Yes it's cool - as long as you're not a retard.Originally posted by davidche:ive considered that b4. But do you think its cool to let everybody laugh at me?
Vince, you know whats wrong with my sentance tat its so bird brained?Originally posted by davidche:God's ways cant be comprehended by man. If it could, the thread starter wldnt be asking the qns dude.
btw, you misunderstood my sentance, i was saying that atheists see our explaination as a run-away from the qn and not answering it.
I told you liao .. intellectual dead end.Originally posted by davidche:wads so wrong about my sentance anyway? Dont act cool.
Too cheem too cheem... simplify your explanations for davidcheOriginally posted by Icemoon:I told you liao .. intellectual dead end.
Furthermore your sentence itself is wrong because it presupposes every question asked has no answer. This is a pig brained assumption isn't it?
you try lor!Originally posted by kaister:Too cheem too cheem... simplify your explanations for davidche
Originally posted by Icemoon:you try lor!
i know what you mean. But dont you think bird-brained is too serious a word?Originally posted by Icemoon:I told you liao .. intellectual dead end.
Furthermore your sentence itself is wrong because it presupposes every question asked has no answer. This is a pig brained assumption isn't it?
did you spill some water by any chance??Originally posted by M©+square:
Unfortunately, no.Originally posted by davidche:did you spill some water by any chance??
Let me increase your intelligence by a bit.Originally posted by davidche:i know what you mean. But dont you think bird-brained is too serious a word?
Shld be ape-brain, if you believe in evolution....
HuxleyÂ’s most famous defence of Darwin took place on 30 June 1860 in Oxford. The occasion was a public debate between Huxley and Samuel Wilberforce, the Bishop of Oxford. Wilberforce, like many members of the Anglican Church, was horrified by the suggestion that humans had not been created by God but was the descendant of apes. Before the meeting, Wilberforce was coached by the like-minded Richard Owen, an eminent Victorian scientist. Owen was HuxleyÂ’s archrival. He tried to make WilberforceÂ’s case as strong as possible.
Wilberforce gave his speech and then asked a question intended to ridicule the evolutionists – was Huxley descended from an ape on his grandfather’s or grandmother’s side of the family? Legend has it that Huxley whispered to a neighbour, ‘the Lord hath delivered him into my hands’. He then rose to his feet and delivered a stinging riposte: he was not ashamed of his ancestry, but ‘would be ashamed to be connected with a man who used great gifts to obscure the truth’.
Huxley had implied he would rather be related to an ape than a bishop. The audience were astonished at his audacity. Pandemonium ensued.