current living specimens, practically speaking,
    Or, current at the time of writing. That's what
    creationism really means: creation, and then
    no evolution. Which is quite wrong, of course.

    The tweaking creator that you say Behe holds to
    would bewilder public school students, and they
    are not what the bible describes. That doesn't
    matter to me, but it matters to the people who
    are supposed to fall for this. I expect that they'
    regard Behe as a dirty wvolutionist.

    A thing that still does matter to me is that you must
    not call Alfred Russel Wallace a creationist, and you
    have done so, by defining the term too loosely.

    Grading for Ron's definition of a creationist:

    Technical accuracy: 10/10
    Usefulness: 0/10


    The definition is the most useful for the current creationist political
    stupidity because the ID perps have been trying to create their "Big
    Tent" that they claim includes all types of Biblical creationists.
    Trying to claim that ID perps are not creationists is just stupid.

    I find nothing *useful* whatsoever in a definition that lumps Ken
    Miller, Francis Collins and me in the same category as Ken Ham. It
    obviously appeals to you but I doubt whether many others will find it
    useful either.

    That is because you are too dense to understand the difference.

    You are a creationist. You need to deal with that fact in dealing with reality. The ID perps deal with their creationist beliefs differently
    than you and Miller do, but Miller claims to believe in an interactive
    God that is active today, just like most of the ID perps. He just knows
    the difference between a political scam and real science. There was a
    thread up on TO a few years ago knocking Ken Miller for a talk he gave
    about science and religion where he claimed that there was room for God
    in the world around us. They were making fun of his notion that the
    creator could be manipulating things by "jiggling atoms". There is no
    doubt that Ken Miller is a creationist.

    Francis Collins was one of the founders of BioLogos, and he definitely
    is a creationist. You can go to their site and they have their core values.

    QUOTE:
    Core Values
    Christ-centered Faith — We embrace the historical Christian faith,
    upholding the authority and inspiration of the Bible.

    Rigorous Science — We affirm the established findings of modern science, celebrating the wonders of God’s creation.

    Gracious Dialogue — We strive for humble and thoughtful dialogue with
    those who hold other views, speaking the truth in love.
    END QUOTE:

    https://biologos.org/about-us

    https://biologos.org/about-us/what-we-believe

    They are creationists. They call what they believe about biological
    evolution "evolutionary creation"

    https://biologos.org/common-questions/is-evolutionary-creation-compatible-with-biblical-inerrancy

    Ron Okimoto


    The whole reason for there to be ID perps and the rubes that want to
    believe them is because they are Biblical creationists. It is what
    nearly all of them have in common. There are some Muslim IDiots, but
    they believe in the same creator as the ID perps. Kalkidas was only
    pretending to be a Hindu IDiot, but there could be some real ones out
    there because Hindus are creationists. Some of them have only one
    creator. We've had Hindu creationists that were anti-evolution posting
    on TO from time to time. Nearly all of them didn't claim to be IDiots,
    they just supported their creationist beliefs.

    Ron Okimoto


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  • From RonO@21:1/5 to broger...@gmail.com on Sun Jan 21 10:00:04 2024
    On 1/20/2024 1:22 PM, broger...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Saturday, January 20, 2024 at 1:17:44 PM UTC-5, Martin Harran wrote:

    I find nothing *useful* whatsoever in a definition that lumps Ken
    Miller, Francis Collins and me in the same category as Ken Ham. It
    obviously appeals to you but I doubt whether many others will find it
    useful either.

    It is very useful to Ron. His definition has an entirely plausible rationale and yet it differs from the definition that most people here use. That maximizes the number of people Ron can say are wrong. Very useful.


    You guys are wrong about the definition, and always have been in terms
    of what type of creationists the ID perps are. Failure to be able to
    apply creationism to what the ID perps believe is a fault for TO. Their intelligent designer is the Biblical creator. To deny that is stupid.

    Ron Okimoto

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  • From =?UTF-8?B?w5bDtiBUaWli?=@21:1/5 to RonO on Mon Jan 22 00:38:41 2024
    On Saturday 20 January 2024 at 16:57:44 UTC+2, RonO wrote:
    On 1/19/2024 12:14 PM, Ernest Major wrote:
    On 19/01/2024 17:43, Martin Harran wrote:
    Grading for Ron's definition of a creationist:

    Technical accuracy: 10/10
    Usefulness: 0/10


    I suggest that "technical accuracy" be replaced by "precision".

    Ron's fault is to insist that there's one true definition of creationism (and that the true definition is not the one in widest usage). An
    accurate definition of creationism recognises the variation in usage.

    It is the TO fault to claim that there is only one true definition of creationist. What do you think that this is about? I am the one that
    is claiming that there are all kinds of creationists, and what matters
    is that they all believe in a creator. How can anyone be so wrong about
    what this issue is about?

    Words have no meaning. Noises made by spurting air through
    meat or rows of very primitive abstract markings have no meaning. These
    are used because we can not communicate directly. So we use those
    vulgar sound and visual signals for to communicate.

    Game of usage of different from other's meaning and then to claim that everybody are using wrong meaning and so are wrong based on some
    "real" meaning is useless word game. It just makes communication
    impossible.

    It is just a fact that the main reason why IDiots exist is because they
    are creationists of one sort or another. It is their common trait.
    Pretty much all of the ID perps at the Discovery Institute have admitted
    that their designer is the Biblical creator.

