Showing posts with label evolution and palaeontology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label evolution and palaeontology. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 April 2026

Spinoff Debate with Justin Roe


HGL's F.B. writings: Challenge not met · Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl: Spinoff Debate with Justin Roe

March 31st, 2026
Tuesday of Holy Week

Hans Georg Lundahl
Good day!

Is it OK if I keep your name as it is on the post, or you prefer to have it shortened?

HGL's F.B. writings: Challenge not met
https://hglsfbwritings.blogspot.com/2026/03/challenge-not-met.html


Justin Roe
What post, and why am I mentioned?

April 1st, 2026
Wednesday of Holy Week

Hans Georg Lundahl
1) The blog post I linked to.
2) Because you are in the debate with me which I posted.

Justin Roe
Interesting, what purpose does that serve?

Make sure to update your blog when people reply to you.

Hans Georg Lundahl
To document the debate.

I try to. Sometimes I make a new post instead.

Btw, in case you feel like referring to big fish like Tomasello, he made this an April Fools for you:

Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl: Tomasello Not Answering
Thursday, 28 September 2023
https://correspondentia-ioannis-georgii.blogspot.com/2023/09/tomasello-not-answering.html


Justin Roe
I'm still a little baffled at what you said about being skeptical that Hominidae forms a clade. Your initial question seems to be framed as some sort of "problem" for the evolution of humans from non-human great apes. As humans just ARE great apes if "great apes" is a real category, that doesn't make sense. What else would we have evolved from? The fact that a particular behavioral transition is still a bit of a mystery doesn't call the genetics into question.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Your initial question seems to be framed as some sort of "problem" for the evolution of humans from non-human great apes.


No.

It is the problem for the evolution of human speech from non-human ape vocal communications.

The one problem is not the other problem.

"What else would we have evolved from?"

Different question, but presumes, very definitely, we evolved. Which is between us, still to be proven.

Justin Roe
As there is not currently any one conclusively demonstrated hypothesis, I suppose one could call the development of human speech a "miracle" for now.

What exactly is your alternative hypothesis for the origin of the nested heirarchy of genetic similarity between all organisms, and especially between us and the other great apes? We and panins are one anothers' closest living relatives, followed by the gorillas, then orangutans. Additionally, we are more similar genetically to chimps and bonobos than rats are to mice or lions are to tigers. If we didn't evolve, every piece of evidence really looks like we did.

Hans Georg Lundahl
"As there is not currently any one conclusively demonstrated hypothesis"

Understatement of the year.

There isn't a hypothesis with sufficient detail to be understandable on this point.

"What exactly is your alternative hypothesis for the origin of the nested heirarchy of genetic similarity between all organisms"

There is some kind of common origin.

In the forum one of the common origins was supposed to be Evolution, what was the other one, again?

Justin Roe
You'll have to enlighten me. I'm unaware of any other potential mechanism that could result in such a heirarchy of similarity besides evolution.

Hans Georg Lundahl
I wasn't talking of another "mechanism" but of another origin ...

Justin Roe
If this is just going to turn into vague verbal volleyball, I'm out. Just make your point man.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Creation is a good explanation of why there would exist nested hierarchies, even if it's not a mechanical one.

Justin Roe
How so?

Hans Georg Lundahl
God, on this hypothesis has free will.

Free will implies some kind of logic.

Logic could produce nested hierarchies freely, rather than by a mechanism.

Justin Roe
Is the alternative hypothesis something like "God did it that way" then?

Hans Georg Lundahl
Yes.

Justin Roe
Is there any pattern that we could theoretically see that would be incompatible with that hypothesis?

Hans Georg Lundahl
I would say that a total difference of genomes and proteins across all creatures, no hierarchical similarities would be incompatible.

Because it would be random.

Justin Roe
But any degree of similarity, in any pattern, is compatible with "God did it that way"?

I should say "non-zero degree".

Hans Georg Lundahl
I would say so.

Apart from such similarity that a common ancestor seems obvious to common sense quite apart from the theory of evolution.

Like hedgehogs evolved from a common hedgehog ancestor (a couple on the Ark) into 5 genera and 17 species.

Justin Roe
I guess I'm asking whether "God did it that way" makes any specific predictions of what we should find when we sequence the genomes of organisms, which evolution does not? Is there some sort of "genetic signature" that lets us distinguish between organisms that do share common ancestry from those that don't, in your view?

Hans Georg Lundahl
"makes any specific predictions of what we should find when we sequence the genomes of organisms, which evolution does not?"

No, I don't think so.

This makes nested hierarchies a common prediction for Creationists and Evolutionists, so it cannot really be used as distinctive evidence between the theories.

The thing to look out for is not a specific signature in genome sequences, but an obvious one in the function. Between man and what most would call apes, there is speech and lack of it.

Justin Roe
No, it doesn't. If any pattern of similarity is compatible with creationism, then a nested heirarchy is not a prediction of creationism. Evolution explicitly predicts that we should find that pattern and no other. Accommodation and retrodiction are not prediction.

Hans Georg Lundahl
"If any pattern of similarity is compatible with creationism, then a nested heirarchy is not a prediction of creationism."

We do not have a fully nested hierarchy.

On CMI you can find exceptions.

You should by the way say that they are not a specific prediction of creationism only.

"Evolution explicitly predicts that we should find that pattern and no other."

I think CMI has examples refuting it.

Your methodology seems very fuzzy in the outline, it's only precise in observation ... but not in analysis.

"Accommodation and retrodiction are not prediction."

Can they be confirmation?

Justin Roe
"Can they be confirmation?"

Not really, but they aren't disconfirmation either.

[My main point]

Care to share a link to any examples of that?

"Your methodology ... [is] only precise in observation ... but not in analysis"

Where exactly could my analysis improve?

Hans Georg Lundahl
I actually looked up "nested hierarchies" on CMI, and this is the article I found, not exactly what I was "promising" (or kind of), here:

CMI: Cladistics, evolution and the fossils
By Shaun Doyle | Published 20 Aug, 2012 | Updated 12 Oct, 2012
https://creation.com/en/articles/cladistics


Point 1 to note, "nested hierarchies" are in evolution, on the analysis of Shaun Doyle, to a high degree treated as dealing with independent traits.

He considers, the actually dependent traits are giving a mirage of lineage.

Point 2 is, nested hierarchies were not predicted by evolutionists and then discovered, but discovered before, by Creationists (Linnaeus) and then accomodated by Evolutionists.

So, point 3, even supposing nested hierarchies were pretty exceptionless, you'd need to work on ... reading up things I wasn't a challenge on in CMI who answers them better than I do.

Justin Roe
That article doesn't seem to touch on genetic phylogenies, which are actually the thing typically used with extant lineages today. Like the article correctly points out, morphology, especially between relatively close relatives, is not always the best gauge of relatedness. Genetics, however, is. DNA similarity IS relatedness, as DNA is the physical "thing" that is passed from parent to child.

Hans Georg Lundahl
"DNA similarity IS relatedness, as DNA is the physical "thing" that is passed from parent to child."

Again presuming Evolution instead of proving it.

What you observed is that relatedness will (within some limits) lead to DNA similarity, what you wanted to prove is DNA similarity proves relatedness. Not same thing and not true.

Justin Roe
No, that's just literally how reproduction works. Whether it's mitotic or meiotic, the thing that the parent or parents pass to the child is their DNA. Evolution or not. There could be a perfectly flat fitness landscape and zero mutations (i.e. zero evolution occurring) and DNA similarity could be used to track ancestry with exactness.

Hans Georg Lundahl
"the thing that the parent or parents pass to the child is their DNA."

Granted on both sides.

When do you come to distinctive evidence?

Or is this your idea of April 1st?

Justin Roe
Good, now that we agree that DNA similarity is what determines relatedness, the nested heirarchy of genetic similarity among great apes mean that our ancestry lies within that group. See this paper:

Complete sequencing of ape genomes | Nature https://share.google/6Is7kkYiPRK27HpYD

Hans Georg Lundahl
"Good, now that we agree that DNA similarity is what determines relatedness"

Degree of relatedness in case of such.

We did not agree that DNA similarity proves relatedness.

Justin Roe
If we're going to do genetic last-thursdayism here then this isn't going to go much further.

Hans Georg Lundahl
The problem of last thursdayism isn't about miraculous origin.

It's about deceptive origin.

If I had no memories previous to being created as an adult, I could have no absurdity to see or find in everything being created before that.

But I have memories, i e cognitive acts, pointing back to a childhood.

DNA similarities aren't cognitive acts. They do not equal remembering being the same Tiktaalik that the Oliphaunt in the Room was a million plus years ago.

"in everything being created before that."

As in just or days before that.

Adam on the first friday was presumably a Last Sundayist.

Justin Roe
You're right, genetics are not the same thing as memories. They're something far more reliable. If two men, let's call them Dave and John, both claim to be my biological father, how would I go about investigating whether one of them is right? I'd make them take a paternity test, and whoever's genome I share half of is my father. Dave and John can't "misremember" their own genomes. A deity planting fake genetic similarity is even more deceptive than one planting fake memories.

April 2nd, 2026
Maundy Thursday

Hans Georg Lundahl
A genetic similarity isn't fake because it doesn't depend on common ancestry.

You can and even need to have a father.

But mankind (including Neanderthals and Denisovans, Soloans, Heidelbergians and Antecessors, at least) need not, and probably, bc of the linguistic problem, even cannot have an ancestral species or genus that's not human.

You don't get to say "just because we have chosen this methodology, God's duty to us is to refute any of our false conclusions according to this methodology, otherwise He's deceptive."

The similarity is totally genuine, but your conclusions don't follow.

Hans Georg Lundahl
[also shared link here]

Justin Roe
And yet, the same methods for analyzing genomes used for paternity tests also place us squarely within Hominidae, alongside the other great apes. Again, see this paper.

