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46% Americans Believe In Creationism: Do You Believe In Creationism?

(▪‿▪)DoctorWhoGuru(▪‿▪) 2012/06/06 01:33:07
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  • gracious43 2012/07/03 06:15:01
    Yes
    gracious43
    +1
    Judgian12365M has blocked me. This is typical Atheistic, morality and behavior from Atheists and Evolutionists when their faith in Evolution gets called into question by someone who understand science and can call them on their drivel.


    judgian12365M
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    Amherst Junction, WI, US
  • littlebuffalo55TBA 2012/07/01 10:19:40
    No
    littlebuffalo55TBA
    +2
    No....It's not an overwhelming concern I have as the idea of all this is ummm evolving!

    buddhist golden masks
  • ☥☽✪☾DAW ☽✪☾ 2012/06/30 18:21:42
    No
    ☥☽✪☾DAW ☽✪☾
    +1
    46% of people are idiots
    family guy creationism creationists creationists creationists so is Gravity jump out a window and see what happens
    creationists
  • none 2012/06/30 18:17:52
    No
    none
    +1
    I don't believe in the tooth fairy either.
  • Jackie G - Poker Playing Pa... 2012/06/30 17:03:26
    No
    Jackie G - Poker Playing Patriot
    +1
    Nope, I was fortunate to have science teachers who pointed out, rightly, that evolution and the bible were not in conflict at all.
  • beachbum 2012/06/30 13:50:18
    Yes
    beachbum
    +3
    Yes, I do. The Bible opens with the words 'in the beginning, God created'. That said, I wasn't there when God created, and He did not seek my advise on how to create, did not ask my opinion, etc. - therefore I have no know HOW he created, His methods, etc. The whole creation/evolution thing is really a non-issue.
  • VERYwiseguy 2012/06/30 10:08:53
    No
    VERYwiseguy
    +1
    With these same people being polled it was found 46% of Americans are stupid. lol
  • MandaLynne 2012/06/30 05:29:54
    Yes
    MandaLynne
    +1


    There is no rationality in the idea that one day everything just exploded into existence from nothing, with laws, mathematical order and life evolving on this planet. Atheism in this sense is a fraud. It attacks one set of so called "irrational" beliefs and replaces it with an even more irrational one.

    Nothing cannot put something in itself. SOMEONE has to put SOMETHING in NOTHING. That is the most rational way of seeing it. Laws in the universe keep order, but laws need a lawgiver.
  • littleb... MandaLynne 2012/07/01 10:12:05
    littlebuffalo55TBA
    Lol...ummm...."Mathematical Order" was always there...it ummm took US evolving to figure how to decipher it. But the math was always there!

    infinity
  • JDLogan 2012/06/30 04:47:18
    No
    JDLogan
    +1
    I'm an atheist.
  • Herb 2012/06/30 04:43:00
    Yes
    Herb
    +3
    A new Gallup poll measures Americans' belief in the origin of human beings, and how this belief correlates with church attendance, political party affiliation and education level. The poll was conducted by interviewing a random sample of 1,012 adults, aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia.

    The following question was asked to determine Americans' views on origin of human beings:


    Which of the following statements comes closest to your views on the origin and development of human beings?
    1) Human beings have developed over millions of years from less advanced forms of life, but God guided this process,
    2) Human beings have developed over millions of years from less advanced forms of life, but God had no part in this process,
    3) God created human beings pretty much in their present form at one time within the last 10,000 years or so.


    Respondents were categorized as believing in theistic evolution (option 1), evolution (option 2) and creationism (option 3) depending on their answer choice.

    Forty six percent Americans believed in creationism, 32 percent believed in theistic evolution and 15 percent believed in evolution without any divine intervention. As the graph below shows, the percent of Americans who believe in creationism ha...
    A new Gallup poll measures Americans' belief in the origin of human beings, and how this belief correlates with church attendance, political party affiliation and education level. The poll was conducted by interviewing a random sample of 1,012 adults, aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia.

    The following question was asked to determine Americans' views on origin of human beings:


    Which of the following statements comes closest to your views on the origin and development of human beings?
    1) Human beings have developed over millions of years from less advanced forms of life, but God guided this process,
    2) Human beings have developed over millions of years from less advanced forms of life, but God had no part in this process,
    3) God created human beings pretty much in their present form at one time within the last 10,000 years or so.


    Respondents were categorized as believing in theistic evolution (option 1), evolution (option 2) and creationism (option 3) depending on their answer choice.

