(January 6, 2015 at 12:31 am)LostLocke Wrote:(January 5, 2015 at 10:59 pm)Chili Wrote: I am telling you that Gen.1, 2 and 3 explain how the intelligent design is built inside the species, where Lord God is Plato's genus and the difference is made known by the essence we see that we call the son who brings logos to the fore, that would account for the difference between [bare naked] animal and the being in charge. For Plato this was a re-emergence and then we first see the body as byproduct with new life emerging from within.Yeah, nice, and none of that has anything to do with evolution.
Actually it places the what is known as the Intelligent Design inside the species. Lord God is the animal here that is prior to the human condition and therefore is Supreme Ruler when push comes to shove. After all, survival is what evolution is all about as seen from the inside where God is short for the word 'good' and Lord God is the animal that must make sure he is OK with it too.
Lord God is the boss, = the animal in charge and 'like god' is the idea of himself used to test, sniff and taste while looking for goodies in life between the opposite that we know as good and bad including pleasure and pain, with all of them being an illusion as a quality in life in which also rainbows are seen and dreams can be lived for the better of both.
In this fashion [what we call] our senses are temporal add-on's used by the Being in charge to look for the goodies, while we as humans are in absence of a life of our own as outsider to him.
This would be what we call evolution today as seen after the fact, and that is were the word myopic has room to be while we forget that we look with our eyes and see with our mind.
Quote:Nearsightedness, or myopia, is the most common refractive error of the eye, and it has become more prevalent in recent years.
In fact, a recent study by the National Eye Institute (NEI) shows the prevalence of myopia grew from 25 percent of the U.S. population (ages 12 to 54) in 1971-1972 to a whopping 41.6 percent in 1999-2004.
Though the exact cause for this increase in nearsightedness among Americans is unknown, many eye doctors feel it has something to do with eye fatigue from computer use and other extended near vision tasks, coupled with a genetic predisposition for myopia.
In the above quote it is obvious that science does not see it my way, and will keep slicing away to get to the bottom of problem they see in the eye.