Complete sequencing of ape genomes
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08816-3


Hans Georg Lundahl
"the same methods for analyzing genomes"

Has it occurred to you that you can be overdoing the scope of a method?

Justin Roe
If I'm "overdoing the scope", where exactly is the "line" you are proposing that genetics breaks down? Is it a certain number of generations? A certain degree of dissimilarity?

Hans Georg Lundahl
A very clear difference of what kind of creature it is.

In paternity tests a man is compared to a man.

In your misuse, a man is compared to sth which cannot ever learn to actually talk.

Justin Roe
What is the "very clear difference" in the genetics, specifically? There are "very clear differences" between the variety of Homo species you mentioned, hence why they are classified as different species/subspecies. Why stop at antecessor? Is that a fundamentally different "kind" of creature than Homo erectus? Homo habilis? Australopithecines? And do you have any idea whether all of those species had the sort of speech capacity you're using to draw your line?

For fear of waxing repetetive, why is this paper invalid?

Complete sequencing of ape genomes - Nature
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08816-3


April 3rd, 2026
Good Friday

Justin Roe
Make sure to update your blog, sir. Wouldn't want your readers to think I didn't respond.

April 4th, 2026
Holy Saturday

Hans Georg Lundahl
Thank you, I do so at my leisure, and intend to do so when I've responded to your argument.

1) You didn't catch the fact that a sequencing of the genome proves you have a LOT OF empirical evidence, but that it doesn't prove it's RELEVANT for your proposition.
2) How about getting back to speech.

Homo sapiens sapiens, Neanderthals, Denisovans, Homo erectus soloensis, as far as we can tell Antecessors and Heidelbergians too, all were able to speak.

For whatever is applicable as checked, each have human or near human, definitely not simian:

  • FOXP2 genes
  • hyoids
  • ears
  • Broca's area (which leaves marks in the inside of the skull)


Australopithecus and Paranthropus have none of these, and Homo habilis is poor in documentation.

There doesn't seem to be much room on the palaeonthological side either for a transition from non-speech to speech.

Tuesday, 13 May 2025

Entre moi et l'abbé Horovitz sur CÉC § 283


I

De Hans-Georg Lundahl à Olivier Horovitz
5/12/2025 at 6:42 PM
Ceci peut-être pas depuis Vatican II, mais bien ... 1992 (CEC § 283)
§283
La question des origines du monde et de l'homme fait l'objet de nombreuses recherches scientifiques qui ont magnifiquement enrichi nos connaissances sur l'âge et les dimensions du cosmos, le devenir des formes vivantes, l'apparition de l'homme. Ces découvertes nous invitent à admirer d'autant plus la grandeur du Créateur, de lui rendre grâce pour toutes ses oeuvres et pour l'intelligence et la sagesse qu'il donne aux savants et aux chercheurs. Avec Salomon, ceux-ci peuvent dire: «C'est Lui qui m'a donné la science vraie de ce qui est, qui m'a fait connaître la structure du monde et les propriétés des éléments (...) car c'est l'ouvrière de toutes choses qui m'a instruit, la Sagesse» (Sg 7:17-21).


Si le cosmos a 7200 ans, nous ne le connaissons pas à cause de recherches récentes, mais bien de l'une des additions des informations chronologiques de la Bible ... si Dieu a créé Adam directement à partir de la matière inerte, nous ne le connaissons pas de recherches récentes mais à partir de la vision que Dieu communica à Moïse en inspirant grosso modo Genèse 1 (et encore quelque versets du chapitre 2).

Donc, si nous connaissons l'âge du cosmos et l'apparition de l'homme grâce à des recherches scientifiques, ça veut dire que le cosmos n'a pas 7200 ans et qu'Adam, pourvu qu'il existât même, avait des progéniteurs avec une anatomie et un génôme vers le sien, mais qui n'étaient pas l'image de Dieu.

Je tiens ces deux propos comme matériellement hérétiques, incompatibles avec les positions de la Bible, des Pères de l'Église, en passant par Jésus et les Apôtres.

Avant de me citer Fulcran Vigouroux, je vous prie de prendre en compte qu'il pouvait en 1880 ou quelque chose, en écrivant son introduction à l'Ancien Testament, une cosmogonie et géologie protracté de 100 000 ou 1 000 000 ans, mais en même temps un anthropocène à partir de la création d'Adam en chronologie biblique des LXX.

Avant de me citer Pie XII, Humani Generis, je vous prie de prendre en compte qu'il permettait la discussion d'une origine évolutionniste d'Adam (sous certaines conditions) quasi en huis clos ... en d'autres mots, la discussion qu'il permettait était pour des thèses "quae tute doceri non possunt" ... la même qualification qu'on a pour le millénarisme modifié dans une référence que votre même catechisme résume comme "l'Église rejette."

Une fois que vous avez pris ceci en compte, libre à vous de citer les deux ...

Hans Georg Lundahl

II

D'Olivier Horovitz à Hans-Georg Lundahl
5/12/2025 at 7:17 PM
Re :Ceci peut-être pas depuis Vatican II, mais bien ... 1992 (CEC § 283)
Vous ne me donnez pas mon titre d'abbé, j'en conclu donc que vous êtes sédévacantiste !
J'ai pris le temps de lire votre texte, que cherchez vous donc a démontrer?
Que Pie XII est le dernier vrai pape et qu'ensuite l'Eglise a disparu ?
Depuis maintenant 75 ans...!
Les juifs attendent le messie et vous l'Eglise!
Notre Seigneur nous a donc menti! " les portes de l'enfer ne prévaudront pas!

L'Eglise n'a reçu aucune mission de son divin fondateur à trancher des débats scientifiques !
La vraie foi ne peut contredire la vraie science.
Pour ma part je reste satisfait de l'académie des sciences fondée par saint Jean Paul II.
Comme je l'ai souvent dit à maître Abauzit : je ne suis pas le procureur chargé de maître l'Eglise en accusation mais son éternel avocat.

Abbé Horovitz

III

D'Olivier Horovitz à Hans-Georg Lundahl
5/12/2025 at 7:22 PM
Re :Ceci peut-être pas depuis Vatican II, mais bien ... 1992 (CEC § 283)
Je vous rappel également que saint Jean Paul II a conclu concernant l'hypothèse de l'évolution :
Celle ci n'est recevable qu'à deux conditions.
1) il y a une différence de nature et non pas de degré entre l'homme et le singe.
2) il faut parler des évolutions comme d'un phénomène extrêmement complexe.

IV

D'Olivier Horovitz à Hans-Georg Lundahl
5/12/2025 at 7:28 PM
Re :Ceci peut-être pas depuis Vatican II, mais bien ... 1992 (CEC § 283)
Votre ton éminemment doctoral, ainsi que des termes comme "votre catéchisme " ont pour effet de vous déconsidérer particulièrement...
A vous de juger du grotesque de la situation :
Vous niez 75 ans de magistère et vous vous positionnez comme un magistère au dessus du magistère !

V

De Hans-Georg Lundahl à Olivier Horovitz
5/12/2025 at 8:01 PM
Re: Re :Ceci peut-être pas depuis Vatican II, mais bien ... 1992 (CEC § 283)
Après avoir lu les autres, je ne suis pas exactement sédévacantiste.

Encore moins, d'ailleurs, sédéprivationniste :

R. P. Noël Barbara ... hérétique ?

1992 à 2025 n'est pas 75 ans.

L'accusation de se poser "comme un magistère au dessus du magistère" revient à nier la possibilité de trouver un pape destitué ou jamais avenu à partir d'une prêche d'hérésie, contrairement à St. Robert Bellarmin, dont la fête a déjà commencé, mais en plus, j'ai un pape à qui obéir :

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMRj2QJAXcg

Successeur de celui-ci :

Why I am the True Pope with Pope Michael
vatican in exile | 21 March 2022
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jcxnABw20-g


Vous êtes satisfait avec la commission scientifique ?

Je suis censé croire à votre belle mine ?

Attendez, 75 ans, vous prétendez, à tort, que Pape Pie XII aurait enseigné formellement la licéité de l'origine évolutionniste d'Adam ?

Ou vous suivez le magistère de l'archidiocèse, qu'en 1947 le même pape dut reprimer parce que trop évolutionniste ?

Il y a une nette différence entre "c'est licite" et "pour l'instant on n'interdit pas" et encore entre "croire" et "proposer en discussion" ...

Pour moi, la discussion décrite par Pie XII pour la thèse évolutionniste relève d'une description exacte d'une thèse "quae tute doceri non potest" ...

§676
Cette imposture antichristique se dessine déjà dans le monde chaque fois que l'on prétend accomplir dans l'histoire l'espérance messianique qui ne peut s'achever qu'au-delà d'elle à travers le jugement eschatologique: même sous sa forme mitigée, l'Église a rejeté cette falsification du Royaume à venir sous le nom de millénarisme (cf. DS 3839), surtout sous la forme politique d'un messianisme sécularisé, «intrinsèquement perverse» (cf. Pie XI, enc. «Divini Redemptoris» condamnant le «faux mysticisme» de cette «contrefaçon de la rédemption des humbles»; GS 20-21).


l'Église a rejeté cette falsification du Royaume à venir sous le nom de millénarisme (cf. DS 3839)

Que dit DS 3839 ?

3839
Question : Que faut-il penser du système du millénarisme mitigé qui enseigne qu'avant le jugement dernier, précédé ou non de la résurrection de plusieurs justes, le Christ notre Seigneur viendra visiblement sur notre terre pour y régner ?
Réponse (confirmée par le souverain pontife le 2O juillet) : Le système du millénarisme mitigé ne peut pas être enseigné de façon sûre.


Or, il y a eu des conférences pour étudier les matière qui ne peuvent pas être enseignées de façon sûre. Le rév. abbé Houghton en était chef délégué avant le concile en Angleterre.