    Forty six percent Americans believed in creationism, 32 percent believed in theistic evolution and 15 percent believed in evolution without any divine intervention. As the graph below shows, the percent of Americans who believe in creationism has increased slightly by 2 percent over the last 30 years. The percent of Americans who believe in evolution has also increased by 6 percent over the last 30 years while the percent of Americans who believe in theistic evolution has decreased by 6 percent over the same time period.
    (more)
  • Brosia 2012/06/30 04:36:39
    No
    Brosia
    +2
    I believe in science, because they can prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that evolution happened and is still happening.
  • Joel Buccellato 2012/06/22 05:54:26
    Yes
    Joel	 Buccellato
    +1
    More a hybrid of Darwinism, as originally intended by Darwin, and Creationism.
  • kelly 2012/06/21 13:13:40
    No
    kelly
    +2
    How can you believe in creationism when there is an overwhelming amount of evidence proving the theory of evolution?
  • Joel B... kelly 2012/06/22 05:53:36
    Joel	 Buccellato
    While I believe in a mixture of both theories, and by evolution I am a purist and stick strictly to it as originally intended by Darwin, if "there is an overwhelming amount of evidence proving the theory of evolution" why is not called the Law of Evolution?
  • JDLogan Joel B... 2012/06/30 04:52:46
    JDLogan
    +1
    It works much like gravity, there is the law of gravity, which is THAT it works, and the theory of gravity, which is HOW it works.

    Everyone talks about the theory of evolution, for two reasons; first, it is the part being worked on, and second, most people don't understand the difference between the common usage of the the word theory and the scientific usage, thus they say "JUST a theory", and "why isn't it a LAW".
  • Joel B... JDLogan 2012/06/30 16:16:01
    Joel	 Buccellato
    Then please enlighten me on the difference between the "common usage" and "scientific usage" of the wird theory. Last I remembered, a theory was a hypothesis that can neither be proven false nor true because the evidence is inconclusive. As far as overwhelming evidence is concerned, I thought only a law could hold that, such as Newton's Laws of Physics. Evolution and Creationism have no overwhelming evidence.
  • Flash,aka,Mr.Lightning 2012/06/15 00:59:18
    Yes
    Flash,aka,Mr.Lightning
    +2
    The earth's eco system in its complete entirety had to come into existence at all about the same time for life to exist in its inter-dependancy as we know it.
  • Flash,a... Flash,a... 2012/06/15 01:28:28
    Flash,aka,Mr.Lightning
    +4
    Look up the word 'theory'. Then get any book on Evolution and with a highlighter mark the words ;- 'possible','we believe' postulate','imagination',' put forward','guess'.
    'likely','probable','speculat...
    "Science" means knowledge.
    Strata fossil findings have no proof of any creature changing from one thing into something else. Every creature be it animal,bird,fish,or insect has always been THAT creature,-varities within species is not proof of evolution; a canine is still a canine is still a dog though different type breeds exist.
    Evolution is man's newest RELIGION excepting that the god of that religion is his own mind and hence no rules
  • Blank Blank Blank 2012/06/14 21:23:05
  • Lily 2012/06/12 12:37:28
    No
    Lily
    +1
    To each their own.
  • budgerigar42 2012/06/08 02:50:38
    No
    budgerigar42
    +3
    That's ridiculous. There's plenty of proof for evolution, and people are still completely ignoring science!
  • irish -liberty or death! 2012/06/07 12:46:11 (edited)
  • Going Terrier 2012/06/07 06:12:56
    No
    Going Terrier
    +2
    Oh God, no!
  • Helmholtz 2012/06/06 23:26:42
    No
    Helmholtz
  • Dave 2012/06/06 23:21:40
    No
    Dave
    +3
    How'd we get to be so backwards as a nation? The rest of the world is moving on from the Middle Ages and the USA still hangs on to things like religion, war, and that Climate Change isn't brought on by humans.
  • Wolf97 2012/06/06 20:51:22
    No
    Wolf97
    +3
    46%? Maybe its time to leave the country. Maybe move to South Korea...oh wait.
  • TheHushedScreamer 2012/06/06 16:45:05
    No
    TheHushedScreamer
    +3
    I've been given no valuable, sustainable, tangible or provable reason to believe in such thing.
  • Sookie 2012/06/06 15:11:34 (edited)
    No
    Sookie
    +5
    I do not subscribe to any particular set of beliefs or theories pertaining to that which has yet to be answered (that which may never be answered). I subscribe to the notion that there are no definitive answers and that things exist that are not and may not ever be known, conclusively.
  • ally 2012/06/06 15:07:06
    No
    ally
    +3
    No, I don't.
  • Donald Eric Kesler 2012/06/06 14:02:08
    No
    Donald Eric Kesler
    +3
    No one has put forth any evidence that lends credence to the theory that some undefined creator is responsible for either the genesis or diversity of life on planet Earth. Furthermore, there are facts that contradict the creationist theory.
  • SW 2012/06/06 13:08:32
    No
    SW
    +3
    Neither does/did Neil Degrasse Tyson, Stephen Hawking, Carl Sagan, the or geology and biology depts of every major university in the WORLD. Sorry.
  • boltfox20 2012/06/06 11:27:28 (edited)
    No
    boltfox20
    +3
    I'm glad it's down to 46%.

