And I thought this thread was dead lol
Since I never chimed in, let me give my two cents. I am not going to argue, because we've already seen that it's pretty much pointless here. I am not going to try to refute what others have said, because that would take WAY too long. I simply am going to tell you why I have CHOSEN to believe in creation...intelligent design...whatever you may call it.
1. The math just doesn't add up. For this part, allow me to quote a paper I wrote during high school (if you want the bibliography, I can PM it to you...I also do autographs
):
Russel F. Doolittle, Ph. D., starts his article in
Scientists Confront Creationism by saying “One of the favorite creationist attacks on the concept of biological evolution concentrates on the improbability of various aspects of a spontaneous origin of life on earth” (Laurie, 85), and he is correct. All of life exemplifies the imaginative hand of God; “It seems screamingly obvious that the world of living things is the result of an intent or a designer assembling order according to some master plan. Even Einstein said “I shall never believe that God plays dice with the world”, suggesting a creator…” (Smith and Sullivan, 76). Yet evolutionists expect us to “…resist that illusion [that nature and the universe were designed]” (Smith and Sullivan, 83) and to “…keep our minds open to the possibility that undirected, random processes can also generate order, even in the domain of living things” (Smith and Sullivan, 69). The problem with this thinking is that, when considered in a purely mathematical light, the chances of life coming about by random happenings are impossible. In his book
Scientific Creationism, Dr. Henry Morris, Ph. D., founder of the Institute for Creation Research and well-known creationist author, does an excellent job of illustrating this point in a way that cannot be debated.
Let us suppose that the smallest, least complex system in the universe is composed of 100 parts. If there is only one combination that will produce life, there is a one in 10^158 probability that a randomly selected combination will work. If the 100 parts were linked, shuffled, and re-linked one billion times every second for 30 billion years (which is over three times the estimated age of the entire universe), an infinitely small probability still exists (1 in 10^53) that life would have been produced. This is equivalent to one chance out of one hundred million billion billion billion billion billion! (Morris,
Scientific Creationism, 60-61). However, “Research sponsored by NASA… has shown that the simplest type of protein molecule… is composed of… at least 400 linked amino acids, and each amino acid is a specific combination of four or five basic chemical elements, and each chemical element is a unique assemblage of protons, electrons, and neutrons” (Morris,
Scientific Creationism, 61). When considered in this light, the chances of life evolving by random processes are essentially a mathematical impossibility; life could not have either begun or evolved through chance.
Ever since the publication of Charles Darwin’s book Origin of Species, the scientific majority has advocated that the main “propellant” of evolution is beneficial, random mutations. Experts expect us to believe that mutations can further the evolutionary process when all experimental evidence explicitly shows otherwise.
Creation scientists have observed that virtually all mutations would be eliminated from the general population by natural selection. “…while variations… do arise randomly, which [animals] will survive will not be random. This is because the selective environment has certain conditions that must be met… Selection doesn’t randomly determine which [animals] will survive and which ones won’t. Rather, it simply evaluates the fitness of each individual, allowing some to reproduce and barring others. Selection selects for the better suited and against the les well suited, and its effects are certainly not random” (Smith an Sullivan, 82). At sometime during the evolutionary process, there is certain to be a step which will make the organism less suited to its environment, causing death and a halt to the process. A helpful mutation might indeed be preserved and spread by natural selection, yet “The phenomenon of a truly beneficial mutation…has yet to be documented” (Morris,
Scientific Creationism, 56). H.J. Muller has said “the great majority of mutations, certainly well over 99%, are harmful in some way…” (Morris, Scientific Creationism, 55). The chances of just one beneficial mutation happening are almost nonexistent!
Evolution is not all about one successful mutation, however; if this were true, evolution would have a much better chance of success. The truth is that for evolution to be able to work, a string of literally billions of beneficial mutations has to come about without one wrong step. “ In order to continue toward higher and higher order… each trial step would have to be immediately beneficial; there could be no failures or backward steps” (Morris,
Scientific Creationism, 63). Considering how rare one good mutation is, one can see the extreme problem with this thinking. “ The chance of a million beneficial mutations happening in order is one in 10^300,000 (Morris,
Scientific Creationism, 69). This number is too large to humanly comprehend! Not only is a good mutation extremely rare, but the chances of an adequate amount of these occurring without one wrong move are essentially zero (or nought, for you Britons out there
).