Et ce qu'il décrit correspond très exactement à la phraséologie utilisé par Pie XII en Humani Generis:

C'est pourquoi le magistère de l'Eglise n'interdit pas que la doctrine de l' " évolution ", dans la mesure où elle recherche l'origine du corps humain à partir d'une matière déjà existante et vivante - car la foi catholique nous ordonne de maintenir la création immédiate des âmes par Dieu - soit l'objet, dans l'état actuel des sciences et de la théologie d'enquêtes et de débats entre les savants de l'un et de l'autre partis : il faut pourtant que les raisons de chaque opinion, celle des partisans comme celle des adversaires, soient pesées et jugées avec le sérieux, la modération et la retenue qui s'imposent; à cette condition que tous soient prêts à se soumettre au jugement de l'Eglise à qui le mandat a été confié par le Christ d'interpréter avec autorité les Saintes Ecritures et de protéger les dogmes de la foi (11).


Exactement ce qu'a vécu l'Abbé Houghton dans la Conférence des Hautes études, pour précisément les thèses "qui ne peuvent pas être enseignées de façon sûre.

Et cette qualification est, pour votre cathéchisme, l'équivalent d'un rejet par l'Église.

Pour l'Église universelle (à part sa réception à l'archidiocèse de Paris) on est très loin d'avoir 75 d'ans de magistère pour la thèse évolutionniste.

1992 était après l'élection de pape Michel I.

Hans Georg Lundahl

VI

D'Olivier Horovitz à Hans-Georg Lundahl
5/12/2025 at 8:30 PM
Re :Re: Re :Ceci peut-être pas depuis Vatican II, mais bien ... 1992 (CEC § 283)
Je vous laisse à votre logorrhée, prétentieuse et incompréhensible pour la plupart des catholiques.
Je regrette le temps de la Sainte Inquisition où l'on savait règler le problème du désordre des hérétiques ! Vous bénéficiez de la Grande miséricorde de l'Eglise. Profitez en!

VII

De Hans-Georg Lundahl à Olivier Horovitz
5/12/2025 at 9:02 PM
Re: Re : Re :Ceci peut-être pas depuis Vatican II, mais bien ... 1992 (CEC § 283)
Subsistit in n'était pas incompréhensible pour pas mal de catholiques, dont Maître Adrien Abauzit, à supposer que Mgr Philippe l'ait expliqué correctement.*

Dans votre réponse, vous parlez de "l'Église catholique se trouve dans le Corps du Christ" mais le texte en français dit :

Cette Église comme société constituée et organisée en ce monde, c’est dans l’Église catholique qu’elle subsiste,


Il y a une raison pourquoi je n'utilise pas LG pour attaquer Vatican II, puisque je connais la connexion sémantique entre "subsiste" et "substance" ... par contre, votre résumé dans la vidéo inverse la relation, et ... il faut avouer que la phrase continue à prêter à la confusion, pas juste parmi sédévacantistes ...

Pour ce qui est de l'Inquisition, je ne pense pas qu'un seul Inquisiteur en 1400 aurait jugé quelqu'un d'hérétique parce qu'il croyait le mauvais pape.

Et nul Inquisiteur non plus aurait accordé de juger quelqu'un d'hérétique parce que la création immédiate d'Adam était cru comme de fide.**

Ce que vous semblez souhaiter, c'est une Inquisition pervertie, et quand à la grande miséricorde, elle m'a été appliquée d'une manière contraignante et appauvrissante ... socialement et financièrement.

Si vous en doutez, contactez les curés de Sainte Anne de la Butte au Caille ou Saint Ambroise dans l'XI, ceux qui ont été impliqués dans l'accueil de matin.

J'écris. Je vise a monétiser mes écrits par publications imprimées de suite de ma publication en ligne (dont l'accès est gratuit), et les premiers intéressés dans un Catholique créationniste jeune terre, c'est à dire la jeunesse catholique, a été plus ou moins cité d'éviter mes écrits, comme si j'étais haereticus vitandus ... sans qu'il y ait eu un jugement.

Prétentieux ? Je prétend en effet être, en dessous de la vérité, et avec, partie lésée ...

Hans Georg Lundahl

* [dans la révision] J'aurais dû mettre un point d'interrogation. N'était pas ... ? = était en effet.
** [dans la lettre même marqué*] Ou l'absence d'années avant sa création comme vérité biblique.

VIII

De Hans-Georg Lundahl à Olivier Horovitz
5/13/2025 at 3:12 PM
Notification de publication + clarifications
Entre moi et l'abbé Horovitz sur CCC § 283

"L'Eglise n'a reçu aucune mission de son divin fondateur à trancher des débats scientifiques !"

Comme, sans doute, le diamètre exact de la Terre, le nombre exact de parties d'un flagelle de bactérie, choses qu'on peut observer assez directement et dont la valeur précise (entre certains paramètres) n'a aucune importance ni pour la foi, ni pour matières annexes.

St. Robert Bellarmin n'avait rien à dire contre les quatres lunes de Jupiter ou de mettre Vénus en orbite autour du Soleil. Et en 1633, Galilée n'a pas abjuré sa lunette.

Mais, désolé, le § 283 pêche alors, si on reste là, justement contre ce principe. Il prétend trancher entre Tychon / Riccioli et Kepler, entre Nicolas Sténon et Charles Lyelle, et entre Charles Darwin et Ken Ham.

Dès ce principe, l'église devrait au minimum laisser la parfaite liberté d'être géocentrique et créationniste jeune terre. Une liberté dont je jouissais en 1988, comme voverti au Vaticandeuxisme, c'est à dire sur ma propre intention à l'Église catholique.

C'était aussi avant l'élection de Michel I.

"logorrhée, prétentieuse et incompréhensible pour la plupart des catholiques."

Je pense que vous pensez à ma démonstration que les conditions pour la discussion, selon Pie XII, correspondent exactement à celles pour la discussion des thèses qui ne peuvent pas être enseignées de façon sûre.

1) Elle sera plus clair pour ceux qui ont lu Prêtre rejeté, par l'abbé Houghton. Certes une minorité parmi les Catholiques.
2) Il dirigea en Angleterre, avant le Concile, une conférence de hautes études, dont le but précis était d'étudier des matières qui ne pouvaient pas être enseignées de façon sûre (c'est une note théologique, un rejet inférieur à "erroné" mais quand même une forme de rejet, probablement synonyme à "téméraire" .... ou avec un ajout "téméraire pour l'instant" ...)
3) Le procédé de cette conférence était ce qui Pie XII décrivit pour la thèse d'une origine évolutionniste d'Adam: entre experts, en huis clos.
4) Quand Pie XII ajoute quasiment la thèse traditionnelle dans le même panier, c'est pour marquer que sa présence devait être là dans les conférences de hautes études. Il n'a pas déterminé que le catéchisme devait être revisé pour rendre l'origine directe d'Adam moins définitive.
5) Preuve supplémentaire, s'il en faut, l'évolution était justement un des thèmes de la conférence de hautes études dirigée par l'abbé Houghton.

DONC, en 1992, quand Wojtyla prétend que Pie XII avait accepté l'origine évolutionniste, en Humani Generis, il fait une lecture à contresens, il se trompe ou il ment.

Car, comme prouvé entre Denzinger 3839 et CCC § 676 la note "ne peut pas être enseigné de façon sûre" est un rejet de l'église. Un rejet faible, peut-être temporaire, mais au moins pour l'instant un rejet. Et donc pas une acceptation.

Hans Georg Lundahl

Friday, 20 September 2024

Continuing debate with David C. Campbell on YEC, OE, Palaeontology


HGL's F.B. writings: Debate on Geology · Creation vs. Evolution: 4.5 Billion Years Worth of Nuclear Decay, Before the End of Day Three? · Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl: Continuing debate with David C. Campbell on YEC, OE, Palaeontology · Continued Debate with David C. Campbell · Mr. Campbell is Back · Mr. Campbell. Can you guess? Is. Back.

FB mail exchange with David C. Campbell

Friday 22:20,
6.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
Good day!

Are you a palaeontologist?

If so, one Jeffrey (presumably Greenberg sent me to you:

Debate on Geology
https://hglsfbwritings.blogspot.com/2024/09/debate-on-geology.html


LD 20:47,
8.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
Yes, I am a paleontologist. My research emphasizes mollusks, with most experience in the southeastern US. However, having worked in museums and done plenty of reading, I am familiar with global paleontology. As with all other areas of geology, paleontology clearly contradicts the claims of modern young-earth creationism.

Monday 21:30,
9.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
OK.

One YEC which I don't know how Palaeontology is supposed to contradict, is this.

During the Flood, most bigger fossils that are recognisable (like a T Rex or a Procynosuchus delaharpeae looking like a T Rex or a Procynosuchus delaharpeae) would have been buried in situ.

This means, land fauna would have been buried on the places that were land in pre-Flood times. As to aquatic fauna, it could be buried above land, if floating into an area during the Flood before getting killed, but they could not be below land fauna, and they could not alternative with land fauna.

Land fauna being on the single land surface could not have several levels of itself, for instance, no Procynosuchus delaharpeae from the Permian straight below a T Rex from the Jurassic.

Exactly where on earth do we find land fauna contradicting this prediction?

Tuesday 15:05
10.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
Land or freshwater and ocean fauna alternate in many parts of the world. Historically, the classic example is the Paris Basin, surveyed by Cuvier and Brongniart in the late 1700's. But most coastal parts of the world have some alternation between land and ocean deposits. For example, all of Florida has oceanic rock, with patches of later land deposits, and sometimes back and forth is preserved. The midwestern US has Paleozoic ocean rocks with Pleistocene land faunas. Much of the classic western North American area for dinosaurs and large land mammals has some alternation of ocean and land deposits, with land deposits above ocean. Occasional land animals wash out into the ocean as well.

