Look up Seegert, The Starting Point, and his material on mutation. How difficult is that?
I have a hunch your point is that it's not difficult—which raises an obvious and interesting question:
If your sources are easy to find, why don't you cite them?
I do not accept your conclusions repeated over and over. They are platitudes; you must deal in specifics.
My track record in these forums has abundantly proven my willingness to deal in specifics, and sometimes in painstaking detail. That should tell you, if nothing else, that you need only ask and I would be happy to deliver—because I do deliver. I have been studying these issues in depth for well over a decade, so I have probably dealt with just about every question a young-earth creationist might ask—because I had the same questions.
So, just ask.
I have written Seegerts objections (the analogy of deleting, doubling and interchanging) out twice but you don't deal with one specific part of it, which is transparently clear.
You know what else is transparently clear? The fact that I asked for your sources in order to deal with the objections.
"That's why I posted Seegert's 'book editing' illustration about mutation, to solicit John's comments," you said. "A dismissive response means nothing. I have to know why he objects."
And I replied, "Then provide a proper citation, please, so I can verify what Seegert said and respond to it" (
source).
But you didn't. You said I'd find "some deconstructing explanation" for your reference (whatever that means) and told me to look it up myself: "You have the topics and analogies and his organization name, so look it up directly." Because, you see, it's my job to cite your sources for your claims. (That was sarcasm.)
You are the first person I have read in years who does not know that macroevolution is a cosmological view of conventional, secular, anti-supernatural science. So, even on that, I don't know why I should trust anything you put up.
You are probably the only person on the planet who "knows" that macroevolution is
a cosmological view. Can you name even one source who says this? Just one.
Are you saying the ordinary meaning of Genesis 1 ... is not credible?
What is "ordinary" supposed to mean here?
The literal meaning of Genesis 1 is credible.
The young-earth creationist interpretation of Genesis 1 is not credible (nor literal).
[Are you saying] that Genesis 1 is the evolutionary process you think happened ...
No.
Genesis 1 describes the dawn of redemptive history 6,000 years ago, which was preceded by several hundred million years of natural history.
I'd like to make clear that conflict between conventional science and biblical-informed science is real.
Okay.
And I would like to make clear that there is no conflict between conventional science and biblically informed science.
Every person I have read over the past decades who said it was not in conflict was misconstruing one or the other.
Name one. Just one.
(You knew that was coming, right?)
To be 'recognizable to an evolutionary biologist' therefore can simply mean that the person is so immersed in cosmological evolution that he cannot see the flaws, especially if he is saying that he sees no conflict.
That is not what I mean. For example, when an Arminian says that Calvinists believe in a God who created humans as pre-programmed robots, a Calvinist would look at that and say, "No, we don't." They are not describing Calvinism in a way that is recognizable to any Calvinist.
Here is another example: I can describe atheism in a way that is recognizable to atheists, who could say, "He's right."
And you, too, could articulate evolution in a way that's recognizable to evolutionary biologists—even though you reject evolution, just as I reject atheism.
But you choose to distort and misrepresent it instead, which is dishonest if done intentionally.
If I hear you put yourself as an authority ("I am living proof") ... I will ignore any further posts you make.
I find myself wondering if this applies to Seegert, too—because he said, "
I am absolute proof that God exists" (
00.06:35; emphasis added).
When he says, "I am proof," is Seegert putting himself as an authority? (Of course not.)
EarlyActs probably understands the idiom when Seegert says it, but thinks it's something offensive when I say it.