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You mentioned Adam. If he wasn't evolved, what was he?
He was not evolved because evolution happens to populations over generations, not to individuals in their lifetime. Adam was just a guy, like you or me, who lived roughly 6,000 years ago.
How about the biblical Adam?
Well, yes ... <confused look> ... that is precisely what I said ("pointing to the first few chapters of Genesis").
I fail to see any type of evolution there, theistic or otherwise.
Same here.
Theistic evolution or typical evolution cannot explain death, except by borrowing from biblical revelation.
All right, I am putting a stop to this by calling out the fallacy of equivocation here (invoking rule 4.4). In this discussion, you may no longer fail to distinguish between physical and spiritual death.
In order for me to respond, you must specify which of the following were you saying:
1. Theistic evolution or typical evolution cannot explain physical death, except by borrowing from biblical revelation.
2. Theistic evolution or typical evolution cannot explain spiritual death, except by borrowing from biblical revelation.
Was that when the primates became man?
Primates never became man.
The problem with your question is that it treats "primates" as if they were a single creature that later turned into humans. That is not how this works. Primates didn't turn into humans. Rather, humans are one species inside the primate group (which includes lemurs, lorises, tarsiers, monkeys, and other apes). Lineages branch, not transform.
And that happened several million years ago. Adam lived roughly 6,000 years ago.