Likewise, many areas have multiple layers of land and freshwater faunas, one above another. The Triassic to Jurassic rift basins along the eastern US have multiple layers of land deposits. Some have younger land and ocean layers alternating above them. Many coal deposits have many layers of land and freshwater deposits associated with them. The Badlands area of South Dakota has multiple land layers, as do the Mesozoic and early Cenozoic land deposits in areas famous for dinosaurs in the western US. It is actually extremely common to have marine sedimentary rocks below terrestrial sedimentary rocks.

Thursday 02:31,
12.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
"Many coal deposits have many layers of land and freshwater deposits associated with them."

Could this be because floating log mats are identified as land layers when they became coal?

Obviously, even if coal is floating log mats in the Flood, it won't be just the logs, it will be some other land biota along with it ... or did I misunderstand what you were saying?

But I'd appreciate if you dropped "many" and concentrated on one clear example.

"The Triassic to Jurassic rift basins along the eastern US have multiple layers of land deposits. Some have younger land and ocean layers alternating above them."

Alternating at what angle, and how many of the land layers include actual land vertebrate fauna?

Again, one clear example is more instructive than a broad range of applications to a sweeping statement.

"It is actually extremely common to have marine sedimentary rocks below terrestrial sedimentary rocks."

In how many cases does this involve actual vertebrate fauna in each layer and this at angles, like more vertical than 45° ideally?

Friday 00:14
13.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
No, the floating mat model is not compatible either with flood geology or actual geological evidence. Flood geology implies violently catastrophic flooding which would melt the earth, which is not compatible with floating mats with trees and land animals. Also, coal seams commonly do have roots extanding into the ground under them; although some of the plant material moved around some (such as washing into the ocean), much coal shows ample evidence of being depostied in place.

Vertebrate faunas are present in multiple layers on top of each other in many parts of the world. Classic examples include the Badlands of South Dakota and the Jurassic to early Cenozoic layers of the prime dinosaur-hunting regions of the western US and Canada. In these areas, often they layers are largley flat; however, they are extremely tilted in places such as along the front of the Rockies in central Colorado.

Friday 13:21
13.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
"Flood geology implies violently catastrophic flooding which would melt the earth,"

Alleged consequence =/= obvious implication.

"Also, coal seams commonly do have roots extanding into the ground under them;"

A log mat which was uprooted from original place would probably get some roots into as yet soft mud during the Flood.

"although some of the plant material moved around some (such as washing into the ocean), much coal shows ample evidence of being depostied in place."

How would you know the difference between deposition in place and deposition after floating around as a log mat?

"Vertebrate faunas are present in multiple layers on top of each other in many parts of the world."

Many parts of the world is not one place.

"Classic examples include the Badlands of South Dakota"

What exact place there involves digging down and finding a "later-period" fossil, and digging further down and finding an "earlier-period" fossil? Specifically land vertebrate.

Land non-vertebrates are often small enough to remain intact even if not deposited in situ and aquatic vertebrates we would expect several layers on top of each other, we would expect for instance sharks over trilobites and Mosasaurs or whales over sharks. So, two of more layers of land vertebrates. On top of each other.

"In these areas, often they layers are largley flat;"

I'm specifically looking for flat, non-tilted layers. The lower discovery through further digging.

"however, they are extremely tilted in places such as along the front of the Rockies in central Colorado."

Apart from the fact I wasn't looking for tilted, how would you diagnose layers as tilted in those parts?

Friday 23:41
13.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
The modern creation science movement originated in the mid-1800s, with the misapplication of “Enlightenment” bias to the Bible and claiming that the Bible had to be talking about science to be true. It reflects a misinterpretation of selected verses rather than a thorough effort to understand either Scripture or creation. Throughout the early church and medieval times, various ideas about the age of the earth were discussed in the church. As geologic study began to look at evidence for the age of the earth in the mid-1600’s, it gradually became more and more obvious that immense amounts of time were required to explain what was observed. This was not generally seen as a problem for the Bible. The “history” claimed by atheists and young-earthers is not true.

"Flood geology implies violently catastrophic flooding which would melt the earth," Alleged consequence =/= obvious implication.

In order to have all of the plate tectonic motion recorded in the geological record fitting into a single year, the heat required would melt the earth. The energy required to supply or remove enough water to flood the earth would produce enough heat to melt the earth. Speeding up radiometric decay as advocated in the RATE project would produce enough heat to melt the earth (which they admit but ignore). These are not alleged consequences. But the implications are indeed obvious.

“ "Also, coal seams commonly do have roots extanding into the ground under them;" A log mat which was uprooted from original place would probably get some roots into as yet soft mud during the Flood.

First, you need to have a coherent model for the Flood and demonstrate what would actually happen under those circumstances rather than claiming that it could do anything you want it to. If the continents are zipping around at 45 mph, log mats don’t have a chance. If the flood is calm enough to have a mat, you can’t have all the violent geologic events squeezed into a short period of time. Second, many coal layers have soil layers with extensive evidence of roots under them, not merely the occasional root that could be squashed into them after deposition. Yes, it is possible to tell the difference. You also need to consider whether you are applying the same standard of proof to the young-earth claims as you are to honest biblical old-earth geology.

“Many parts of the world is not one place. “ No, it’s lots of places. And each one has the pattern that you are claiming doesn’t exist.

“"Classic examples include the Badlands of South Dakota" What exact place there involves digging down and finding a "later-period" fossil, and digging further down and finding an "earlier-period" fossil? Specifically land vertebrate. Land non-vertebrates are often small enough to remain intact even if not deposited in situ and aquatic vertebrates we would expect several layers on top of each other, we would expect for instance sharks over trilobites and Mosasaurs or whales over sharks. So, two of more layers of land vertebrates. On top of each other.

Multiple layers of land vertebrates are found throughout the upper western Great Plains regions. On top of each other. https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2003/0035/pdf/of03-35.pdf is an overview of the stratigraphy at Badlands National Park. The marine Pierre Shale and Fox Hills Formation (with major changes in the types of fossils found in them as you go up through the layers) are overlain by multiple layers of land and freshwater deposits with many land vertebrates.

Further west (much of eastern Montana, for example), the Judith River Formation, a famous dinosaur-bearing layer, is under the Bearpaw marine deposit, followed by more dinosaurs in the terrestrial Hell Creek Formation.

“"In these areas, often they layers are largley flat;" I'm specifically looking for flat, non-tilted layers. The lower discovery through further digging. "however, they are extremely tilted in places such as along the front of the Rockies in central Colorado." Apart from the fact I wasn't looking for tilted, how would you diagnose layers as tilted in those parts?

You mentioned tilted in your previous post. Given that dinosaurs did not simply walk up a steep muddy slope, the tilting of the layers is quite apparent at Dinosaur Ridge (https://dinoridge.org/visit-dinosaur-ridge/dinosaur-ridge-trail/ ). Also, the ridge has Jurassic land vertebrate layers overlain by Cretaceous land layers with the trackways.

Saturday 14:24
Feast of Holy Cross
14.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
History of ideas is closer to my field than to yours.

"The modern creation science movement originated in the mid-1800s, with the misapplication of “Enlightenment” bias to the Bible and claiming that the Bible had to be talking about science to be true."

In fact, no such thing.

"It reflects a misinterpretation of selected verses rather than a thorough effort to understand either Scripture or creation. Throughout the early church and medieval times, various ideas about the age of the earth were discussed in the church."

Yes, whether LXX or Vulgate was the better key to Genesis 5 and 11. Whether the creation days were 168 hours or just one (nano-)second, possibly followed by gestation time. How to count the years in between Exodus and Temple. How many years did the kingdom of Judah last. Did Jesus come in Daniel's 63rd of 61st week. How long after the captivity was the start of the weeks. But NOT wether the days could be longer periods, that's a misreading for them corresponding to longer periods after Adam sinned (and yes, Jesus came and remade man in the sixth of these).

"As geologic study began to look at evidence for the age of the earth in the mid-1600’s, it gradually became more and more obvious that immense amounts of time were required to explain what was observed."

Steno was a Flood geologist. James Hutton was a Deist, and he wrote on Siccar point in 1788.

"This was not generally seen as a problem for the Bible. The “history” claimed by atheists and young-earthers is not true."

About Protestantism. All through the 19th C. from Lyell to the 1890's, we Catholics defended Young Earth Creationism (as the traditional doctrine), Day-Age AND Gap Theories. All pious Catholics agreed that the history of man at least was the Biblical history from Adam on, that Abraham lived some time between 2000 to 3000 + (perhaps a bit beyond that, but not by too much) after Creation of man. Carbon dating now puts this in conflict with any Old Earth theory, but in a YEC setting, with atmosphere being young, this is still feasible.

I do not have this history from Atheists or from YEC but from the article Hexaëmeron by the Jesuit Mangenot in 1920, in Paris, he rejected all three and introduced sth very close to Framework Hypothesis.

"In order to have all of the plate tectonic motion recorded in the geological record fitting into a single year, the heat required would melt the earth."

I suppose you mean things like motion from Pangaea and Gondwana? Because I'd dispute that this was the actual configuration of continents prior to the Flood. I would also dispute that the tectonic motion ceased just after the Flood, I would on the contrary say significant motion continued up to Babel times (350 to 401 after the Flood).

Plus, the plates would anyway be gliding over molten magma. Hence my underlining that the consequence is alleged.

"Speeding up radiometric decay as advocated in the RATE project would produce enough heat to melt the earth (which they admit but ignore)."

Not if it was limited to certain quantities of Uranium. And even then I'd extend the "quicker process" far beyond the single year.

"an overview of the stratigraphy at Badlands National Park."

Can't open it in this library.

"the Judith River Formation, a famous dinosaur-bearing layer, is under the Bearpaw marine deposit, followed by more dinosaurs in the terrestrial Hell Creek Formation."

I know enough about Hell Creek to know that a Formation is not a place, nor is it restricted to a place.

