I was taught that God used materials from other worlds to make ours, and that's how we happen to have stuff over 6,000 years old.
That's nice. Its also irrelevant. Its not official Church doctrine and never was.
Sounds to me as if Nelson is taking the temple film a bit too literally. ;)
Coggins7 wrote:There may have been a time when a certain reptilian line branched out that would, in time, become dogs. But they were not dogs, but reptiles. Further, marcoevolution as yet has no empirical basis other than highly speculative evidence and a great deal of rather circular extrapolation, and serious conceptual and probabilistic problems still obtain.
I find Nelson's remarks interesting and sad. He is/was a medical doctor, not an evolutionary scientist. When I had my appendix removed last month, I talked to my surgeon a little bit about my work, dealing with molecular evolution. He had no experience with the field. I find this is the case with many medical doctors. They focus on their specialties (which is good...I'm glad my surgeon was good at his job). They are not authorities on evolution. Nelson seems to believe that microevolution can occur, while discounting macroevolution. It amazes me that so many people still discount speciation based on their adherence to their creation myths. While the church has no "official stance on evolution", its leaders have made many opiniated remarks (I.e. McConkie and Joseph Fielding Smith) that uninformed members hold to be doctrine.
silentkid wrote:Coggins, your above post is the perfect example of an uninformed individual making critiques of evolutionary theory. You showed your ignorance of the theory in your short paragraph. Why should I take anything you say about seriously?