Hugh Ross: Creation as Science

Started by ushomefree8 pages

Hugh Ross: Creation as Science

For all interested, it is imperative to watch the video presentation below entitled, "Creation as Science," in its entirety! You may have to view it in segments, as I did, for it is over an hour in length. This presentation was posted to introduce valid issues regarding the Evolution/Creation debate, which has manifested into a tug-of-war match. You may not agree with all that Hugh Ross states; but you will be "forced" to agree with the majority of his presentation. For all interested in the Evolution/Creation debate, this video presentation will stimulate your mind. Enjoy!

Creation as Science

Hugh Norman Ross (born July 24, 1945) is a Canadian-born Old Earth creationist and Christian apologist. An astronomer and astrophysicist by training, he has established his own ministry called Reasons To Believe that promotes forms of Old Earth creationism known as progressive creationism and day-age creationism. Ross accepts the scientific evidence of the age of the earth and the age of the universe, but he rejects evolution and abiogenesis as explanations for the history and origin of life.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Ross_(creationist)

Re: Hugh Ross: Creation as Science

Originally posted by ushomefree
For all interested, it is imperative to watch the video presentation below entitled, "Creation as Science," in its entirety! You may have to view it in segments, as I did, for it is over an hour in length. This presentation was posted to introduce valid issues regarding the Evolution/Creation debate, which has manifested into a tug-of-war match. You may not agree with all that Hugh Ross states; but [B]you will be "forced" to agree with the majority of his presentation. For all interested in the Evolution/Creation debate, this video presentation will stimulate your mind. Enjoy!

Creation as Science[/B]

And those of this that are psychologically immune to hypnosis? What about us?

Originally posted by Shakyamunison
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Ross_(creationist)

Actually he sounds like the kind of guy I'd like. His beliefs seem to lack a certain level of internal consistency though. If they had that it would make a great SciFi novel.

Shakyamunison-

Why don't you stay on topic and watch the presentation; and by the way, Hugh Ross--although Canadian--was not born an Old Earth Creationist. You would know such if you have read his books and/or watched his movies available on RTB. Really, let's keep on topic please.

Originally posted by ushomefree
Hugh Ross--although Canadian--was not born an Old Earth Creationist.

I imagine he was born without any opinion on either creation or evolution. Further I reject the notion that being from Canada might have an effect on that.

Originally posted by ushomefree
Shakyamunison-

Why don't you stay on topic and watch the presentation; and by the way, Hugh Ross--although Canadian--was not born an Old Earth Creationist. You would know such if you have read his books and/or watched his movies available on RTB. Really, let's keep on topic please.

Question: How was I off topic? Answer: I was not, off topic.

All I did was provide information.
Information about the person you are going to see is relevant to what the person has to say.

Thank you Shakyamunison.

Originally posted by ushomefree
Thank you Shakyamunison.

You should stay away from sarcasm.

Finished?

Originally posted by ushomefree
Finished?

What? 😕 So, you can be sarcastic at me, and I can't respond? 🙄

Re: Hugh Ross: Creation as Science

Originally posted by ushomefree
For all interested, it is imperative to watch the video presentation below entitled, "Creation as Science," in its entirety! You may have to view it in segments, as I did, for it is over an hour in length. This presentation was posted to introduce valid issues regarding the Evolution/Creation debate, which has manifested into a tug-of-war match. You may not agree with all that Hugh Ross states; but you will be "forced" to agree with the majority of his presentation. For all interested in the Evolution/Creation debate, this video presentation will stimulate your mind. Enjoy!

Creation as Science

This video presentation was well done. Hugh Ross showed that the Biblical record is indeed scientifically sound.

Why not post this in the creationism thread? Or any of the dozens of creationism threads you've made in teh past? Or was it time to meet your spam thread quota for the month?

Also, creationism isn't science. It's faith. Dur.

Originally posted by DigiMark007
Why not post this in the creationism thread? Or any of the dozens of creationism threads you've made in teh past? Or was it time to meet your spam thread quota for the month?

Also, creationism isn't science. It's faith. Dur.

Creationism is very scientific just view Hugh Ross' presentation.

Originally posted by JesusIsAlive
Creationism is very scientific just view Hugh Ross' presentation.

Since I'd rather not waste an hour of my life, let me ask you a couple simple questions:

Does he provide a scientific study by which we can empirically test for god's involvement in evolution? If so, briefly explain what the procedure is. Also, what are the criteria for the tests success, and is it a test that can be repeated and verified by testers of any belief? Again, why is this so?