"You mentioned tilted in your previous post."

I think you misunderstood sth else.

// In how many cases does this involve actual vertebrate fauna in each layer and this at angles, like more vertical than 45° ideally? //

I didn't mean the verticality within a single layer (which if so would be very tilted). I meant verticality between the layers, so as to exclude that the "different layers" are biotopes side by side. I mean, if you dig down one metre and find a Stegosaur, and then you find a Dimetrodon ten metres below the Stegosaur, I would like the Dimetrodon to be straight under the Stegosaur, not further away from the vertical line than ten metres.

"Also, the ridge has Jurassic land vertebrate layers overlain by Cretaceous land layers with the trackways."

Are the Cretaceous layers also involving land vertebrates? Or does "trackways" just mean footprints?

Monday 23:34
16.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
Not just the difference between the LXX and Masoretic. Many Christians advocated the idea that creation was eternal, yet created; they thought that God as Creator needed a corresponding creation. Others thought that the time of creation was a finite, but vast, time back into the past, with no clear evidence of the date. Others thought that the time since the days of Genesis 1 through 2:3 was fairly completely accounted for in Scripture, but within that there were some who thought that the chaos of Genesis 1:2 might have lasted for a noticeable amount of time before the 7 days and some who did not. The Fourth Lateran Council rejected the idea of a co-eternal creation, though that did not prevent people from continuing to talk about the idea, but the other options remained within the range of western orthodoxy. Ivano Dal Prete’s On the Edge of Eternity. The Antiquity of the Earth in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Oxford University Press, 2022 goes into detail with many examples of ancient earth ideas in pre-modern Europe.

Steno did not hold to modern Flood Geology. But he did not follow up beyond his initial publications. A wide range of workers studied geology in the late 1600’s through the later 1700’s, building on Steno’s (and others’) ideas. For example, one priest noted that the lava flow from the roughly 200-year old flow on Mount Etna still looked pretty fresh. But digging for a well found a series of seven layers where a lava flow had covered soil that had weathered from an older flow. He guessed that each of those must have taken at least a couple thousand years. And the volcano is on top of some rather young geologic layers. Another priest objected to this suggestion. The papal authorities investigated, found that the old-earther was right, and formally suppressed the claims of the young-earther in the latest 1700’s.

Carbon dating supports a biblical timeline. Before Abraham, there is not enough detail to definitely say that particular archaeological remains match with particular parts of the Bible. But Abraham’s world is recognizably early second millennium BC in the Near East. Carbon dating confirms that somebody burned down impressive buildings in the late 900’s BC – Pharoah Shishak raiding Rehoboam and Jeroboam (and bragging about it in hieroglyphics), that Hezekiah’s tunnel was built in Hezekiah’s time, etc. While demonstrating that certain young-earth claims about changing decay rates are untrue, this doesn’t say much else about age of the earth before Abraham.

“Because I'd dispute that this was the actual configuration of continents prior to the Flood. I would also dispute that the tectonic motion ceased just after the Flood, I would on the contrary say significant motion continued up to Babel times (350 to 401 after the Flood).”

The evidence of past plate motion is based on a wide range of evidence, with a series of multiple supercontinents; Pangea being the most recent. No, moving continents on magma does not speed them up enough to make a young-earth view possible. Besides, cooling that magma in a few thousand years doesn’t work. You do not have any valid geological reason to dispute that was the configuration of the continents; you are simply rejecting it because it conflicts with young-earth claims. You need to critically examine all the evidence. Basic laws of thermodynamics, the ones that young-earthers like to claim pose challenges for evolution, are what tell us that creation science models would melt the earth. Dismissing all the evidence as alleged does not make it sound like you are seriously considering it.

"Speeding up radiometric decay as advocated in the RATE project would produce enough heat to melt the earth (which they admit but ignore)." Not if it was limited to certain quantities of Uranium. And even then I'd extend the "quicker process" far beyond the single year.

Speeding up radiometric decay alters very basic laws of physics. Atoms can’t exist if you change the laws. You can’t just play around with the numbers because you want them to fit a young earth; you have to seriously examine what the actual consequences would be. There’s more thorium than uranium around, as well as plenty of potassium-40 and hundreds of other radioactive isotopes. All of the isotopes that last long enough to give any information about the age of the earth point to ages older than is compatible with young-earth claims.

“I know enough about Hell Creek to know that a Formation is not a place, nor is it restricted to a place.” No, it is found in lots of places. Where the next layer down, the Bearpaw, is also exposed, the one underneath is marine and the Hell Creek has land fauna. That’s what you said shouldn’t exist in a flood model. You need to recognize that the geologic record does clearly show land deposits on top of ocean deposits and different land deposits on top of other land deposits, and either come up with a revised flood model or admit that you don’t currently have a good model. How could your flood produce layers with totally different marine life, one layer after another? You need to develop specific models, see if they work, and make corrections.

Right at Dinosaur Ridge, the Stegosaurus bones and other Jurassic fossils (including some footprints) are under a layer with Cretaceous footprints. Elsewhere you can find Cretaceous bones in the layers above the Jurassic bones, but I don’t know if there are Cretaceous bones right at Dinosaur Ridge.

Tuesday 15:28
17.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
I have not read the book by Ivano Dal

"Many Christians advocated the idea that creation was eternal, yet created; they thought that God as Creator needed a corresponding creation."

Wait, are we talking Christians in general or Christians of the type considered authoritative by Catholics as in Church Fathers, Doctors and at least saints?

Averroism was condemned by Tempier as much as it was refuted by St. Thomas.

"Others thought that the time of creation was a finite, but vast, time back into the past, with no clear evidence of the date."

I've heard a rumour Jerome thought this about spiritual creatures, but have no trace of this applying to material creation.

"Others thought that the time since the days of Genesis 1 through 2:3 was fairly completely accounted for in Scripture, but within that there were some who thought that the chaos of Genesis 1:2 might have lasted for a noticeable amount of time before the 7 days and some who did not."

From modern Geology this is the position of one school in three. Cardinal Wiseman.

"The Fourth Lateran Council rejected the idea of a co-eternal creation, though that did not prevent people from continuing to talk about the idea, but the other options remained within the range of western orthodoxy."

I defy you to prove Gap Theory so ... if you have the book, you'll know what authors he spoke of.

"Steno did not hold to modern Flood Geology. But he did not follow up beyond his initial publications."

He had other fish to fry, getting Lutherans of Northern Europe back into the Catholic Church and dying from hardships on the road.

"A wide range of workers studied geology in the late 1600’s through the later 1700’s, building on Steno’s (and others’) ideas. For example, one priest noted that the lava flow from the roughly 200-year old flow on Mount Etna still looked pretty fresh. But digging for a well found a series of seven layers where a lava flow had covered soil that had weathered from an older flow. He guessed that each of those must have taken at least a couple thousand years. And the volcano is on top of some rather young geologic layers. Another priest objected to this suggestion. The papal authorities investigated, found that the old-earther was right, and formally suppressed the claims of the young-earther in the latest 1700’s."

Names would be helpful. Late 1700's?

"Carbon dating supports a biblical timeline. Before Abraham, there is not enough detail to definitely say that particular archaeological remains match with particular parts of the Bible. But Abraham’s world is recognizably early second millennium BC in the Near East."

Genesis 14 is recognisably carbon dated to 3500 BC.

The fact that Abraham's pharao was willing to even talk of Abraham's God suggests that he was a very early one, well before Pharaos and Khemetic priests became a very well oiled team overall (with some subteams competing).

"Carbon dating confirms that somebody burned down impressive buildings in the late 900’s BC"

I consider carbon dating reached the point of coincidence between real dates and dated dates at around the Trojan War, 1180 BC.

"The evidence of past plate motion is based on a wide range of evidence, with a series of multiple supercontinents; Pangea being the most recent."

Your sentence conflates evidence and explanation. These are opposite ends of the spectrum.

"No, moving continents on magma does not speed them up enough to make a young-earth view possible."

I have your word for it ... no calculation, however.

1) Moving on magma
2) Moving far less.

I have not seen calculations showing the problem persists.

"Besides, cooling that magma in a few thousand years doesn’t work."

I don't think you followed my proposal at all. I'm far from saying it has cooled.

"You do not have any valid geological reason to dispute that was the configuration of the continents; you are simply rejecting it because it conflicts with young-earth claims."

Or those of Bible and Tradition .... somewhat weightier than I.

"critically examine all the evidence. Basic laws ... would melt the earth ... all the evidence"

Extremely big talk. Exactly zero calculations, even such I'd find hard to follow.

"does not make it sound like you are seriously considering it."

I reserve my right to consider things flippantly, if it suits me. Especially if you are flippant enough to claim calculations you refuse to show.

"Speeding up radiometric decay alters very basic laws of physics. Atoms can’t exist if you change the laws."

I think there are quite a few known factors that can speed up decay without altering the laws of physics.

"you have to seriously examine what the actual consequences would be."

I did that with carbon 14 after hearing that kind of big claims about a speeded carbon 14 production nuke frying vertebrate life. In the end it was the Evolution side that gave up:

Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl : Other Check on Carbon Buildup
Thursday 23 November 2017, Posted by Hans Georg Lundahl at 09:23
https://correspondentia-ioannis-georgii.blogspot.com/2017/11/other-check-on-carbon-buildup.html


"There’s more thorium than uranium around,"

Thorium - Lead does perhaps not need Speeded up decay, could be the Lead that was there to start with (no Thorium in Zircons)

"as well as plenty of potassium-40 and hundreds of other radioactive isotopes."

How much of the argon in potassium argon dating has been verified as argon 40? I consider argon trapped from the air to be a clear option.

"All of the isotopes that last long enough to give any information about the age of the earth point to ages older than is compatible with young-earth claims."

I consider genealogies better suited than isotopes to tell us the age of the Earth, like Genesis 5 and 11.