Evolution by natural selection and mutations is impossible, and the math indefatigably supports this proof.
2. Despite what others have said previously, order does indeed lead to the logical conclusion that there was design somewhere in the process. Honestly, the best example I can give has to do with computers and DNA.
In the study of computer code, there is a rule that a code never arises in and of itself. There HAS to be a designer for an ORDER-ly, working code to come about. Computer codes show a very high level of design, thought, order, logic, and purpose...things which by their very nature necessitate an intelligent being to be produced. Case in point: this very web site. Someone had a purpose for it...someone designed it in a logical, orderly manner...and someone worked hard to get it to where it is now. This web site did not just spontaneously come into being out of a jumble of 1's and 0's floating around on the web: SOMEONE arranged the information for our benefit.
Now let us look at a single strand of human DNA: the marvel of nano-biology. The coding for making an entire human being, contained in a package smaller than the period at the end of this sentence, and containing less storage space than is needed to run Windows XP (750 MB in the average DNA strand compared to 1,500 MB for XP). Mankind, with all his knowledge and technological prowess, could not come close to achieving such compactness of so much information in such a small container.
To compound the math even more, we have to take into account that computer code only uses two bases--1's and 0's--whereas DNA has FOUR bases--adenine, guanine, thymine, and cytosine. Correct me if I'm wrong--my high school Algebra II seems like forever ago--but I believe that this raises the number of combinations by a factor of four (as in "to the fourth power"). Such complexity simply astounds the mind, and it is found as close as our own bodies. We are perfectly engineered, well-formed machines, right down to the "code" that gives us our beings. What is even more awe-inspiring is that this "code" is self-healing and self-replicating: things that a computer coder could only dream of accomplishing.
When we see a working computer code--for example,the code used to make this web site work--we of course quickly come to the logical conclusion that an intelligent being created and ordered it into its present condition. How arrogant and close-minded, then, is it to take even a casual glance at DNA, the "code" of life itself, in all its super-human complexity and structure, and say that it had to have "appeared," with no outside forces involved? It is, in my opinion, nothing but willful blindness to what is staring us in the face.
3. The former two proofs had nothing to do with things of the mind and heart, the seat of emotions and thought. They were hard facts. Nothing "religious" whatsoever about them. Now, allow me to share the biggest reason why I believe in intelligent design:
I do not have enough faith to believe in evolution.
Yes, you just read that right; that was not a typo. I do not have enough faith to believe in evolution.
Now, say what you will--and I know I will get some strong responses to that statement--but, at some point, we are ALL exhibiting faith in our decision. Neither you nor I was there when the universe and all therein was formed, so at some point we have to take it by faith. Whether you believe in evolution or creation, you are exhibiting faith in someone. For creationists, we have faith that the Word of God, the Bible, tells us the truth about the origins of life and
er; for the evolutionist, he has faith in the scientist that theorizes and studies origins. But I digress: back to what I was saying.
When I look at the world around me, I see order and I see design. I see beauty in the colors plastered across the skies at sunrise and sunset; I see power in the hurricanes and tornadoes that people endanger their lives to research; and I see infinity in the star-spangled night sky, with its myriad starts, planets, and nebulae. I would rather believe--it makes more sense to me--that an all-powerful, transcendent, super-natural being of some kind--whether he be the God of the Christians or not--created the universe and its marvels. Even the smallest life-form on earth exhibits extraordinary order, structure, and design, testifying of a creator somewhere. The Bible says "The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork (Psalm 19:1)...For the invisible things of [God] from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse (Romans 1:20)."
Call me weak...call me brain-washed...call me what you may, you cannot convince me that there is not a Creator-God. I have seen too much; I know too much; I have experienced too much in my own life for anything to dissuade me from knowing that God, my Creator, is real.
So there you have it: with all due respect to MT, this is why Ariel DOES believe in this.