Quote Originally Posted by meloncoly
I find it asburd a human being can teach creationism through stories alone from uneducated ancestors with the need to believe in a higher power.
i can understand you perplexity of religious people and there simplicity of certain matters. remember not all people believing in a higher power simply accept stories of creation. that is a huge generalization, especially considering the majority of Christians believe creation stories are not actually events, but stories with important morals.

i do think it is interesting that human kind cannot get away from a "feeling" or "belief" that there is some higher power... just interesting
hazetwostep Reviewed by hazetwostep on . question about evolution i have always been taught a "creation" perspective on the origin of the universe and understand that theory quite well. I am very curious to learn about the evolutionary viewpoint. i certainly do not disagree with the principle of natural selection, but the aspect that assumes we are descendents apes brings some confusion. now for my question... if apes evolved to eventually become humans as we know them today, why did only some of us evolve and some stay as apes? why did all in between Rating: 5