  • kelly boltfox20 2012/06/21 14:41:51
    kelly
    Yeah, as much as 46 % is a large number at least we can say its still the minority
  • Philo-Publius 2012/06/06 10:42:14
    No
    Philo-Publius
    +4
    I do, however, find the list of evidences in its favor slightly more scientifically compelling than the theory of evolution.
    retro
  • boltfox20 Philo-P... 2012/06/06 11:26:51
    boltfox20
    +1
    ... There are no evidences in its favor. All evidence points toward evolution, which is a proven scientific fact.
  • Philo-P... boltfox20 2012/06/06 11:38:20
    Philo-Publius
    +3
    That's the type of self-assured infallibility I hear from Creationists.
    retro
  • boltfox20 Philo-P... 2012/06/06 11:51:00 (edited)
    boltfox20
    +3
    There is no infallibility. A fact is something we know to be true based on our knowledge of reality. Evolution is a fact. If what we know about the universe changes, we have to re-examine all associated facts.

    It is a fact that evolution happens. The theory is why it happens, which can and should never be proven. it can only be demonstrated to be true beyond a reasonable doubt, which it has been.
  • Philo-P... boltfox20 2012/06/07 10:23:27
    Philo-Publius
    You're correct about theories having to be demonstrated rather than proven, it's just that I haven't seen anything at all in the way of demonstration of the instant one – a lot of conjecture, speculation, inference and (I think unwarranted) extrapolation, but no demonstration. I often wonder what others could possibly be seeing that would cause them to so revel in its self-evidency.
    retro
    I've always had trouble accepting this 'evolution is a fact and a theory' argument you make, too – it just seems so 'cart-before-the-horseish'. We could declare the same, I think, about *anything* we might believe: One could as readily claim that, “Cats stealing children's breath as they sleep is a *fact* – how they *do* it, however, is a theory.”
  • boltfox20 Philo-P... 2012/06/07 13:09:15 (edited)
    boltfox20
    Actually, how they do it would be a law. WHY they do it is the theory.

    There are facts about evolution, observations we have made and proven to be true. These facts are things like, mutations occur, they can be good or bad, mutations are passed on.

    There are laws of evolution, things we know to occur. These laws are things like: mutations cause one species to perform better than another one, when a species mutates enough apart from another group they might no longer be able to breed and thus form a new species.

    And then there is the theory of evolution. The theory is that Natural Selection allows only the best traits to continue on. Natural Selection is the part Darwin came up with and we have since improved upon as we have discovered more facts and laws. Essentially, the animal that survives longer breeds more. When they breed more, more of the beneficial trait is passed on. This is Natural Selection.

    It's the exact same thing with Gravity. There is the fact that things fall. There is the law that things with more mass pull things with less mass toward them. There is the theory, which I don't understand at all, that was first made by Newton then perfected by Einstein.

    A fact is an observable truth about known reality. A law is a statement based on repeated experiments and observat...
    Actually, how they do it would be a law. WHY they do it is the theory.

    There are facts about evolution, observations we have made and proven to be true. These facts are things like, mutations occur, they can be good or bad, mutations are passed on.

    There are laws of evolution, things we know to occur. These laws are things like: mutations cause one species to perform better than another one, when a species mutates enough apart from another group they might no longer be able to breed and thus form a new species.

    And then there is the theory of evolution. The theory is that Natural Selection allows only the best traits to continue on. Natural Selection is the part Darwin came up with and we have since improved upon as we have discovered more facts and laws. Essentially, the animal that survives longer breeds more. When they breed more, more of the beneficial trait is passed on. This is Natural Selection.

    It's the exact same thing with Gravity. There is the fact that things fall. There is the law that things with more mass pull things with less mass toward them. There is the theory, which I don't understand at all, that was first made by Newton then perfected by Einstein.

    A fact is an observable truth about known reality. A law is a statement based on repeated experiments and observations. A theory is the best explanation available for why these things are what they are. As such, things like evolution and gravity can be all three, as they are referring to different parts of the same thing.
    (more)
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