
Originally Posted by
tokidoki
@treize: Seriously, you need to learn gisting! My god!
copy pasta galore.. i hope he can at least explain one by one.. Most of the sources are books from a quarter of a century ago..
@treize: I see that one of your quotes is from Michael Denton. He's a respected biochemist and i admire his scientific research and his anthropic argument for design.. Mao ni nakanindot sa mga genuine scientists they are heard within the scientific community through peer reviews and debates but it does not automatically mean their views are accepted by the majority..
Evolution is a fact in the sense that it is overwhelmingly validated by the evidence. Frequently, evolution is said to be a fact in the same way as the Earth revolving around the Sun is a fact. The following quotation from H. J. Muller, "One Hundred Years Without Darwin Are Enough" explains the point.
There is no sharp line between speculation, hypothesis, theory, principle, and fact, but only a difference along a sliding scale, in the degree of probability of the idea. When we say a thing is a fact, then, we only mean that its probability is an extremely high one: so high that we are not bothered by doubt about it and are ready to act accordingly. Now in this use of the term fact, the only proper one, evolution is a fact.
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evoluti...heory_and_fact
And by the way, going back to Dr Denton, the good news is:
Since the time Denton challenged neo-Darwinism with his 1985 book Evolution: A Theory in Crisis, many of Denton's views have since diverged outside of the Intelligent Design movement, Denton still accepts design but embraces a non-Darwinian evolutionary theory. He denies that randomness accounts for the biology of organisms, he has proposed an evolutionary theory which is a “directed evolution” in his book Natures Destiny (199

. Life according to Denton did not exist until initial conditions of the universe were fine tuned.
Well at least he doesn't believe in the 6-day creation anymore..