You have not offered a total amount of what is there and what was there before decay, I think it's hard to pinpoint one.

"Where the next layer down, the Bearpaw, is also exposed, the one underneath is marine and the Hell Creek has land fauna. That’s what you said shouldn’t exist in a flood model."

I am not speaking of layers in lots of places. I am speaking of lots of layers in a place, each with palaeofauna. What location do you find Hell Creek on top, dig further down and find Bearpaw?

If it's just a matter of walking, we could be tracing a pre-Flood coastline.

"How could your flood produce layers with totally different marine life, one layer after another?"

For Grand Canyon, I already have a model. Invertebrates were swept about in diverse parts of the Flood and from diverse sources that then deposited on top of each other.

"Right at Dinosaur Ridge, the Stegosaurus bones and other Jurassic fossils (including some footprints) are under a layer with Cretaceous footprints."

I'll take the words at max value. One surge of the Flood buried the Stegosaur. Then in shallow waters a Cretaceous creature tried wading on top of the mud ...

"Elsewhere you can find Cretaceous bones in the layers above the Jurassic bones, but I don’t know if there are Cretaceous bones right at Dinosaur Ridge."

Where would be helpful.

One more:

"Steno did not hold to modern Flood Geology."

Neither did the author of Gletscher oder Sintflut. A Catholic priest.

Modern Flood Geologists do admit there was an Ice Age.

Wednesday 16:43
18.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
But not honestly. The geologic record indicates mutliple ice ages through geologic time, and multiple advances and retreats of ice during the most recent one. In the YEC ice age, glaciers advanced from Greenland to Kansas and retreated back within a few hundred years. It's ridiculous and not compatible with the geological evidence. Rather, it's merely an effort to keep fooling people even if they've heard of an ice age.

Thursday 03:25
19.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
If I were to say such a thing about Evolutionists, perhaps even AronRa who probably introduced the heat problem, I'd be stamped right away as a conspiracy theorist.

"The geologic record indicates"

You mean the geologic remains are compatible with being interpreted as ...

"In the YEC ice age, glaciers advanced from Greenland to Kansas and retreated back within a few hundred years. It's ridiculous"

Not if there were drastic changes in temperature.

I'd say the weather was cooled by ionising particles results of the same increase in cosmic radiation that also decreased lifespans and that also increased the carbon 14 content. This was at its most intense in the Ice Age, reaching production levels of C-14 20 times as fast as now.

By the Trojan War, 1779 years after the Flood, the pmC was up at 100 for the first time in world history.

"and not compatible with the geological evidence."

Would you mind telling me what geologic evidence clearly shows that Riss and Würm were different periods?

I note that you have (at least for the moment) left superposition of land vertebrate faunas aside ...

Thursday 23:07
19.IX.2024
David C. Campbell
Well, you weren't listening on the superposition of land faunas. There's Triassic land faunas on top of Permian in South Africa, for example. At Tar Heel, NC, there's a layer with Cretaceous land plants and occasional dinosaur material under multiple different marine layers, followed by a layer with land mammal bones. The Triassic basins in central North Carolina have a series of three formations with assorted land vertebrates, one on top of the other.

For the Pleistocene ice ages, there are many places where traces of one ice age is overlain by another, demonstrating that they were separate glacial intervals. Likewise, we have deposits that reflect the up and down of sea level as glaciers melt and grow. This also affects the ratios of 18Oto 16O, which can be traced back and forth through time. The youngest glacial advance has meaningful 14C dates associated with it; the others are all to background. The patterns of glaciers advancing and retreating match the Milankovitch cycles in Earth's orbit, each cycle taking from about 20,000 to 100,000 years. (We can see how fast each is changing today to calculate the cycle lengths).

No, changing temperature fast enough to send glaciers back and forth from Greenland to Kansas and back in 500 years is not reasonable. If you want to be credible, examine your models, rather uncritically accepting anything young-earth and inventing bad excuses to ignore the evidence. An honest young-earth position has to admit to problems.

Friday 06:01
20.IX.2024
Vous avez envoyé
"Well, you weren't listening on the superposition of land faunas."

I totally was. YOU are the one who weren't listening to my actual question.

I specified, I think more than once, that in order for me to admit that X is above Y, I don't ask whether the wharves surrounding X get above the wharves surrounding Y at some horizontal point between X and Y as you walk from X to Y.

In order for me to admit that X is above Y, I want you to dig a whole that get's down to X and a little deeper down gets to Y. The angle in you dig down between the layers should ideally not exceed 45 °.

"There's Triassic land faunas on top of Permian in South Africa, for example."

No, there ain't no such thing. I actually CHECKED.

"At Tar Heel, NC, there's a layer with Cretaceous land plants and occasional dinosaur material under multiple different marine layers, followed by a layer with land mammal bones."

In that case, the land mammal bones could be a post-Flood layer. The marine layers flooded the land plants and dino material before getting buried in mud themselves.

It could also be it was marine in pre-Flood times if the dino material is very fragmentary.

"For the Pleistocene ice ages, there are many places where traces of one ice age is overlain by another, demonstrating that they were separate glacial intervals."

1) How would that be diagnosed in the terrain?
2) How would you tell the difference between a progression, regression and reprogression of an ice cap at millions and at decades of a distance? The one radio-method that actually is relatively giving dates the right order is lacking for all except the last ice age, and the non-carbon methods one could use for Riss are totally moot.

"The youngest glacial advance has meaningful [C-14] C dates associated with it; the others are all to background."

Well, that would be the post-Flood ice age. In my view, between 2957 BC and 2607 BC when the Younger Dryas ended. The carbon dates would be 39,000 BP respectively 9500 BC

"(We can see how fast each is changing today to calculate the cycle lengths)."

Except this is what one would call an extrapolation from the present and into a non-extant past. The Milankovich point that you associate with the Last Ice Age would be before Creation, and the real reason is something else.

"No, changing temperature fast enough to send glaciers back and forth from Greenland to Kansas and back in 500 years is not reasonable."

In 350 years on my view.

When the production of C-14 was 20 times faster than today how much would that change temperatures due to ionising particles?

During the Little Ice Age (c. 1300 to 1800 AD), C-14 production was faster than today, and that only so much that raw carbon dates are about a century off.

"If you want to be credible, examine your models, rather uncritically accepting anything young-earth"

If you imagine I'm "uncritically accepting" and "not examining" the models proposed by the big YEC organisations, you are deluded. If you had said this face to face to me, I'd probably have hit you in the face and called you "gubbfan" in Swedish. You are an old man, possibly attained by sclerosis or very early Alzheimer since you UNCRITICALLY take over this view of me from other men YOUR generation. When I was a child, I could reasonably expect that once I was 20, I'd be treated as an adult. Today, I'm treated as an immature teen when I am 56, by people who are probably above 70, maybe 80, and enjoy the power of infantilising others that their social leverage can give them. Why didn't you make a quiverfull instead of trying to treat other people's sons like your own?

What the likes of YOU find credible is without relevance to me. YOU are not credible about South Africa. Did you really miss my link in response to Jeff Greenberg about my correspondence with South Africa?

Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl : Contacting Karoo about superposition of layers and fossils
https://correspondentia-ioannis-georgii.blogspot.com/2015/06/contacting-karoo-about-superposition-of.html


If you wish to mentor people, do so with people who are still immature enough to want a mentor and also gullible enough to trust you.

"and inventing bad excuses to ignore the evidence."

I'm not ignoring any evidence. I simply not subscribing to your conclusions about it. Often enough presented without your offering even a small resumé about what the evidence (the factors in the ground, for instance) is.

"An honest young-earth position has to admit to problems."

Admitting to problems and admitting I have sinned have one thing in common. The problems for YEC as I see them, and the sins I have committed as I see them, may not be the problems you wish to present me, and not be the sins some Evangelicals would credit me with.


I sent him a link to this, somewhat belatedly, he responded, not sure if one should say "graciously" given I had expressed a desire to punch him, or very ungraciously, given he continues the provication. Upcoming on 3.X, day of St. Therese of the Child Jesus and of the Holy Face.

Sunday, 27 March 2022

Über Claesemanns Theorien mit Tradis in Hamburg


I
Ich an P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX
2/5/2022 at 1:59 PM
Ist Stefan Claesemann ein Gläubiger des Priorats Hl. Theresa von Avila, Hamburg?
Wenn nicht, dann warscheinlich Sedevacantist, auch Hamburg.

Wir theilen einen Einsatz für die Historizität der Bibel, aber sie sieht bei uns verschieden aus, ich denke der Seine ist aus wissenschaftlicher Sicht nur schlecht möglich, wärend meiner noch keine Widerlegung fand.

Aber, entscheiden Sie selbst, hier sind unsere Auseinandersetzungen:

HGL'S F.B. WRITINGS: Somewhat Sectarian Style, Semel · Somewhat Sectarian Style, bis · Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl: No Answer from Dr. Liebi, So Far? · Stefan Claesemann tries to take it in private with me · Creation vs. Evolution : Let's Carbon Test Stefan Claesemann's ChronologyCorrecting the Test]*

Er behauptet zwar nicht, aber impliziert einen Aufstieg des C-14-Halts von 1,4 bis 100 pmC in höchstens 507 Jahren oder sogar noch nur 367, wenn es ihm ernst ist um Mentuhotep III als Pharao Abrahams, ich behaupte direct einen solchen Aufstieg in 1772 Jahren.

Er hat die Masoretisch-Vulgate Chronologie, Abraham geboren 292 nach der Sintflut, ich den kürzeren LXX (ohne 2. Kainan), Abraham geboren 942 nach der Flut.

Er identifiziert den reellen Alter Sesostris III mit dem C-14-Alter, und macht ihn zum Pharao Josephs, ich identifiziere erst den Fall Trojas C-14-Zeit mit reeller, and mache Sesostris III zum Pharao gestorben 1590 v. Chr. - um die Geburt Mosens.