    There are very lot of people who believe in creator God. Low minority of
    them supports Discovery Institute and lot of those few do it based on
    "enemy of my enemies is my friend" logic. There are few of them because
    ID is weak and weak friend can be worse than enemy. Same is with
    "scientific creationism" that lot of believers find kooky. So conflating everybody who believe into creator God as "creationists" and all
    "creationists" into "IDiots" is just making the vulgar signals messed up
    and hard to follow.

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  • From Robert Carnegie@21:1/5 to RonO on Wed Jan 24 04:36:01 2024
    On Sunday 21 January 2024 at 15:32:45 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/21/2024 9:10 AM, Robert Carnegie wrote:
    On Saturday 20 January 2024 at 14:57:44 UTC, RonO wrote:
    On 1/19/2024 12:14 PM, Ernest Major wrote:
    On 19/01/2024 17:43, Martin Harran wrote:
    Grading for Ron's definition of a creationist:

    Technical accuracy: 10/10
    Usefulness: 0/10


    I suggest that "technical accuracy" be replaced by "precision".

    Ron's fault is to insist that there's one true definition of creationism >>> (and that the true definition is not the one in widest usage). An
    accurate definition of creationism recognises the variation in usage.
    It is the TO fault to claim that there is only one true definition of
    creationist. What do you think that this is about? I am the one that
    is claiming that there are all kinds of creationists, and what matters
    is that they all believe in a creator. How can anyone be so wrong about
    what this issue is about?

    No; "creationist" does not mean "There was a creator"
    to most people, or to
    <https://www.dictionary.com/browse/creationist>

    It means "There was no evolution" - or, much more
    loosely, that natural evolution is a scientifically
    unsatisfactory explanation of how things are -
    but while that's wrong, I want to reserve "creationism"
    for the particular error of believing that distinct
    animal species, or distinct plants, were created
    separately, and don't have a common ancestor
    and common descent. That God created biological
    "kinds" that are distinct and that have remained and
    will remain distinct.
    There are many variations of the definition due to what the issues have
    been, but before there were YEC anti-evolution scientific creationists,
    a creationist was just someone that believed in a creator. You can't
    get stuck in a rut with definitions that are no longer accurate in terms
    of the anti-evolution creationism.

    There have been old earth and young earth creationists for centuries.
    After biological evolution became an option there were some old earth creationists that accepted biological evolution to one degree or another.

    The Reason to believe IDiots are old earth anti-evolutionists, and so
    are most of the ID perps, but not all the ID perps are anti-evolution creationists, but they are still ID perps because they believe in the
    same creator as the other ID perps.

    After Darwin flat earth creationism came back as a fundy belief.

    You should just believe the Wiki on this one. Hindu and Muslim are creationists. Hindu's just believe in another creator or creators.
    Muslims believe in the same creator as the ID perps and the
    anti-evolution scientific creationists.

    If "creationism" means "creation" then there
    is no need to say "creationism". That isn't a
    solid proof that the words have different
    meanings, but in my opinion, it makes it
    stupid if they do.

    Regardless, we know that creationism
    means specifically,

    "And out of the ground the LORD God formed
    every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air;
    and brought them unto Adam to see what he
    would call them: and whatsoever Adam called
    every living creature, that was the name thereof."
    (Genesis 2:19)

    Other religions may offer similar stories
    of gods designing animals, and plants etc.,
    in the holy books or word of mouth.
    From a not very holy book of Buddhism
    comes Sun Wukong, Monkey King,
    although this is not the origin of monkeys;
    other monkeys exist.

    These accounts differ in when creatures
    were brought into existence and why.
    What they have in common for the purpose
    of talk.origins is a stance opposed to
    evolutionary theory in biology. This isn't
    written in the holy books but they have to
    have it, because of the comprehensive
    evidence which proves evolution and
    common descent, and which refutes
    the descriptions of gods creating each
    species individually. It's necessary for
    them to claim that some other scientific
    fact, or some unjustified assertion,
    makes evolution impossible in spite of
    the evidence, or makes evolution between
    "kinds" impossible. This would be fair
    argument if done fairly, which it isn't;
    a small amount of evidence that a theory
    is wrong can be enough to overthrow it.
    (However, the evidence must be
    high quality.) The claim is that "Since
    evolution cannot have happened, it must
    be that gods did it."

    Some people choose to doubt some of their
    religion's dogma while retaining the religion.
    (People have been killed for doing that.)
    With respect to creationism, these doubters
    include people who believe that species were
    created at different times, and not all during one
    week 6025 years ago, and people who believe
    that some starter species were created and
    then they evolved. Chiefly because not
    everything that is alive now could be carried
    on Noah's ark, I think. But also to make humans
    be made by God even if everything else evolved.
    Where a god - or an extra-terrestrial alien - makes
    a living being of a new type from non-living matter,
    I count it as creationism.

    And there are people who accept common descent
    and evolution of older species into new ones, but
    with God either controlling that process, including
    just turning creatures into other creatures, or else
    just having it turn out the way that he wanted
    because apparently gods can do that. I split that
    from creationism, because none of the living things
    that we take an interest in are created separately,
    and because the differences from the actual evolution
    are invisible or non-existent, and so are not arguable,
    and not especially useful to argue where that is possible.
    What's a real problem is creationism that blatantly
    denies science and that interferes with education.
    The story of a god who created new things separately
    and one by one is what we should recognise as
    creationism, and should criticise, as we must.

    A god who uses evolution is not a threat to science -
    unless their plan of evolution still disagrees
    significantly with science. For instance by actually
    having a plan - teleology - or in having a species
    abruptly fall extinct because the god is displeased by it.
    I don't know if that is actually claimed.

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