I'm going to answer some of your questions for Cycel if you don't mind. : P
Thanks for replying Cycel
i would have to disagree that there are only "few" biologists, physicists, or philosophers who are creationists, in the sense that we are talking about. Theistic evolutionists are still "creationists", they just believe that the Almighty started the evolutionary process....at least that is my understanding.
For sake of argument, let's refer to creationists as those who believe God created life as is and those who believe God started the evolutionary process as evolutionists.
Pasteur seemed pretty adamant that living things can only arise from other living things. If he were here today, and you had the opportunity to talk to him, what would u say regarding his theory of biogenesis in microbiology?
It's hard to imagine an intermediate between living and non-living things, between sentience and non-sentience. This is why so many creationists laugh at the idea of sentient life suddenly forming in primordial soup (assuming this is what scientists believe), because they can't fathom an intermediate stage between the two.
It's definitely hard to imagine, perhaps impossible (in the same way we can't imagine what it's like to be a living plant without the ability to think or feel). But it doesn't mean it didn't happen. Science is constantly proving that our intuition is, to some degree, flawed. For example, intuition once told us that the sun revolved around the Earth, but we now know it's the other way around.
there are some bees that only have one set of wings, yet u are still able see where their second set of wings had previously been. In fact, these "second set of wings" still move in sync with the first set while in flight. Since bees evolve into having two sets of wings, why do these bees appear to be de-evolving?
There's no such thing as "devolving". Some attributes in animals that aren't necessary for survival are lost over time. These are called vestigial structures. Snakes and whales are wonderful examples of animals who still have their hind leg bones!
Vestigiality - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
can u please explain the Platypus?
The platypus looks like it's a collection of different species combined into one animal. How could a mammal have a bill? The answer is simple, the bill of a platypus is structurally different from the bill of birds. It doesn't actually have a duck bill, or any kind of bird-like bill. The bill of the platypus is unique to it's lineage in the same way bat wings differ greatly from bird wings. They're both wings, but very different in how they came to be and what they've become.
There's a video I watched a while back that easily explained the difference between the platypus bills and bird bills, but I can't readily find it. If you're interested in watching it, let me know and I'll spend some time digging it up for you so you can watch it. There are numerous other videos on the internet that goes over platypus evolution - one of them might actually be the video I'm looking for. Just let me know if you're interested, I don't want to waste an hour looking for a video you're not interested in watching. : P
Anyway, keep the questions going. They're good questions.