Einzelkeiten dazu in dem letzten Theil obiger Serie.

Hans Georg Lundahl

* Fußnote
Correcting the Test wurde später zugefügt. Siehe nächsten Brief.

II
Ich an P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX
2/18/2022 at 2:35 PM
Ist Stefan Claesemann etc. Fortsetzung
Ich entdeckte einen Rechenfehler in mein Let's Carbon Test Stefan Claesemann's Chronology - Von Sintflut an Joseph in Ägypten habe ich 292 + 215 Jahre Masoretische Chronologie gerechnet, es sollte aber sein 292 + 75 + 215.

Mit der Berichtigung nahm ich den Entschluß die mathematische Überprüfung zu wiederholen, mit der Berichtigung berücksichtigt. Hier : Correcting the Test

Auch wenn Stefan Claesemann nicht ein Gläubiger des Priorats hl. Theresa von Avila ist, finde ich, Sie sollten es auch mal lesen.

Daß ich ihn für entweder FSSPX oder Sedevacante halte, schließe ich von hier, seinen Worten:

I have become traditional catholic and get bloody eyes reading the 2004 Martyrologium as proving evidence for the by Paul prophecised fall away from faith by my church in the end times.

I love the Latin Mass and know that the old Martyrologium is partly very near to the unfalsified biblical dates.


Daß er in Hamburg wohnt steht auf sein FB-Profil.

Und die Ursache Ihres Schweigens, was soll ich daraus schließen?

Hans Georg Lundahl

III
P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX an mich
2/23/2022 at 7:35 PM
Re: Ist Stefan Claesemann etc. Fortsetzung
Sehr geehrter Hr. Lundahl,
Vielen Dank für Ihren Hinweis. Sie haben Recht, dass Sie nachfragen, warum ich Ihnen erst jetzt - auf Ihre bereits zweite Email - antworte. Ich bitte um Verzeihung, dass ich Sie so lange warten ließ.
Die Ursache, erst heute mein Schweigen zu brechen und Ihnen eine Antwort zu schreiben, resultiert aus der Größe der Gemeinde, die ich zurzeit betreue, und meiner weiteren Aufgaben in der Gemeinde an meinem Wohnort. Mein Schweigen war und ist kein Zeichen von Desinteresse an der Frage, sondern schlicht und ergreifend meine aktuell mich sehr in Anspruch nehmenden Aufgaben. Ich hoffe, Sie können mir noch einmal verzeihen.
Über ein persönliches Kennenlernen würde ich mich sehr freuen - falls Ihnen genehm.
In jedem Fall Ihnen alles Gute und Gottes Segen,
Ihr P. Roling

IV
Ich an P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX
2/24/2022 at 11:35 AM
Re: Ist Stefan Claesemann etc. Fortsetzung
Herzlichen Dank!

Ich weiß nun mal nicht wo Stefan Claesemann wohnt, außer auf FB steht "Hamburg". Selbst lebe ich in Paris.

Ich hätte nichts gegen einen Briefewechsel, aber würde mich dabei vorbehalten gelegentlich bei einer Uneinigkeit (und auch bei Einighkeit wenn Ihnen genehm, aber da ist kein Vorbehalt in dem Fall) den Briefewechsel auf meinen Blog copiieren zu können.

http://correspondentia-ioannis-georgii.blogspot.com/

Ich bin ehemahliger der FSSPX, immer noch einfacher Gläubiger, und will es bleiben, jetzt Anhänger an Pabst Michael (auch ehem. der FSSPX).

Was wollen Sie näher wissen?

Hans Georg Lundahl

V
P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX an mich
2/24/2022 at 2:34 PM
Re: Ist Stefan Claesemann etc. Fortsetzung
Sehr geehrter Hr. Lundahl,

Vielleicht können Sie Hr. Clasemann über FB direkt fragen, wo er zur Kirche geht? Wäre zumindest eine Idee...

Ich muss Ihnen auch gestehen - das habe ich dann in der Email doch noch vergessen, klar zu sagen - dass ich seinen und Ihren Text noch nicht gelesen habe, sodass ich gar nicht in der Lage bin, in dieser Sache Fragen stellen zu können. Sobald ich mich näher damit befasst haben werde und noch Fragen offen sind, würde ich mich dann wieder bei Ihnen melden. Bis dahin bitte ich Sie, keine Emails oder Briefe von mir zu veröffentlichen. Vielen Dank.

Alles Gute und Gottes Segen,

Ihr P. Roling

VI
Ich an P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX
3/1/2022 at 11:31 AM
Re: Ist Stefan Claesemann etc. Fortsetzung
Ist Laetare-Sonntag eine gute Frist?

P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX an mich
Ich an P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX
P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX an mich
Ich an P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX
P. Matthias Rohling, FSSPX an mich

Friday, 4 March 2022

With Hugh Owen, Mainly on Improving Catholic Creation Research, but Also on My Situation


I
HGL to Hugh Owen
12/27/2021 at 5:57 PM
Kennedy Report
I am watching Forrest Valkai trying to debunk a section of The Kennedy Report. Here is were I stopped Forrest Valkai's video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJnhRQjPD9U&t=1106s

Random mutations do not all look like what he saw on the orphanage.

a) Some mutations, while indeed losses of information, are nevertheless beneficial. FV could very easily give the example of lactase persistence, eye colour, skin colour, speed for accumulating fat and muscle ...
b) What he saw would normally have been not locus mutations, but "chromosome mutations" - things that change the karyotype, one of the best known examples of which is Downs, three chromosomes 21 instead of 2. And chromosome mutations are indeed handicap, cancer, death before birth (three examples of the latter : trisomy 1, trisomy 3, tetraploidy all over the karyotype - mortal unless mosaical, or chimeral). However, the guy from The Kennedy Report seemingly has no idea how this could be exploited in the question of rising number of chromosomes, among mammals, which is one of the implications of evolution.

To me it seems, the Catholic creationist movement is - as far as the human reason aspect is concerned - a joke. It's like picking Ray Comfort over Jonathan Sarfati - or the preachy over the exact.

I am not saying that the points in the video by the Kennedy report are in and of themselves bad, but the guy seems unable to properly defend them. They can perhaps not be disproven by good analysis, but they are easy to debunk by nitpicking and the guy is not ready to nitpick back or even better forestall nitpicking by actually giving a not just coherent, but also detailed and informed reason for his points.

Meanwhile, there is a Catholic creationist apologist whom you are boycotting. Me.

You will excuse me for not wishing you a blessed Christmastide, you knew me years ago, and your boycott has blighted part of mine, through the poverty I'm going through.

Hans Georg Lundahl

II
Hugh Owen to HGL
12/27/2021 at 7:37 PM
Re: Kennedy Report
Dear Hans,

Christ is born! Glorify Him!

Thank you for getting in touch.

Kennedy Hall does not represent the Kolbe Center, so we cannot take responsibility for any weaknesses in his presentation. On the other hand, it sounds as if some of the main points he made are correct, even if he was not able to defend them against "nit-picking." I have not seen his video so I do not know. For example, to show that there are "beneficial" mutations does not disprove the truth of the claim that there are no examples of mutations that add new functional information to the genome of any plant, animal or human. If that claim is true--and it is--then all the nit-picking in the world cannot save biological evolution from bankruptcy.

In short, your statement that "the Catholic creationist movement is - as far as the human reason aspect is concerned - a joke," is unjust, since the materials on our website and the content of our DVD series have held up very well under criticism. For examples, please see the "Replies to Critics" section of our website, especially the Trialogue with the two Dominican priests, to see that our team defends the traditional teaching of the Church on creation much better than the Catholic defenders of progressive creation or theistic evolution, from the perspective of theology, philosophy and natural science.

Through the prayers of the Mother of God, may the Holy Ghost lead us all into all the Truth and may we all be saved souls together in Heaven!

In Domino,

Hugh Owen

III
HGL to Hugh Owen
12/28/2021 at 10:50 AM
Re: Kennedy Report
A few replies:

"For example, to show that there are "beneficial" mutations does not disprove the truth of the claim that there are no examples of mutations that add new functional information to the genome of any plant, animal or human."

Very true. But unfortunately not what Kennedy was saying.

Some people have tried to figure out how mutations could do that. Jacques Monod in the early 70's conceded that one mutation would not bring about a new functional gene. But he was optimistic, it could happen if an offspring inherited a mutation from father and one from mother. I have pointed out that this cannot happen, since the mutations will be on two different chromosomes, therefore two different and non-combining versions of the old gene. I am reminded of how Rev. Houghton mentioned that the mention of chromosomes was banned from French science for c. 50 years, because they understood how it undermined evolution - something which I also used in context with chromosome numbers being different.

I decided to make two thought experiments on it and here these are:

What Could Irregular Deletions Do? · What About Pseudo-Genes Starting to Code?

"If that claim is true--and it is--then all the nit-picking in the world cannot save biological evolution from bankruptcy."

There is bankrupcy and bankrupcy. In the final three and a half years before Harmageddon, two men will be soundly bankrupt intellectually, but they won't quite be so mediatically - you know the two who get thrown alive into a lake of fire. I want a Catholic Creationist movement that is able to show itself able to nitpick and therefore bankrupt any nitpicker like Forrest Valkai. Here is how I come up against him, btw:

Watch Forrest Valkai on his Video from 17:00 to 18:00 · Debate with Shane Wilson and ReiperX

and Forrest Valkai to the Rescue of Radiometric Dating (Or Not?) · L M and Comparative Religion to the Rescue of Forrest Valkai? · subductionzone to the rescue of Forrest Valkai? Or Keith Levkoff? Deus-Stein? · How Carbon Dating is Done, Why My Calibration is Possible

"For examples, please see the "Replies to Critics" section of our website, especially the Trialogue with the two Dominican priests"

Ah, I found "answer to second question" on it ... I sent one of the two an answer on "fittingness of evolution". Do you have any similar with secularists? I have, not due to them agreeing in advance, but due to my hijacking our dialogues onto my blogs (like the one linked to).