If it doesn't provide those things in a scientifically valid way, free from bias and working only with observable data, it is not science.

Basically, if it is just a tired reiteration of the creationist propoganda I've heard countless times before (most of ushome's material just rehashes the same points) I don't want to watch it and be frustrated.

Originally posted by DigiMark007
Since I'd rather not waste an hour of my life, let me ask you a couple simple questions:

Does he provide a scientific study by which we can empirically test for god's involvement in evolution? If so, briefly explain what the procedure is. Also, what are the criteria for the tests success, and is it a test that can be repeated and verified by testers of any belief? Again, why is this so?

If it doesn't provide those things in a scientifically valid way, free from bias and working only with observable data, it is not science.

Basically, if it is just a tired reiteration of the creationist propoganda I've heard countless times before (most of ushome's material just rehashes the same points) I don't want to watch it and be frustrated.

Here is Hugh Ross' hotline for those of you who have purchased his "Creation as Science" book or for those who have any questions at all about the presentation (i.e. creation or evolution).

science-faith hotline (everyday except Christmas):

626-335-5282

5-7 PM Pacific

or

Live webcast every Tuesday

11am-1pm

www.reasons.org

866-RTB-RADIO

At 1:04:55 in Hugh Ross' video presentation he explains how the creation model can be put to the test.

Originally posted by JesusIsAlive
At 1:04:55 in Hugh Ross' video presentation he explains how the creation model can be put to the test.

Creation can be falsified if: "scientists can prove that there is nothing unique about human creature's spirit attributes compared to other creatures of light."

1:05:10

Anything that reminds me of DavidIke deserves any and all ridicule it gets.

I like this quote too:

"We make predictions and then wait two or three years."

But really the entire thing is an infomercial, little more.

K, so I'm listening to snippets while I do more important stuff. Here's a running commentary as I listen...

- Hmm. He starts by, in essence, billing the Bible as a valid science book. Yet this fails to account for numerous interpretations, language and translation differences, and the fact that people can "find" supposedly correct cosmology in the Bible, but a fair number of other passages are way off. It's a post hoc ergo propter hoc argument....assigning meaning after the fact instead of as a predictive agent, which would lend it credibility. It's no better than the idiotic Nostradamus apologists, who claim success by reinterpreting things to predict past events. Also, he incorrectly asserts that the Christian god is the only mythological god said to create something from nothing, when in fact they are littered throughout mythology, both predating and post-dating Christianity.

- Second Law of Thermodynamics argument?! *yawn*

- Also ignores theories that account for the existence of matter by entirely causal forces.

- He likes throwing out buzzwords of theoretical physics. He must've claimed about a dozen times that "all evidence points to a creator" or "scientists agree..." without saying why, explaining how, or naming the scientists and evidence for such statements. I haven't even heard an argument yet other than explaining the history of our cosmological knowledge then finding a Bible passage that fits it loosely.

- Calling creation a "miracle" and stopping at that as a final explanation is horrible. This is the antithesis of scientific inquiry.

- Still trying to sell the Bible as a literal science book. Lots of Bible passages are cited, yet all are fairly vague stretches to meet the analogies he sees with modern physics. I could find plenty of these in any religious text, so long as I'm allowed to use such vague criteria to match them as "factual."

- Hey! I heard the words "fine tuning!" I was wondering when he'd pull out the anthropic argument. Seriously, he was dying with the Bible as literal science book schtick.

...I'm 25 minutes in. I'm stopping due to my brain feeling like it's dying. If anyone else besides the dynamic evangelical duo watches it (not recommended, btw), let me know if I missed anything.

....

P.S. JIA's post answered nothing that I asked. It's like he didn't even acknowledge that I spoke.

Just as an addendum: I'm a bit cynical and sarcastic toward ushome and JIA because they have a habit of ignoring the other side and only confirming their beliefs instead of seeking to challenge them. But for those who are genuinely interested in hearing discussion, evolutionary theory can and does offer elegant answers to any and all objections raised thus far in the creationist movement. Creationists also have no valid scientific theory of their own, but have irrational faith in spades to tell you otherwise and a gift for perverting science to meet their ends. If someone wants to discuss these things, rather than just post their side of the argument and ignore the rest, I and others are willing to debate. I don't both with lengthy rebuttals anymore, because I've said most of it before and am subsequently ignored or the point is dodged/changed. It's a waste of time unless someone is genuinely interested in engaging others.