The notion that evolution is simply one animal coming from another is completly wrong. That is an aspect of evolution yes, but the entire theory itself is more encompassing and broad than that.EDIT: Yes, it works
I blame Pokémon for that ultra-simplistic view of evolution.
You got my vote for RA2 Wizard. Always and forever.
1st cent: Regarding Creation vs. Evolution. First off, contrary to popular belief, creation and evolution are NOT mutually exclusive. God may have created the first life forms, true, but it makes sense that they would have changed somewhat since the beginning of time. Evolution, in other words. Especially when you factor in the Fall.
People often ask, "If God created life, then why does it suck so much?" although usually in more words than that. Well originally, it didn't suck. But as soon as Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit, evil entered the world, and you got stuff like disease and aggression and all that nastiness.
However, what I want to say here is that it doesn't matter how life on Earth came about, or to what degree evolution played a part. All that matters is that God did it. How, why, when, we can never know any of those things for sure and I really don't think God cares whether we believe he created the universe in six literal days or whether it was over billions of years, as science suggests. Just that God is behind it all, however it happened.
2nd cent: Regarding the meaning of life. Even Christians will give you widely varying answers to this, and frankly I'm not 100% sure of it myself. I think it's safe to say that our purpose on Earth is "To Do God's Will", although that is an oversimplification and gets into the issue of what is God's will, which is a totally different gnarly religious issue.
While I can't say with any clarity what exactly "the meaning of life" is (unless you count 42), I can say that it's NOT just to procreate. Even the lowliest of animals have a greater purpose than that. Down to the smallest bacterium, it will at least provide a food source for some other organism higher up the food chain, some more advanced lifeform that could not survive on its own. Smaller organisms keep on providing sources of nourishment for larger ones on up the food chain until you get to the top, where humans are. We are entirely dependent on bugs and germs for our continued existence.
The purpose of the lowliest organisms, therefore, could be said to be "to procreate and to support higher forms of life." However, even that is an incomplete definition.
Many more advanced forms of life exist for less scientific reasons. What is the purpose of a domestic dog or a cat? Perhaps originally they were kept nearby to control pest populations, but today their main purpose is to bring happiness to their owners. Survival of the fittest alone cannot explain the existence of many domesticated breeds of cats and especially dogs. Pets are something we humans have artificially--I hesitate to use the word "created"--guided the evolution of, recently for the sole purpose of companionship and/or beauty. Sometimes, we even preclude the most basic purpose of life--procreation--by sterilizing our pets, in order to focus on those last qualities, and we always prevent them from becoming food (unless you're either a sadist or starving). Therefore, the purpose of pets could be said simply to be, "to bring happiness, companionship, and/or beauty into the world."
Now if mere cats and dogs have such a noble purpose as that, don't you think humans should have a purpose at least as noble?
I'm not going to try and get into exactly what that nobler purpose might be, but I will say that to assert "the purpose of life is to procreate" is to reduce humanity lower than the most basic, animalistic level of existence.
We have something no other life form has--intelligence and self-awareness--and with it comes the power to change the world for better or for worse.
I don't want to sound cliched, but... with great power comes great responsibility. We have a responsibility to care for the world and protect its life for the sake of future generations.
To simply Exist and Procreate is to ignore that responsibility, with the inevitable result that the world will be less able to support life.
It's happened many times before on a small scale, every time a pest organism invades new territory and drives local species to extinction. Only with humans (which, if you change the definition of a pest to be "harmful to Earth's welfare" instead of "harmful to human welfare", fit every aspect of it) the scale is the whole world and the local species are worldwide.
Not to mention that the idea of our sole purpose being procreation and the perpetuation of microscopic strands of peptides is just plain depressing.
What about people who never reproduce? Einstein never had any kids. Neither did Jesus, for that matter. Did they have no purpose then?
Just inconsequential blips in the course of history that may as well have never existed for all the difference it makes? In that case, nothing we do matters. "Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die," in the words of the Bible.
And eventually, if a meteor doesn't strike the Earth first, or we don't ruin the environment to the point where life is impossible, the sun is going to burn out and go dark, and nothing will be able to live anymore.
All our efforts to preserve the species will be for naught. In the end, entropy always wins. There is a limited amount of energy in the universe and it grows less every day.
Even if we eventually settle other planets and continue the human genetic line there, we can't escape that basic, cosmic truth. A billion, or a trillion, or a googleplex years from now, it doesn't matter, the universe will run down and there will be no meaning or purpose to anything anymore. In fact, with that in perspective, there is no meaning or purpose to anything now either, if you believe we are only here to procreate.
That's why I don't understand people who believe that about the meaning of life. If you ask me, I couldn't live without the idea of some higher purpose, some hope of beating entropy. The alternative is just too bleak.
But more advanced (Multicellular) lifeforms choose what to eat, where to eat.
On the Christian side of the fence, there was the holocaust (Hitler was raised a Roman Catholic, and used Christianity to rally people together),
Reality it is what it is. My thinking needs to be subject to reality because reality is not subject to my thinking......
Virus's are not living as there is a list of properties a thing must have to be classed as living (Can't remember) that we did in science one time and a virus has only 2 or 3 of them so it is therefor not living.
I actually just learned from this that the Mimivirus is so large that another virus is able to infect it and use it as its host virus.