"In short, your statement that "the Catholic creationist movement is - as far as the human reason aspect is concerned - a joke," is unjust,"

I must admit I have omitted looking at your work, since you decided to overlook mine on carbon dates, when you defended a Vulgate-Ussher timeline instead of a timeline with Roman martyrology for December 25th, which is what I use. It should therefore be taken, as perhaps excepting not just me, but also you.

Still, I think you could improve if you took a bit of my materials too.

That said, in a more charitable mood, this time: Merry Christmas!

Hans Georg Lundahl

IV
Hugh Owen to HGL
12/28/2021 at 5:09 PM
Re: Kennedy Report
Dear Hans,

Christ is born! Glorify Him!

First things first: How is your mother doing? I have been keeping her in my prayers.

Thank you for your replies.

Please forgive me for not getting back to you about your work on C-14 dating. If I could trouble you to send it to me again, I will ask the member of our team who is in charge of that project to look at it carefully.

After we have looked at your work on C-14 dating, we can take up the pros and cons of the chronology derived from the Septuagint vs. the one derived from the numbers in the Hebrew text of the Bible that St. Jerome used in the Vulgate.

I am going to recommend to Kennedy Hall that he ask one of our leadership team members who has expertise in biology to do an interview with him and answer the critics. Hopefully, he will do so.

In Domino,

Hugh Owen

V
HGL to Hugh Owen
12/28/2021 at 6:09 PM
Re: Kennedy Report
She was sending me a letter a few weeks ago, and I haven't received it.

Material on C-14, perhaps not identic to previous: Have you Really Taken ALL the Factors into Account? · New Tables · Why Should one Use my Tables? · And what are the lineups between archaeology and Bible, in my tables? · Bases of C14 · An example of using previous · Difference with Carbon 14 from Other Radioactive Methods

LXX / Roman martyrology vs later Hebrew texts (Vulgate, Masoretic), see my answer to CMI : Resp. to Carter / Cosner : In the Lifetime of Josephus
As well as my background story for Roman martyrology of December 25th, credits to my friend Stephan Borgehammar, a Church historian : Background to Christmas Martyrology · What Martyrology, by the way?

So, St. Jerome is equally responsible for the chronology of the martyrology (LXX without second Cainan) and for the Latin text with another chronology.

Your recommendations to Kennedy Hall are very appreciated.

Chromosome numbers, first published on Communities dot com · · · Undisputed facts · Hypothesis I · Hypothesis II · Hypothesis III · Hypothesis IV · Overall criticism

Update on Chromosome numbers · · · Talkorigins explains on human-chimp situation · my footnotes on this post · a little excursus on French language history

Speciation observed - but not in mammals · · · a wannna-read

Non-replies · · · comments part on non-replies, mostly links about chromosomal polymorphism

Chromosome numbers - the summing up · · · Kent Hovind's list of chromosome numbers of different species, plus one other link Comments part

Updated : Was I wrong on Karyograms?
Other : Microbes to Man - Happening Before Our Eyes?

Would that be some help?

Hans Georg Lundahl

VI
HGL to Hugh Owen
12/28/2021 at 7:04 PM
Re: Kennedy Report
Dear Hans,

Pax Christi!

That is a very rich collection of information!

We will try to be systematic and work our way through the various articles.

We will begin with the articles on C-14 which I will forward to our main expert in that area.

Please be patient with us, but we will get back to you this time!

In Domino,

Hugh Owen

VII
Hugh Owen to HGL
12/28/2021 at 7:08 PM
Re: Kennedy Report
Dear Hans,

Pax Christi!

When we try to open the files on C-14, Webroot tells us that the site is dangerous. Have you had any problems with site security?

Can you suggest another way to access the C-14 material?

In Domino,

Hugh Owen

VIII
HGL to Hugh Owen
12/29/2021 at 6:36 PM
Re: Kennedy Report
No, I can't suggest any other way to access it.

Try to go to a cyber, ignore webroot and try there.

Either way, get used to such things abusively warning for sites that are NOT dangerous.

I have had the cyber site of a city near Paris block all of blogspot.com because it contains the letter sequence blogs pot .com and in French "pot" is not often used for flower pot or chamber pot, it's just slang for "weed".

Hans Georg Lundahl

IX
Hugh Owen to HGL
12/29/2021 at 11:22 PM
Re: Kennedy Report
Dear Hans,

Pax Christi!

I have asked my webmaster to help me access the content of your website safely.

I am sure that he will be able to do so.

In Domino,

Hugh

X
HGL to Hugh Owen
12/30/2021 at 12:43 PM
Re: Kennedy Report
Thank you in advance!

You might be saving me a lot of trouble, if you get to it soon./HGL

XI
HGL to Hugh Owen
1/7/2022 at 3:10 PM
Hello, have the IT specialists resolved the problem, yet?
I should have been hearing some from you or the carbon experts, I feel?

If they are confused about sth, it could be the thing I deal with here:

My C14 Calibration, Has it Any Stability? · 670 Actual Years = 32 000 or 4000 Carbon Years? Both.

XII
HGL to Hugh Owen
1/7/2022 at 3:44 PM
webroot
look at this form:

https://www.brightcloud.com/tools/change-request.php

I found it on the site of webroot.

Someone manually would have put my blog URL on a "dangerous" category./HGL

XIII
Hugh Owen to HGL
1/7/2022 at 6:34 PM
Re: webroot
Dear Brother Hans,

Pax Christi!

I finally had to have our webmaster send me the files. I then forwarded them to our expert in C-14 dating. He has a lot of irons in the fire, so please be patient. We will get back to you as soon as we can.

Your Mom is in my prayers. Are you able to visit her?

In Domino,

Hugh Owen

XIV
HGL to Hugh Owen
1/7/2022 at 7:20 PM
Re: webroot
My mom is in Malmö. I am in Paris. 1249 km.

Travelling is restricted with mask and perhaps now even pass mandates.

I don't have a friend with a car who's willing to go, as far as I know./HGL

Tuesday, 1 March 2022

Thomistic Institute Doesn't Answer?


I
Me to Thomistic Institute
1/28/2022 at 5:49 PM
was already sent to Fr Nicanor Austriaco, OP
https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2022/01/more-thorough-answer-to-rev-nicanor.html
https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2021/12/niche-argument-revisited.html

II
Me to Thomistic Institute
2/1/2022 at 1:31 PM
I get a somewhat iffy feeling, if you are the ones recommending those videos
Apart from the one for Evolution, not bad ones.

I get the feeling, you are perhaps (or someone else is, but using you) avoiding the actual debate on the relative weight of Genesis 5 and 11 versus samples with 25 pmC (implying as uncalibrated raw carbon dates an age of 11460 years).

You seem to - or someone else seems to be trying to foist hours of prolegomena on me, as if it were some kind of given I was not as yet qualified to discuss either aspect, as long as I don't agree with you.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sSUfieX401Q

The video on Sola Scriptura includes the observation that the Protestants had a great optimism about exegesis. Fine. They would obviously (some to this day) say "if a truth had been lost to all of the Church from lack of reading, it could easily be restored by reading" - and I'd agree, but I'd just answer that such a case could not happen, there is a proof text against it, for the Catholic system. This would perhaps to some seem as if I were guilty of "sola scriptura" heresy, but the thing is, "sola scriptura" is the Protestant (more Calvinist than Lutheran, as said) catchword. It is not the exact wording of what the Catholic Church de facto and de jure condemned at Session IV of the Council of Trent. Prof. Michael Root never actually says that the Catholic Church condemned exegetic optimism. But it is left to the imagination.

Then I get this recommendation:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7AgfgDmgogA

Now, we must keep in mind, "shadow" and "reality" are here not used in the perspective of humdrum epistemology, as Aristotle would in the Organon. On the contrary, they have a highly Platonic flavour. BOTH are what Aristotle would consider realities, but one of them is a higher one, of a type that Aristotle would dispute on the Tritos Anthropos argument, and the other is a participation in it. Like the Aaronite and even (though less so) Melchisedecian priesthoods were participations of a shadowy type, in the priesthood of Christ, in which Catholic priests have a more direct share.

In other words, the idea of "shadow" doesn't warrant Adam being some kind of metaphor or genealogies from him to Noah or Shem to Abe some kind of mythology.

But even more, the argument I made against Fr Austriaco was in fact that pretending Evolution is before sin a fitting process subservient to creation is turning upside down what St. Thomas meant by God giving creatures the dignity of being real causes. That (as some observations on impossibility of human language evolving from non-human oral communications and so on) really has no side open to questions of exegesis. It means Evolution is rotten in sound Thomistic Philosophy even before being in historic narratival conflict with the Bible.

Hans Georg Lundahl

III
Me to Thomistic Institute
2/3/2022 at 6:31 PM
Can't Fr. Simon Gaine make up his mind to be Catholic?
I watched his video here:

Did Christ Die For Neanderthals? | Fr Simon Gaine, OP
14th Febr. 2020 | The Thomistic Institute
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NKcwCpWOZhk


I answered at time signatures under video, and the comments are also here:

https://assortedretorts.blogspot.com/2022/02/neanderthals-were-human-and-lived-after.html

The extremely implicit and unargued dependance on the dating methods, the "we must enlarge our understanding of the Bible" and "we can't enlarge our understanding of dating methods, they aren't just by God, you know, they are by S C I E N T I S T S" is annoying to an actual Catholic Christian, and on top of that, in Paris I have to do with an actual apostate who openly wrote he doesn't believe Adam and Eve existed as you and I do, and he hasn't been censured by his hierarchs either of Assumptionist order or of the Archdiocese.

Autour de Sébastien Antoni qui a nié l'individualité d'Adam et d'Ève

Hans Georg Lundahl