@Professor Kent: To me, you are kind of mixing apples …

Comment on The Full History of La Sierra University vs. Louie Bishop by George Evans.

@Professor Kent: To me, you are kind of mixing apples up with oranges. The “Rio” statement is concerning hermeneutics. It is violated when a person says the resurrection is not physically possible and therefore we should question the bibles reporting of resurrections.

But normally this isn’t what’s going on when we bring evidence for 6,000 years old creation in six days. We aren’t concerned with reinterpreting scripture. We are into reinterpreting science. We think unbelievers have stolen science out from under our noses.

You seem to have bought to evolutionary farm, and now you have built a wall between science and scripture so you can try to get the two to coexist.

George Evans Also Commented

The Full History of La Sierra University vs. Louie Bishop
@Pauluc: You wrote of Sean, “Your definition of science…to include the supernatural is a private interpretation that flies in the face of the accepted definitions.”

Correct. And that position should be adopted by all Adventist scientific institutions.


The Full History of La Sierra University vs. Louie Bishop
@Pauluc: You wrote, “I accept the SDA 28 fundamental as the description of Adventist thought about the bible…”

An athiest could honestly make the same comment.


The Full History of La Sierra University vs. Louie Bishop
@Sean Pitman: When I was young I remember Friday night “star studies” conducted by astronomers, and Sabbath afternoon nature walks conducted by biologists. And earlier, in the 40’s I understand scientists would accompany evangelists and present scientific information that corroborated the scriptures. Can you imagine a LSU biologist accompanying an evangelist now?


Recent Comments by George Evans

Gary Gilbert, Spectrum, and Pseudogenes
@Pauluc: You wrote, “In the Adventist tradition I am not dualist and accept that our brains are simply part of the natural world. They are not the repository of the soul or an antennae for the supernatural world but are highly complex elaborations of the invertebrates head ganglion.”

I didn’t realize we had this tradition. Now that I think about it, you seem to be voicing an idea I call neo-deism. I have used the term anti-pantheism in Adventist circles for obvious reasons. As a people we got so afraid of pantheism that we bolted to the other side of the road, and apparently developed a new tradition when I wasn’t looking.

This is very interesting. Until now I hadn’t understood the nexus of anti-pantheism opening the door for theistic evolution. Thank you, Paul.


Gary Gilbert, Spectrum, and Pseudogenes
@Pauluc: A bee is not an extrinsic agent. Bees are not artistic.


Gary Gilbert, Spectrum, and Pseudogenes
@Sean Pitman: From Merriam-Webster:

1. a : something created by humans usually for a practical purpose; especially : an object remaining from a particular period
b : something characteristic of or resulting from a particular human institution, period, trend, or individual


Gary Gilbert, Spectrum, and Pseudogenes
@Pauluc: I think you are the only scientist that defines a beehive as an artifact.


Gary Gilbert, Spectrum, and Pseudogenes
@Pauluc: In this case the Torah is the evidence. Before we get to criticizing the Pentateuch, we should consider it’s provenance. It is not a document that we dug up in some foreign land. It has been in the continuous possession of the original “family”. And this lays in the dust the charge that it is an old document written in a dead language also.

So what does the document say? It says that sometime during the event known as the Exodus, Moses, the leader of the group, chiseled out two tablets of stone, and God wrote on them. Shortly thereafter Moses apparently recorded the inscription, and we have it in Exodus chapter 20.

Modern scholarship is a flash in the pan by comparison. For us, at this end of history to question this story’s veracity be we gentile or even Jew, is ludicrous.